Publication | Closed Access
A Single Molecule Perspective on the Functional Diversity of <i>in Vitro</i> Evolved β-Glucuronidase
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Citations
34
References
2014
Year
Functional DiversityGlycobiologyMolecular BiologyBiosynthesisEnzymologySingle Molecule PerspectiveStructure-function Enzyme KineticsMolecular DiversityGlycosylationBiochemistryNew Enzyme ActivityProtein BiosynthesisCellular EnzymologySingle Gus MoleculesIndividual Enzyme MoleculesNatural SciencesEnzyme CatalysisProtein EvolutionEnzyme Specificity
The mechanisms that drive the evolution of new enzyme activity have been investigated by comparing the kinetics of wild-type and in vitro evolved β-glucuronidase (GUS) at the single molecule level. Several hundred single GUS molecules were separated in large arrays of 62,500 ultrasmall reaction chambers etched into the surface of a fused silica slide to observe their individual substrate turnover rates in parallel by fluorescence microscopy. Individual GUS molecules feature long-lived but divergent activity states, and their mean activity is consistent with classic Michaelis-Menten kinetics. The large number of single molecule substrate turnover rates is representative of the activity distribution within an entire enzyme population. Partially evolved GUS displays a much broader activity distribution among individual enzyme molecules than wild-type GUS. The broader activity distribution indicates a functional division of work between individual molecules in a population of partially evolved enzymes that-as so-called generalists-are characterized by their promiscuous activity with many different substrates.
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