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Improving Escherichia coli Alkaline Phosphatase Efficacy by Additional Mutations inside and outside the Catalytic Pocket

Authors :
Evelyne Lajeunesse
Jean-Claude Boulain
Fabrice Lemaître
André Ménez
Frédéric Ducancel
Arween Pearson
Bruno H. Muller
Claire Lamoure
Marie-Hélène Le Du
Laurence Cattolico
Source :
ChemBioChem. 2:517-523
Publication Year :
2001
Publisher :
Wiley, 2001.

Abstract

We describe a strategy that allowed us to confer on a bacterial (E. coli) alkaline phosphatase (AP) the high catalytic activity of the mammalian enzyme while maintaining its high thermostability. First, we identified mutations, at positions other than those occupied by essential catalytic residues, which inactivate the bacterial enzyme without destroying its overall conformation. We transferred concomitantly into the bacterial enzyme four residues of the mammalian enzyme, two being in the catalytic pocket and two being outside. Second, the gene encoding the inactive mutant was submitted to random mutagenesis. Enzyme activity was restored upon the single mutation D330N, at a position that is 12 A away from the center of the catalytic pocket. Third, this mutation was combined with other mutations previously reported to increase AP activity slightly in the presence of magnesium. As a result, at pH 10.0 the phosphatase activity of both mutants D330N/D153H and D330N/D153G was 17-fold higher than that of the wild-type AP. Strikingly, although the two individual mutations D153H and D153G destabilize the enzyme, the double mutant D330N/D153G remained highly stable (T(m)=87 degrees C). Moreover, when combining the phosphatase and transferase activities, the catalytic activity of the mutant D330N/D153G increased 40-fold (k(cat)=3200 s-1) relative to that of the wild-type enzyme (k(cat)=80 s-1). Due to the simultaneous increase in K(m), the resulting k(cat)/K(m) value was only increased by a factor of two. Therefore, a single mutation occurring outside a catalytic pocket can dramatically control not only the activity of an enzyme, but also its thermostability. Preliminary crystallographic data of a covalent D330N/D153G enzyme-phosphate complex show that the phosphate group has significantly moved away from the catalytic pocket, relative to its position in the structure of another mutant previously reported.

Details

ISSN :
14394227
Volume :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ChemBioChem
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5e2594f17881219a25f97aa17d1a47d3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/1439-7633(20010803)2:7/8<517::aid-cbic517>3.0.co;2-h