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Improving thermostability and catalytic behavior towards Dallulose of L-rhamnose isomerase from Caldicellulosiruptor obsidiansis OB47 by site-directed mutagenesis Ziwei Chen, Jiajun Chen, Wenli Zhang, Tao Zhang, Cuie Guang, and Wanmeng Mu J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.8b05107 • Publication Date (Web): 29 Oct 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on October 31, 2018
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Improving thermostability and catalytic behavior towards D-allulose of L-rhamnose isomerase from Caldicellulosiruptor obsidiansis OB47 by
site-directed mutagenesis
Ziwei Chen, † Jiajun Chen, † Wenli Zhang, † Tao Zhang, † Cuie Guang, † and Wanmeng Mu*, †, § †
State Key Laboratory of Food Science and Technology, Jiangnan University, Wuxi, Jiangsu, 214122, China.
§
International Joint Laboratory on Food Safety, Jiangnan University, Wuxi, Jiangsu 214122, China.
*
Corresponding author.
Address: State Key Laboratory of Food Science and Technology, Jiangnan University, Wuxi, Jiangsu, 214122, P. R. China. Tel: (86) 510-85919161. Fax: (86) 510-85919161. E-mail address:
[email protected].
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ABSTRACT
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D-Allose, a rare sugar, is an ideal table sugar substitute and has many advantageous
3
physiological functions. L-Rhamnose isomerase (L-RI) is an important D-allose-producing
4
enzyme but exhibits a comparatively low catalytic activity on D-allulose. In this study, an
5
array of hydrophobic residues located within the β1-α1-loop was solely or collectively
6
replaced with polar amino acids by site-directed mutagenesis. A group of mutants were
7
designed to weaken the hydrophobic environment and strengthen the catalytic behavior on
8
D-allulose. Compared to the wild-type enzyme, the relative activities of V48N/G59N/I63N
9
and V48N/G59N/I63N/F335S mutants were increased by 105.6% and 134.1% acting on
10
D-allulose, respectively. Another group of mutants were designed to enhance
11
thermostability. Finally, the t1/2 values of mutant S81A were increased by 7.7 and 1.1 h at
12
70 and 80°C, respectively. These results revealed that site-directed mutagenesis is efficient
13
for improving thermostability and catalytic behavior towards D-allulose.
14 15
KEYWORDS: D-allose, L-rhamnose isomerase, catalytic behavior, thermostability, site-
16
directed mutagenesis
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INTRODUCTION
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In the natural environment, only seven monosaccharides are common sugars that are
19
abundant in nature, such as D-glucose and D-fructose. The majority of monosaccharides
20
are rare sugars, which are defined by the International Society of Rare Sugars (ISRS) as
21
monosaccharides and monosaccharides derivatives that barely appear in nature.1 D-Allose,
22
an extensively studied rare sugar, has 80% relative sweetness to sucrose but is non caloric
23
and nontoxic2, 3. Therefore, D-allose is an ideal table sugar substitute and food additive and
24
is beneficial to weight loss. Also, D-allose displays many salutary physiological functions,
25
such as anti-tumor, anti-cancer,4 cryoprotective,5 neuroprotective,6 anti-osteoporotic,7 anti-
26
inflammatory,8
27
physiological functions and health benefits of D-allose have been reviewed in detail.11 D-
28
Allose has huge application potential in the food systems, clinical treatment and health care
29
fields because of its remarkable physiological functions. However, chemical synthesis of
30
D-allose has many disadvantages, including a low conversion rate, chemical pollution and
31
byproduct generation.12 The enzymatic production of D-allose was widely investigated in
32
recent years.
