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Probing the Role of Two Critical Residues in Inulin Fructotransferase (DFA III-producing) Thermostability from Arthrobacter sp. 161MFSha2.1 Shuhuai Yu, Xiao Wang, Tao Zhang, Bo Jiang, and Wanmeng Mu J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.6b02291 • Publication Date (Web): 21 Jul 2016 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on July 25, 2016
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Probing the Role of Two Critical Residues in Inulin Fructotransferase (DFA III-producing) Thermostability from Arthrobacter sp. 161MFSha2.1 Shuhuai Yu†, Xiao Wang†, Tao Zhang†, Bo Jiang†,§, Wanmeng Mu*,†,§
†
State Key Laboratory of Food Science and Technology, Jiangnan University, Wuxi,
Jiangsu, 214122, China §
Synergetic Innovation Center of Food Safety and Nutrition, Jiangnan Universtiy,
Wuxi, Jiangsu, 214122, China
Corresponding authors: *
(W.
Mu)
Phone:
+86
510
85919161.
Fax:
E-mail:
[email protected].
1
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+86
510
85919161.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
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Abstract
2
Inulin fructotransferase (IFTase) is an important enzyme that produces
3
di-D-fructofuranose 1,2':2,3' dianhydride (DAF III) which is beneficial for human
4
health. Present investigations mainly focus on screening and characterizing IFTase,
5
including catalytic efficiency and thermostability which are two important factors for
6
enzymatic industrial applications. However, few reports aimed to improve these two
7
characteristics based on the structure of IFTase. In this work, a structural model of
8
IFTase (DFA III-producing) from Arthrobacter sp. 161MFSha2.1 was constructed
9
through homology modeling. By analyzing this model, two residues, Ser-309 and
10
Ser-333, may play key roles in the structural stability. Therefore, the functions of the
11
two residues were probed by site-directed mutagenesis combined with the Nano-DSC
12
method and assays for residual activity. In contrast to other mutations, single mutation
13
of serine 309 (or serine333) to threonine did not decrease the enzymatic stability,
14
whereas double mutation (serine 309 and serine333 to threonine) can enhance
15
thermostability (approximately 5 °C). The probable mechanisms for this enhancement
16
were investigated.
17 18
Key words: Di-D-Fructofuranose 1,2':2,3' dianhydride (DFA III); Inulin; Inulin
19
fructotransferase (IFTase); Homology modeling; Thermostability
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Introduction
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Fructose is usually a critical carbohydrate for metabolism in organisms. However,
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this monosaccharide is often stored in the form of fructans in 15% of flowering plants
23
as well as in a wide range of bacteria or fungi 1. In addition to serving as an energy
24
storage reservoir
25
environments 3. Inulin and levan are two primary fructans that consist of linear β-2,1-
26
and β-2,6-linked fructosyl residues, respectively. They display physiological functions
27
for human health to some extent. Specifically, inulin is considered as functional food
28
and feed because of its prebiotic properties 4. For example, it selectively enhances the
29
growth of bifidobacteria and lactobacilli 5. Moreover, calcium intake can be
30
significantly promoted by ingestion of inulin-type fructans
31
principally
32
sucrose:sucrose
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1-fructosyl-tansferase (1-FFT). During the synthetic process, 1-SST catalyzes the
34
formation of 1-kestose, a trisaccharide, by transferring one sucrose fructosyl residue
35
onto other sucrose molecules. Subsequently, chain elongation is achieved by 1-FFT 8, 9.
36
In contrast, bacterial inulin is mainly biosynthesized by inulosucrase, which belongs
37
to glycosyl hydrolase (GH) family 68 based on the classification of the
38
‘carbohydrate-active enzymes (CAZy)’ database (http://www.cazy.org/)
39
degradation of fructans to small molecular carbohydrates facilitates energy acquisition.
40
This
41
β-fructofuranosidase (3.2.1.26) 14 and exo-inulinase (E.C. 3.2.1.7) 15, which hydrolyze
1, 2
, fructans also function as protectants against various
biosynthesized
process
by
two
distinct
1-fructosyl-transferase
usually
needs
various
enzymes
(1-SST)
enzymes.
