Publication | Open Access
Recruitment of substrate-specificity properties from one enzyme into a related one by protein engineering.
137
Citations
33
References
1987
Year
EngineeringProtein AssemblyMolecular BiologySerine ProteasesAmino Acid SubstitutionsEnzymatic ModificationBiosynthesisSubstrate-specificity PropertiesStructure-function Enzyme KineticsEnzymesBiochemistryRelated OneBiomolecular EngineeringCellular EnzymologyNatural SciencesEnzyme CatalysisBiotechnologySynthetic BiologyEnzyme SpecificityProtein EngineeringBacillus LicheniformisMicrobiology
The Bacillus licheniformis and Bacillus amyloliquefaciens subtilisins differ by 31% in protein sequence and by factors of greater than 60 in catalytic efficiency, kcat/Km, toward various substrates. Despite large differences in sequence and substrate specificity for these serine proteases, only two amino acid substitutions (residues 156 and 217) occur within 4 A (contact distance) of modeled substrates, and a third substitution (residue 169) is within 7 A. The three B. licheniformis substitutions (Ser-156/Ala-169/Leu-217) were introduced into the wild-type B. amyloliquefaciens subtilisin (Glu-156/Gly-169/Tyr-217) by site-directed mutagenesis. The substrate specificity of the triple mutant approaches that of B. licheniformis enzyme when assayed with seven different substrates that vary in charge, size, and hydrophobicity. Thus, specificity properties of distantly related and functionally divergent enzymes can be exchanged by limited amino acid replacements, in this case representing less than 4% of the sequence differences.
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