anti-hypertensive,9
and
immunosuppressant
functions.10
More
33
L-Rhamnose isomerase (L-RI, EC 5.3.1.14), one type of aldose-ketose isomerase,
34
catalyzes the conversion between L-rhamnose and L-rhamnulose. L-RI has a broad
35
substrate spectrum and can also catalyze the isomerization of D-allulose and D-allose.13 L-
36
RI, as an important D-allose-producing enzyme, has been extensively studied. To date, 3
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from various microorganisms, more than ten L-RIs catalyzing the isomerization reaction
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between D-allulose and D-allose have been cloned and identified, such as Clostridium
39
stercorarium ATCC 35414 L-RI,14 Thermobacillus composti KWC4 L-RI,15 Bacillus
40
subtilis WB600 L-RI,16 Dictyoglomus turgidum DSMZ 6724 L-RI,17 Bacillus pallidus Y25
41
L-RI,18 Thermotoga maritima ATCC 43589 L-RI,19 Caldicellulosiruptor saccharolyticus
42
ATCC
43
saccharolyticum NTOU1 L-RI,22 and Pseudomonas stutzeri L-RI.13 However, these
44
investigations primarily focused on screening strains and property characterizations of L-
45
RIs. These characterized L-RIs show ultralow catalytic activity on D-allulose, which limits
46
the application of L-RIs in the industrial production of D-allose. Furthermore, few studies
47
are available in regards to enhancing the thermostability and catalytic behavior by
48
molecular modification, which are two important factors in the enzymatic production of D-
49
allose. To date, the crystal structures and the catalytic mechanisms of Escherichia coli L-
50
RI,23 Bacillus halodurans ATCC BAA-125 L-RI,24 and P. stutzeri L-RI have been
51
resolved.25 In 2010, the effect of the C-terminal region and residue Ser329 of P. stutzeri L-
52
RI corresponding to Phe336 in E. coli L-RI on substrate specificity was elaborated by
53
Yoshida et al with site-directed mutagenesis.26 To date, only this paper has focused on the
54
site-directed mutagenesis of L-RI. However, the variation of specific activity of P. stutzeri
55
L-RI on D-allulose and D-allose has not been further explored.
56
43494
L-RI,20
Mesorhizobium
loti
L-RI,21
Thermoanaerobacterium
Previously, the wild-type L-RI from Caldicellulosiruptor obsidiansis OB47 was 4
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characterized in our laboratory.27 Although C. obsidiansis OB47 L-RI exhibits the highest
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catalytic activity (19.4 U/mg) on D-allulose compared with other reported L-RIs, such as
59
T. composti KWC4 L-RI (1.7 U/mg) and T. maritima ATCC 43589 L-RI (1.1 U/mg),19, 28
60
it still cannot remotely meet the needs of industrial production of D-allose. In this work,
61
we built a model of C. obsidiansis OB47 L-RI on the basis of the B. halodurans ATCC
62
BAA-125 L-RI structure. Therefore, we rationally designed site-directed mutagenesis on
63
the grounds of reported structural information of L-RIs to further improve thermostability
64
and catalytic activity on D-allulose of C. obsidiansis OB47 L-RI, which is conducive to
65
industrial production of D-allose.
66 67
MATERIALS AND METHODS
68
Strains, Reagents and Chemicals. The E. coli DH5α and BL21 (DE3) strains were
69
purchased from Sangon Biotech Co., Ltd. (Shanghai, China). The plasmid harboring the
70
C. obsidiansis OB47 L-RI gene was constructed in our previous work27. The reagents used
71
for site-directed mutagenesis of wild-type L-RI gene were obtained from Generay Biotech
72
Co., Ltd. (Shanghai, China). Isopropyl--D-1-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) for induction
73
was from Sigma (St. Louis, MO, USA). The Ni2+-chelating affinity chromatography resin
74
was provided by GE (Uppsala, Sweden). Electrophoretic reagents were obtained from Bio-
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Rad (Hercules, CA, USA). Other chemicals were from Sinopharm Chemical Reagent
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(Shanghai, China) or Sigma (St. Louis, MO, USA). 5
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Molecular Modeling and Docking. The homology modeling of the three-dimensional
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structure of wild-type enzyme and mutants was conducted by the SWISS-MODEL online
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server (http://www.expasy.ch/swissmod/ SWISS-MODEL.html) using the crystal structure
81
of B. halodurans ATCC BAA-125 L-RI (PDB number: 3P14) as a template (sequence
82
identity = 55%).29-31 The model energy minimization was performed using the Discovery
83
Studio package (Accelrys, CA, USA). The accuracy of wild-type enzyme and mutant
84
models was examined by the SAVES server.32, 33 The stereochemical quality was verified
85
by Procheck with its Ramachandran plot module.34 The obtained models were delineated
86
and presented with the Pymol Molecular Graphics Software.
87
The L-rhamnose and D-allulose models were constructed by the GlycoBioChem
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PRODRG2 online server (http://davapc1.bioch.dundee.ac.uk/cgi-bin/prodrg/submit.html).
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The ligand energy minimization was implemented by Chem3D Pro14.0.35 L-Rhamnose and
90
D-allulose were used as ligands. Correspondingly, the wild-type enzyme and mutant
91
models were used as acceptors for docking. The docking procedure was executed by the
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Autodock 4.2 software package.36 The obtained models were further handled by a battery
93
of programs in AutoDock Tool, such as adding hydrogen atoms, calculating charge and
94
removing water molecules.