6, 7
. In nature, inulin is
in
plants,
and
For
3
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inulin,
including
fructan:fructan
it
10-13
. The
involves
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
16
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inulin into fructose; endo-inulinase (EC. 3.2.1.7)
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fructo-oligosaccharides; and inulin fructotransferases (IFTases), which decompose
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inulin into di-D-fructofuranose 1,2':2,1' dianhydride (difructose anhydride I, DAF I)
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(EC 4.2.2.17 for DFA I-forming IFTase)
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dianhydride (difructose anhydride III, DAF III) (EC 4.2.2.18 for DFA III-forming
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IFTase) 18, 19.
17
, which converts inulin into
or di-D-fructofuranose 1,2':2,3'
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Among these inulin products, DFA III, which consists of two fructose molecules
49
with two reciprocal glycosidic linkages 20, has attracted increasing attention from the
50
scientific and commercial community because of its promising physiological
51
functions. For example, due to its low calories (52% sweetness but only 1/15 energy
52
of sucrose)
53
effect of accelerating calcium or iron absorption in the intestines 22, functional foods
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to treat osteoporosis and iron-deficiency anemia can be made by supplementation
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with DFA III. Considering these benefits for human health, DFA III has been
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industrially manufactured using commercially available Arthrobacter sp. H65-7
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IFTase (DFA III-forming) by the Shimizu Factory (Tokachi District, Hokkaido, Japan)
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of the Nippon Beet Sugar Mfg. Co., Ltd. since 2004
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III-containing commodities have been on the market since 2004 and in drugstores and
60
convenience stores since 201124.
21
, it can be used as an ideal sucrose substitute. Additionally, given the
23
. Moreover, in Japan, DFA
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Aside from the aforementioned functional research and commercial application of
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DFA III, the synthesis of DFA III has been extensively investigated. Presently, the
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major manufacturing approach is through biosynthesis with microorganisms or IFTase. 4
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Wang et al. summarized the microorganisms and IFTases that produce DFA III up to
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2015 25. Furthermore, two novel IFTases (DAF III-producing) were elaborated on by
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Haraguchi et al.
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microorganisms or enzymes. In contrast, few reports have examined improving
68
enzymatic activity or thermostability, which are two important factors of industrial
69
enzymes. Although it was reported that catalytic behavior and thermal stability of
70
IFTase can be enhanced by applying high hydrostatic pressure 28, 29, few investigations
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have examined increases in activity or thermostability based on protein structure. In
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2007, the three-dimensional crystallographic structure of Bacillus sp. snu-7 IFTase
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(BsIFTase) was first resolved by Jung et al., which revealed that the enzyme is a
74
homotrimer
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characteristic enhancement on the basis of the BsIFTase structure. In this work, we
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constructed a model of IFTase from Arthrobacter sp. 161MFSha2.1 (AsIFTase) based
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on the BsIFTase structure (AsIFTase, which is a homotrimer as BsIFTase, has been
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fully characterized in our previous investigation 27). In this model, two serine residues,
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Ser-309 and Ser-333, showed potential critical roles in stabilizing the structure.
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Therefore, a rational design was implemented to probe the functions of these two
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residues and to enhance the thermostability of AsIFTase, which may make this IFTase
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to be an ideal industrial enzyme.
26
and Wang et al.
27
in 2015. These studies focused on screening
30
. However, there has been no further exploration on enzymatic
83 84
Materials and methods
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Chemicals, reagents, and strains. The gene cloning agents were obtained from 5
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Sangon Biotech Co., Ltd. (Shanghai, China). Electrophoretic reagents were obtained
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from Bio-Rad (Hercules, CA, USA). The Ni2+-chelating affinity chromatography resin
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was purchased from GE (Uppsala, Sweden). Isopropyl-β-D-1-thiogalactopyranoside
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(IPTG) for induction was from Sigma (St. Louis, Mo, USA). Inulin (Orafti HP,
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molecular weight is approximately 5,000 Da) was purchased from BENEO-Orafti NV
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(Tienen, Belgium). Other chemicals were at least of analytical grade and were
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obtained from Sigma (St. Louis, MO, USA) or Sinopharm Chemical Reagent
93
(Shanghai, China).
94 95
Escherichia coli (E. coli) BL21 (DE3) and DH5α cells were obtained from Sangon Biological Engineering Technology and Services (Shanghai, China).
96 97
Molecular modeling. The homology construction of the structural models was
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performed with the SWISS-MODEL server (http://www.expasy.ch/swissmod/
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SWISS-MODEL.html) 30-33 using the BsIFTase crystal structure (PDB ID: 2INV) 30 as
100
a template. The structure energy minimization was implemented by Discovery Studio
101
software (Accelrys, CA, USA). Subsequently, the quality of the AsIFTase and mutant
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models was checked by the VERIFY_3D Server 34-36. The stereochemical quality was
103
validated by Coot with its Ramachandran plot module
104
rendered and presented with the Pymol Molecular Graphics System.
