Muller B H, Lamoure C, Le Du M H, Cattolico L, Lajeunesse E, Lemaître F, Pearson A, Ducancel F, Ménez A, Boulain J C
Département d'Ingénierie et d'Etudes des Protéines (DIEP), CEA Saclay, Bât. 152, 91191 Gif-sur-Yvette Cedex, France.
Chembiochem. 2001 Aug 3;2(7-8):517-23. doi: 10.1002/1439-7633(20010803)2:7/8<517::AID-CBIC517>3.0.CO;2-H.
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.
我们描述了一种策略,该策略使我们能够赋予细菌(大肠杆菌)碱性磷酸酶(AP)以哺乳动物酶的高催化活性,同时保持其高热稳定性。首先,我们在除必需催化残基占据的位置以外的其他位置鉴定出突变,这些突变使细菌酶失活而不破坏其整体构象。我们同时将哺乳动物酶的四个残基转移到细菌酶中,两个在催化口袋内,两个在催化口袋外。其次,将编码无活性突变体的基因进行随机诱变。在距离催化口袋中心12埃的位置发生单突变D330N后,酶活性得以恢复。第三,将此突变与先前报道的在镁存在下能略微增加AP活性的其他突变相结合。结果,在pH 10.0时,突变体D330N/D153H和D330N/D153G的磷酸酶活性比野生型AP高17倍。引人注目的是,尽管两个单独的突变D153H和D153G会使酶不稳定,但双突变体D330N/D153G仍保持高度稳定(熔点 = 87摄氏度)。此外,当将磷酸酶和转移酶活性结合时,突变体D330N/D153G的催化活性相对于野生型酶(催化常数 = 80 s-1)增加了40倍(催化常数 = 3200 s-1)。由于米氏常数同时增加,所得的催化常数/米氏常数的值仅增加了两倍。因此,发生在催化口袋外的单个突变不仅可以显著控制酶的活性,还可以控制其热稳定性。共价D330N/D153G酶 - 磷酸盐复合物的初步晶体学数据表明,相对于先前报道的另一个突变体结构中的位置,磷酸基团已明显从催化口袋移开。