scholarly journals Biochemical and structural studies of mutants indicate concerted movement of the dimer interface and ligand-binding region ofMycobacterium tuberculosispantothenate kinase

Author(s):  
A. Paul ◽  
P. Kumar ◽  
A. Surolia ◽  
M. Vijayan

Two point mutants and the corresponding double mutant ofMycobacterium tuberculosispantothenate kinase have been prepared and biochemically and structurally characterized. The mutants were designed to weaken the affinity of the enzyme for the feedback inhibitor CoA. The mutants exhibit reduced activity, which can be explained in terms of their structures. The crystals of the mutants are not isomorphous to any of the previously analysed crystals of the wild-type enzyme or its complexes. The mycobacterial enzyme and its homologousEscherichia colienzyme exhibit structural differences in their nucleotide complexes in the dimer interface and the ligand-binding region. In three of the four crystallographically independent mutant molecules the structure is similar to that in theE. colienzyme. Although the mutants involve changes in the CoA-binding region, the dimer interface and the ligand-binding region move in a concerted manner, an observation which might be important in enzyme action. This work demonstrates that the structure of the mycobacterial enzyme can be transformed into a structure similar to that of theE. colienzyme through minor perturbations without external influences such as those involving ligand binding.

2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura Navone ◽  
Thomas Vogl ◽  
Pawarisa Luangthongkam ◽  
Jo-Anne Blinco ◽  
Carlos H. Luna-Flores ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Phytases are widely used commercially as dietary supplements for swine and poultry to increase the digestibility of phytic acid. Enzyme development has focused on increasing thermostability to withstand the high temperatures during industrial steam pelleting. Increasing thermostability often reduces activity at gut temperatures and there remains a demand for improved phyases for a growing market. Results In this work, we present a thermostable variant of the E. coli AppA phytase, ApV1, that contains an extra non-consecutive disulfide bond. Detailed biochemical characterisation of ApV1 showed similar activity to the wild type, with no statistical differences in kcat and KM for phytic acid or in the pH and temperature activity optima. Yet, it retained approximately 50% activity after incubations for 20 min at 65, 75 and 85 °C compared to almost full inactivation of the wild-type enzyme. Production of ApV1 in Pichia pastoris (Komagataella phaffi) was much lower than the wild-type enzyme due to the presence of the extra non-consecutive disulfide bond. Production bottlenecks were explored using bidirectional promoters for co-expression of folding chaperones. Co-expression of protein disulfide bond isomerase (Pdi) increased production of ApV1 by ~ 12-fold compared to expression without this folding catalyst and restored yields to similar levels seen with the wild-type enzyme. Conclusions Overall, the results show that protein engineering for enhanced enzymatic properties like thermostability may result in folding complexity and decreased production in microbial systems. Hence parallel development of improved production strains is imperative to achieve the desirable levels of recombinant protein for industrial processes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (12) ◽  
pp. 5521
Author(s):  
Li Liu ◽  
Shuhuai Yu ◽  
Wei Zhao

Isomaltulose is widely used in the food industry as a substitute for sucrose owing to its good processing characteristics and physicochemical properties, which is usually synthesized by sucrose isomerase (SIase) with sucrose as substrate. In this study, a gene pal-2 from Raoultella terrigena was predicted to produce SIase, which was subcloned into pET-28a (+) and transformed to the E. coli system. The purified recombinant SIase Pal-2 was characterized in detail. The enzyme is a monomeric protein with a molecular weight of approximately 70 kDa, showing an optimal temperature of 40 °C and optimal pH value of 5.5. The Michaelis constant (Km) and maximum reaction rate (Vmax) are 62.9 mmol/L and 286.4 U/mg, respectively. The conversion rate of isomaltulose reached the maximum of 81.7% after 6 h with 400 g/L sucrose as the substrate and 25 U/mg sucrose of SIase. Moreover, eight site-directed variants were designed and generated. Compared with the wild-type enzyme, the enzyme activities of two mutants N498P and Q275R were increased by 89.2% and 42.2%, respectively, and the isomaltulose conversion rates of three mutants (Y246L, H287R, and H481P) were improved to 89.1%, 90.7%, and 92.4%, respectively. The work identified a novel SIase from the Raoultella genus and its mutants showed a potential to be used for the production of isomaltulose in the industry.