95 96
Site-Directed Mutagenesis. Site-directed mutagenesis of C. obsidiansis OB47 L-RI was 6
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manipulated by one-step PCR methods using a TaKaRa MutantBEST Kit (TaKaRa, Dalian,
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China). The mutants were divided into two groups: One group, including S81A, S81Q,
99
S88R, V421I and I343A, for enhancing the thermostability; and another group, including
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V48N, G59N, G60T, G62T, I63N, I101N, F335C, F335S, V48N/ G59N/ I63N and V48N/
101
G59N/ I63N/F335S, for improving the catalytic activity towards D-allulose. The
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recombinant plasmid containing the wild-type C. obsidiansis OB47 L-RI gene was used as
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the template. All primers used for mutagenesis are shown in Table S1. After PCR
104
amplification, the obtained products were digested and purified by DpnI. The gene
105
sequences of various mutants were verified by Sangon Biotech Co., Ltd. (Shanghai, China).
106 107
Heterologous Expression and Purification. The mutant plasmids were introduced into E.
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coli DH5α and BL21 (DE3) for gene cloning and enzyme overexpression, respectively.
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The recombinant BL21 strains were cultivated in Luria-Bertani medium (LB, 10 g L-1
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tryptone, 10 g L-1 NaCl, and 5 g L-1 yeast extract) with ampicillin (100 µg/mL) at 37°C and
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200 rpm. The IPTG was added to the LB medium at a final concentration of 1 mM until
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the OD600 attained 0.5-0.7. The recombinant cells were induced for 6 h at 28°C. After that,
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the induced recombinant cells were harvested by centrifugation at 8000 g for 10 min. Then,
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the collected cells were washed twice using distilled water and stored at - 20°C.
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The purification procedures for the wild-type enzyme and mutants were accomplished
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in the cold room. The pelleted cells were suspended in cell lysis buffer (pH 8.0) and 7
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disrupted by sonication for 16 min (on 1 s, off 2 s) with a Scientz-II D ultrasonic
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homogenizer (Scientz Biotechnology, Ningbo, China). The cellular lysates were
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centrifuged at 10000 g for 15 min to remove the cell fragments, and then the supernatant
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was collected and filtered through a 0.45 μm water phase filter. Fast Protein Liquid
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Chromatography (FPLC, ÄKTA Purifier System, GE Healthcare) was used for purification
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of the wild-type enzyme and mutants. The column was washed using 5 column volume
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(CV) ultrapure water at 1 mL/min flow rate. The filtrate was loaded on a Ni2+-chelating
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Sepharose Fast Flow resin column (8.9× 64 mm, GE Healthcare). The column was pre-
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equilibrated with 12 CV fresh binding buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, 500 mM NaCl, pH 8.0) at
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a 0.6 mL/min flow rate. Afterwards, the unbound and unwanted enzymes were eliminated
127
from the resin column using 6 CV washing buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, 500 mM NaCl, and
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50 mM imidazole, pH 8.0) at 1 mL/min flow rate. Lastly, the target proteins were eluted
129
using 6 CV elution buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, 500 mM NaCl, 500 mM imidazole, pH 8.0)
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at 1 mL/min. The fractions displaying catalytic activity were pooled and dialyzed against
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50 mM Tris-HCl buffer (pH 8.0) containing EDTA for 12 h to remove metal ions.
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Subsequently, the protein was dialyzed against Tris-HCl buffer (pH 8.0) to remove EDTA.
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The protein concentrations were measured by the Lowry method using bovine serum
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albumin as the reference.37 The purity and molecular weights of wild-type enzyme and
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mutants were checked using 12% sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel
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electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) with Coomassie brilliant blue R250 staining. 8
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Isomerization Activity. The catalytic activity of wild-type enzyme and mutants towards
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D-allulose was determined by assaying the formation of D-allose. Under optimal reaction
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conditions, the enzymatic reactions were implemented at 85°C with 50 mM N-(2-
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Hydroxyethyl) piperazine-N-3-propanesulfonic acid (HEPPS) buffer (pH 8.0) containing
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40 mM D-allulose, 1 mM Co2+ and 0.05 μM purified enzyme. After 10 min, the reaction
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mixture was boiled for 15 min to stop the enzyme reaction. The catalytic activity of wild-
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type enzyme and mutants towards L-rhamnose was investigated by assaying the
145
accumulated amount of L-rhamnulose. The reaction conditions of catalytic activity acting
146
on L-rhamnose are the same as acting on D-allulose.