37
. The structures were
105 106
Mutagenesis, heterologous expression, and purification. Based on analysis of the
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AsIFTase model, residues Ser-309 and Ser-333 may be important for enzyme stability. 6
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Hence, a rational design of the two critical residues was implemented, and
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site-directed mutagenesis was performed by one-step PCR methods using a TaKaRa
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MutantBEST Kit (TaKaRa, Dalian, China). In total, eight single-point mutants
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(S309A, S309C, S309F, S309T, S333A, S333C, S333F, and S333T) and four double
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mutations (S309A/S333A, S309C/S333C, S309F/S333F, and S309T/S333T) were
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designed (Table 1). The pET-22b(+) plasmid constructed in a previous work
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used as a template with the primers shown in Table 1. According to the TaKaRa
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MutantBEST Kit protocol, the 50 µL PCR reaction system contained 0.01 – 1.0 ng of
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plasmid template, 10× pyrobest Buffer II, 0.25 µL of pyrobest DNA polymerase
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(TaKaRa, Dalian, China) (5 U µL-1), 1 µL of each primer (20 µM), 4 µL of dNTP
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mixture (2.5 mM for each). Finally, ddH2O was used to bring the reaction to the final
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volume. The PCR reaction was performed with following program: predenaturation at
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94 °C for 1 min; 30 cycles of denaturation at 94 °C for 30 s, annealing at 57 °C for 30
121
s, and elongation at 72 °C for 5 min; and a final extension step at 72 °C for 10 min.
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Subsequently, a reaction containing 50 µM DNA fragment, 2 µL of 10× blunting
123
buffer, 1 µL of Blunting Kination enzyme mix, and a suitable amount of ddH2O,
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which was used to bring the final volume to 20 µL, was used to phosphorylated the
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5′-ends of the amplified fragments. Finally, 5 µL of DNA ligation solution I was
126
added to the above reaction system for self-ligation at 16 °C for 1 h.
127 128
27
was
Induction, expression, and purification of the AsIFTase mutants were carried out similarly to that of AsFTase in our previous work 27.
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The effect of temperature on enzyme activity and thermostability. The assay
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methods and unit definition of enzymatic activity were reported in our previous
132
work27. Temperatures were from 30 to 80 °C.
133
The thermostability of the enzyme was investigated as follows. First, because
134
Differential Scanning Calorimeters (Nano DSC, TA Instruments, New Castle, DE) can
135
sensitively capture the change in energy in protein folding and unfolding processes,
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the melting temperature (Tm) was used to reflect the thermostability of the enzyme. At
137
3 atmospheric pressures (approximately 304 kPa), the sample (0.1 mg mL-1) was
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detected at a heating rate of 1 °C min-1 from 30 to 100 °C. Second, referring to our
139
previous work 27, the thermostability was inspected by detecting the residual activity
140
after incubating the enzymes at 55, 60, 70, and 80 °C for 240 min. Thirdly, to
141
determine the enzymatic thermostability, which was indicated by the half-life time of
142
heat denaturation (t1/2), the enzymes were incubated at 55 °C for different times and
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the residual activities were measured at 55 °C and pH 5.5.
144 145
Results
146
Prediction of the AsIFTase structure
147
Because BsIFTase shared high sequence identity (83%) with AsIFTase, the 30
148
crystallographic structure of BsIFTase (PDB ID: 2inv)
was selected as a template
149
for homology modeling. After structure energy minimization, the VERIFY-3D module
150
demonstrated that 97% of the residues had an average 3D-1D score >= 0.2, which was
151
higher than the minimal requirement (80%). Subsequently, the Ramachandran plot 8
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(Fig. S1) showed that the total percentage, including preferred regions (93.7%) and
153
allowed regions (3.86%), was rather high (more than 95%). These results indicated
154
that the overall quality of the model was acceptable.
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As shown in Fig. 1A, the monomeric model of AsIFTase has a right-handed parallel
156
β-helix, which is similar to BsIFTase. In addition, superimposition of the overall
157
structures showed that the two structures are similar (Fig. 1B). In both structures,
158
hydrogen bonds from residue Ser-309 protrude into the central axis forming a triangle.
