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Functional Structure/Activity Relationships
Thermostability and specific activity enhancement of an arginine deiminase from Enterococcus faecalis SK23.001 via semi-rational design for L-citrulline production Xue Cai, Hangyu Jiang, Tao Zhang, Bo Jiang, Wanmeng Mu, and Ming Miao J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.8b02858 • Publication Date (Web): 26 Jul 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on July 29, 2018
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
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Thermostability and specific activity enhancement of an arginine deiminase from
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Enterococcus faecalis SK23.001 via semi-rational design for L-citrulline
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production
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† † *,† †,‡ †,‡ Xue Cai , Hangyu Jiang , Tao Zhang , Bo Jiang , Wanmeng Mu , Ming
5
Miao
6 7 8 9
†
†
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
10 11
*
Corresponding author.
12
Address: State Key Laboratory of Food Science and Technology, Jiangnan University,
13
Wuxi, Jiangsu 214122, P. R. China.
14
Tel.: (86) 510-85919161. Fax: (86) 510-85919161.
15
E-mail:
[email protected] (T.Zhang).
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ABSTRACT L-Citrulline
is a non-essential amino acid with a variety of physiological functions
18
and can be enzymatically produced by arginine deiminase (ADI, EC 3.5.3.6). The
19
enzymatic production approach is of immense interest because of the mild condition,
20
high yield, low cost and environmental benignity. However, the major hindrances of
21
L-citrulline
22
Hence, in this work, directed evolution and site-directed mutagenesis aided with in
23
silico screening, including b-factor values and HoTMuSiC, were applied to an ADI
24
from Enterococcus faecalis SK23.001 (EfADI) identified previously and a triple-site
25
variant R15K/F269Y/G292P was obtained. The triple-site variant displays a 2.5-fold
26
higher specific enzyme activity (333 U mg-1), lower Km value of 6.4 mM and a
27
6.1-fold longer half-life time (t1/2, 45 °C = 86.7 min) than the wild-type EfADI. This
28
work provides a protein engineering strategy to improve the enzyme activity and
29
thermostability, which might be transferrable to ADIs and other enzymes.
30
KEYWORDS:
31
thermostability, directed evolution, site-directed mutagenesis
industrialization are the poor thermostability and enzyme activity of ADI.
L-citrulline,
arginine
deiminase,
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Enterococcus
faecalis,
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INTRODUCTION
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L-citrulline
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functions and wide applications in the health care, pharmaceutical and fine chemical
35
industries.1 In health care, L-citrulline is able to protect DNA and polymorphonuclear
36
leukocytes (PMNs) from oxidative damage,2 to maintain the normal function of the
37
cardiovascular system,3 to reduce gut injury during exercise and to stimulate muscle
38
protein synthesis4.
39
is a naturally occurring non-essential amino acid with various biological
Previously, three methods for
L-citrulline
production have been reported,
40
including chemical synthesis, microbial fermentation and enzymatic synthesis.5-7 The
41
enzymatic synthesis is of most interest because of its mild reaction conditions, high
42
production yield, and simple purification of final products.6 This approach involves
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one enzyme, arginine deiminase (ADI, EC 3.5.3.6), which hydrolyzes L-arginine into
44
L-citrulline
45
microorganisms have been characterized, including Aspergillus fumigatus (A.
46
fumigatus),8 Bacillus cereus (B. cereus),9 Enterococcus faecalis (E. faecalis),10
47
Euglena gracilis (E. gracilis),11 Halobacterium salinarium (H. salinarium),12
48
Lactococcus lactis (L. lactis),13 Mycoplasma arginine (M. arginine),14 Pseudomonas
49
putida (P. putida),15 Pseudomonas plecoglossicida (P. plecoglossicida),16 and
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Streptococcus pyogenes (S. pyogenes).17 The recombinant ADIs with the highest
51
specific enzyme activity were reported from L. lactis, Lactococcus lactis ssp. Lactis
52
(L. lactis ssp. lactis), and E. faecalis with values of 195.7 U mg-1, 140.3 U mg-1, and
and ammonium. Currently, a number of ADIs from various
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131.2 U mg-1, respectively. 6,10,13 The most stable ADI was from L. lactis ssp. lactis
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with the half-life time of 90 min at 50 °C.13 The L-citrulline production by ADI is
55
commercially limited due to the low enzyme activity and thermostability of the
56
characterized ADIs under processing conditions. To increase L-citrulline production
57
commercially, natural ADIs need to be engineered to enhance their catalytic behaviors,
58
including enzyme activity, thermostability and kinetic parameters.
