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Regioselectivity Engineering of Epoxide Hydrolase: Near-Perfect Enantioconvergence through a Single Site Mutation
42
Citations
40
References
2018
Year
Single Site MutationBiochemistryEpoxide HydrolaseNatural SciencesBiocatalysisEnzyme CatalysisCellular EnzymologyMolecular BiologySynthetic Biology-Pnso RegioselectivityRegioselectivity EngineeringStructure-function Enzyme KineticsChemical BiologySmart LibraryEnzymatic ModificationStructural Biology
An epoxide hydrolase from Vigna radiata (VrEH2) affords partial enantioconvergence (84% ee) in the enzymatic hydrolysis of racemic p-nitrostyrene oxide (pNSO), mainly due to insufficient regioselectivity for the (S)-enantiomer (rS = αS/βS = 7.3). To improve the (S)-pNSO regioselectivity, a small but smart library of VrEH2 mutants was constructed by substituting each of four key residues lining the substrate binding site with a simplified amino acid alphabet of Val, Asn, Phe, and Trp. Among the mutants, M263N attacked almost exclusively at Cα in the (S)-epoxide ring with satisfactory regioselectivity (rS = 99.0), without compromising the original high regioselectivity for the (R)-epoxide (rR = 99.0), resulting in near-perfect enantioconvergence (>99% analytical yield, 98% ee). Structural and conformational analysis showed that the introduced Asn263 formed additional hydrogen bonds with the nitro group in substrate, causing a shift in the substrate binding pose. This shift increased the difference in attacking distances between Cα and Cβ, leading to an improved regiopreference toward (S)-pNSO and affording near-perfect enantioconvergence.
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