159
Although many residues in one subunit formed hydrogen bonds with the second
160
subunit, the residue Ser-309 in one subunit can simultaneously form hydrogen bonds
161
with other two subunits, which displayed a unique intersubunit contact.
162 163
Gene cloning, heterologous expression, and purification of the mutants
164
Given the specificity of the triangular pattern (hydrogen bonds) between the
165
Ser-309 residues, which may play a critical role in the stability of the structure,
166
site-directed mutagenesis was implemented to investigate the functions of this site.
167
Additionally, Ser-333, which is above Ser-309 (Fig. 2A), had considerable probability
168
to form this triangular pattern through mutation, which would also contribute to the
169
stability of the three-dimensional structure. Hence, mutation of Ser-333 was also
170
performed. Eight single-point mutants (S309A, S309C, S309F, S309T; S333A, S333C,
171
S333F, and S333T) were designed for Ser-309 and Ser-333, respectively (Table 1).
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Four double mutations, including S309A/S333A, S309C/S333C, S309F/S333F, and
173
S309T/S333T, were also made. After cloning the genes and heterologous expression,
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the Ser-309 and Ser-333 mutants were purified as single strands from a gel with a
175
molecular mass of approximately 42 kDa (Fig. 3), which indicated that all the mutants
176
expressed correctly in the E. coli system. 9
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The effect of mutation on the enzyme activity and thermostability
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Mutation of Ser-309 and Ser-333 may change the reaction temperature and
180
stability of the three-dimensional structure. Hence, the dependence of enzyme activity
181
on temperature was determined to identify the optimum temperature and
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thermostability. As shown in Table 2, compared with the optimum reaction
183
temperatures (Topt) for wild-type AsIFTase (55 °C), the Topt values for the
184
phenylalanine (Phe), cysteine (Cys), and alanine (Ala) mutants decreased by 5 °C,
185
while those for the threonine (Thr) mutants were invariable. Based on the mutant Topt
186
values, the relative enzyme activities were more than 90%, except for the two double
187
mutants (S309A/S333A and S309C/S333C) (Table 2).
188
For thermostability, in comparison with wild-type AsIFTase via the Nano-DSC
189
method (Fig. 4), the Tm value of the Phe, Ser, and Ala mutants successively decreased,
190
while the Tm values increased by approximately 2 and 5 °C for the single and double
191
Thr mutants, respectively (Table 2). Simultaneously, after incubation at 55, 60, 70,
192
and 80 °C for 240 min, the results of the residual activities can be summarized into
193
three facets. First, the thermostability of all the enzymes, which was indicated by
194
residual activities, gradually declined with the increase in temperature (Fig. 5).
195
Second, in comparison with wild-type AsIFTase, the thermostability of the Ala, Cys,
196
and Phe mutants decreased. This downward trend was more obvious with the increase
197
in temperature. Moreover, the falling velocity of the Phe mutants was slightly slower
198
than that of the Ala and Cys mutants. Third, in contrast to other mutants, there were 10
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very slight differences in the thermostability between the wild-type enzyme and the
200
single Thr mutants. In contrast, the stability of the double Thr mutant was obviously
201
improved, and this improvement was more remarkable with increases in temperature.
202
Lastly, in comparison with wild-type AsIFTase (shown in Table 2), the t1/2 at 55 °C
203
was enhanced by approximately 2 and 4 h for the single and double Thr mutants,
204
respectively, while it was reduced by at least 5 h for the other mutants.
205 206
Homology modeling of the mutants
207
The homology modeling process and quality check was similar to that of
208
wild-type AsIFTase. The final mutant models were acceptable and quite similar to that
209
of wild-type AsIFTase (data not shown). However, the Ser-309 and Ser-333 linkages
210
with nearby residues were varied (Fig. 6), which may contribute to the differences in
211
the aforementioned thermostability of the mutants (detailed changes are analyzed in
212
the Discussion section).
213 214
Discussion
215
In general, it is difficult to obtain three-dimensional coordinates for each enzyme.
216
However, because the tertiary structure is determined by the primary structure, it is
217
possible to obtain enzymatic structures through homology modeling. Usually, the
218
constructed models are reliable when enzymes share finely high sequence identity
219
with proteins having known structures. These models allow enzymes to be rationally
220
designed and modified.
