1 research outputs found
Spatially Organized Enzymes Drive Cofactor-Coupled Cascade Reactions
We report the construction of an
artificial enzyme cascade based
on the xylose metabolic pathway. Two enzymes, xylose reductase and
xylitol dehydrogenase, were assembled at specific locations on DNA
origami by using DNA-binding protein adaptors with systematic variations
in the interenzyme distances and defined numbers of enzyme molecules.
The reaction system, which localized the two enzymes in close proximity
to facilitate transport of reaction intermediates, resulted in significantly
higher yields of the conversion of xylose into xylulose through the
intermediate xylitol with recycling of the cofactor NADH. Analysis
of the initial reaction rate, regenerated amount of NADH, and simulation
of the intermediates’ diffusion indicated that the intermediates
diffused to the second enzyme by Brownian motion. The efficiency of
the cascade reaction with the bimolecular transport of xylitol and
NAD<sup>+</sup> likely depends more on the interenzyme distance than
that of the cascade reaction with unimolecular transport between two
enzymes
