4.8 Article

Directed Evolution of a Surface-Displayed Artificial Allylic Deallylase Relying on a GFP Reporter Protein

Journal

ACS CATALYSIS
Volume 11, Issue 17, Pages 10705-10712

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acscatal.1c02405

Keywords

directed evolution; in vivo screening; surface display; deallylation; purified protein screening

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation [200020_182046]
  2. NCCR Molecular Systems Engineering
  3. ERC [694424]
  4. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [200020_182046] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)
  5. European Research Council (ERC) [694424] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Artificial metalloenzymes combine characteristics of both homogeneous catalysts and enzymes, allowing for new-to-nature reactions to be implemented in living organisms. Directed evolution of an artificial metalloenzyme based on Escherichia coli surface-displayed streptavidin led to the assembly of an artificial allylic deallylase, showing catalytic activity towards deprotection reactions. The in vivo screening results showed a significant increase in activity compared to in vitro screening, possibly due to differences in the oligomeric state of the enzyme.
Artificial metalloenzymes (ArMs) combine characteristics of both homogeneous catalysts and enzymes. Merging abiotic and biotic features allows for the implementation of new-to-nature reactions in living organisms. Here, we present the directed evolution of an artificial metalloenzyme based on Escherichia coli surfacedisplayed streptavidin (SavSD hereafter). Through the binding of a ruthenium-pianostool cofactor to SavSD, an artificial allylic deallylase (ADAse hereafter) is assembled, which displays catalytic activity toward the deprotection of alloc-protected 3-hydroxyaniline. The uncaged aminophenol acts as a gene switch and triggers the overexpression of a fluorescent green fluorescent protein (GFP) reporter protein. This straightforward readout of ADAse activity allowed the simultaneous saturation mutagenesis of two amino acid residues in Sav near the ruthenium cofactor, expediting the screening of 2762 individual clones. A 1.7-fold increase of in vivo activity was observed for SavSD S112T-K121G compared to the wild-type SavSD (wt-SavSD). Finally, the best performing Sav isoforms were purified and tested in vitro (SavPP hereafter). For SavPP S112M-K121A, a total turnover number of 372 was achieved, corresponding to a 5.9-fold increase vs wt-SavPP. To analyze the marked difference in activity observed between the surface-displayed and purified ArMs, the oligomeric state of SavSD was determined. For this purpose, crosslinking experiments of E. coli cells overexpressing SavSD were carried out, followed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDSPAGE) and Western blot. The data suggest that SavSD is most likely displayed as a monomer on the surface of E. coli. We hypothesize that the difference between the in vivo and in vitro screening results may reflect the difference in the oligomeric state of SavSD vs soluble SavPP (monomeric vs tetrameric). Accordingly, care should be applied when evolving oligomeric proteins using E. coli surface display.

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