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Improvement of Biocatalysts for Industrial and Environmental Purposes by Saturation Mutagenesis

Journal

BIOMOLECULES
Volume 3, Issue 4, Pages 778-811

Publisher

MDPI AG
DOI: 10.3390/biom3040778

Keywords

biocatalysis; directed evolution; synthetic biology; protein engineering; industrial biotechnology; bioremediation; fine chemistry; saturation mutagenesis; screening methods

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Laboratory evolution techniques are becoming increasingly widespread among protein engineers for the development of novel and designed biocatalysts. The palette of different approaches ranges from complete randomized strategies to rational and structure-guided mutagenesis, with a wide variety of costs, impacts, drawbacks and relevance to biotechnology. A technique that convincingly compromises the extremes of fully randomized vs. rational mutagenesis, with a high benefit/cost ratio, is saturation mutagenesis. Here we will present and discuss this approach in its many facets, also tackling the issue of randomization, statistical evaluation of library completeness and throughput efficiency of screening methods. Successful recent applications covering different classes of enzymes will be presented referring to the literature and to research lines pursued in our group. The focus is put on saturation mutagenesis as a tool for designing novel biocatalysts specifically relevant to production of fine chemicals for improving bulk enzymes for industry and engineering technical enzymes involved in treatment of waste, detoxification and production of clean energy from renewable sources.

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