Modulating Enzyme Functions by Semi-Rational Redesign and Chemical Modifications : A Study on Mu-class Glutathione Transferases

Today, enzymes are extensively used for many industrial applications, this includes bulk and fine-chemical synthesis, pharmaceuticals and consumer products. Though Nature has perfected enzymes for many millions of years, they seldom reach industrial performance targets. Natural enzymes could benefit...

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Main Author: Norrgård, Malena A
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Uppsala universitet, Institutionen för biokemi och organisk kemi 2011
Subjects:
Cys
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-149326
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-554-8029-5
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-uu-1493262013-01-08T13:07:29ZModulating Enzyme Functions by Semi-Rational Redesign and Chemical Modifications : A Study on Mu-class Glutathione TransferasesengNorrgård, Malena AUppsala universitet, Institutionen för biokemi och organisk kemiUppsala : Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis2011protein redesignsemi-rational redesignsaturation mutagenesisiterative saturation mutagenesischemical modificationCysCys-X scanningenzyme evolutionpromiscuoussubstrate selectivityenantioselectivityBiochemistryBiokemiToday, enzymes are extensively used for many industrial applications, this includes bulk and fine-chemical synthesis, pharmaceuticals and consumer products. Though Nature has perfected enzymes for many millions of years, they seldom reach industrial performance targets. Natural enzymes could benefit from protein redesign experiments to gain novel functions or optimize existing functions. Glutathione transferases (GSTs) are detoxification enzymes, they also display disparate functions. Two Mu-class GSTs, M1-1 and M2-2, are closely related but display dissimilar substrate selectivity profiles. Saturation mutagenesis of a previously recognized hypervariable amino acid in GST M2-2, generated twenty enzyme variants with altered substrate selectivity profiles, as well as modified thermostabilities and expressivities. This indicates an evolutionary significance; GST Mu-class enzymes could easily alter functions in a duplicate gene by a single-point mutation. To further identify residues responsible for substrate selectivity in the GST M2-2 active site, three residues were chosen for iterative saturation mutagenesis. Mutations in position10, identified as highly conserved, rendered enzyme variants with substrate selectivity profiles resembling that of specialist enzymes. Ile10 could be conserved to sustain the broad substrate acceptance displayed by GST Mu-class enzymes. Enzymes are constructed from primarily twenty amino acids, it is a reasonable assumption that expansion of the amino acid repertoire could result in functional properties that cannot be accomplished with the natural set of building blocks. A combination approach of site-directed mutagenesis and chemical modifications in GST M2-2 and GST M1-1 resulted in novel enzyme variants that displayed altered substrate selectivity patterns as well as improved enantioselectivities. The results presented in this thesis demonstrate the use of different protein redesign techniques to modulate various functions in Mu-class GSTs. These techniques could be useful in search of optimized enzyme variants for industrial targets. biokemi och organisk kemiDoctoral thesis, comprehensive summaryinfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-149326urn:isbn:978-91-554-8029-5Digital Comprehensive Summaries of Uppsala Dissertations from the Faculty of Science and Technology, 1651-6214 ; 741application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic protein redesign
semi-rational redesign
saturation mutagenesis
iterative saturation mutagenesis
chemical modification
Cys
Cys-X scanning
enzyme evolution
promiscuous
substrate selectivity
enantioselectivity
Biochemistry
Biokemi
spellingShingle protein redesign
semi-rational redesign
saturation mutagenesis
iterative saturation mutagenesis
chemical modification
Cys
Cys-X scanning
enzyme evolution
promiscuous
substrate selectivity
enantioselectivity
Biochemistry
Biokemi
Norrgård, Malena A
Modulating Enzyme Functions by Semi-Rational Redesign and Chemical Modifications : A Study on Mu-class Glutathione Transferases
description Today, enzymes are extensively used for many industrial applications, this includes bulk and fine-chemical synthesis, pharmaceuticals and consumer products. Though Nature has perfected enzymes for many millions of years, they seldom reach industrial performance targets. Natural enzymes could benefit from protein redesign experiments to gain novel functions or optimize existing functions. Glutathione transferases (GSTs) are detoxification enzymes, they also display disparate functions. Two Mu-class GSTs, M1-1 and M2-2, are closely related but display dissimilar substrate selectivity profiles. Saturation mutagenesis of a previously recognized hypervariable amino acid in GST M2-2, generated twenty enzyme variants with altered substrate selectivity profiles, as well as modified thermostabilities and expressivities. This indicates an evolutionary significance; GST Mu-class enzymes could easily alter functions in a duplicate gene by a single-point mutation. To further identify residues responsible for substrate selectivity in the GST M2-2 active site, three residues were chosen for iterative saturation mutagenesis. Mutations in position10, identified as highly conserved, rendered enzyme variants with substrate selectivity profiles resembling that of specialist enzymes. Ile10 could be conserved to sustain the broad substrate acceptance displayed by GST Mu-class enzymes. Enzymes are constructed from primarily twenty amino acids, it is a reasonable assumption that expansion of the amino acid repertoire could result in functional properties that cannot be accomplished with the natural set of building blocks. A combination approach of site-directed mutagenesis and chemical modifications in GST M2-2 and GST M1-1 resulted in novel enzyme variants that displayed altered substrate selectivity patterns as well as improved enantioselectivities. The results presented in this thesis demonstrate the use of different protein redesign techniques to modulate various functions in Mu-class GSTs. These techniques could be useful in search of optimized enzyme variants for industrial targets. === biokemi och organisk kemi
author Norrgård, Malena A
author_facet Norrgård, Malena A
author_sort Norrgård, Malena A
title Modulating Enzyme Functions by Semi-Rational Redesign and Chemical Modifications : A Study on Mu-class Glutathione Transferases
title_short Modulating Enzyme Functions by Semi-Rational Redesign and Chemical Modifications : A Study on Mu-class Glutathione Transferases
title_full Modulating Enzyme Functions by Semi-Rational Redesign and Chemical Modifications : A Study on Mu-class Glutathione Transferases
title_fullStr Modulating Enzyme Functions by Semi-Rational Redesign and Chemical Modifications : A Study on Mu-class Glutathione Transferases
title_full_unstemmed Modulating Enzyme Functions by Semi-Rational Redesign and Chemical Modifications : A Study on Mu-class Glutathione Transferases
title_sort modulating enzyme functions by semi-rational redesign and chemical modifications : a study on mu-class glutathione transferases
publisher Uppsala universitet, Institutionen för biokemi och organisk kemi
publishDate 2011
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-149326
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-554-8029-5
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