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The concentration of D-allose was determined by high-performance liquid
148
chromatography (HPLC) with a refractive index (IR) detector (2414, Waters, USA) and a
149
Ca2+ ligand exchange column (6.5 mm × 300 mm, Sugar-Pak 1, Waters Corp., USA). The
150
column was eluted with ultrapure water at a column temperature of 85°C with a flow rate
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of 0.4 mL/min. The concentration of L-rhamnulose was determined using a modified
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cysteine-sulfuric acid-carbazol method.38 First, 500 μL reaction mixture was diluted and
153
was added to 100 μL of 1.5% cysteine hydrochloride solution. After blending, 3 mL of 75%
154
sulfuric acid and 100 μL of ethanol-carbazole were added in turn. Then, the generated
155
mixture was immediately incubated at 60°C for 10 min and the absorbance was promptly
156
measured at 540 nm. One unit of enzyme activity was defined as the amount of enzyme 9
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catalyzing the generation of 1 μmol monosaccharide per minute at 85°C and pH 8.0.
158 159
Mutation for Thermostability. To investigate the thermostability of mutants, the half-life
160
(t1/2) and melting temperature (Tm) were measured. For t1/2 determination, the wild-type
161
enzyme and mutants were pre-incubated at 70 and 80°C. The samples were discontinuously
162
withdrawn at specific times, and the residual activity was later assayed at pH 8.0 and 85°C.
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The initial activity without incubation was set as 100%.
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A differential scanning calorimeter (Nano DSC III, TA Instrument, USA) equipped with
165
a Platinum Capillary Cell was used for Tm value determination. After vacuum
166
degasification (635 mmHg), the dialyzed buffers and proteins were loaded into reference
167
and sample cells, respectively. The scanning was carried out at 3 atm air pressure from 25
168
to 100°C with a heating rate of 1 °C/min after pre-equilibration for 10 min. The DSC data
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of the wild-type enzyme and mutants were analyzed using the TA Instruments Nano
170
Analyze software. The Two State Scaled model was selected in the fitting process after
171
baseline-corrected fitting.
172 173
Production of D-Allose from D-Allulose. The production of D-allose from D-allulose was
174
implemented in 5 mL reaction mixtures containing 50 mM HEPPS buffer (pH 8.0), 1 mM
175
Co2+ and 5 μM of purified enzyme. Twenty-five g/L D-allulose was used as the initial
176
substrate concentration. Considering the thermostability and productivity, the conversation 10
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temperature was set at 60°C. The reaction mixture was inactivated and detected by HPLC
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at given times to determine the concentration of D-allose. All experiments were
179
implemented in triplicate.
180 181
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
182
Expression and Purification. After overexpression, the wild-type enzyme and mutants
183
were purified. As shown in Figure S1, an approximately 48 kDa band was visible in the
184
SDS-PAGE gel, which was in agreement with the theoretical molecular weight. This result
185
manifested that the folding of the mutant proteins was correct and that expression and
186
purification are not affected by mutagenesis.
187 188
Structural Modeling. Homology modeling is the most effective method to predict
189
unresolved protein structure. Homology modeling is based on two principles: the first point
190
is that the protein three-dimensional structure is exclusively determined by the amino acid
191
sequence, and could be theoretically inferred from the primary sequence; and the second
192
point is that protein three-dimensional structure is highly conservative in the course of
193
protein evolution. The B. halodurans ATCC BAA-125 L-RI shared 55% sequence identity
194
with C. obsidiansis OB47 L-RI, and thus, was chosen as the template for homology
195
modeling. The models of wild-type (as shown in Figure 1A) and variant C. obsidiansis
196
OB47 L-RI were constructed on the basis of the crystal structure of B. halodurans ATCC 11
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BAA-125 L-RI (PDB ID: 3P14) using the SWISS-MODEL server. After the energy
198
minimization, the quality of the obtained model was evaluated using the VERIFY-3D
199
procedure from the SAVES server. The results of VERIFY-3D revealed that 94.98% of the
200
amino acid residues possessed an average 3D-1D score ≥ 0.2 in 3D-1D structural
201
compatibility, which was considerably greater than the minimal quality requirement (80%).
