Abstract

ABSTRACTThe α-amylases are endo-acting enzymes that hydrolyze starch by randomly cleaving the 1,4-α-d-glucosidic linkages between the adjacent glucose units in a linear amylose chain. They have significant advantages in a wide range of applications, particularly in the food industry. The eukaryotic α-amylase isolated from the Antarctic ciliated protozoon Euplotes focardii (EfAmy) is an alkaline enzyme, different from most of the α-amylases characterized so far. Furthermore, EfAmy has the characteristics of a psychrophilic α-amylase, such as the highest hydrolytic activity at a low temperature and high thermolability, which is the major drawback of cold-active enzymes in industrial applications. In this work, we applied site-directed mutagenesis combined with rational design to generate a cold-active EfAmy with improved thermostability and catalytic efficiency at low temperatures. We engineered two EfAmy mutants. In one mutant, we introduced Pro residues on the A and B domains in surface loops. In the second mutant, we changed Val residues to Thr close to the catalytic site. The aim of these substitutions was to rigidify the molecular structure of the enzyme. Furthermore, we also analyzed mutants containing these combined substitutions. Biochemical enzymatic assays of engineered versions of EfAmy revealed that the combination of mutations at the surface loops increased the thermostability and catalytic efficiency of the enzyme. The possible mechanisms responsible for the changes in the biochemical properties are discussed by analyzing the three-dimensional structural model.IMPORTANCE Cold-adapted enzymes have high specific activity at low and moderate temperatures, a property that can be extremely useful in various applications as it implies a reduction in energy consumption during the catalyzed reaction. However, the concurrent high thermolability of cold-adapted enzymes often limits their applications in industrial processes. The α-amylase from the psychrophilic Antarctic ciliate Euplotes focardii (named EfAmy) is a cold-adapted enzyme with optimal catalytic activity in an alkaline environment. These unique features distinguish it from most α-amylases characterized so far. In this work, we engineered a novel EfAmy with improved thermostability, substrate binding affinity, and catalytic efficiency to various extents, without impacting its pH preference. These characteristics can be considered important properties for use in the food, detergent, and textile industries and in other industrial applications. The enzyme engineering strategy developed in this study may also provide useful knowledge for future optimization of molecules to be used in particular industrial applications.

Highlights

  • The ␣-amylases are endo-acting enzymes that hydrolyze starch by randomly cleaving the 1,4-␣-D-glucosidic linkages between the adjacent glucose units in a linear amylose chain

  • One way to solve this problem is to modify existing cold-adapted enzymes by site-directed mutagenesis combined with a rational design approach [28], which generally is based on structureguided consensus sequence alignments with sequences that have moderate or high amino acid identity to reduce the number of possible target residues to be mutated

  • The results showed that EfAmy represents a classical psychrophilic enzyme with high hydrolytic activity at low temperatures (5 to 25°C) and high thermolability

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Summary

Introduction

The ␣-amylases are endo-acting enzymes that hydrolyze starch by randomly cleaving the 1,4-␣-D-glucosidic linkages between the adjacent glucose units in a linear amylose chain. Cold-adapted enzymes produced by psychrophiles possess high biotechnological value and provide economic benefit, being more productive at low temperatures than mesophilic or thermophilic homologs This implies energy savings in industrial processes [16, 17]. Rational design principles were successfully utilized to enhance the stability and/or catalytic efficiency of enzymes such as maltogenic amylase and patatin-like phospholipase [29,30,31] These changes reduced the molecular flexibility of the polypeptide by (i) introducing hydrophobic residues in the protein core, (ii) introducing disulfide and salt bridges to increase electrostatic interactions in the polypeptide, (iii) stabilizing ␣-helix dipoles, (iv) introducing Pro residues, and (v) loop shortening to decrease loop entropy [28, 32]

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