2011 ◽  
Vol 286 (27) ◽  
pp. 24417-24425 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chi-Yuan Chou ◽  
Liang Tong

Biotin carboxylase (BC) activity is shared among biotin-dependent carboxylases and catalyzes the Mg-ATP-dependent carboxylation of biotin using bicarbonate as the CO2 donor. BC has been studied extensively over the years by structural, kinetic, and mutagenesis analyses. Here we report three new crystal structures of Escherichia coli BC at up to 1.9 Å resolution, complexed with different ligands. Two structures are wild-type BC in complex with two ADP molecules and two Ca2+ ions or two ADP molecules and one Mg2+ ion. One ADP molecule is in the position normally taken by the ATP substrate, whereas the other ADP molecule occupies the binding sites of bicarbonate and biotin. One Ca2+ ion and the Mg2+ ion are associated with the ADP molecule in the active site, and the other Ca2+ ion is coordinated by Glu-87, Glu-288, and Asn-290. Our kinetic studies confirm that ATP shows substrate inhibition and that this inhibition is competitive against bicarbonate. The third structure is on the R16E mutant in complex with bicarbonate and Mg-ADP. Arg-16 is located near the dimer interface. The R16E mutant has only a 2-fold loss in catalytic activity compared with the wild-type enzyme. Analytical ultracentrifugation experiments showed that the mutation significantly destabilized the dimer, although the presence of substrates can induce dimer formation. The binding modes of bicarbonate and Mg-ADP are essentially the same as those to the wild-type enzyme. However, the mutation greatly disrupted the dimer interface and caused a large re-organization of the dimer. The structures of these new complexes have implications for the catalysis by BC.


1979 ◽  
Vol 179 (1) ◽  
pp. 99-107 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey D. Hillman

NAD+-specific glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.12) from Escherichia coli was purified to homogeneity by a relatively simple procedure involving affinity chromatography on agarose–hexane–NAD+ and repeated crystallization. Rabbit antiserum directed against this protein produced one precipitin line in double-diffusion studies against the pure enzyme, and two lines against crude extracts of wild-type E. coli strains. Both precipitin lines represent the interaction of antibody with determinants specific for glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase. Nine independent mutants of E. coli lacking glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase activity all possessed some antigenic cross-reacting material to the wild-type enzyme. The mutants could be divided into three groups on the basis of the types and amounts of precipitin lines observed in double-diffusion experiments; one group formed little cross-reacting material. The cross-reacting material in crude cell-free extracts of several of the mutant strains were also tested for alterations in their affinity for NAD+ and their phosphorylative activity. The cumulative data indicate that the protein in several of the mutant strains is severely altered, and thus that glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase is unlikely to have an essential, non-catalytic function such as buffering nicotinamide nucleotide or glycolytic-intermediate concentrations. Others of the mutants tested have cross-reacting material which behaved like the wild-type enzyme for the several parameters studied; the proteins from these strains, once purified, might serve as useful analogues of the wild-type enzyme.