221
In this work, the AsIFTase monomer displayed a typical right-handed parallel 11
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222
β-helix (Fig. 1A) and the root mean square deviation (RMSD) of the Cα atoms
223
between the two structures by superimposition (Fig. 1B) was 0.063 (1150 to 1150
224
atoms), which indicated that the two structures were quite similar. Moreover, it
225
revealed that residue Ser-309 forms a unique triangular hydrogen bond linkage, which
226
may play a critical role in stabilizing the structure. Likewise, BsIFTase also displayed
227
this pattern. However, the linkages between Ser-309 and nearby residues were
228
different. As seen in Fig. 2A, in addition to the triangular linkage, Ser-309 also
229
formed a hydrogen bond (3.2 Å) with Ser-308 from a neighboring subunit, which may
230
enhance the structural stability. Moreover, Ser-333, which also bonds to Ser-308 (2.6
231
Å) from the same subunit, formed a weak hydrogen bond with Ser-309 (3.4 Å).
232
Therefore, Ser-333 may act like a crab claw that indirectly stabilizes the overall
233
structure through clamping Ser-309 and Ser-308 and consolidating the linkage
234
between these two residues. This clamp role of Ser-333 is similar to Asp-233 in
235
BsIFTase for stability purposes, though Asp-233 stabilizes the substrate rather than the
236
three-dimensional structure
237
Ser-309, and Ala-333 (corresponding to Ser-308, Ser-309, and Ser-333 in AsIFTase,
238
respectively) were absent (Fig. 2B). Therefore, in comparison with AsIFTase, the
239
lower thermostability (103-min half-life at 60 °C for BsIFTase
240
half-life at 80 °C for AsIFTase 27) may be partly ascribed to this absence. As shown in
241
Fig. S2, all the IFTases (DFA III-forming) with GeneBank accession had 82%
242
sequence identity. This considerably high identity indicated that IFTases (DFA
243
III-forming) may have similar structures. Fig. S2 shows that residues corresponding to
30
. However, in BsIFTase, linkages between Thr-308,
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the BsIFTase active center and residues corresponding to Ser-308 and Ser-309 in
245
AsIFTase were highly conserved, while residues corresponding to Ser-333 in
246
AsIFTase were variable. Like Ala-333 in BsIFTase, this variation may lead to a
247
decrease in structural stability.
248
Due to the importance of Ser-309 and Ser-333 from a previous analysis, these sites
249
were mutated to four different amino acids. Mutation with a smaller Ala and a larger
250
Phe were designed to verify the importance of Ser-309 and Ser-333. The Cys mutant
251
was designed to improve the thermostability because disulfide bond which is firmer
252
than hydrogen bonds may be formed between cysteines. Thr, which is similar to Ser,
253
was introduced to form triangular hydrogen linkages and to reinforce the stability of
254
the structure. As seen in Fig. 3, the individual mutant protein bands on the SDS-PAGE
255
gel were approximately 42 kDa. This agreed well with the molecular mass of
256
wild-type AsIFTase in our previous work 27. Wild-type AsIFTase was also purified and
257
the SDS-PAGE result was similar to our previous work (data not shown).
258
After purification, the effect of temperature on enzyme activity was investigated.
259
The activity of all the enzymes was determined at their respective Topt values (50 or
260
55 °C). Table 2 showed that the relative activities of most of the mutants were more
261
than 90%, though the double Ala and Cys mutants displayed a slightly lower relative
262
activity (88 and 84%, respectively), which indicated that mutation of Ser-309 and
263
Ser-333 had little effect on activity. These data can be explained by the structure. Due
264
to the considerable sequence identity and structural similarity between AsIFTase and
265
BsIFTase, we can infer that the AsIFTase active center is located at a
266
monomer-monomer interface like BsIFTase, which means that Ser-309 and Ser-333
267
were far away from this putative active center. Therefore, Ser-309 and Ser-333 had no
268
direct role in catalyzing or binding substrate, which indicated that the effect of 13
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mutation on activity was not obvious.
270
Thereafter, the thermostability of the mutants was investigated. First, the
271
thermostability was determined by Nano-DSC (Fig. 4). As shown in Table 2, in
272
comparison with the wild-type enzyme (87.04 °C), the Tm values for the Ala, Cys, Phe
273
mutants dropped by 13 to 25 °C. This result indicated that mutation of the Ser-309 or
274
-333 residues to Ala, Cys, and Phe decreased the enzymatic stability. Moreover, the
275
Tm of Phe, Cys, and Ala displayed a successive downtrend, which suggested that the
276
Phe mutant was slightly more stable than the Ala and Cys mutants. Second, the
277
residual activities were assayed to determine the thermostability. Fig. 5 showed that
278
the residual activities of all the enzymes decreased with an increase in temperature.