202
The Ramachandran plot (Figure S2) exhibited that the amino acid residues at the
203
percentages of 90.3%, 9.0% and 0.7% were located in the most favored regions,
204
additionally allowed regions and generously allowed regions, respectively. Moreover,
205
amino acid residues were scarcely located in disallowed regions. The monomer structures
206
of C. obsidiansis OB47 L-RI (cyan) and B. halodurans ATCC BAA-125 L-RI (warm pink)
207
were superimposed (Figure 1B) with a 0.120 of root-mean-square deviation (RMSD) value.
208
The result of superimposition indicated that the structures of C. obsidiansis OB47 L-RI and
209
template were very similar. All of these results revealed that the acquired 3D models were
210
applicable and could be used for further structural analysis.
211
The structural arrangement of C. obsidiansis OB47 L-RI is the (β/α)8-barrel
212
conformation (Figure 1), which is composed of alternating connections between eight α-
213
helices (α1-α8) and eight β-strands (β1-β8). Moreover, the C. obsidiansis OB47 L-RI
214
structure has additional α-helical domains (α0, α9, α10, α11, α12) and an extended flexible
215
loop, which is similar to other resolved L-RI structures and may contribute to the
216
association between subunits and the combined action with active sites in the catalytic 12
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center, respectively.23, 25 It is thought that the (β/α)8-barrel conformation of L-RIs is the
218
most widespread and stable fold in characterized and resolved enzymes. Having intrinsic
219
stability, this (β/α)8-barrel structure can serve as the core scaffold for molecular
220
modification aiming at thermostability and catalytic activity. Notably, the flexible loop
221
above the catalytic core, which determines substrate specificity, is the most attractive
222
candidate for improving catalytic activity on D-allulose by site-directed mutagenesis
223
according to the reported E. coli L-RI structural information.
224 225
Effect of Mutation on Catalytic Behavior. In 2000, Korndörfer et al. reported that in the
226
E. coli L-RI structure, the β1-α1-loop, which is a flexible loop domain consisting of a series
227
of hydrophobic residues (Asp52-Arg78), is probably in charge of the recognition of
228
substrates. This β1-α1-loop of E. coli L-RI is similar to a lid or switch partly covering the
229
catalytic pocket to control the entry of L-rhamnose. Furthermore, this β1-α1-loop together
230
with several non-conservative hydrophobic residues (Ile105, Tyr106 and Phe336) creates
231
a hydrophobic region encompassing the substrate of the C6-methyl group. It revealed that
232
E. coli L-RI prefers the L-rhamnose with a C6-methyl group over the substrates with a C6-
233
oxhydryl group, such as D-allose and D-allulose. Particularly, in E. coli L-RI, V53, I67 and
234
I105 (in C. obsidiansis OB47 L-RI corresponding to V48, I63 and I101) have a
235
hydrophobic stacking interaction and a significant effect on the recognition of substrate.23
236
In 2007, a similar β1-α1-loop (Gly60-Arg76) was found in the P. stutzeri L-RI, which 13
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exhibits a broad substrate specificity. However, the difference is that the β1-α1-loop of P.
238
stutzeri L-RI covers the adjacent subunit molecule in connection with the substrate binding.
239
In addition, the β1-α1-loop of P. stutzeri L-RI only forms a hydrophobic interaction with
240
the substrate instead of a hydrophobic pocket, which results in a slight recognition for the
241
C6 position. This can explain why P. stutzeri L-RI has a broader substrate specificity than
242
E. coli L-RI.25
243
In E. coli L-RI, Phe336 (in C. obsidiansis OB47 L-RI corresponding to Phe335) in the
244
vicinity of conservative residues has a significant impact on the substrate specificity.23
245
However, this site is a hydrophilic serine in D. turgidum DSMZ 6724 L-RI, M. loti L-RI
246
and P. stutzeri L-RI (S329) and a hydrophilic cysteine in Caldilinea aerophila L-RI (a
247
hypothetical L-RI in GenBank, NCBI number: WP_014435274.1) (Figure S3).
248
Furthermore, to investigate the effect of S329 in P. stutzeri L-RI on substrate specificity,
249
Yoshida et al designed four mutants including S329F, S329K, S329L and S329A. The
250
results showed that the kcat/Km of S329F acting on D-allose was distinctly lower. To
251
summarize, this site together with the “β1-α1-loop” creates the hydrophobic catalytic
252
environment which possibly has an enormous effect on recognition of substrate according
253
to these L-RI structural information which has been verified.
254
The possible location of the β1-α1-loop (Asp47-Agr73) in the structure model of C.
