1 research outputs found
Relief of Xylose Binding to Cellobiose Phosphorylase by a Single Distal Mutation
Cellobiose phosphorylase
(CBP) cleaves cellobioseî—¸abundant
in plant biomassî—¸to glucose and glucose 1-phosphate. However,
the pentose sugar xylose, also abundant in plant biomass, acts as
a mixed-inhibitor and a substrate for the reverse reaction, limiting
the industrial potential of CBP. Preventing xylose, which lacks only
a single hydroxymethyl group relative to glucose, from binding to
the CBP active site poses a spatial challenge for protein engineering,
since simple steric occlusion cannot be used to block xylose binding
without also preventing glucose binding. Using CRISPR-based chromosomal
library selection, we identified a distal mutation in CBP, Y47H, responsible
for improved cellobiose consumption in the presence of xylose. <i>In silico</i> analysis suggests this mutation may alter the
conformation of the cellobiose phosphorylase dimer complex to reduce
xylose binding to the active site. These results may aid in engineering
carbohydrate phosphorylases for improved specificity in biofuel production,
and also in the production of industrially important oligosaccharides