279
This phenomenon conformed to common regularity due to the unfolding of protein at
280
higher temperatures 39. Moreover, at low temperatures (55 °C), enzymes including the
281
Ala, Cys, and Phe mutants maintained more than 74% of their residual activity (Fig.
282
5). However, at higher temperatures (60 to 80 °C), the residual activities of the Ala,
283
Cys, and Phe mutants substantially dropped. Interestingly, the residual activities of the
284
Phe mutants were always higher than those of the Ala and Cys mutants at the same
285
temperature. This indicated that the Phe mutants were more stable than Ala and Cys
286
mutants, which agreed well with the Nano-DSC results. In contrast to the other
287
mutants, the residual activities of the single Thr mutants slightly changed compared
288
with the wild-type enzyme at the same temperature, while the double Thr mutation
289
enhanced the residual activities. This indicated that the mutation of Ser to Thr at
290
amino acids 309 and 333, respectively, maintained or enhanced the structural stability.
291
This enhancement was also in accordance with the Nano-DSC results. The enhanced
292
effect of the double Thr mutant was more remarkable, especially at higher
293
temperatures. For example, at 55 °C, the wild-type enzyme, S309T, S333T, and 14
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double mutants maintained approximate residual activities (90, 90, 88, and 91%
295
respectively). However, at 80 °C, their residual activities were 52, 53, 56, and 62% of
296
residual activities, respectively. These changes in residual activity suggest that
297
wild-type AsIFTase and the Thr mutants maintained their stability at low temperatures,
298
and the double Thr mutant was more stable at higher temperatures. Lastly, the assay
299
for t1/2 at 55 °C was implemented (Table 2). In comparison with wild-type AsIFTase,
300
the t1/2 values of the Thr mutants increased by 2 to 4 h, while those of the other
301
mutants decreased by at least 5 h. This also validated that the thermostability of the
302
double Thr mutants was more stable than those of the wild-type enzyme or other
303
mutants.
304
Herein, the increase or decrease in thermostability due to the mutations can be
305
explained by changes in the linkages between the residues. As mentioned above, the
306
triangular linkages formed by Ser-309 residues and linkages between Ser-309 and
307
S308 from neighboring subunits may play a critical role in stabilizing the structure
308
(Fig. 2A). However, these linkages were broken by mutating Ser to Ala, Cys, and Phe
309
(Fig. 2A–2C), which led to the decrease in thermostability. In the Phe mutant,
310
although these linkages were absent, an edge-to-face (3.6 Å) and a quite weak offset
311
face-to-face (4.1 and 4.2 Å) π-π stacking interaction probably formed between the Phe
312
residues (Fig. 6C). That is why the thermostabilities of the Phe mutants decreased
313
slower than those of the other mutants. Furthermore, the mutation of Ser to Cys was
314
originally designed to introduce disulfide bonds between the 309 residues; however,
315
no bond (even hydrogen bond) was formed (Fig. 6B). In contrast to the Ala, Cys, and
316
Phe mutants, the mutation of Ser-309 to Thr-309 did not change the interaction ways
317
of these residues (Fig. 6D). Simultaneously, the linkages between Thr-309 and
318
Ser-308 (or Thr-309) were slightly strengthened (3.2 to 3.1 Å between Thr-309 and 15
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Ser-308 and 2.9 to 2.8 Å between Thr-309 and Thr-309). This is why the
320
thermostability of the Thr-309 mutant did not decrease as that of Ala, Cys, and Phe
321
mutants. For the Thr-333 mutant, a new triangular hydrogen bond linkage was formed
322
between the Thr-333 (Fig. 6E), which may contribute to the maintenance of
323
thermostability. As mentioned above, the clamp-like hydrogen bonds made by residue
324
333 with S308 (or 309) may indirectly stabilize the structure. However, this clamp
325
was lost in the Thr-333 mutant. The slight rather than substantial enhancement at
326
higher temperature in the thermostability of the Thr-333 mutant can be ascribed to this
327
loss. Lastly, the improvement in stability for the double Thr mutant may be the
328
comprehensive result of Thr-309 and Thr-333 (Fig. 6F).
