Shimegi Tomohito, Takusagawa Yuhsuke, Ohtsuki Takashi, Noda Satoko, Kurisu Genji, Kusunoki Masami, Ui Sadaharu
Graduate School of Medicine and Engineering, University of Yamanashi, Takeda, Kofu, Japan.
Protein Pept Lett. 2011 Aug;18(8):825-30. doi: 10.2174/092986611795713970.
The development of a stable L-BDH chimera was attempted by exchanging whole domains between two native structural analogs, L-BDH and meso-BDH, because the S-configuration specificity of L-BDH is valuable from the standpoint of its application but its activity is unstable, whereas meso-BDH is stable. The domain chimeras obtained indicated that the leaf-like structures constituting three domains were likely to be mainly associated with chiral recognition, and the fourth domain, the basic domain, is likely to be mainly associated with enzyme stability. A combination of the leaf domains of L-BDH and the basic domain of meso-BDH attained a sufficient level of practical use as an artificial L-BDH chimera, because the resulting enzyme had both stability and S-configuration specificity. However, the levels of stability and specificity were slightly lower than those of the respective enzymes from which they were derived.