Abstract

Phosphatases are hydrolytic enzymes that cleave the phosphoester bond of numerous substrates containing phosphorylated residues. The typical classification divides them into acid or alkaline depending on the pH at which they have optimal activity. The histidine phosphatase (HP) superfamily is a large group of functionally diverse enzymes characterized by having an active-site His residue that becomes phosphorylated during catalysis. HP enzymes are relevant biomolecules due to their current and potential application in medicine and biotechnology. Entamoeba histolytica, the causative agent of human amoebiasis, contains a gene (EHI_146950) that encodes a putative secretory acid phosphatase (EhHAPp49), exhibiting sequence similarity to histidine acid phosphatase (HAP)/phytase enzymes, i.e., branch-2 of HP superfamily. To assess whether it has the potential as a biocatalyst in removing phosphate groups from natural substrates, we studied the EhHAPp49 structural and functional features using a computational-experimental approach. Although the combined outcome of computational analyses confirmed its structural similarity with HP branch-2 proteins, the experimental results showed that the recombinant enzyme (rEhHAPp49) has negligible HAP/phytase activity. Nonetheless, results from supplementary activity evaluations revealed that rEhHAPp49 exhibits Mg2+-dependent alkaline pyrophosphatase activity. To our knowledge, this study represents the first computational-experimental characterization of EhHAPp49, which offers further insights into the structure–function relationship and the basis for future research.

Highlights

  • Phosphatases are enzymes that cleave the phosphoester bond of various substrates containing phosphorylated residues [1,2,3]

  • Bioinformatic analyses of genomic and proteomic data confirmed its similarity to histidine acid phosphatase (HAP)/phytases

  • We engineered a bacterial plasmid for cytosolic expression of the recombinant enzyme after induction with IPTG

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Summary

Introduction

Phosphatases are enzymes that cleave the phosphoester bond of various substrates (e.g., proteins, lipids, and sugars) containing phosphorylated residues [1,2,3]. The histidine phosphatase (HP) superfamily (InterPro: IPR029033) is a large group of functionally diverse enzymes sharing a conserved active site that includes a His residue, which becomes phosphorylated during catalysis. This superfamily comprises two branches that share limited sequence similarity. Branch-2 (InterPro: IPR000560) contains mainly acid phosphatases and phytases [5]. The human prostatic acid phosphatase is a biomarker with clinical significance for prostate cancer [6], and phytases have potential as biocatalysts for sustainable agriculture and animal nutrition [7,8,9]

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