59
Protein engineering can be divided into three main categories: irrational design,
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semi-rational design and rational design.18 The combination of irrational and rational
61
design constitutes the semi-rational design, which is an effective approach that intends
62
to generate small but functionally rich mutant libraries.19-22 Therefore, we employ an
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combinatorial approach (directed evolution and site-directed mutagenesis) on our
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previously constructed recombinant ADI from E. faecalis SK23.001 (EfADI)
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expressed in Escherichia coli (E. coli) BL21(DE3)10, which displayed a specific
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enzyme activity of 131.2 U mg-1 on L-arginine at pH 5.5 and retained 50% of its initial
67
activity after 14.3 min at 45 °C, with the intention of achieving thermostability
68
improved variants. In this study, directed evolution via error-prone polymerase chain
69
reaction (epPCR), in silico screening (B-factor values and the HoTMuSiC algorithm)
70
and site-directed mutagenesis were successively applied to the wild-type EfADI,
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resulting in variants with enhanced enzyme activities and thermostabilities.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Bacterial Strains, Plasmids, and Materials. The recombinant plasmid
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pET28a(+)-EfADI was constructed in our previous study.10 E. coli DH5α and
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BL21(DE3) cells were used as hosts for cloning and overexpression of EfADI,
76
respectively. The vector pET28a(+) (Novagen, Darmstadt, Germany) was used for
77
construction of the recombinant vector harboring mutant genes. E. coli cells were
78
incubated at 37 °C in Luria-Bertani media (peptone 10 g L-1, yeast extract 5 g L-1,
79
NaCl 10 g L-1) containing kanamycin (50 µg mL-1). Instant Error-Prone PCR Kit was
80
purchased from Tiandz, Inc. (Beijing, China). Plasmid extraction kit, agarose gel
81
DNA recovery kit, DNA purification kit, isopropyl β-D-1-thiogalactopyranoside
82
(IPTG), kanamycin and reagents of analytical grade were purchased from Sangon
83
Biotech (Shanghai, China). Restriction enzymes BamH I and Xho I, DNA ligase,
84
DNA marker and premixed protein marker (Broad) were purchased from Takara
85
Biomedical Technology Inc. (Shiga, Japan). The nucleotide sequence of E. faecalis
86
SK23.001 ADI is available in the GenBank database (accession number: MG763888).
87
Mutant Library Generation by Error-Prone PCR. The gene of EfADI was
88
subjected to epPCR to introduce random mutations following the Instant Error-Prone
89
PCR Kit manual. EfADI gene (1.26 kb) was amplified in a reaction volume of 30 µL
90
that contained 10 ng of the ancestral pET28a(+)-EfADI plasmid, 10× epPCR mix, 2.5
91
units of Taq polymerase, 10 pM primer ADI_forward with BamH I site (underlined)
92
(5′-CGCGGATCCATGAGTCATCCAATTAATGT-3′) and 10 pM primer ADI_reverse
93
with Xho I site (underlined) (5′-CCGCTCGAGTTAAAGATCTTCACGGT-3′), 10×
94
dNTP specific for epPCR, 3 µL of 5 mM MnCl2, and double distilled water. The
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reaction program was as follows: 94 °C for 3 min, 30 cycles of 94 °C for 60 s, 45 °C
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for 60 s, 94 °C for 60 s. The resulting PCR products were purified using DNA
97
purification kit and subsequently digested with BamH I and Xho I at 37 °C for 1 h.
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The PCR products were then cloned into pET28a(+) vector and transformed into E.
99
coli BL21(DE3).
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Expression and Screening of EfADI Variants. Colonies from the mutant library
101
constructed by epPCR were screened for improved enzyme activity following Ni’s
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high-throughput screening strategy22 with minor modifications. Briefly, single
103
colonies were inoculated into 5 mL of LB medium with kanamycin (50 µg mL-1) and
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IPTG (0.5 mM) and cultivated at 37 °C for 24 h. The cells were collected by
105
centrifugation (8, 000 × g, 4 °C, 10 min) and resuspended in 200 µL of reaction buffer
106
(10 g L-1 L-arginine, 20 mM potassium phosphate buffer, pH 6.0). The reaction
107
solutions were incubated at 45 °C for 15 min, followed by addition of 200 µL of 10%
108
sulfuric acid to terminate the reaction. After adding 60 µL of diacetyl monoxime
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thiosemicarbazide solution, reaction tubes were incubated at 37 °C for 2 h. Active
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colonies resulted in the formation of purple color with a λmax of 530 nm.
