- Catalytic Promiscuity of Ancestral Esterases and Hydroxynitrile Lyases
-
Catalytic promiscuity is a useful, but accidental, enzyme property, so finding catalytically promiscuous enzymes in nature is inefficient. Some ancestral enzymes were branch points in the evolution of new enzymes and are hypothesized to have been promiscuous. To test the hypothesis that ancestral enzymes were more promiscuous than their modern descendants, we reconstructed ancestral enzymes at four branch points in the divergence hydroxynitrile lyases (HNL's) from esterases ~100 million years ago. Both enzyme types are α/β-hydrolase-fold enzymes and have the same catalytic triad, but differ in reaction type and mechanism. Esterases catalyze hydrolysis via an acyl enzyme intermediate, while lyases catalyze an elimination without an intermediate. Screening ancestral enzymes and their modern descendants with six esterase substrates and six lyase substrates found higher catalytic promiscuity among the ancestral enzymes (P 0.01). Ancestral esterases were more likely to catalyze a lyase reaction than modern esterases, and the ancestral HNL was more likely to catalyze ester hydrolysis than modern HNL's. One ancestral enzyme (HNL1) along the path from esterase to hydroxynitrile lyases was especially promiscuous and catalyzed both hydrolysis and lyase reactions with many substrates. A broader screen tested mechanistically related reactions that were not selected for by evolution: decarboxylation, Michael addition, γ-lactam hydrolysis and 1,5-diketone hydrolysis. The ancestral enzymes were more promiscuous than their modern descendants (P = 0.04). Thus, these reconstructed ancestral enzymes are catalytically promiscuous, but HNL1 is especially so.
- Devamani, Titu,Rauwerdink, Alissa M.,Lunzer, Mark,Jones, Bryan J.,Mooney, Joanna L.,Tan, Maxilmilien Alaric O.,Zhang, Zhi-Jun,Xu, Jian-He,Dean, Antony M.,Kazlauskas, Romas J.
-
supporting information
p. 1046 - 1056
(2016/02/05)
-
- Catalytic transformation of HODAs using an efficient meta-cleavage product hydrolase-spore surface display system
-
The accumulation of 2-hydroxy-6-oxohexa-2,4-dienoic acids (HODAs) in the process of aromatics transformation will hinder the mineralization rate. In this study, a novel type of biocatalyst, meta-cleavage product (MCP) hydrolase (MfphA and BphD) displayed on the surface of Bacillus subtilis 168 spores, was developed for the transformation of HODAs. The successful display of CotG-MfphA and CotG-BphD fusion protein on the surface of spore were confirmed by western blot analysis and activity measurement. The optimal transformation conditions by spore surface-displayed MfphA and BphD were found to be 70 C and pH 7. The thermal and pH stability analysis exhibited that spore surface-displayed MfphA and BphD were stable and retained more than 80% of relative activities even at 80 C and pH 10. Meanwhile, recycling experiments showed that the conversion percentage of HODA by surface-displayed MfphA and BphD were not significantly decreased throughout the reutilization process, which still retained 45% and 70% at the tenth cycle, respectively. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report concerning the B. subtilis 168 spore surface-displayed MCP hydrolases. The high activities and good recycle performance suggested that this novel biocatalyst system could serve as a suitable alternative for HODAs transformation.
