4.5 Article

Engineering of Candida antarctica lipase B for hydrolysis of bulky carboxylic acid esters

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 150, Issue 4, Pages 474-480

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbiotec.2010.09.951

Keywords

Isononanoic acid; Rational design; Mutant library; Protein engineering; Virtual screening; T138S CALB

Funding

  1. Fachagentur Nachwachsende Rohstoffe e. V. [FKZ 22003005]

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Candida antarctica lipase B (CALB) is a widely used biocatalyst with high activity and specificity for a wide range of primary and secondary alcohols. However, the range of converted carboxylic acids is more narrow and mainly limited to unbranched fatty acids. To further broaden the biotechnological applications of CALB it is of interest to expand the range of converted carboxylic acid and extend it to carboxylic acids that are branched or substituted in close proximity of the carboxyl group. An in silica library of 2400 CALB variants was built and screened in silico by substrate-imprinted docking, a four step docking procedure. First, reaction intermediates of putative substrates are covalently docked into enzyme active sites. Second, the geometry of the resulting enzyme-substrate complex is optimized. Third, the substrate is removed from the complex and then docked again into the optimized structure. Fourth, the resulting substrate poses are rated by geometric filter criteria as productive or non-productive poses. Eleven enzyme variants resulting from the in silica screening were expressed in Escherichia coli BL21 and measured in the hydrolysis of two branched fatty acid esters, isononanoic acid ethyl ester and 2-ethyl hexanoic acid ethyl esters. Five variants showed an initial increase in activity. The variant with the highest wet mass activity (T138S) was purified and further characterized. It showed a 5-fold increase in hydrolysis of isononanoic acid ethyl ester, but not toward sterically more demanding 2-ethyl hexanoic acid ethyl ester. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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