Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Rational Design • Requires: – 3D Structure of Enzyme – Knowledge of Enzyme Mechanism • • Increase size of substrate binding pocket Add or subtract an interaction – H-Bond – Ion Pairing – Disulfide Bonds • Replace residues with those found in homologous enzymes • Site-Directed Mutagenesis – Polymerase Chain Reaction Mullis, K. et al. Science 1988, 239, 487 Site-Directed Mutagenesis • What to consider: – Will the amino acid mutation change the 3D structure of the enzyme? – Will the amino acid mutation affect the 2D structure of the enzyme (helix breaker)? – Is the amino acid mutation on the surface of the enzyme? Thermolysin-like protease (TLP) Mutazioni: A4T, T56A, G58A, T63F, S65P, A69P, G8C, and N60C First-order inactivation of TLPs. Stabilities of TLPs were determined at different temperatures. Shown are the first-order inactivation curves for TLP-ste incubated at 80°C ( ) and 90°C (+), thermolysin at 90°C ( ), and the 8-fold mutant at 100°C ( ) Top and side views of the hydrophobic patches on the surfaces of AcNIR (A) and AcPAZ (B) Kataoka, K. et al. J. Biol. Chem. 2004;279:53374-53378 Electron transfer from Achromobacter cycloclastes pseudoazurin (AcPAZ) to wild-type and mutant Alcaligenes xylosoxidans nitrite reductases (AxNIRs) “Irrational Design” Directed Evolution Directed Evolution • Survival of the Fittest Gene of Interest Random Mutagenesis etc… Expression etc… Screening/Selection Positive Mutants DIRECTED ENZYME EVOLUTION Error-Prone PCR • DNA Polymerase Fidelity – Taq polymerase ~1 mutation every 10,000 nucleotides • Reduction of Fidelity – Error rates of 0.4% to 2% – Nearly all mutations are base substitutions – Experimental Methods – Suboptimal Conditions • Biased concentrations of dNTP’s • ~ 0.5 mM – 1.0 mM Mn2+ • Increased [MgCl2] (~ 7mM) • Addition of salt or organic solvents (DMSO) Leung, D.W.; Chen, E.; Goeddel, D.V.; Technique 1989, 1(1), 11 Cadwell, R.C.; Joyce, G.F.; PCR Methods Appl. 1992, 2, 28 Beckman, R.A.; Mildvan, A.S.; Loeb, L.A.; Biochemistry 1985, 24, 5810 Error Bias On average only 5.7 amino acid substitutions are accessible from a 1 base mutation 5’ – AUGUUACAUGGUGCACCACUUAGGCGACCAAAAUGA – 3’ 5’ – AUGUUACAUGGUGCAACACUUAGGCGACCAAAAUGA – 3’ 5’ – AUGUUACAUGGUGCACCUCUUAGGCGACCAAAAUGA – 3’ NH3+ - Met – Leu – His – Gly – Ala – Pro – Leu – Arg – Arg – Leu – Lys – COONH3+ - Met – Leu – His – Gly – Ala – Thr – Leu – Arg – Arg – Leu – Lys – COONH3+ - Met – Leu – His – Gly – Ala – Pro – Leu – Arg – Arg – Leu – Lys – COO- "Asexual" Evolution by Sequential Rounds of Random Mutagenesis Attività selezionata Ma l’attività contro un altro substrato varia casualmente… Activities and thermostabilities (as measured by the ratio of residual to initial activity, in arbitrary units) of a library of randomly mutagenized pNB esterases. Parent pNB esterases all lie within the circle, showing that the screen is sensitive to changes brought about by primarily single amino acid substitutions. Variants exhibiting improvements in single properties are observed much more frequently than variants with improvements in both properties simultaneously. Thermostabilizing mutations tend to deactivate, while activating mutations tend to destabilize. Individual populations (in the boxes) can be recombined to obtain enzymes that are both more active and more stable Increased stability enhances evolvability of the P450 BM3 heme domain. (A) The stable 5H6 protein yielded more mutants with new or improved activity than the marginally stable 21B3 protein. The counts above the bars give the number of improved mutants of the total number of mutants screened. (B) Some of the improved 5H6 mutants were greatly destabilized relative to the parent protein, whereas the stabilities of the improved 21B3 mutants clustered around those of the parent protein (circles show T50 values for improved mutants). • Screening criteria is important • Stability can be used instead of improvement • Allows for functionally neutral mutations "Sexual" Evolution by Gene Recombination Starting