255
obsidiansis OB47 L-RI was determined by sequence alignment and structural analysis. As
256
shown in Figure 2A, the surface model of C. obsidiansis OB47 L-RI β1-α1-loop (raspberry) 14
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above the central tunnel (green) is also similar to a lid and may be involved in the
258
recognition of substrate. A hydrophobic cavity between the β1-α1-loop and the catalytic
259
pocket (yellow) can be clearly observed from lateral view (Figure 2B). The surface models
260
superimposed with the cartoon model are presented in Figure 2C and 2D. To improve the
261
catalytic activity of C. obsidiansis OB47 L-RI on D-allulose (C6-oxhydryl group), which
262
is good for the industrial production of D-allose, a group of mutants was designed by
263
weakening the hydrophobic environment created by the “β1-α1-loop”. In C. obsidiansis
264
OB47 L-RI, a group of hydrophobic residues comprised of four continuous glycines (G59,
265
G60, G61 and G62) may exert a strong hydrophobic interaction. Therefore, five
266
hydrophobic residues (V48, G59, G60, G62 and I63) located within the β1-α1-loop and
267
two subsidiary residues I101 and F335 (in E. coli L-RI corresponding to Ile105 and F336,
268
respectively) were selected as the mutation sites and replaced with hydrophilic residues.
269
Hence, eight single-point mutants (V48N, G59N, G60T, G62T, I63N, I101N, F335C and
270
F335S) and two multiple mutants (V48N/G59N/I63N and V48N/G59N/I63N/F335S) were
271
designed for catalytic behavior.
272
The catalytic activities of wild-type enzyme and mutants towards L-rhamnose and D-
273
allulose were determined at optimal reaction conditions as previously described,27 and the
274
activity of the wild-type enzyme was set as 100%. As shown in Table 1, compared with
275
the wild-type enzyme, the relative activities of V48N, G59N, G62T, I101N, F335C and
276
F335S acting on D-allulose were increased by 68.6%, 61.4%, 36.1%, 36.8%, 87.4% and 15
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31.7%, respectively. Moreover, the relative activities of all mutants acting on L-rhamnose
278
were visibly decreased. In particular, the relative activities of V48N/G59N/I63N and
279
V48N/G59N/I63N/F335S were increased by 105.6% and 134.1% on D-allulose, and
280
decreased by 38.5% and 39.4% on L-rhamnose, respectively. This may suggests that
281
multiple mutation sites exert a synergistic effect. This result is largely consistent with the
282
design principle of mutation. The cartoon models of the wild-type enzyme (A) and mutant
283
V48N/G59N/I63N/F335S (B) are shown in Figure 3. Furthermore, to elucidate vividly the
284
variation of the catalytic pocket, their surface models are presented in Figure 4. After the
285
residues of V48 and F335 were respectively substituted by N48 and S335, their positions
286
were closer to the substrate and the catalytic pocket was partly shrunk. The shrinking of
287
the catalytic pocket enhanced the hydrophilic environment and the interaction with the
288
substrate of the C6-oxhydryl group. After G59 was replaced by N59, the position of the
289
residue shifted to the inside from the edge of the catalytic pocket. However, when the I63
290
was replaced by 63N, the side chain of the 63N residue diverged the central tunnel. This
291
finding could explain why the relative activity of I63N towards D-allulose was not
292
increased.
293 294
Effect of Mutation on Thermostability. To enhance the thermostability of C. obsidiansis
295
OB47 L-RI, the PDB file of the model was uploaded to the Hotspot Wizard 3.0 online
296
server
(https://loschmidt.chemi.muni.cz/hotspotwizard/), 16
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can
automatically
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establish mutation libraries and design site-specific mutation for protein stability according
298
to the amino acid frequency and evolutionary information from three large databases.39 The
299
server recommended many sites which may alter the thermostability of L-RI. By the
300
analysis of C. obsidiansis OB47 L-RI structural model, it is observed that two residues S81
301
and S88 located in α1 region may generate interplay with V421 and I343 located in α1 and
302
α8 regions, respectively. Thus, five mutants, S81A, S81Q, S88R, V421I and I343A, were
303
designed for further studies. The t1/2 of the wild type enzyme and mutants was determined
304
at 70 and 80°C. As shown in Table 2, in contrast to the wild-type enzyme, the t1/2 of S88R,
305
V421I and I343A was obviously lower at 70 and 80°C. Interestingly, the t1/2 of S81A was
306
enhanced to 34.1 and 5.6 h but the t1/2 of S81Q was dramatically reduced at 70 and 80°C,
307
respectively. The structural stability of S81A was further investigated by Nano-DSC
308
(Figure S4). Compared with the wild-type enzyme, the Tm value of S81A was increased by
309
approximately 3°C. As illustrated in Figure 5A, the valine of the 421 position contains two
310
methyl groups that are closest to the S81 residue containing a hydroxyl located in the α-
311
helix of the C-terminal. Thus, when serine-81 was replaced with a hydrophobic residue of
312
alanine containing a methyl group, a hydrophobic interaction was formed between alanine-
313
81 and valine-421, which contributed to strengthening the locking force of the overall
314
structure and thereby enhancing the structural thermostability (Figure 5B).