329
In summary, based on homology modeling and site-directed mutagenesis, two
330
residues, Ser-309 and Ser-333, were proven to be important for AsIFTase
331
thermostability. Thermostability was improved by approximately 5 °C through double
332
mutating Ser to Thr, which can be ascribed to the changes in the linkages between
333
Ser-308, Ser-309, and Ser-333. Given the perfect characterization of AsIFTase
334
reported in our previous work
335
may make this enzyme ideal for developing DFA III products.
27
, the improvement in thermal stability in this work
336 337
Author information
338
Corresponding author
339
*
340
E-mail:
[email protected].
(W.
Mu)
Phone:
+86
510
85919161.
Fax:
341
16
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+86
510
85919161.
Page 17 of 34
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
342
Funding Information
343
This work was supported by the NSFC Project (Nos. 31371788 and 21276001),
344
the 863 Project (No. 2013AA102102), the Support Project of Jiangsu Province (No.
345
BK20130001 and 2015-SWYY-009), and the project of outstanding scientific and
346
technological innovation group of Jiangsu Province (Jing Wu).
347 348 349
Abbreviations used IFTase,
inulin
fructotransferase;
DFA III,
di-D-fructofuranose
1,2':2,3'
350
dianhydride; AsIFTase, Arthrobacter sp. 161MFSha2.1 IFTase; BsIFTase, Bacillus sp.
351
snu-7
352
isopropyl-β-D-1-thiogalactopyranoside;
353
polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; LB medium, Luria-Bertani medium; DSC,
354
differential scanning calorimetry
IFTase;
HPLC,
high-performance
liquid
SDS-PAGE,
chromatography; sodium
dodecyl
IPTG, sulfate;
355 356 357
Competing interests The authors declare that no competing interests exist.
358 359 360 361
Compliance with ethical standards This article does not contain any studies with human participants or animals performed by any of the authors.
362 363
Author Contributions 17
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364
SY, XW, TZ, BJ, and WM conceived and designed the experiments. SY and XW
365
performed the experiments. SY, XW and WM analyzed the data. SY, XW, and WM
366
contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools. SY and WM wrote the paper.
367 368
Supporting information
369
Fig. S1. Ramanchandran plot of AsIFTase model.
370 371
Fig. S2. Multiple sequence alignments of IFTases (DFA III-forming).
372 373
References
374
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20. Jackson, E. J. M. a. R. F., Structure of difructose dianhydride III
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(difructofuranose 1,2',2,3'-anhydride). J. Res. Natl. Bur. Stand. 1940, 24, 181-204.
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21. Kikuchi, H.; Nagura, T.; Inoue, M.; Kishida, T.; Sakurai, H.; Yokota, A.; Asano,
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dianhydrides. Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 2015, 99, 175-188.
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26. Haraguchi, K., Difructose Dianhydride III Producing inulin fructotransferase
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27. Wang, X.; Yu, S. H.; Zhang, T.; Jiang, B.; Mu, W., Identification of a recombinant
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inulin fructotransferase (difructose dianhydride III forming) from Arthrobacter sp
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161mfsha2.1 with high specific activity and remarkable thermostability. J Agric Food
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34. Bowie, J. U.; Luthy, R.; Eisenberg, D., A method to identify protein sequences
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37. Emsley, P.; Lohkamp, B.; Scott, W. G.; Cowtan, K., Features and development of
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ssion, and characterization of Bacillus sp. snu-7 inulin fructotransferase. J. Micr
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39. Bisswanger, H., Enzyme assays. Perspectives in Sci. 2014, 1, 41-55.
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Figure legends
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Fig. 1. AsIFTase models and structural alignment of AsIFTase and BsIFTase. (A)
479
Monomeric model of AsIFTase. β-sheets are delineated with cyan, yellow, and red
480
colors. The probable 310-helices and α-helix are colored in green. (B) Superimposition
481
of the AsIFTase model (green) onto the crystallographic structure for BsIFTase (PDB
482
ID: 2inv) (cyan). The Ser-309 residues from AsIFTase and BsIFTase protrude from the
483
core β-helices, forming three regular protrusions in the intersubunit channel along the
484
central axis. Hydrogen bonds between the three AsIFTase or BsIFTase Ser-309
485
residues form a triangle with 2.9 Å distances, which stabilize the overall structure.
486 487
Fig. 2. Hydrogen bonds formed between Ser-309, Ser-308, and Ser-333 in (A)
488
AsIFTase and (B) BsIFTase. The different colored dash lines represent hydrogen
489
bonds. The hydrogen bonds distances (angstrom) are labeled with black Arabic
490
numerals.
