Abstract

l-amino acid deaminases (LAADs) are flavoenzymes that catalyze the stereospecific oxidative deamination of l-amino acids into α-keto acids, which are widely used in the pharmaceutical, food, chemical, and cosmetic industries. However, the substrate specificity of available LAADs is limited, and most substrates are concentrated on several bulky or basic l-amino acids. In this study, we employed a LAAD from Proteus mirabilis (PmiLAAD) and broadened its substrate specificity using a semi-rational design strategy. Molecular docking and alanine scanning identified F96, Q278, and E417 as key residues around the substrate-binding pocket of PmiLAAD. Site-directed saturation mutagenesis identified E417 as the key site for substrate specificity expansion. Expansion of the substrate channel with mutations of E417 (E417L, E417A) improved activity toward the bulky substrate l-Trp, and mutation of E417 to basic amino acids (E417K, E417H, E417R) enhanced the universal activity toward various l-amino acid substrates. The variant PmiLAADE417K showed remarkable catalytic activity improvement on seven substrates (l-Ala, l-Asp, l-Ile, l-Leu, l-Phe, l-Trp, and l-Val). The catalytic efficiency improvement obtained by E417 mutation may be attributed to the expansion of the entrance channel and its electrostatic interactions. These PmiLAAD variants with a broadened substrate spectrum can extend the application potential of LAADs.

Highlights

  • In this study, we developed new PmiLAAD variants with higher activity toward various types of L-amino acids via a semi-rational design strategy

  • Seven L-amino acids were docked into the active site of the homologous model of PmiLAAD by AutoDock

  • By site-directed saturation mutagenesis, site E417 was identified as a key site for catalytic efficiency improvement

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Summary

Introduction

LL-amino aciddeaminases deaminases (LAADs) flavoenzymes containing non-covalently. -amino acid are are flavoenzymes containing non-covalently bound bound flavin adenine dinucleotide, which catalyzes the stereospecific oxidative deaminaflavin adenine dinucleotide, which catalyzes the stereospecific oxidative deamination of tion of L-amino acids into α-keto acids and ammonia [1] (Figure 1). L -amino acids into α-keto acids and ammonia with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

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