4.7 Article

Evolutionary Optimization of Computationally Designed Enzymes: Kemp Eliminases of the KE07 Series

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 396, Issue 4, Pages 1025-1042

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2009.12.031

Keywords

directed evolution; computational protein design; enzymatic catalysis

Funding

  1. BioModularH2 EU Network
  2. Sasson and Marjorie Peress Philanthropic Fund
  3. Defense Advances Research Projects Agency
  4. Adams Fellowship (Israel Academy of Science)

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Understanding enzyme catalysis through the analysis of natural enzymes is a daunting challenge-their active sites are complex and combine numerous interactions and catalytic forces that are finely coordinated. Study of more rudimentary (wo)man-made enzymes provides a unique opportunity for better understanding of enzymatic catalysis. KE07, a computationally designed Kemp eliminase that employs a glutamate side chain as the catalytic base for the critical proton abstraction step and an apolar binding site to guide substrate binding, was optimized by seven rounds of random mutagenesis and selection, resulting in a >200-fold increase in catalytic efficiency. Here, we describe the directed evolution process in detail and the biophysical and crystallographic studies of the designed KE07 and its evolved variants. The optimization of KE07's activity to give a k(cat)/K-M value of similar to 2600 s(-1) M-1 and an similar to 10(6)-fold rate acceleration (k(cat)/k(uncat)) involved the incorporation of up to eight mutations. These mutations led to a marked decrease in the overall thermodynamic stability of the evolved KE07s and in the configurational stability of their active sites. We identified two primary contributions of the mutations to KE07's improved activity: (i) the introduction of new salt bridges to correct a mistake in the original design that placed a lysine for leaving-group protonation without consideration of its quenching interactions with the catalytic glutamate, and (ii) the tuning of the environment, the pK(a) of the catalytic base, and its interactions with the substrate through the evolution of a network of hydrogen bonds consisting of several charged residues surrounding the active site. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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