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Crystal structures and kinetic studies of a laboratory evolved aldehyde reductase explain the dramatic shift of its new substrate specificity

The Fe(2+)-dependent E. coli enzyme FucO catalyzes the reversible interconversion of short-chain (S)-lactaldehyde and (S)-1,2-propane­diol, using NADH and NAD(+) as cofactors, respectively. Laboratory-directed evolution experiments have been carried out previously using phenyl­acetaldehyde as the su...

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Autores principales: Sridhar, Shruthi, Zavarise, Alberto, Kiema, Tiila-Riikka, Dalwani, Subhadra, Eriksson, Tor, Hajee, Yannick, Reddy Enugala, Thilak, Wierenga, Rik K., Widersten, Mikael
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Union of Crystallography 2023
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10324492/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37261425
http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S205225252300444X
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author Sridhar, Shruthi
Zavarise, Alberto
Kiema, Tiila-Riikka
Dalwani, Subhadra
Eriksson, Tor
Hajee, Yannick
Reddy Enugala, Thilak
Wierenga, Rik K.
Widersten, Mikael
author_facet Sridhar, Shruthi
Zavarise, Alberto
Kiema, Tiila-Riikka
Dalwani, Subhadra
Eriksson, Tor
Hajee, Yannick
Reddy Enugala, Thilak
Wierenga, Rik K.
Widersten, Mikael
author_sort Sridhar, Shruthi
collection PubMed
description The Fe(2+)-dependent E. coli enzyme FucO catalyzes the reversible interconversion of short-chain (S)-lactaldehyde and (S)-1,2-propane­diol, using NADH and NAD(+) as cofactors, respectively. Laboratory-directed evolution experiments have been carried out previously using phenyl­acetaldehyde as the substrate for screening catalytic activity with bulky substrates, which are very poorly reduced by wild-type FucO. These experiments identified the N151G/L259V double mutant (dubbed DA1472) as the most active variant with this substrate via a two-step evolutionary pathway, in which each step consisted of one point mutation. Here the crystal structures of DA1472 and its parent D93 (L259V) are reported, showing that these amino acid substitutions provide more space in the active site, though they do not cause changes in the main-chain conformation. The catalytic activity of DA1472 with the physiological substrate (S)-lactaldehyde and a series of substituted phenyl­acetaldehyde derivatives were systematically quantified and compared with that of wild-type as well as with the corresponding point-mutation variants (N151G and L259V). There is a 9000-fold increase in activity, when expressed as k (cat)/K (M) values, for DA1472 compared with wild-type FucO for the phenyl­acetaldehyde substrate. The crystal structure of DA1472 complexed with a non-reactive analog of this substrate (3,4-di­meth­oxy­phenyl­acetamide) suggests the mode of binding of the bulky group of the new substrate. These combined structure–function studies therefore explain the dramatic increase in catalytic activity of the DA1472 variant for bulky aldehyde substrates. The structure comparisons also suggest why the active site in which Fe(2+) is replaced by Zn(2+) is not able to support catalysis.
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spelling pubmed-103244922023-07-07 Crystal structures and kinetic studies of a laboratory evolved aldehyde reductase explain the dramatic shift of its new substrate specificity Sridhar, Shruthi Zavarise, Alberto Kiema, Tiila-Riikka Dalwani, Subhadra Eriksson, Tor Hajee, Yannick Reddy Enugala, Thilak Wierenga, Rik K. Widersten, Mikael IUCrJ Research Papers The Fe(2+)-dependent E. coli enzyme FucO catalyzes the reversible interconversion of short-chain (S)-lactaldehyde and (S)-1,2-propane­diol, using NADH and NAD(+) as cofactors, respectively. Laboratory-directed evolution experiments have been carried out previously using phenyl­acetaldehyde as the substrate for screening catalytic activity with bulky substrates, which are very poorly reduced by wild-type FucO. These experiments identified the N151G/L259V double mutant (dubbed DA1472) as the most active variant with this substrate via a two-step evolutionary pathway, in which each step consisted of one point mutation. Here the crystal structures of DA1472 and its parent D93 (L259V) are reported, showing that these amino acid substitutions provide more space in the active site, though they do not cause changes in the main-chain conformation. The catalytic activity of DA1472 with the physiological substrate (S)-lactaldehyde and a series of substituted phenyl­acetaldehyde derivatives were systematically quantified and compared with that of wild-type as well as with the corresponding point-mutation variants (N151G and L259V). There is a 9000-fold increase in activity, when expressed as k (cat)/K (M) values, for DA1472 compared with wild-type FucO for the phenyl­acetaldehyde substrate. The crystal structure of DA1472 complexed with a non-reactive analog of this substrate (3,4-di­meth­oxy­phenyl­acetamide) suggests the mode of binding of the bulky group of the new substrate. These combined structure–function studies therefore explain the dramatic increase in catalytic activity of the DA1472 variant for bulky aldehyde substrates. The structure comparisons also suggest why the active site in which Fe(2+) is replaced by Zn(2+) is not able to support catalysis. International Union of Crystallography 2023-06-02 /pmc/articles/PMC10324492/ /pubmed/37261425 http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S205225252300444X Text en © Shruthi Sridhar et al. 2023 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) Licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original authors and source are cited.
spellingShingle Research Papers
Sridhar, Shruthi
Zavarise, Alberto
Kiema, Tiila-Riikka
Dalwani, Subhadra
Eriksson, Tor
Hajee, Yannick
Reddy Enugala, Thilak
Wierenga, Rik K.
Widersten, Mikael
Crystal structures and kinetic studies of a laboratory evolved aldehyde reductase explain the dramatic shift of its new substrate specificity
title Crystal structures and kinetic studies of a laboratory evolved aldehyde reductase explain the dramatic shift of its new substrate specificity
title_full Crystal structures and kinetic studies of a laboratory evolved aldehyde reductase explain the dramatic shift of its new substrate specificity
title_fullStr Crystal structures and kinetic studies of a laboratory evolved aldehyde reductase explain the dramatic shift of its new substrate specificity
title_full_unstemmed Crystal structures and kinetic studies of a laboratory evolved aldehyde reductase explain the dramatic shift of its new substrate specificity
title_short Crystal structures and kinetic studies of a laboratory evolved aldehyde reductase explain the dramatic shift of its new substrate specificity
title_sort crystal structures and kinetic studies of a laboratory evolved aldehyde reductase explain the dramatic shift of its new substrate specificity
topic Research Papers
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10324492/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37261425
http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S205225252300444X
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