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Arginine-to-lysine substitutions influence recombinant horseradish peroxidase stability and immobilisation effectiveness

BACKGROUND: Horseradish Peroxidase (HRP) plays important roles in many biotechnological fields, including diagnostics, biosensors and biocatalysis. Often, it is used in immobilised form. With conventional immobilisation techniques, the enzyme adheres in random orientation: the active site may face t...

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Autores principales: Ryan, Barry J, Ó'Fágáin, Ciarán
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2234406/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18053254
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6750-7-86
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author Ryan, Barry J
Ó'Fágáin, Ciarán
author_facet Ryan, Barry J
Ó'Fágáin, Ciarán
author_sort Ryan, Barry J
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Horseradish Peroxidase (HRP) plays important roles in many biotechnological fields, including diagnostics, biosensors and biocatalysis. Often, it is used in immobilised form. With conventional immobilisation techniques, the enzyme adheres in random orientation: the active site may face the solid phase rather than bulk medium, impeding substrate access and leading to sub-optimal catalytic performance. The ability to immobilise HRP in a directional manner, such that the active site would always face outwards from the insoluble matrix, would maximise the immobilised enzyme's catalytic potential and could increase HRP's range of actual and potential applications. RESULTS: We have replaced arginine residues on the face of glycan-free recombinant HRP opposite to the active site by lysines. Our strategy differs from previous reports of specific HRP immobilisation via an engineered affinity tag or single reactive residue. These conservative Arg-to-Lys substitutions provide a means of multipoint covalent immobilisation such that the active site will always face away from the immobilisation matrix. One triple and one pentuple mutant were generated by substitution of solvent-exposed arginines on the "back" of the polypeptide (R118, R159 and R283) and of residues known to influence stability (K232 and K241). Orientated HRP immobilisation was demonstrated using a modified polyethersulfone (PES) membrane; the protein was forced to orientate its active site away from the membrane and towards the bulk solution phase. Mutant properties and bioinformatic analysis suggested the reversion of K283R to improve stability, thus generating two additional mutants (K118/R159K and R118K/K232N/K241F/R283K). While most mutants were less stable in free solution than wild type rHRP, the quadruple revertant regained some stability over its mutant counterparts. A greater degree of immobilisation on CNBr-activated Sepharose™ was noted with increased lysine content; however, only marginal gains in solvent stability resulted from immobilisation on this latter matrix. CONCLUSION: Directional, orientated, immobilisation of rHRP mutants onto an activated, modified polyethersulfone membrane has been achieved with excellent retention of catalytic activity; however, re-engineering of acceptable stability characteristics into the "immobilisation mutants" will determine their applicability in diagnosis and biosensor development.
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spelling pubmed-22344062008-02-08 Arginine-to-lysine substitutions influence recombinant horseradish peroxidase stability and immobilisation effectiveness Ryan, Barry J Ó'Fágáin, Ciarán BMC Biotechnol Research Article BACKGROUND: Horseradish Peroxidase (HRP) plays important roles in many biotechnological fields, including diagnostics, biosensors and biocatalysis. Often, it is used in immobilised form. With conventional immobilisation techniques, the enzyme adheres in random orientation: the active site may face the solid phase rather than bulk medium, impeding substrate access and leading to sub-optimal catalytic performance. The ability to immobilise HRP in a directional manner, such that the active site would always face outwards from the insoluble matrix, would maximise the immobilised enzyme's catalytic potential and could increase HRP's range of actual and potential applications. RESULTS: We have replaced arginine residues on the face of glycan-free recombinant HRP opposite to the active site by lysines. Our strategy differs from previous reports of specific HRP immobilisation via an engineered affinity tag or single reactive residue. These conservative Arg-to-Lys substitutions provide a means of multipoint covalent immobilisation such that the active site will always face away from the immobilisation matrix. One triple and one pentuple mutant were generated by substitution of solvent-exposed arginines on the "back" of the polypeptide (R118, R159 and R283) and of residues known to influence stability (K232 and K241). Orientated HRP immobilisation was demonstrated using a modified polyethersulfone (PES) membrane; the protein was forced to orientate its active site away from the membrane and towards the bulk solution phase. Mutant properties and bioinformatic analysis suggested the reversion of K283R to improve stability, thus generating two additional mutants (K118/R159K and R118K/K232N/K241F/R283K). While most mutants were less stable in free solution than wild type rHRP, the quadruple revertant regained some stability over its mutant counterparts. A greater degree of immobilisation on CNBr-activated Sepharose™ was noted with increased lysine content; however, only marginal gains in solvent stability resulted from immobilisation on this latter matrix. CONCLUSION: Directional, orientated, immobilisation of rHRP mutants onto an activated, modified polyethersulfone membrane has been achieved with excellent retention of catalytic activity; however, re-engineering of acceptable stability characteristics into the "immobilisation mutants" will determine their applicability in diagnosis and biosensor development. BioMed Central 2007-12-05 /pmc/articles/PMC2234406/ /pubmed/18053254 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6750-7-86 Text en Copyright © 2007 Ryan and Ó'Fágáin; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ryan, Barry J
Ó'Fágáin, Ciarán
Arginine-to-lysine substitutions influence recombinant horseradish peroxidase stability and immobilisation effectiveness
title Arginine-to-lysine substitutions influence recombinant horseradish peroxidase stability and immobilisation effectiveness
title_full Arginine-to-lysine substitutions influence recombinant horseradish peroxidase stability and immobilisation effectiveness
title_fullStr Arginine-to-lysine substitutions influence recombinant horseradish peroxidase stability and immobilisation effectiveness
title_full_unstemmed Arginine-to-lysine substitutions influence recombinant horseradish peroxidase stability and immobilisation effectiveness
title_short Arginine-to-lysine substitutions influence recombinant horseradish peroxidase stability and immobilisation effectiveness
title_sort arginine-to-lysine substitutions influence recombinant horseradish peroxidase stability and immobilisation effectiveness
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2234406/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18053254
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6750-7-86
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