Changes in Active Site Loop Conformation Relate to the Transition toward a Novel Enzymatic Activity

This article has been Reviewed by the following groups

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

Log in to save this article

Abstract

Enzymatic promiscuity, the ability of enzymes to catalyze multiple, distinct chemical reactions, has been well documented and is hypothesized to be a major driver for the emergence of new enzymatic functions. Yet, the molecular mechanisms involved in the transition from one activity to another remain debated and elusive. Here, we evaluated the redesign of the active site binding cleft of the lactonase Sso Pox using structure-based design and combinatorial libraries. We created variants with largely improved catalytic abilities against phosphotriesters, the best ones being > 1,000-fold better compared to the wild-type enzyme. The observed shifts in activity specificity are large, ∼1,000,000-fold and beyond, since some variants completely lost their initial activity. The selected combinations of mutations have considerably reshaped the active site cavity via side chain changes but mostly through large rearrangements of the active site loops, as revealed by a suite of crystal structures. This suggests that specific active site loop configuration is critical to the lactonase activity. Interestingly, analysis of high-resolution structures hints at the potential role of conformational sampling and its directionality in defining an enzyme activity profile.

Article activity feed

  1. Thank you for your hard work and for making it available to anyone by publishing a pre-print paper! I was wondering if your empirical diffraction datasets could be used to inform better structure prediction? My understanding of structure prediction algorithms is that they capture the global structure but cannot model well the impact of individual residue changes. Have you tried any structure modeling software to see if their predictions would match what you have found empirically? Thank you for your time!