Key amino acid residues conferring enhanced enzyme activity at cold temperatures in an Antarctic polyextremophilic β-galactosidase

Autor: Shiladitya DasSarma, Victoria J. Laye, Ram Karan, Priya DasSarma, Wolf T. Pecher, Jong-Myoung Kim
Rok vydání: 2017
Předmět:
Halobacterium
Models
Molecular

Protein Conformation
alpha-Helical

0301 basic medicine
Archaeal Proteins
030106 microbiology
Antarctic Regions
Gene Expression
Crystallography
X-Ray

Substrate Specificity
Structure-Activity Relationship
03 medical and health sciences
Catalytic Domain
TIM barrel
Protein Interaction Domains and Motifs
Homology modeling
Enzyme kinetics
Cloning
Molecular

Halorubrum
Site-directed mutagenesis
Psychrophile
Multidisciplinary
biology
Active site
Biological Sciences
Nitrophenylgalactosides
beta-Galactosidase
biology.organism_classification
Recombinant Proteins
Enzyme assay
Cold Temperature
Kinetics
030104 developmental biology
Amino Acid Substitution
Biochemistry
Mutagenesis
Site-Directed

biology.protein
Haloarchaea
Thermodynamics
Protein Conformation
beta-Strand

Protein Binding
Zdroj: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 114:12530-12535
ISSN: 1091-6490
0027-8424
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1711542114
Popis: The Antarctic microorganism Halorubrum lacusprofundi harbors a model polyextremophilic β-galactosidase that functions in cold, hypersaline conditions. Six amino acid residues potentially important for cold activity were identified by comparative genomics and substituted with evolutionarily conserved residues (N251D, A263S, I299L, F387L, I476V, and V482L) in closely related homologs from mesophilic haloarchaea. Using a homology model, four residues (N251, A263, I299, and F387) were located in the TIM barrel around the active site in domain A, and two residues (I476 and V482) were within coiled or β-sheet regions in domain B distant to the active site. Site-directed mutagenesis was performed by partial gene synthesis, and enzymes were overproduced from the cold-inducible cspD2 promoter in the genetically tractable Haloarchaeon, Halobacterium sp. NRC-1. Purified enzymes were characterized by steady-state kinetic analysis at temperatures from 0 to 25 °C using the chromogenic substrate o-nitrophenyl-β-galactoside. All substitutions resulted in altered temperature activity profiles compared with wild type, with five of the six clearly exhibiting reduced catalytic efficiency (kcat/Km) at colder temperatures and/or higher efficiency at warmer temperatures. These results could be accounted for by temperature-dependent changes in both Km and kcat (three substitutions) or either Km or kcat (one substitution each). The effects were correlated with perturbation of charge, hydrogen bonding, or packing, likely affecting the temperature-dependent flexibility and function of the enzyme. Our interdisciplinary approach, incorporating comparative genomics, mutagenesis, enzyme kinetics, and modeling, has shown that divergence of a very small number of amino acid residues can account for the cold temperature function of a polyextremophilic enzyme.
Databáze: OpenAIRE