Distal mutations enhance efficiency of free and immobilized NOV1 dioxygenase for vanillin synthesis.
J Biotechnol
; 391: 92-98, 2024 Aug 10.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-38880386
ABSTRACT
Protein engineering is crucial to improve enzymes' efficiency and robustness for industrial biocatalysis. NOV1 is a bacterial dioxygenase that holds biotechnological potential by catalyzing the one-step oxidation of the lignin-derived isoeugenol into vanillin, a popular flavoring agent used in food, cleaning products, cosmetics and pharmaceuticals. This study aims to enhance NOV1 activity and operational stability through the identification of distal hotspots, located at more than 9â¯Å from the active site using Zymspot, a tool that predicts advantageous distant mutations, streamlining protein engineering. A total of 41 variants were constructed using site-directed mutagenesis and the six most active enzyme variants were then recombined. Two variants, with two and three mutations, showed nearly a 10-fold increase in activity and up to 40-fold higher operational stability than the wild-type. Furthermore, these variants show 90-100â¯% immobilization efficiency in metal affinity resins, compared to approximately 60â¯% for the wild-type. In bioconversions where 50â¯mM of isoeugenol was added stepwise over 24-h cycles, the 1D2 variant produced approximately 144â¯mM of vanillin after six reaction cycles, corresponding to around 22â¯mg, indicating a 35â¯% molar conversion yield. This output was around 2.5 times higher than that obtained using the wild-type. Our findings highlight the efficacy of distal protein engineering in enhancing enzyme functions like activity, stability, and metal binding selectivity, thereby fulfilling the criteria for industrial biocatalysts. This study provides a novel approach to enzyme optimization that could have significant implications for various biotechnological applications.
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Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Assunto principal:
Benzaldeídos
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Mutagênese Sítio-Dirigida
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Enzimas Imobilizadas
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Mutação
Idioma:
En
Ano de publicação:
2024
Tipo de documento:
Article