491 492
Fig. 3. SDS-PAGE analysis of the mutants. (A) Lane M: standard protein marker; lane
493
1 to 6: S309A, S309C, S309F, S309T, S309A/S333A, and S309C/S333C. (B) Lane M':
494
standard protein marker (the same to that of Lane M); Lane 1' to 6': S333A, S333C,
495
S333F, S333T, S309F/S333F, and S309T/S333T.
496 497
Fig. 4. Wild-type AsIFTase Nano-DSC results. The Tm corresponds to the peak
498
temperature. The mutant Nano-DSC profiles were similar to the wild-type AsIFTase 24
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profile (data not shown).
500 501
Fig. 5. Thermostability of wild-type AsIFTase and the mutants. The enzymes were
502
incubated at 55, 60, 70, and 80 °C for 240 min. The residual activity was defined as
503
the percentage of initial enzymatic activity. Each experiment was carried out in three
504
replications ± standard deviation.
505 506
Fig. 6. The linkages between the Ser-308, Ser-309, and Ser-333 residues. Ser-308,
507
Ser-309, and Ser-333 are labeled pink, green, and orange, respectively. The dash
508
represents hydrogen bonds (cut-off was 3.3 Å) or distance between the residues. The
509
length of the dashed lines is labeled with black Arabic numerals. (A)-(F) represent
510
linkages of S309A, S309C, S309F, S309T, S333T, S309T/S333T, respectively.
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Table 1. Primers for site-directed mutagenesis. The underlined sequences represent mutated codons. Double mutation was implemented by mutating Ser-309 (Ser-333) after the successful single mutation of Ser-333 (Ser-309). Mutant sites S309A-Forward S309C-Forward S309F-Forward S309T-Forward Ser-309-Reverse S333A-Forward S333C-Forward S333F-Forward S333T-Forward Ser-333-Reverse
Oligonucleotides( (5′-3′) ) CGTATCGGCGAACCGGTTTCAGGGCTT CGTATCGTGCAACCGGTTTCAGGGCTTC CGTATCGTTCAACCGGTTTCAGGGCTTC CGTATCGACTAACCGGTTTCAGGGCTTC GAGCAGCGGTTACAGCCGTTGAACT ATCACGGCGAATCACTTCCGCAGGG ATCACGTGCAATCACTTCCGCAGGG ATCACGTTCAATCACTTCCGCAGGG ATCACGACTAATCACTTCCGCAGGG GAGGTTTTCCTTGCATCCATTCAG
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Table 2. The results of effect of temperature on enzyme activity. Topt represents optimum temperature. The relative activity of the mutants was defined as a percentage of the wild-type enzyme activity. The melting temperatures (Tm) of the mutants using the Nano-DSC method were compared with the wild-type enzyme (87.04 °C was defined as 0, and the other Tm values were calculated by subtracting 87.04 °C). The t1/2 represents the half-life time of enzymatic heat denaturation. The data is the mean of three replications ± standard deviation.
wild S309A S309C S309F S309T S333A S333C S333F S333T S309A/333A S309C/333C S309F/333F S309T/333T
Topt (°C) 55 50 50 50 55 50 50 50 55 50 50 50 55
Activity (%) 100 ± 2.3 95.80 ± 3.2 94.90 ± 2.1 102.60 ± 4.3 103.50 ± 3.9 98.60 ± 2.3 95.70 ± 4.1 97.40 ± 3.7 92.40 ± 2.5 88.20 ± 3.9 84.50 ± 4.4 96.40 ± 2.9 91.80 ± 3.1
Tm (°C) 0 (87.04) ± 0.4 - 17.88 ± 1.3 - 16.8 ± 0.9 - 15.83 ± 1.2 + 2.89 ± 1.5 - 18.83 ± 2.0 - 15.71 ± 1.1 - 13.29 ± 2.3 + 2.16 ± 3.0 - 25.88 ± 2.8 - 23.7 ± 1.4 - 19.52 ± 2.8 + 5.05 ± 1.0
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t1/2 (h) 20.7 ± 2.0 11.5 ± 1.1 12.8 ± 0.9 11.0 ± 1.3 22.5 ± 1.8 10.5 ± 0.9 12.6 ± 1.3 15.0 ± 1.1 22.0 ± 0.8 8.3 ± 0.9 6.8 ± 0.7 10.0 ± 0.9 24.0 ± 1.3
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