13 research outputs found
Engineering enzymes for noncanonical amino acid synthesis
The standard proteinogenic amino acids grant access to a myriad of chemistries that harmonize to create life. Outside of these twenty canonical protein building blocks are countless noncanonical amino acids (ncAAs), either found in nature or created by man. Interest in ncAAs has grown as research has unveiled their importance as precursors to natural products and pharmaceuticals, biological probes, and more. Despite their broad applications, synthesis of ncAAs remains a challenge, as poor stereoselectivity and low functional-group compatibility stymie effective preparative routes. The use of enzymes has emerged as a versatile approach to prepare ncAAs, and nature's enzymes can be engineered to synthesize ncAAs more efficiently and expand the amino acid alphabet. In this tutorial review, we briefly outline different enzyme engineering strategies and then discuss examples where engineering has generated new âncAA synthasesâ for efficient, environmentally benign production of a wide and growing collection of valuable ncAAs
Engineering enzymes for noncanonical amino acid synthesis
The standard proteinogenic amino acids grant access to a myriad of chemistries that harmonize to create life. Outside of these twenty canonical protein building blocks are countless noncanonical amino acids (ncAAs), either found in nature or created by man. Interest in ncAAs has grown as research has unveiled their importance as precursors to natural products and pharmaceuticals, biological probes, and more. Despite their broad applications, synthesis of ncAAs remains a challenge, as poor stereoselectivity and low functional-group compatibility stymie effective preparative routes. The use of enzymes has emerged as a versatile approach to prepare ncAAs, and nature's enzymes can be engineered to synthesize ncAAs more efficiently and expand the amino acid alphabet. In this tutorial review, we briefly outline different enzyme engineering strategies and then discuss examples where engineering has generated new âncAA synthasesâ for efficient, environmentally benign production of a wide and growing collection of valuable ncAAs
Direct enzymatic synthesis of a deep-blue fluorescent noncanonical amino acid from azulene and serine
We report a simple, oneâstep enzymatic synthesis of the blue fluorescent noncanonical amino acid βâ(1âazulenyl)âlâalanine (AzAla). Using an engineered tryptophan synthase βâsubunit (TrpB), stereochemically pure AzAla can be synthesized at scale starting from commercially available azulene and lâserine. Mutation of a universally conserved catalytic glutamate in the active site to glycine has only a modest effect on native activity with indole but abolishes activity on azulene, suggesting that this glutamate activates azulene for nucleophilic attack by stabilization of the aromatic ion
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Scalable continuous evolution for the generation of diverse enzyme variants encompassing promiscuous activities
Enzyme orthologs sharing identical primary functions can have different promiscuous activities. While it is possible to mine this natural diversity to obtain useful biocatalysts, generating comparably rich ortholog diversity is difficult, as it is the product of deep evolutionary processes occurring in a multitude of separate species and populations. Here, we take a first step in recapitulating the depth and scale of natural ortholog evolution on laboratory timescales. Using a continuous directed evolution platform called OrthoRep, we rapidly evolve the Thermotoga maritima tryptophan synthase β-subunit (TmTrpB) through multi-mutation pathways in many independent replicates, selecting only on TmTrpBâs primary activity of synthesizing L-tryptophan from indole and L-serine. We find that the resulting sequence-diverse TmTrpB variants span a range of substrate profiles useful in industrial biocatalysis and suggest that the depth and scale of evolution that OrthoRep affords will be generally valuable in enzyme engineering and the evolution of biomolecular functions
Computational design of a homotrimeric metalloprotein with a trisbipyridyl core
Metal-chelating heteroaryl small molecules have found widespread use as building blocks for coordination-driven, self-assembling nanostructures. The metal-chelating noncanonical amino acid (2,2'-bipyridin-5yl)alanine (Bpy-ala) could, in principle, be used to nucleate specific metalloprotein assemblies if introduced into proteins such that one assembly had much lower free energy than all alternatives. Here we describe the use of the Rosetta computational methodology to design a self-assembling homotrimeric protein with [Fe(Bpy-ala)3]2+ complexes at the interface between monomers. X-ray crystallographic analysis of the homotrimer showed that the design process had near-atomic-level accuracy: The all-atom rmsd between the design model and crystal structure for the residues at the protein interface is âź1.4 Ă
. These results demonstrate that computational protein design together with genetically encoded noncanonical amino acids can be used to drive formation of precisely specified metal-mediated protein assemblies that could find use in a wide range of photophysical applications.</p
Metal-chelating non-canonical amino acids in metalloprotein engineering and design
The ability to rationally design metalloproteins with desired functions remains a difficult challenge despite many years of effort. Recently, the potential of using genetically encoded metal-chelating non-canonical amino acids (NCAAs) to circumvent longstanding difficulties in this field has begun to be explored. In this review, we describe the development of this approach and its application to the rational design or directed evolution of NCAA-containing metalloproteins in which the bound metal ions serve in structural roles, as catalysts, or as regulators of the assembly or disassembly of protein complexes. These successes highlight the fact that amino acids not found in nature can recapitulate the functions of their naturally occurring counterparts and suggest the promise of this nascent approach for simplifying the metalloprotein design problem
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Scalable continuous evolution for the generation of diverse enzyme variants encompassing promiscuous activities.
Enzyme orthologs sharing identical primary functions can have different promiscuous activities. While it is possible to mine this natural diversity to obtain useful biocatalysts, generating comparably rich ortholog diversity is difficult, as it is the product of deep evolutionary processes occurring in a multitude of separate species and populations. Here, we take a first step in recapitulating the depth and scale of natural ortholog evolution on laboratory timescales. Using a continuous directed evolution platform called OrthoRep, we rapidly evolve the Thermotoga maritima tryptophan synthase β-subunit (TmTrpB) through multi-mutation pathways in many independent replicates, selecting only on TmTrpB's primary activity of synthesizing L-tryptophan from indole and L-serine. We find that the resulting sequence-diverse TmTrpB variants span a range of substrate profiles useful in industrial biocatalysis and suggest that the depth and scale of evolution that OrthoRep affords will be generally valuable in enzyme engineering and the evolution of biomolecular functions
Improved Synthesis of 4âCyanotryptophan and Other Tryptophan Analogues in Aqueous Solvent Using Variants of TrpB from <i>Thermotoga maritima</i>
The use of enzymes has become increasingly
widespread in synthesis
as chemists strive to reduce their reliance on organic solvents in
favor of more environmentally benign aqueous media. With this in mind,
we previously endeavored to engineer the tryptophan synthase β-subunit
(TrpB) for production of noncanonical amino acids that had previously
been synthesized through multistep routes involving water-sensitive
reagents. This enzymatic platform proved effective for the synthesis
of analogues of the amino acid tryptophan (Trp), which are frequently
used in pharmaceutical synthesis as well as chemical biology. However,
certain valuable compounds, such as the blue fluorescent amino acid
4-cyanotryptophan (4-CN-Trp), could only be made in low yield, even
at elevated temperature (75 °C). Here, we describe the engineering
of TrpB from <i>Thermotoga maritima</i> that improved synthesis
of 4-CN-Trp from 24% to 78% yield. Remarkably, although the final
enzyme maintains high thermostability (<i>T</i><sub>50</sub> = 93 °C), its temperature profile is shifted such that high
reactivity is observed at âź37 °C (76% yield), creating
the possibility for in vivo 4-CN-Trp production. The improvements
are not specific to 4-CN-Trp; a boost in activity at lower temperature
is also demonstrated for other Trp analogues