315 316
Bioconversion of D-Allulose to D-Allose. The production of D-allose was investigated in 17
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317
5 mL reaction mixtures containing 25 g/L D-allulose using wild-type enzyme and mutant
318
V48N/G59N/I63N/F335S. As shown in Figure 6, the isomerization reaction of mutant and
319
wild-type enzyme approached, respectively, equilibrium at 16 and 24 h with an
320
approximately
321
V48N/G59N/I63N/F335S exhibits higher catalytic efficiency than wild-type enzyme under
322
the same reaction conditions. Moreover, D-altrose as a potential byproduct has not been
323
detected in reaction mixtures of wild-type enzyme and mutant by HPLC analysis (data not
324
shown), which can simplify the separation and purification and better for industrial
325
production of D-allose. Compared with the wild-type enzyme, the mutant
326
V48N/G59N/I63N/F335S has a better catalytic behavior in the industrial production of D-
327
allose. The D-ribose-5-phosphate isomerase from Thermotoga lettingae TMO converts D-
328
allulose to D-allose with a ratio of 32% but exhibits a low productivity. The D-galactose-
329
6-phosphate isomerase from Lactococcus lactis and glucose-6-phosphate isomerase from
330
Pyrococcus furiosus produce D-allose with 25% and 32% conversion rates but with a
331
detectable by-product, respectively.11 Compared with these D-allose-producing enzymes,
332
the C. obsidiansis OB47 L-RI displays a larger application potential.
32%
conversion
ratio.
It
is
observed
that
the
mutant
333 334
ASSOCIATED CONTENT
335
Supporting Information
336
Figure S1. SDS-PAGE analysis of mutants. Figure S2. Ramachandran plot of the C. 18
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obsidiansis OB47 L-RI model. Figure S3. Multiple sequence alignment of various L-RIs.
338
Figure S4. Nano DSC analysis of wild-type enzyme (A) and V48N/G59N/I63N/F335S
339
mutant (B). Table S1. Primers for site-directed mutagenesis.
340 341
AUTHOR INFORMATION
342
Corresponding Authors
343
* (W. Mu) Phone: +86 510 85919161. Fax: +86 510 85919161. E-mail:
344
[email protected].
345
Funding
346
This work was supported by the Support Project of Jiangsu Province (No. 2015-SWYY-
347
009), the Research Program of State Key Laboratory of Food Science and Technology,
348
Jiangnan University (No. SKLF-ZZA-201802 and SKLF-ZZB-201814), and the National
349
First-Class Discipline Program of Food Science and Technology (No. JUFSTR20180203).
350
Ethical Statement
351
This article does not contain any studies with human participants performed by any of the
352
authors.
353
19
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354 355 356 357 358
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of L-rhamnose isomerase with a novel high thermostability from Bacillus halodurans.
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rhamnose and D-allose provide insights into broad substrate specificity. J. Mol. Biol. 2007, 23
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isomerase. Protein Eng., Des. Sel. 2010, 23 (12), 919-927.
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thermostable recombinant L-rhamnose isomerase from Caldicellulosiruptor obsidiansis
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OB47 and its application for the production of L-fructose and L-rhamnulose. J. Sci. Food
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its use for biotechnological production of rare sugars. Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 2016,
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(39) Bendl, J.; Stourac, J.; Sebestova, E.; Vavra, O.; Musil, M.; Brezovsky, J.; Damborsky,
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protein engineering. Nucleic Acids Res. 2016, 44, 479-487.
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Figure legend
474
Figure 1. C. obsidiansis OB47 L-RI structural model and alignment with B. halodurans
475
ATCC BAA-125 L-RI (PDB ID: 3P14). (A) Dimer model of C. obsidiansis OB47 L-RI.
476
The α-helix, β-strand and random coil were respectively colored cyan, magenta and salmon.
477
(B) Monomer superimposition of C. obsidiansis OB47 L-RI (cyan) and B. halodurans
478
ATCC BAA-125 L-RI (warm pink).
