Efficacy in laboratory evolution of enzymes is currently a pressing issue, making comparative studies of different methods and strategies mandatory. Recent reports indicate that iterative saturation mutagenesis (ISM) provides a means to accelerate directed evolution of stereoselectivity and thermostability, but statistically meaningful comparisons with other methods have not been documented to date. In the present study, the efficacy of ISM has been rigorously tested by applying it to the previously most systematically studied enzyme in directed evolution, the lipase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa as a catalyst in the stereoselective hydrolytic kinetic resolution of a chiral ester. Upon screening only 10,000 transformants, unprecedented enantioselectivity was achieved (E = 594). ISM proves to be considerably more efficient than all previous systematic efforts utilizing error-prone polymerase chain reaction at different mutation rates, saturation mutagenesis at hot spots, and/or DNA shuffling, pronounced positive epistatic effects being the underlying reason.
Saturation mutagenesis constitutes a powerful method in the directed evolution of enzymes. Traditional protocols of whole plasmid amplification such as Stratagene's QuikChange™ sometimes fail when the templates are difficult to amplify. In order to overcome such restrictions, we have devised a simple two-primer, two-stage polymerase chain reaction (PCR) method which constitutes an improvement over existing protocols. In the first stage of the PCR, both the mutagenic primer and the antiprimer that are not complementary anneal to the template. In the second stage, the amplified sequence is used as a megaprimer. Sites composed of one or more residues can be randomized in a single PCR reaction, irrespective of their location in the gene sequence.The method has been applied to several enzymes successfully, including P450-BM3 from Bacillus megaterium, the lipases from Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Candida antarctica and the epoxide hydrolase from Aspergillus niger. Here, we show that megaprimer size as well as the direction and design of the antiprimer are determining factors in the amplification of the plasmid. Comparison of the results with the performances of previous protocols reveals the efficiency of the improved method.
Forty yeast strains were screened for nitrile-hydrolysing activity. Among them Kluyveromyces thermotolerans MGBY 37 exhibited highest nitrile-hydrolysing activity (0.030 lmol/h/mg dry cell weight). This yeast contained a two-enzyme system i.e. nitrile hydratase (NHase, EC 4.2.1.84) and amidase (EC 3.5.1.4) for the hydrolysis of nitriles/amides to corresponding acids and ammonia. However, these enzymes had more affinity for N-heterocyclic aromatic and aromatic nitriles/amides rather than unsaturated and saturated aliphatic nitriles/amides. The NHaseamidase activity was constitutively produced by K. thermotolerence MGBY 37. Addition of acetonitrile in the medium enhanced the production of this activity while other nitriles and amides lowered the production of NHaseamidase activity. This organism thus exhibited two types of amidase i.e. a constitutive amidase having affinity for Nheterocyclic aromatic, unsaturated and saturated aliphatic amides and another inducible amidase with affinity for aromatic amides. Formamide proved to be the best inducer of the latter amidase activity. This is the first report on nitrile-and amide-hydrolysing activity in Kluyveromyces.
A propionitrile-induced nitrile hydratase (NHase), a promising biocatalyst for synthesis of organic amides has been purifi ed from cell-free extract of Rhodococcus rhodochrous PA-34. About 11-fold purifi cation of NHase was achieved with 52% yield. The SDS-PAGE of the purifi ed enzyme revealed that it consisted of two subunits of 25.04 kD and 30.6 kD. However, the molecular weight of holoenzyme was speculated to be 86 kD by native-PAGE. This NHase exhibited maximum activity at pH 8.0 and temperature 40°C. Half-life was 2 h at 40°C and 0.5 h at 50°C. The Km and Vmax were 167 mM and 250 μmole/min/mg using 25 mM 3-cyanopyridine as substrate. AgNO 3 , Pb(CH 3 COO) 2 and HgCl 2 inhibited the NHase to extent of 89-100%.
The most thoroughly studied enzyme in directed evolution is the lipase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PAL) as a catalyst in the hydrolytic kinetic resolution of 2-methyldecanoic acid p-nitrophenyl ester. Seminal studies utilized epPCR, saturation mutagenesis and DNA shuffling or combinations thereof. With current emphasis on efficacy in laboratory evolution, however, we recently applied our previously developed method, iterative saturation mutagenesis (ISM), to the same catalytic system, discovering that this approach is much more efficient than the original strategies. Herein, we consider PAL once more, this time testing ISM as a means to broaden the substrate scope of this lipase by studying bulky substrates of the type 2-phenylalkanoic acid esters as substrates that are not accepted by the WT. Highly active and enantioselective (E up to 436) mutants were evolved, a process that required only small mutant libraries and thus a minimum of screening effort. A theoretical investigation using molecular dynamics simulations and docking experiments revealed the source of enhanced activity and stereoselectivity.
Rhodococcus sp. NDB 1165, a nitriletransforming organism was isolated from temperate forest soil of Himalayas. The nitrilase (EC 3.5.5.2) activity of this organism had higher substrate specificity toward aromatic nitriles (benzonitrile, 3-cyanopyridine and 4-cyanopyridine) and unsaturated aliphatic nitrile (acrylonitrile) in comparison to saturated aliphatic nitriles (acetonitrile, propionitrile, butyronitrile and isobutyronitrile) nitrile and arylacetonitrile (phenylacetonitrile and indole-3-acetonitrile). The nitrilase of Rhodococcus sp. NDB 1165 was inducible in nature and propionitrile proved to be an efficient inducer. However, the salts of ferrous and cobalt ions had an inhibitory effect. Under optimized reaction conditions (pH 8.0 and temperature 45°C) the nitrilase activity of this organism was 2.39 ± 0.07 U/mg dry cell mass (dcm). The half-life of this enzyme was 150 min and 40 min at 45°C and 50°C respectively. However, it was quite stable at 40°C and around 58 % activity was retained even after 6 h at this temperature. The V max and K m value of this nitrilase were 1.67 lmol/ml min and 0.1 M respectively using 3-cyanopyridine as substrate. However, the decrease in V max and K m values (0.56 lmol/ml min and 0.02 M, respectively) were observed at >0.05 M 3-cyanopyridine which revealed that this enzyme experienced uncompetitive inhibition at higher substrate concentrations. Under optimized reaction conditions, 1.6 M 3-cyanopyridine was successfully converted in to nicotinic acid using 2.0 mg resting cells (dcm)/ml reaction mixture in 11 h. This is the highest production of nicotinic acid i.e. 8.95 mg/mg resting cells (dcm)/h as compared to nitrilase systems reported hitherto.
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