from a single parent sequence, random mutagenesis methods (for example, using error-prone PCR) generate a library of genes containing point mutations. Recombination generates gene libraries with different combinations of the mutations from a pool of parent sequences. The parent sequences can be positive mutants from a round of screening, genes evolved separately for different properties, or even closely related natural sequences Lineage of pNB esterase variants showing amino acid substitutions accumulated by four generations of sequential random mutagenesis (fourth generation) and by DNA shuffling (fifth and sixth generations) and screening. All variants contain amino acid substitutions H322R, Y370F, M358V and L144M from the third generation parent Directed Evolution: recombination protocols DNA shuffling Top ss of homologous Double stranded template genes Random fragmentation Recombination-dependent Amplification PCR Double stranded template genes PCR with DNaseI PCR - 1. denaturation 94ºC 2. Short annealing 5 s Annealing of 3. Short extension 3s 72ºC homologous regions 40 cycles Chimeras Recombination Recombination PCR Ness JE. et al. (2002) Nat Biotechnol 20:1251. PCR- amplification Changing the ss templates for 10 cycles Ikeuchi A. et al (2003). Biotechnology Progress. 19:1460. Directed Evolution • Survival of the Fittest Gene of Interest Random Mutagenesis etc… Expression etc… Screening/Selection Positive Mutants Screening • High-Throughput Methods • Selection – UV/Vis Spectroscopy – IR Spectroscopy – Capillary Array Electrophoresis – GC – pH indicators – Fluorescence – Circular Dichroism – Mass Spectrometry Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. Engl. 1997, 36, 2830 Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. Engl. 1998, 37, 2647 Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. Engl. 2000, 39, 3891 Catal. Today 2001, 67, 389 • Phage Display Chem. Eur. J. 1998, 4, 2324 Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. Engl. 1999, 38, 497 Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. Engl. 1999, 111, 1868 Selection O O OH O O O O Yeast Esterase H2O O O + O O + HO O • Host cell experiences a growth advantage as a consequence of producing enzyme with desired property • Measurement of optical density (OD) of cells identifies hits (S)-substrate Inhibition of Cell Growth OD = 0.11 (R)-substrate Cell Growth OD = 0.51 Reetz, M.; Rüggeberg, C.J.; Chem. Commun. 2002, 1428 Phage Display • Phages – Viruses that infect bacterial cells (E. coli) – Accommodate, replicate segments of “foreign” DNA – Foreign DNA is spliced into the gene for a phage coat protein • • Affinity Selection Enzymes Displayed – Trypsin, Prostate Specific Antigen, β-lactamase, Lysozyme Smith, G.P.; Petrenko, V.A.; Chem. Rev., 1997, 97, 391 O High-Throughput Screening OH Hydrolyase O O O Buffer, pH 7.2 O + -O O + H+ O Inactive Hydrolyase Active, non-selective (R)-selective (S)-selective S ester R ester • 96-well plate • pH indicator – p-nitrophenol (pKa = 7.15) • Substrates – ~20 μg/well – Variation between quadruplicate measurements < 2% Janes, L.E.; Löwendahl, A.C. Kazlauskas, R.J.; Chem. Eur. J. 1998, 4(11), 2324 • LC-MS High-Throughput Screening D • • • • • O D O O Epoxide Hydrolase O Auto-sampler + D D 96-well microtiter plateD Electrospray Ionization, TOF Detector Eight Channels 14 minutes/plate = ~10,000/day D OH O Schrader, W.; Eipper, A; Pugh, D.J.; Reetz, M.; Can. J. Chem. 2002, 80, 626 OH + D OH O D D D OH Evoluzione di una idrossilasi degli acidi grassi (P450) in una monoossigenasi del propano . (a) Total turnover numbers for propane hydroxylation (moles propanol per mole P450). (b) Km values and (c) catalytic rate constants ( k cat ) for propane oxidation. (d) ... (e) residual activity on palmitate and laureate (f) thermal stability (g) … Rudi Fasan , Yergalem T. Meharenna , Christopher D. Snow , Thomas L. Poulos , Frances H. Arnold Journal of Molecular Biology, Volume 383, Issue 5, 2008, 1069 - 1080 Fig. 2 Evolution of a P450 propane monooxygenase from a long-chain fatty acid