479 480
Figure 2. Planform (A) and lateral view (B) of the surface model of wild-type enzyme.
481
Surface and cartoon models were respectively delineated cyan and green. The β1-α1-loop
482
(raspberry) embraced the catalytic pocket (yellow line) and partly covered the catalytic
483
tunnel (green). Superimposition of surface and cartoon models by part (C) and whole (D)
484
transparency.
485 486
Figure 3. Residue distributions of 48, 59, 63 and 335 positions of wild-type enzyme (A)
487
and V48N/G59N/I63N/F335S mutant (B). These residues were presented as stick models.
488 489
Figure 4. Surface models of wild-type enzyme (A) and V48N/G59N/I63N/F335S mutant
490
(B). Residues of 48, 59, 63 and 335 positions were respectively colored magenta, orange,
491
blue and green.
492 26
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Figure 5. Location of S81 and V421 in a cartoon model of wild-type enzyme (A) and
494
V48N/G59N/I63N/F335S mutant (B). The hydrophobic interaction was represented using
495
red dotted lines.
496 497
Figure 6. Production of D-allose using the V48N/G59N/I63N/F335S mutant and wild-type
498
enzyme. The conversion reactions were carried out at 60°C and pH 8.0 containing 1 mM
499
Co2+, 5 μM of purified enzyme and 25 g/L D-allulose as substrate. The experiments were
500
conducted in three replications ± standard deviation.
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Table 1. Relative activities towards L-rhamnose and D-allulose of wild-type enzyme and mutants Enzymes
Relative activity (%) L-rhamnose
D-allulose
Wild-type
100.0 ± 2.2
100.0 ± 1.8
V48N
49.9 ± 0.8
168.6 ± 1.6
G59N
86.0 ± 0.4
161.4 ± 1.2
G60T
86.5 ± 0.6
87.1 ± 0.6
G62T
70.4 ± 0.6
136.1 ± 1.4
I63N
40.8 ± 0.8
94.5 ± 1.1
I101N
87.4 ± 1.1
136.8 ± 1.2
F335C
69.6 ± 1.6
187.4 ± 2.0
F335S
59.1 ± 1.4
131.7 ± 2.1
V48N/ G59N/ I63N
38.5 ± 0.7
205.6 ± 2.4
V48N/ G59N/ I63N/F335S
39.4 ± 0.5
234.1 ± 2.2
28
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Table 2. Thermostability of C.obsidiansis OB47 L-RI mutations Enzymes
Half-life t1/2(h) 70°C
80°C
Wild-type
26.4
4.5
S81A
34.1
5.6
S81Q
6.5
1.8
S88R
5.7
2.0
I343A
4.7
1.9
V421I
13.6
4.6
29
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Figure 1. C. obsidiansis OB47 L-RI structural model and alignment with B. halodurans ATCC BAA-125 L-RI (PDB ID: 3P14). (A) Dimer model of C. obsidiansis OB47 L-RI. The α-helix, β-sheet and random coil were respectively colored cyan, magenta and salmon. (B) Monomer superimposition of C. obsidiansis OB47 L-RI (cyan) and B. halodurans ATCC BAA-125 L-RI (warm pink). 99x49mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Figure 2. Planform (A) and lateral view (B) of the surface model of wild-type enzyme. Surface and cartoon models were respectively delineated cyan and green. The β1-α1-loop (raspberry) embraced the catalytic pocket (yellow line) and partly covered the catalytic tunnel (green). Superimposition of surface and cartoon models by part (C) and whole (D) transparency. 88x86mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Figure 3. Residue distributions of 48, 59, 63 and 335 positions of wild-type enzyme (A) and V48N/G59N/I63N/F335S mutant (B). These residues were presented as stick models. 91x50mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Figure 4. Surface models of wild-type enzyme (A) and V48N/G59N/I63N/F335S mutant (B). Residues of 48, 59, 63 and 335 positions were respectively colored magenta, orange, blue and green. 99x51mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Figure 5. Location of S81 and V421 in a cartoon model of wild-type enzyme (A) and V48N/G59N/I63N/F335S mutant (B). The hydrophobic interaction was represented using red dotted lines. 82x40mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Figure 6. Production of D-allose using the V48N/G59N/I63N/F335S mutant and wild-type enzyme. The conversion reactions were carried out at 60°C and pH 8.0 containing 1 mM Co2+, 5 μM of purified enzyme and 25 g/L D-allulose as substrate. The experiments were conducted in three replications ± standard deviation. 271x189mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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TOC graphic 84x47mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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