首页|Rational engineering of a mesohalophilic carbonic anhydrase to an extreme halotolerant biocatalyst

Rational engineering of a mesohalophilic carbonic anhydrase to an extreme halotolerant biocatalyst

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Enzymes expressed by highly salt-tolerant organisms show many modifications compared with salt-affected counterparts including biased amino acid and lower alpha-helix content, lower solvent accessibility and negative surface charge. Here, we show that halotolerance can be generated in an enzyme solely by modifying surface residues. Rational design of carbonic anhydrase II is undertaken in three stages replacing 18 residues in total, crystal structures confirm changes are confined to surface residues. Catalytic activities and thermal unfolding temperatures of the designed enzymes increase at high salt concentrations demonstrating their shift to halotolerance, whereas the opposite response is found in the wild-type enzyme. Molecular dynamics calculations reveal a key role for sodium ions in increasing halotolerant enzyme stability largely through interactions with the highly ordered first Na+ hydration shell. For the first time, an approach to generate extreme halotolerance, a trait with broad application in industrial biocatalysis, in a wild-type enzyme is demonstrated.

HALOPHILIC PROTEINSMOLECULAR-DYNAMICSFORCE-FIELDADAPTATIONENZYMESSALTINHIBITIONSTABILITYRESIDUESCAPTURE

Warden, Andrew C.、Williams, Michelle、Peat, Thomas S.、Seabrook, Shane A.、Newman, Janet、Dojchinov, Greg、Haritos, Victoria S.

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Commonwealth Sci & Ind Res Org CSIRO, Energy Flagship, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia

Commonwealth Sci & Ind Res Org CSIRO, Biomed Mfg Program, Parkville, Vic 3052, Australia

2015

Nature Communications

Nature Communications

AHCI
ISSN:2041-1723
年,卷(期):2015.6(Dec.)
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