hydroxylase. (a) Substrate specificity profiles of P450 PMO and its evolutionary intermediates on the C 2 –C 10 alkane series. Fig. 5 Structure of variant 139-3. (a) Superposition of NPG-bound structures of P450 BM3 (orange, PDB code <ce:inter-ref href="genbank:1JPZ" type="simple"> 1JPZ</ce:inter-ref> <ce:cross-ref refid="bib41"> 41 </ce:cross-ref> ) and evolutionary intermediat... Fig. 6 Substrate access pathway. (a) Volumetric restriction and compartmentalization of the substrate access pathway during the transition of P450 BM3 to P450 PMO (left). The A328F mutation in 35E11 interrupts the contiguity of the path by defining an in... Toluene oMonooxygenase or “TOM” • Polymer of 1500 units (amino acids) • At each position there are 19 possibilities (20 building blocks, 1 already used) • 191500 possibilities (101918) Error-Prone DNA Shuffling (Sexual PCR) PCR w/o primers W/T or error-prone PCR Monooxygenase 5’ 3’ Anneal 3’ 5’ DNase I (Random digestion) DNA synthesis (Pfu polymerase) 1st cycle 5’ Denature 3’ 2nd cycle 5’ 10-50 bp size fragments 3’ 5’ 5’ 3’ 3rd cycle 3’ 5’ CentriSep column 3’ 5’ Avr II 3’ 30 cycles Ppu MI 3’ 5’ PCR w/ primers 5’ 3’ 3’ 5’ 3’ 5’ Fragments cloned into suitable vector 5’ Taq/pfu polymerase 5’ 3’ 5’ 3’ 5’ 3’ Avr II Ppu MI 3’ 5’ 3’ 5’ 3’ 3’ 5’ 5’ Resulting genes include different mutations and combinations of mutations Spectrophotometric Assay Methods 1. Naphthol Formation OH TOM OH Tetrazotized o-Dianisidine R N PURPLE DIAZO DYES N 96-Well Plate Screening for Positive Variants DNA Shuffling Created TOM Variants Only Colored Colonies Were Picked (Visual Screening) 96-well Plate Screening Steps: Positive variants analyzed further 1. Growth of variants in 96well plates 2. Cells were washed and contacted with gas phase substrate (e.g. TCE vapor) Spectrophotometric Detection 3. Supernatant was collected via filtration plates and reagents were added for color development. Controlling the Regiospecific Ring-Hydroxylation of Toluene CH3 OH Wild-type TpMO: 90% p-cresol o-cresol (80%) 10% m-cresol G 07 1 A CH3 CH3 I100S/G103S m-cresol (75%) Toluene OH A1 07 T CH3 p-cresol (98%) A. Fishman, Y. Tao, L. Rui, and T. K. Wood, J. Biol. Chem. 280:506-514, 2005. OH Active Site Modeling: Product Docking FeA FeA FeB FeB Wild type TpMO TbuA1 A107G Swiss-Pdb Viewer ToMO Catalytic Residues E214 I100 A101 F205 Q141 T201 E103 Fe M180 Fe A107 A110 Novel Compounds from Toluene Monooxygenases Product Enzyme 2-naphthol T4MO I100A nitrohydroquinone ToMO E214G Structure Application 50,000 ton/yr, no domestic source OH dephostatin (Alzhiemer’s & Parkinson’s) NO2 OH OH 3,6-dihydroxyfluorene & 2,6-dihydroxynaphthalene T4MO 1-, 3-, & 4hydroxyfluourene TOM & TOM V106A 4-methylresorcinol* ToMO F205G ? HO OH OH ? aromatic polyesters $200,000/kg OH CH3 *Previously seen in a consortium but no enzymes identified OH O H N O2 N H 2H2O O indigo 2H2O 3/2O2 NAD+ NADH O 2 DH NA oxidation N H 3-hydroxyindole (indoxyl) H O NA2 D+ ox ida tio nb yT OM dimerization C3 Color Chemistry OH O O dimerization O O2 tryptophan N H 2-hydroxyindole NH O indirubin H N O OH HN N H 2H2O 3/2O2 2H2O NADH NAD+ try pto ph an ase oxidation M TO CH2 by OH O + H2 D NA n io at id ox CH C O2 H D -2 C O H2 N N H isatin NA N H indole dimerization O O2 2H2O isoindigo N H Colored Compounds Extracted from TOM Variants After Saturation Mutagenesis at Position 113 Standard: H N O H N O O O O N H O Indigo (Blue) N H N H NH O Isatin (Yellow) Indirubin (Pink) O N H Isoindigo(Brown) Rui, Reardon, and Wood, Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 66: 422-429, 2005. Conclusioni •Il DNA shuffling può essere usato per individuare quali amino acidi sono coinvolti nella catalisi •La mutagenesi della TpMO alle posizioni I100, G103, e A107 permette di modificare la regiochimica dell’ossidazione di toluene e naftalene, ottenendo anche il meta-cresolo, che gli enzimi naturali non producono •La mutazione della A113 nella toluene monossigenasi modifica la regiospecificità dell’ossidazione dell’indolo, generando diversi colori •Uso come catalizzatori per chimica fine