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  • Enhanced enzyme kinetic stability by increasing rigidity within the active site.

Enhanced enzyme kinetic stability by increasing rigidity within the active site.

The Journal of biological chemistry (2014-01-23)
Yuan Xie, Jiao An, Guangyu Yang, Geng Wu, Yong Zhang, Li Cui, Yan Feng
ABSTRACT

Enzyme stability is an important issue for protein engineers. Understanding how rigidity in the active site affects protein kinetic stability will provide new insight into enzyme stabilization. In this study, we demonstrated enhanced kinetic stability of Candida antarctica lipase B (CalB) by mutating the structurally flexible residues within the active site. Six residues within 10 Å of the catalytic Ser(105) residue with a high B factor were selected for iterative saturation mutagenesis. After screening 2200 colonies, we obtained the D223G/L278M mutant, which exhibited a 13-fold increase in half-life at 48 °C and a 12 °C higher T50(15), the temperature at which enzyme activity is reduced to 50% after a 15-min heat treatment. Further characterization showed that global unfolding resistance against both thermal and chemical denaturation also improved. Analysis of the crystal structures of wild-type CalB and the D223G/L278M mutant revealed that the latter formed an extra main chain hydrogen bond network with seven structurally coupled residues within the flexible α10 helix that are primarily involved in forming the active site. Further investigation of the relative B factor profile and molecular dynamics simulation confirmed that the enhanced rigidity decreased fluctuation of the active site residues at high temperature. These results indicate that enhancing the rigidity of the flexible segment within the active site may provide an efficient method for improving enzyme kinetic stability.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Lipase from Rhizopus oryzae, powder (fine), ~10 U/mg
Sigma-Aldrich
Lipase from Candida rugosa, lyophilized, powder (fine), 15-25 U/mg
Sigma-Aldrich
Lipase from Candida rugosa, powder, yellow-brown, ≥2 U/mg
Sigma-Aldrich
Lipase from Aspergillus oryzae, lyophilized, powder, white, ~50 U/mg
Sigma-Aldrich
Lipase from Aspergillus oryzae, solution, ≥100,000 U/g, white, beige
Sigma-Aldrich
Lipase acrylic resin, ≥5,000 U/g, recombinant, expressed in Aspergillus niger
Sigma-Aldrich
Lipase from Aspergillus oryzae, ≥20,000 U/g
Sigma-Aldrich
Lipase from Mucor miehei, powder, slightly brown, ~1 U/mg
Sigma-Aldrich
Lipase from Candida rugosa, lyophilized powder, ≥40,000 units/mg protein
Sigma-Aldrich
Lipase from Candida rugosa, Type VII, ≥700 unit/mg solid
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Lipase from Pseudomonas sp., Type XIII, lyophilized powder, ≥15 units/mg solid
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Lipase from porcine pancreas, Type II, ≥125 units/mg protein (using olive oil (30 min incubation)), 30-90 units/mg protein (using triacetin)
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Lipase from porcine pancreas, Type VI-S, ≥20,000 units/mg protein, lyophilized powder
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Lipase from wheat germ, Type I, lyophilized powder, 5-15 units/mg solid
Sigma-Aldrich
Lipase from Mucor miehei, lyophilized powder, ≥4,000 units/mg solid (using olive oil)
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Lipase from Rhizopus niveus, powder (fine), ≥1.5 U/mg
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Lipase from Candida sp., recombinant, expressed in Aspergillus niger
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Lipase from Mucor javanicus, lyophilized powder, ≥300 units/mg solid (using olive oil)
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Lipase from Pseudomonas cepacia, powder, light beige, ≥30 U/mg
Sigma-Aldrich
Lipase immobilized from Candida antarctica, beads, slightly brown, >2 U/mg
Sigma-Aldrich
Lipase from Aspergillus niger, powder (fine), ~200 U/g
Sigma-Aldrich
Lipase B Candida antarctica, recombinant from Aspergillus oryzae, powder, beige, ~9 U/mg
Sigma-Aldrich
Lipase A Candida antarctica, recombinant from Aspergillus oryzae, powder, beige, ~2 U/mg