1989 ◽  
Vol 260 (2) ◽  
pp. 491-497 ◽  
Author(s):  
L Hederstedt ◽  
L O Hedén

Mammalian and Escherichia coli succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) and E. coli fumarate reductase apparently contain an essential cysteine residue at the active site, as shown by substrate-protectable inactivation with thiol-specific reagents. Bacillus subtilis SDH was found to be resistant to this type of reagent and contains an alanine residue at the amino acid position equivalent to the only invariant cysteine in the flavoprotein subunit of E. coli succinate oxidoreductases. Substitution of this alanine, at position 252 in the flavoprotein subunit of B. subtilis SDH, by cysteine resulted in an enzyme sensitive to thiol-specific reagents and protectable by substrate. Other biochemical properties of the redesigned SDH were similar to those of the wild-type enzyme. It is concluded that the invariant cysteine in the flavoprotein of E. coli succinate oxidoreductases corresponds to the active site thiol. However, this cysteine is most likely not essential for succinate oxidation and seemingly lacks an assignable specific function. An invariant arginine in juxtaposition to Ala-252 in the flavoprotein of B. subtilis SDH, and to the invariant cysteine in the E. coli homologous enzymes, is probably essential for substrate binding.


2003 ◽  
Vol 47 (3) ◽  
pp. 1037-1046 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian H. Gross ◽  
Jonathan D. Parsons ◽  
Trudy H. Grossman ◽  
Paul S. Charifson ◽  
Steven Bellon ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT DNA gyrase is a bacterial type II topoisomerase which couples the free energy of ATP hydrolysis to the introduction of negative supercoils into DNA. Amino acids in proximity to bound nonhydrolyzable ATP analog (AMP · PNP) or novobiocin in the gyrase B (GyrB) subunit crystal structures were examined for their roles in enzyme function and novobiocin resistance by site-directed mutagenesis. Purified Escherichia coli GyrB mutant proteins were complexed with the gyrase A subunit to form the functional A2B2 gyrase enzyme. Mutant proteins with alanine substitutions at residues E42, N46, E50, D73, R76, G77, and I78 had reduced or no detectable ATPase activity, indicating a role for these residues in ATP hydrolysis. Interestingly, GyrB proteins with P79A and K103A substitutions retained significant levels of ATPase activity yet demonstrated no DNA supercoiling activity, even with 40-fold more enzyme than the wild-type enzyme, suggesting that these amino acid side chains have a role in the coupling of the two activities. All enzymes relaxed supercoiled DNA to the same extent as the wild-type enzyme did, implying that only ATP-dependent reactions were affected. Mutant genes were examined in vivo for their abilities to complement a temperature-sensitive E. coli gyrB mutant, and the activities correlated well with the in vitro activities. We show that the known R136 novobiocin resistance mutations bestow a significant loss of inhibitor potency in the ATPase assay. Four new residues (D73, G77, I78, and T165) that, when changed to the appropriate amino acid, result in both significant levels of novobiocin resistance and maintain in vivo function were identified in E. coli.


1992 ◽  
Vol 288 (3) ◽  
pp. 1045-1051 ◽  
Author(s):  
S J Thornewell ◽  
S G Waley

The substrate-induced inactivation of beta-lactamase I from Bacillus cereus 569/H has been studied. Both the wild-type enzyme and mutants have been used. The kinetics follow a branched pathway of the type recently analysed [Waley (1991) Biochem. J. 279, 87-94]. The substrate cloxacillin (a penicillin) formed an acyl-enzyme (characterized by m.s.), and it was probably the instability of this intermediate that brought about inactivation. A disulphide bond was introduced into beta-lactamase I (the wild-type enzyme lacks this bond) by site-directed mutagenesis: Ala-77 and Ala-123 were replaced by cysteine. Spontaneous oxidation yielded the disulphide. The activity of this newly cross-linked enzyme was a little diminished, but the stability towards inactivation by cloxacillin was not increased. A second mutant of beta-lactamase I was studied: this mutant lacked the first 17 residues, i.e. the first alpha-helix. The mutant had reduced activity towards ordinary (non-inactivating) substrates and no hydrolysis of cloxacillin could be detected. These mutant enzymes were expressed in Bacillus subtilis, and were purified from the extracellular medium.


