haloalkane dehalogenase
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Crystals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (9) ◽  
pp. 1052
Author(s):  
Anastasiia Shaposhnikova ◽  
Michal Kuty ◽  
Radka Chaloupkova ◽  
Jiri Damborsky ◽  
Ivana Kuta Smatanova ◽  
...  

Ionic liquids attracted interest as green alternatives to replace conventional organic solvents in protein stability studies. They can play an important role in the stabilization of enzymes such as haloalkane dehalogenases that are used for biodegradation of warfare agents and halogenated environmental pollutants. Three-dimensional crystals of haloalkane dehalogenase variant DhaA80 (T148L+G171Q+A172V+C176F) from Rhodococcus rhodochrous NCIMB 13064 were grown and soaked with the solutions of 2-hydroxyethylammonium acetate and 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium methyl sulfate. The objective was to study the structural basis of the interactions between the ionic liquids and the protein. The diffraction data were collected for the 1.25 Å resolution for 2-hydroxyethylammonium acetate and 1.75 Å resolution for 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium methyl sulfate. The structures were used for molecular dynamics simulations to study the interactions of DhaA80 with the ionic liquids. The findings provide coherent evidence that ionic liquids strengthen both the secondary and tertiary protein structure due to extensive hydrogen bond interactions.


Author(s):  
Meiqi Wang ◽  
Weili Yu ◽  
Lijuan Shen ◽  
He Zheng ◽  
Xuan Guo ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (11) ◽  
pp. 5854
Author(s):  
Xin Xin ◽  
Chen Li ◽  
Delu Gao ◽  
Dunyou Wang

Enzymes play a fundamental role in many biological processes. We present a theoretical approach to investigate the catalytic power of the haloalkane dehalogenase reaction with 1,2-dichloroethane. By removing the three main active-site residues one by one from haloalkane dehalogenase, we found two reactive descriptors: one descriptor is the distance difference between the breaking bond and the forming bond, and the other is the charge difference between the transition state and the reactant complex. Both descriptors scale linearly with the reactive barriers, with the three-residue case having the smallest barrier and the zero-residue case having the largest. The results demonstrate that, as the number of residues increases, the catalytic power increases. The predicted free energy barriers using the two descriptors of this reaction in water are 23.1 and 24.2 kcal/mol, both larger than the ones with any residues, indicating that the water solvent hinders the reactivity. Both predicted barrier heights agree well with the calculated one at 25.2 kcal/mol using a quantum mechanics and molecular dynamics approach, and also agree well with the experimental result at 26.0 kcal/mol. This study shows that reactive descriptors can also be used to describe and predict the catalytic performance for enzyme catalysis.


Author(s):  
Yue Shan ◽  
Weili Yu ◽  
Lijuan Shen ◽  
Xuan Guo ◽  
He Zheng ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 77 (3) ◽  
pp. 347-356
Author(s):  
Andrii Mazur ◽  
Tatyana Prudnikova ◽  
Pavel Grinkevich ◽  
Jeroen R. Mesters ◽  
Daria Mrazova ◽  
...  

Haloalkane dehalogenases (EC 3.8.1.5) are microbial enzymes that catalyse the hydrolytic conversion of halogenated compounds, resulting in a halide ion, a proton and an alcohol. These enzymes are used in industrial biocatalysis, bioremediation and biosensing of environmental pollutants or for molecular tagging in cell biology. The novel haloalkane dehalogenase DpaA described here was isolated from the psychrophilic and halophilic bacterium Paraglaciecola agarilytica NO2, which was found in marine sediment collected from the East Sea near Korea. Gel-filtration experiments and size-exclusion chromatography provided information about the dimeric composition of the enzyme in solution. The DpaA enzyme was crystallized using the sitting-drop vapour-diffusion method, yielding rod-like crystals that diffracted X-rays to 2.0 Å resolution. Diffraction data analysis revealed a case of merohedral twinning, and subsequent structure modelling and refinement resulted in a tetrameric model of DpaA, highlighting an uncommon multimeric nature for a protein belonging to haloalkane dehalogenase subfamily I.


Author(s):  
Raghunath Satpathy

The halogenated hydrocarbons have been widely used by human beings. They are xenobiotic and toxic. The microbes having a specific group of hydrolase enzymes, known as dehalogenases, that actually break the carbon-halogen bonds of the halogenated substances and subsequently convert them into their non-toxic forms. In this chapter, the categories of dehalogenase enzymes possessed by microorganisms are narrated. The overall source, mechanism of catalysis, and structural aspects of the haloalkane dehalogenase enzymes have been discussed with special focus to the bioremediation of 1, 2 dichloroethane.


Chemosphere ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 262 ◽  
pp. 128288
Author(s):  
Marco C. Knobloch ◽  
Lena Schinkel ◽  
Iris Schilling ◽  
Hans-Peter E. Kohler ◽  
Peter Lienemann ◽  
...  

Catalysts ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 5
Author(s):  
Iuliia Iermak ◽  
Oksana Degtjarik ◽  
Petra Havlickova ◽  
Michal Kuty ◽  
Radka Chaloupkova ◽  
...  

The activity of enzymes with active sites buried inside their protein core highly depends on the efficient transport of substrates and products between the active site and the bulk solvent. The engineering of access tunnels in order to increase or decrease catalytic activity and specificity in a rational way is a challenging task. Here, we describe a combined experimental and computational approach to characterize the structural basis of altered activity in the haloalkane dehalogenase LinB D147C+L177C variant. While the overall protein fold is similar to the wild type enzyme and the other LinB variants, the access tunnels have been altered by introduced cysteines that were expected to form a disulfide bond. Surprisingly, the mutations have allowed several conformations of the amino acid chain in their vicinity, interfering with the structural analysis of the mutant by X-ray crystallography. The duration required for the growing of protein crystals changed from days to 1.5 years by introducing the substitutions. The haloalkane dehalogenase LinB D147C+L177C variant crystal structure was solved to 1.15 Å resolution, characterized and deposited to Protein Data Bank under PDB ID 6s06.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Schenkmayerova ◽  
Gaspar Pinto ◽  
Martin Toul ◽  
Martin Marek ◽  
Lenka Hernychova ◽  
...  

<p>Insertion-deletion mutations are sources of major functional innovations in naturally evolved proteins, but directed evolution methods rely primarily on substitutions. Here, we report a powerful strategy for engineering backbone dynamics based on InDel mutagenesis of a stable and evolvable template, and its validation in application to a thermostable ancestor of haloalkane dehalogenase and <i>Renilla</i> luciferase. First, extensive multidisciplinary analysis linked the conformational flexibility of a loop-helix fragment to binding of the bulky substrate coelenterazine. The fragment’s key role in extant <i>Renilla</i> luciferase was confirmed by transplanting it into the ancestor. This increased its catalytic efficiency 7,000-fold, and fragment-containing mutants showed highly stable glow-type bioluminescence with 100-fold longer half-lives than the flash-type <i>Renilla</i> luciferase <i>RLuc8</i>,<i> </i>thereby addressing a limitation of a popular molecular probe<i>.</i> Thus, our three-step approach: (i) constructing a robust template, (ii) mapping functional regions by backbone mutagenesis, and (iii) transplantation of a dynamic feature, provides a potent strategy for discovering protein modifications with globally disruptive but functionally innovative effects.</p>


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