Picott Katherine J, Bowers Connor M, Edwards Elizabeth A
Department of Chemical Engineering and Applied Chemistry, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Cell and Systems Biology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2025 Mar 19;91(3):e0150124. doi: 10.1128/aem.01501-24. Epub 2025 Feb 13.
Reductive dehalogenases (RDases) are essential in the anaerobic degradation of various organohalide contaminants. This family of enzymes has broad sequence diversity, but high structural conservation. There have been few studies assessing how RDase amino acid sequences affect their substrate selectivity. Here, we focus on two chloroalkane RDases, CfrA and DcrA, which have 95% protein sequence identity but have diverged to have opposite substrate preferences. CfrA dechlorinates chloroform (CF) and 1,1,1-trichloroethane (TCA) but not 1,1-dichloroethane (DCA), while DcrA will dechlorinate 1,1-DCA but not CF or 1,1,1-TCA. We mutated several residues in the active site of CfrA to investigate a change in substrate preference and to identify which wild-type residues contribute the most to substrate specialization. We determined that no individual residue solely dictates substrate discrimination, but both Y80W and F125W mutations were needed to force CfrA to prefer 1,1-DCA as a substrate. When using 1,1,2-TCA as a substrate, CfrA predominately performs hydrogenolysis to 1,2-DCA, yet the introduction of the double mutant changed this preference to dihaloelimination (forming vinyl chloride). We use predictive protein models and substrate docking to predict what interactions are made between the enzyme and substrate to aid in selection. The residues of significance identified in this study are consistent with those identified from chloroethene RDases, suggesting residue locations with a particularly high impact on activity.IMPORTANCEReductive dehalogenases (RDases) play an integral role in the removal of chlorinated solvents from the environment. These enzymes have specificity toward different chlorinated compounds, and it is known that natural variants of highly similar RDases can have distinct activities. How specific differences in protein sequence influence activity is largely unknown. In this study, we demonstrate that mutating a few residues within the active site of CfrA-a chloroform and trichloroethane-specific dehalogenase-changes its substrate preference to dichloroethane. We determine that only two mutations are needed to disrupt the native activity, underscoring the nuances in substrate-structure relationships in RDases. Though we are still far from predicting function from the sequence, this knowledge can give some insight into engineering RDases for new target contaminants.
还原脱卤酶(RDases)在各种有机卤化物污染物的厌氧降解过程中至关重要。这类酶具有广泛的序列多样性,但结构高度保守。很少有研究评估RDase氨基酸序列如何影响其底物选择性。在此,我们聚焦于两种氯代烷烃还原脱卤酶CfrA和DcrA,它们的蛋白质序列一致性为95%,但底物偏好却有所不同。CfrA能使氯仿(CF)和1,1,1 - 三氯乙烷(TCA)脱氯,但不能使1,1 - 二氯乙烷(DCA)脱氯,而DcrA能使1,1 - DCA脱氯,但不能使CF或1,1,1 - TCA脱氯。我们对CfrA活性位点的几个残基进行了突变,以研究底物偏好的变化,并确定哪些野生型残基对底物特异性贡献最大。我们发现没有单个残基能单独决定底物识别,但Y80W和F125W这两个突变都需要才能使CfrA偏好以1,1 - DCA作为底物。当使用1,1,2 - TCA作为底物时,CfrA主要进行氢解反应生成1,2 - DCA,但引入双突变体后,这种偏好转变为二卤消除反应(生成氯乙烯)。我们使用预测性蛋白质模型和底物对接来预测酶与底物之间形成了哪些相互作用,以辅助选择。本研究中确定的重要残基与从氯乙烯还原脱卤酶中鉴定出的残基一致,表明这些残基位置对活性有特别高的影响。
重要性
还原脱卤酶(RDases)在从环境中去除氯化溶剂方面发挥着不可或缺的作用。这些酶对不同的氯化化合物具有特异性,而且已知高度相似的RDases的天然变体可以具有不同的活性。蛋白质序列中的特定差异如何影响活性在很大程度上尚不清楚。在本研究中,我们证明了对CfrA(一种氯仿和三氯乙烷特异性脱卤酶)活性位点内的几个残基进行突变会将其底物偏好改变为二氯乙烷。我们确定只需两个突变就能破坏其天然活性,这突出了RDases中底物 - 结构关系的细微差别。虽然我们距离从序列预测功能仍有很大差距,但这些知识可以为改造RDases以针对新的目标污染物提供一些见解。