2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claudia A. Reinoso ◽  
Vasu D. Appanna ◽  
Claudio C. Vásquez

Tellurite is toxic to most microorganisms because of its ability to generate oxidative stress. However, the way in which tellurite interferes with cellular processes is not fully understood to date. In this line, it was previously shown that tellurite-exposed cells displayed reduced activity of theα-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complex (α-KGDH), which resulted inα-ketoglutarate (α-KG) accumulation. In this work, we assessed ifα-KG accumulation in tellurite-exposedE. colicould also result from increased isocitrate dehydrogenase (ICDH) and glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) activities, both enzymes involved inα-KG synthesis. Unexpectedly both activities were found to decrease in the presence of the toxicant, an observation that seems to result from the decreased transcription oficdAandgdhAgenes (encoding ICDH and GDH, resp.). Accordingly, isocitrate levels were found to increase in tellurite-exposedE. coli. In the presence of the toxicant, cells lackingicdAorgdhAexhibited decreased reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels and higher tellurite sensitivity as compared to the wild type strain. Finally, a novel branch activity of ICDH as tellurite reductase is presented.


2007 ◽  
Vol 404 (1) ◽  
pp. 121-130 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jarosław Olchowy ◽  
Iwona Gabriel ◽  
Sławomir Milewski

Functional and structural properties of several truncated or mutated variants of Candida albicans Gfa1p (glucosamine-6-phosphate synthase) were compared with those of the wild-type enzyme. Fragments encompassing residues 1–345 and 346–712 of Gfa1p, expressed heterogeneously in bacterial host as His6 fusions, were identified as the functional GAH (glutamine amidehydrolysing) and ISOM (hexose phosphate-isomerizing) domains respectively. It was found that the native GAH domain is monomeric, whereas the native ISOM domain forms tetramers, as does the whole enzyme. Spectrofluorimetric and kinetic studies of the isolated domains, the Δ218–283Gfa1p mutein and the wild-type enzyme revealed that the binding site for the feedback inhibitor, uridine 5′-diphospho-N-acetyl-D-glucosamine, is located in the ISOM domain. Inhibitor binding affects amidohydrolysing activity of the GAH domain and, as a consequence, the GlcN-6-P (D-glucosamine-6-phosphate)-synthetic activity of the whole enzyme. The fragment containing residues 218–283 is neither involved in ligand binding nor in protein oligomerization. Comparison of the catalytic activities of Gfa1pV711F, Δ709–712Gfa1p, Gfa1pW97F and Gfa1pW97G with those of the native Gfa1p and the isolated domains provided evidence for an intramolecular channel connecting the GAH and ISOM domains of Gfa1p. The channel becomes leaky upon deletion of amino acids 709–712 and in the W97F and W97G mutants. The Trp97 residue was found to function as a molecular gate, opening and closing the channel. The W97G and V711F mutations resulted in an almost complete elimination of the GlcN-6-P-synthetic activity, with the retention of the amidohydrolase and sugar phosphate-isomerizing activities.


2012 ◽  
Vol 90 (4) ◽  
pp. 540-547 ◽  
Author(s):  
Douglas B. Craig ◽  
Thomas Schwab ◽  
Reinhard Sterner

Wild-type Escherichia coli lacZ was subjected to error-prone PCR to generate two plasmid-encoded gene libraries containing approximately 2.6 (SD 1.9) nucleotide exchanges resulting in 1.8 (SD 1.4) amino-acid substitutions. The libraries were used, along with a plasmid containing wild-type lacZ, to transform E. coli lacking genomic lacZ. Cells expressing functional β-galactosidase were identified by blue/white screening. Cell lysates containing the populations of heterogeneously mutagenized β-galactosidase were subjected to single molecule assays using a capillary electrophoresis laser-induced fluorescence-based protocol. There was no significant difference in the average catalytic rate between the random mutagenized and wild-type enzyme populations. Furthermore, there was no clear pattern between error rates and the variances in the population catalytic rates. This suggests that random sequence errors are not a substantial source of the catalytic heterogeneity of this enzyme.


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