Back to Search Start Over

Biochemical analysis and kinetic modeling of the thermal inactivation of MBP-fused heparinase I: Implications for a comprehensive thermostabilization strategy

Authors :
Satoshi Nakamura
Fumio Arisaka
Hongxin Zhao
Rie Yatsunami
Yu Chen
Xin-Hui Xing
Yang Chen
Fengchun Ye
Shuo Chen
Source :
Biotechnology and Bioengineering. 108(8):1841-1851
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Enzymatic degradation of heparin by heparin lyases has not only largely facilitated heparin structural analysis and contamination detection, but also showed great potential to be a green and cost-effective way to produce low molecular weight heparin (LMWH). However, the commercial use of heparinase I (HepI), one of the most studied heparin lyases, has been largely hampered by its low productivity and extremely poor thermostability. Here we report the thermal inactivation mechanism and strategic thermal stabilization of maltose-binding protein (MBP)-HepI, a fusion HepI produced in E. coli with high yield, solubility and activity. Biochemical studies demonstrated that the thermal inactivation of MBP-HepI involves an unfolding step that is temperature-dependently reversible, followed by an irreversible dimerization step induced by intermolecular disulfide bonds. A good consistency between the kinetic modeling and experimental data of the inactivation was obtained within a wide range of temperature and enzyme concentration, confirming the adequacy of the proposed inactivation model. Based on the inactivation mechanism, a comprehensive strategy was proposed for the thermal stabilization of MBP-HepI, in which Ca(2+) and Tween 80 were used to inhibit unfolding while site mutation at Cys297 and DTT were employed to suppress dimerization. The engineered enzyme exhibits remarkably improved storage and operational thermostability, for example, 16-fold increase in half-life at its optimum temperature of 30 °C and 8-fold increase in remaining activity of 95% after 1-week storage at 4 °C, and therefore shows great potential as a commercial biocatalyst for heparin degradation in the pharmaceutical industry.

Details

Language :
English
Volume :
108
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biotechnology and Bioengineering
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f7eb7c76852a3dbb6388e1cf3d4b7433