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35434-73-2

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35434-73-2 Usage

Check Digit Verification of cas no

The CAS Registry Mumber 35434-73-2 includes 8 digits separated into 3 groups by hyphens. The first part of the number,starting from the left, has 5 digits, 3,5,4,3 and 4 respectively; the second part has 2 digits, 7 and 3 respectively.
Calculate Digit Verification of CAS Registry Number 35434-73:
(7*3)+(6*5)+(5*4)+(4*3)+(3*4)+(2*7)+(1*3)=112
112 % 10 = 2
So 35434-73-2 is a valid CAS Registry Number.

35434-73-2Upstream product

35434-73-2Downstream Products

35434-73-2Relevant academic research and scientific papers

Optimization of Enzyme Mechanism along the Evolutionary Trajectory of a Computationally Designed (Retro-)Aldolase

Zeymer, Cathleen,Zschoche, Reinhard,Hilvert, Donald

, p. 12541 - 12549 (2017)

De novo biocatalysts have been successfully generated by computational design and subsequent experimental optimization. Here, we examined the evolutionary history of the computationally designed (retro-)aldolase RA95. The modest activity of the starting enzyme was previously improved 105-fold over many rounds of mutagenesis and screening to afford a proficient biocatalyst for enantioselective cleavage and synthesis of β-hydroxyketones. Using a set of representative RA95 variants, we probed individual steps in the multistep reaction pathway to determine which processes limit steady-state turnover and how mutations that accumulated along the evolutionary trajectory influenced the kinetic mechanism. We found that the overall rate-limiting step for aldol cleavage shifted from C-C bond scission (or an earlier step in the pathway) for the computational design to product release for the evolved enzymes. Specifically, interconversion of Schiff base and enamine intermediates, formed covalently between acetone and the catalytic lysine residue, was found to be the slowest step for the most active variants. A complex hydrogen bond network of four active site residues, which was installed in the late stages of laboratory evolution, apparently enhances lysine reactivity and facilitates efficient proton shuffling. This catalytic tetrad accounts for the tremendous rate acceleration observed for all steps of the mechanism, most notably Schiff base formation and hydrolysis. Comparison of our results with kinetic and structural studies on natural aldolases provides valuable feedback for computational enzyme design and laboratory evolution approaches alike.

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