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Homology Modeling, In silico Screening and MD Simulation. Multiple amino
112
acid sequence alignments was performed using the online server Clustal Omega23 and
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ESPript 3.024. Three-dimensional homology models of the wild-type EfADI and five
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variants
115
R15K/F269Y/G292P) were generated by SWISS-MODEL25 using S. pyogenes ADI
(M1(R15K),
R15K/G292P,
R15K/G264P,
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R15K/F269Y,
and
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(PDB entry: 4BOF) as template and visualized by PyMOL 2.0.6 (DeLano Scientific
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LLC, San Carlos, CA, USA). Molecular docking was performed using Autodock 4.2
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with a genetic algorithm to investigate the molecular interactions.26
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In silico screening, including B-FITTER and HoTMuSiC algorithm, was carried
120
out to select the amino acids for substitutions. B-FITTER is applied in the quest to
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enhance the thermal robustness of EfADI. This program calculates the average
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b-factor value of all the atoms around an amino acid in a given protein, excluding
123
hydrogen.27 The input was a .pdb file, and the output was a ranking of amino acid
124
residues according to b-factor values. HoTMuSiC algorithm is performed to evaluate
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the changes in melting temperature.28
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To further evaluate the thermostability of the wild-type EfADI and the triple-site
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variant (R15K/F269Y/G292P), molecular dynamics (MD) simulation was performed
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with Gromacs 5.1 package29 at 450 K for 50 ns. Structures were put in a cubic box
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and solvated and systems were minimized in energy and equilibrated in temperature
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and pressure using the Berendsen coupling algorithm and the Rahman-Parrinello
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algorithm, respectively. All bonds were constrained using the LINear Constraint
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Solver (LINCS) algorithm, and periodic boundary conditions were applied. The cutoff
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value for van der Waals interactions was set at 1 nm, and electrostatic interactions
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were calculated using a particle mesh Ewald algorithm. To investigate the stability of
135
the proteins, the root-mean-square deviation (RMSD) analyses were performed using
136
the available Gromacs analysis tools.
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Site-Directed Mutagenesis. Site-directed mutagenesis of EfADI at positions 264,
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269 and 292 was accomplished using a one-step PCR method with primers listed in
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Table S1. The plasmid pET28a(+)-EfADI-M1 obtained from directed evolution was
140
used as template. The PCR system (50 µL) was constituted of pfu Turbo DNA
141
polymerase (2.5 U), dNTP mix (10 mM), template (10 ng) and double distilled water.
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The PCR program was as follows: 98 °C for 1 min, one cycle; 98 °C for 30 s, 61 °C
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for 30 s, 72 °C for 7 min, 3 cycles; 98 °C for 30 s, 61 °C for 30 s, 72 °C for 5 min, 15
144
cycles; 72 °C, 5 min, one cycle. After Dpn I digestion and purification, the amplified
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PCR products were cloned into pET28a(+) vector, and transformed into E. coli
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BL21(DE3) cells. The sequences of constructed variant genes were verified by DNA
147
sequencing.
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Expression and Purification of EfADI Variants from Site-directed
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Mutagenesis. E. coli BL21(DE3) cells harboring pET28a(+)-EfADI-M1 variants
150
were cultivated, and disrupted and purified following the methods of the wild-type
151
pET28a(+)-EfADI described by Jiang et al.10 The subunit molecular weight of EfADI
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variants were examined using 12% of sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel
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electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE).
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Standard Enzyme Activity Assay. Enzyme activities of M1 (R15K) and its
155
variants were assayed based on the amount of produced L-citrulline . Briefly, 10 µL of
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purified protein was incubated with 990 µL of potassium phosphate buffer (20 mM,
157
pH 6.0) containing 10 g L-1 L-arginine at 45 °C for 10 min. The reaction was
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terminated in boiling water for 10 min. One unit of enzyme activity was defined as
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the amount of ADI needed to produce 1 µmol of L-citrulline per minute.
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Product Quantitation via HPLC. The contents of L-citrulline and L-arginine in
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the enzymatic reaction mixtures were analyzed following the method as described by
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Jiang et al10, using high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) (Series 1200;
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Agilent Technologies, Palo Alto, CA, USA) coupled with a HYPERSIL ODS C18
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column (4.6 × 250 mm, 5 µm,Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA), and a
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UV detector (model LC-9A, Shimadzu, Kyoto, Japan). o-Phthaldialdehyde was used
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as precolumn derivation reagent and products were monitored at 338 nm with
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excitation at 262 nm. The column was eluted at 40 °C with a flow rate of 1 mL min-1.
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The gradient mobile phase was composed of buffer A (6.5 g L−1 CH3COONa·3H2O
169
including 0.16 mg L−1 triethylamine and 4.4 mg L−1 tetrahydrofuran, pH 7.2) and
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buffer B (24 g L−1 CH3COONa·3H2O, pH 7.2/acetonitrile/methanol (1:2:2 by
171
volume)). The A/B ratios were 92:8, 62:38, 0:100, 0:100 and 92:8 at run times of 0,
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20, 24, 25.5 and 28.5 min, respectively.
