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Engineering of Ancestors as a Tool to Elucidate Structure, Mechanism, and Specificity of Extant Terpene Cyclase

[Image: see text] Structural information is crucial for understanding catalytic mechanisms and to guide enzyme engineering efforts of biocatalysts, such as terpene cyclases. However, low sequence similarity can impede homology modeling, and inherent protein instability presents challenges for struct...

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Autores principales: Schriever, Karen, Saenz-Mendez, Patricia, Rudraraju, Reshma Srilakshmi, Hendrikse, Natalie M., Hudson, Elton P., Biundo, Antonino, Schnell, Robert, Syrén, Per-Olof
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2021
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8023661/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33496585
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.0c10214
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author Schriever, Karen
Saenz-Mendez, Patricia
Rudraraju, Reshma Srilakshmi
Hendrikse, Natalie M.
Hudson, Elton P.
Biundo, Antonino
Schnell, Robert
Syrén, Per-Olof
author_facet Schriever, Karen
Saenz-Mendez, Patricia
Rudraraju, Reshma Srilakshmi
Hendrikse, Natalie M.
Hudson, Elton P.
Biundo, Antonino
Schnell, Robert
Syrén, Per-Olof
author_sort Schriever, Karen
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Structural information is crucial for understanding catalytic mechanisms and to guide enzyme engineering efforts of biocatalysts, such as terpene cyclases. However, low sequence similarity can impede homology modeling, and inherent protein instability presents challenges for structural studies. We hypothesized that X-ray crystallography of engineered thermostable ancestral enzymes can enable access to reliable homology models of extant biocatalysts. We have applied this concept in concert with molecular modeling and enzymatic assays to understand the structure activity relationship of spiroviolene synthase, a class I terpene cyclase, aiming to engineer its specificity. Engineering a surface patch in the reconstructed ancestor afforded a template structure for generation of a high-confidence homology model of the extant enzyme. On the basis of structural considerations, we designed and crystallized ancestral variants with single residue exchanges that exhibited tailored substrate specificity and preserved thermostability. We show how the two single amino acid alterations identified in the ancestral scaffold can be transferred to the extant enzyme, conferring a specificity switch that impacts the extant enzyme’s specificity for formation of the diterpene spiroviolene over formation of sesquiterpenes hedycaryol and farnesol by up to 25-fold. This study emphasizes the value of ancestral sequence reconstruction combined with enzyme engineering as a versatile tool in chemical biology.
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spelling pubmed-80236612021-04-07 Engineering of Ancestors as a Tool to Elucidate Structure, Mechanism, and Specificity of Extant Terpene Cyclase Schriever, Karen Saenz-Mendez, Patricia Rudraraju, Reshma Srilakshmi Hendrikse, Natalie M. Hudson, Elton P. Biundo, Antonino Schnell, Robert Syrén, Per-Olof J Am Chem Soc [Image: see text] Structural information is crucial for understanding catalytic mechanisms and to guide enzyme engineering efforts of biocatalysts, such as terpene cyclases. However, low sequence similarity can impede homology modeling, and inherent protein instability presents challenges for structural studies. We hypothesized that X-ray crystallography of engineered thermostable ancestral enzymes can enable access to reliable homology models of extant biocatalysts. We have applied this concept in concert with molecular modeling and enzymatic assays to understand the structure activity relationship of spiroviolene synthase, a class I terpene cyclase, aiming to engineer its specificity. Engineering a surface patch in the reconstructed ancestor afforded a template structure for generation of a high-confidence homology model of the extant enzyme. On the basis of structural considerations, we designed and crystallized ancestral variants with single residue exchanges that exhibited tailored substrate specificity and preserved thermostability. We show how the two single amino acid alterations identified in the ancestral scaffold can be transferred to the extant enzyme, conferring a specificity switch that impacts the extant enzyme’s specificity for formation of the diterpene spiroviolene over formation of sesquiterpenes hedycaryol and farnesol by up to 25-fold. This study emphasizes the value of ancestral sequence reconstruction combined with enzyme engineering as a versatile tool in chemical biology. American Chemical Society 2021-01-26 2021-03-17 /pmc/articles/PMC8023661/ /pubmed/33496585 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.0c10214 Text en © 2021 American Chemical Society Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Schriever, Karen
Saenz-Mendez, Patricia
Rudraraju, Reshma Srilakshmi
Hendrikse, Natalie M.
Hudson, Elton P.
Biundo, Antonino
Schnell, Robert
Syrén, Per-Olof
Engineering of Ancestors as a Tool to Elucidate Structure, Mechanism, and Specificity of Extant Terpene Cyclase
title Engineering of Ancestors as a Tool to Elucidate Structure, Mechanism, and Specificity of Extant Terpene Cyclase
title_full Engineering of Ancestors as a Tool to Elucidate Structure, Mechanism, and Specificity of Extant Terpene Cyclase
title_fullStr Engineering of Ancestors as a Tool to Elucidate Structure, Mechanism, and Specificity of Extant Terpene Cyclase
title_full_unstemmed Engineering of Ancestors as a Tool to Elucidate Structure, Mechanism, and Specificity of Extant Terpene Cyclase
title_short Engineering of Ancestors as a Tool to Elucidate Structure, Mechanism, and Specificity of Extant Terpene Cyclase
title_sort engineering of ancestors as a tool to elucidate structure, mechanism, and specificity of extant terpene cyclase
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8023661/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33496585
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.0c10214
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