- Qu, Yuanyuan,Wang, Jingwei,Zhang, Zhaojing,Shi, Shengnan,Li, Duanxing,Shen, Wenli,Shen,Zhou, Jiti
-
p. 204 - 210
(2014/04/03)
-
- The catalytic serine of meta-cleavage product hydrolases is activated differently for C-O bond cleavage than for C-C bond cleavage
-
meta-Cleavage product (MCP) hydrolases catalyze C-C bond fission in the aerobic catabolism of aromatic compounds by bacteria. These enzymes utilize a Ser-His-Asp triad to catalyze hydrolysis via an acyl-enzyme intermediate. BphD, which catalyzes the hydrolysis of 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoic acid (HOPDA) in biphenyl degradation, catalyzed the hydrolysis of an ester analogue, p-nitrophenyl benzoate (pNPB), with a kcat value (6.3 ± 0.5 s-1) similar to that of HOPDA (6.5 ± 0.5 s-1). Consistent with the breakdown of a shared intermediate, product analyses revealed that BphD catalyzed the methanolysis of both HOPDA and pNPB, partitioning the products to benzoic acid and methyl benzoate in similar ratios. Turnover of HOPDA was accelerated up to 4-fold in the presence of short, primary alcohols (methanol > ethanol > n-propanol), suggesting that deacylation is rate-limiting during catalysis. In the steady-state hydrolysis of HOPDA, kcat/Km values were independent of methanol concentration, while both kcat and Km values increased with methanol concentration. This result was consistent with a simple model of nucleophilic catalysis. Although the enzyme could not be saturated with pNPB at methanol concentrations of >250 mM, kobs values from the steady-state turnover of pNPB at low methanol concentrations were also consistent with a nucleophilic mechanism of catalysis. Finally, transient-state kinetic analysis of pNPB hydrolysis by BphD variants established that substitution of the catalytic His reduced the rate of acylation by more than 3 orders of magnitude. This suggests that for pNPB hydrolysis, the serine nucleophile is activated by the His-Asp dyad. In contrast, rapid acylation of the H265Q variant during C-C bond cleavage suggests that the serinate forms via a substrate-assisted mechanism. Overall, the data indicate that ester hydrolysis proceeds via the same acyl-enzyme intermediate as that of the physiological substrate but that the serine nucleophile is activated via a different mechanism.
- Ruzzini, Antonio C.,Horsman, Geoff P.,Eltis, Lindsay D.
-
experimental part
p. 5831 - 5840
(2012/09/22)
-
- Identification of an acyl-enzyme intermediate in a meta-cleavage product hydrolase reveals the versatility of the catalytic triad
-
Meta-cleavage product (MCP) hydrolases are members of the α/β-hydrolase superfamily that utilize a Ser-His-Asp triad to catalyze the hydrolysis of a C-C bond. BphD, the MCP hydrolase from the biphenyl degradation pathway, hydrolyzes 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoic acid (HOPDA) to 2-hydroxypenta-2,4-dienoic acid (HPD) and benzoate. A 1.6 A resolution crystal structure of BphD H265Q incubated with HOPDA revealed that the enzyme's catalytic serine was benzoylated. The acyl-enzyme is stabilized by hydrogen bonding from the amide backbone of 'oxyanion hole' residues, consistent with formation of a tetrahedral oxyanion during nucleophilic attack by Ser112. Chemical quench and mass spectrometry studies substantiated the formation and decay of a Ser112-benzoyl species in wild-type BphD on a time scale consistent with turnover and incorporation of a single equivalent of 18O into the benzoate produced during hydrolysis in H218O. Rapid-scanning kinetic studies indicated that the catalytic histidine contributes to the rate of acylation by only an order of magnitude, but affects the rate of deacylation by over 5 orders of magnitude. The orange-colored catalytic intermediate, ESred, previously detected in the wild-type enzyme and proposed herein to be a carbanion, was not observed during hydrolysis by H265Q. In the newly proposed mechanism, the carbanion abstracts a proton from Ser112, thereby completing tautomerization and generating a serinate for nucleophilic attack on the C6-carbonyl. Finally, quantification of an observed pre-steady-state kinetic burst suggests that BphD is a half-site reactive enzyme. While the updated catalytic mechanism shares features with the serine proteases, MCP hydrolase-specific chemistry highlights the versatility of the Ser-His-Asp triad.
- Ruzzini, Antonio C.,Ghosh, Subhangi,Horsman, Geoff P.,Foster, Leonard J.,Bolin, Jeffrey T.,Eltis, Lindsay D.
-
supporting information; experimental part
p. 4615 - 4624
(2012/04/23)
-