Mutations in adenine-binding pockets enhance catalytic properties of NAD(P)H-dependent enzymes

Protein Eng Des Sel. 2016 Jan;29(1):31-8. doi: 10.1093/protein/gzv057. Epub 2015 Oct 27.

Abstract

NAD(P)H-dependent enzymes are ubiquitous in metabolism and cellular processes and are also of great interest for pharmaceutical and industrial applications. Here, we present a structure-guided enzyme engineering strategy for improving catalytic properties of NAD(P)H-dependent enzymes toward native or native-like reactions using mutations to the enzyme's adenine-binding pocket, distal to the site of catalysis. Screening single-site saturation mutagenesis libraries identified mutations that increased catalytic efficiency up to 10-fold in 7 out of 10 enzymes. The enzymes improved in this study represent three different cofactor-binding folds (Rossmann, DHQS-like, and FAD/NAD binding) and utilize both NADH and NADPH. Structural and biochemical analyses show that the improved activities are accompanied by minimal changes in other properties (cooperativity, thermostability, pH optimum, uncoupling), and initial tests on two enzymes (ScADH6 and EcFucO) show improved functionality in Escherichia coli.

Keywords: directed evolution; enzyme optimality; nicotinamide cofactors; protein engineering; site-saturation mutagenesis.

Publication types

  • Research Support, American Recovery and Reinvestment Act
  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adenine / chemistry
  • Adenine / metabolism*
  • Binding Sites / genetics*
  • Escherichia coli / genetics
  • Mutagenesis, Site-Directed / methods*
  • NADH, NADPH Oxidoreductases / chemistry*
  • NADH, NADPH Oxidoreductases / genetics
  • NADH, NADPH Oxidoreductases / metabolism*
  • NADP / chemistry
  • NADP / metabolism*
  • Protein Binding / genetics

Substances

  • NADP
  • NADH, NADPH Oxidoreductases
  • Adenine