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Biochemical Characterizations of M1 Variants. The buffer systems,
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HAc-NaAc (20 mM, pH 4.0-6.0), potassium phosphate (20 mM, pH 6.0-7.5), and
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Tris-HCl (20 mM, pH 7.5-9.0) were used for determining the variants’ optimal pHs.
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The highest enzyme activity was assumed to be 100%. The pH stability of enzymes
177
was assayed by measuring the residual activities in their respective optimal buffers at
178
45 °C for 10 min after incubation in buffers with pH ranges from 4.0 to 9.0 at 4 °C for
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12 h. The enzyme activity before pre-incubation at 4 °C was assumed to be 100%.
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The optimal temperature for each variant was determined over the temperature
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range 10-70 °C. The variant thermostability at 45 °C was also analyzed. Namely, the
182
purified enzymes were incubated at 45 °C up to 90 min and samples were taken every
183
10 min. Sodium azide (0.1% (w/v)) was added to prevent microbial growth. The
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initial activity level before pre-incubation was defined as 100%. Additionally, the
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thermostability of triple-site variant at 60 °C was measured as above.
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For determination of kinetic parameters, L-arginine concentrations ranged from 1
187
to 30 mM were applied and reactions were carried out at 45 °C in their respective
188
optimal buffer. The kinetic parameters, Km and Vmax, were calculated by non-linear
189
regression fitting using Enzyme Kinetics Module (SigmaPlot 12.5; Systat Software
190
GmbH, Erkrath, Germany).
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L-Citrulline
Production with Purified Variants. L-Citrulline was produced in
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45 °C water bath with stirring at 150 rpm for 10 h with 100 g L−1 L-arginine, 10 U of
193
purified M1 and its variants at their respective optimal buffer and pH in a total
194
volume of 100 mL.
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Statistical Analysis. Statistical analyses and calculation were performed using
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Excel 2011 (Microsoft Corporation, Redmond, WA, USA). All enzymatic assays and
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analytic measurements were performed at least in duplicate.
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RESTULTS AND DISCUSSION
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Screening of Mutant Library. A total number of ~500 EfADI variants after
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epPCR were screened in a parallel manner for increased enzyme activity. One variant
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(M1) with a slightly improved enzyme activity (1.2 fold to the activity of the
202
wild-type EfADI) was identified and the sequencing result revealed an Arg15Lys
203
mutation. The optimal temperature and pH of variant M1 remained the same as that of
204
the wild-type enzyme (55 °C and pH 5.5). The half-life value of variant M1
205
(t1/2,M1,45 °C = 14.5 min) was similar to that of the wild-type EfADI (t1/2,WT, 45 °C = 14.3
206
min). The sequence alignment result shown in Figure 1 revealed that the mutated
207
residue at position 15 of EfADI shares the same residue lysine position in three
208
reported ADIs from S. pyogenes17, M. penetrans30 and L. lactis13, indicating that the
209
residue lysine might be more preferred here. Moreover, modeled protein structure of
210
M1 showed that R15K is on the back of the substrate-binding pocket, which is far
211
away from the active site (Figure 2b). Though the enzyme activity value of M1 was
212
slightly increased,the thermostability of M1 was not enhanced, which was of the
213
most interest in our study. The mechanism behind the activity-improvement of M1
214
will be investigated further by site-saturation mutagenesis. No further mutagenesis
215
was implemented on position 15 in this study. Instead, in silico screening approaches
216
including B-FITTER and HoTMuSiC algorithm were employed on variant M1 for the
217
following site-directed mutagenesis with the intention to reduce the mutant library
218
and obtain thermostability-enhanced enzymes.
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In silico Screening. The stability of enzymes at high temperature, generally over
220
40 °C, are often the prerequisite to be considered in the biotechnological production
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for the prevention of microbial contamination. Therefore, the rational design of
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EfADI engineering based on b-factor values and HoTMuSiC algorithm was carried
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out
224
thermostability-improved variants.
using
variant
M1
as
parent
to
provide
us
with
predictions
of
225
A three-dimensional structure of M1 was firstly modeled based on the X-ray
226
crystal structure of the S. pyogenes ADI (PDB ID: 4BOF, SpADI) using
227
SWISS-MODEL. The amino acid sequence identity between M1 and SpADI was
228
66.83%, which is higher than the identities of M1 and other reported ADIs, for
229
instance, P. aeruginosa (32.75%), M. arginine (38.38%), M. penetrans (39.95%), P.
230
plecoglossicida (31.34%) and L. lactis ssp. lactis (47.89%). The amino acid sequence
231
alignment revealed that SpADI and M1 share the identical active site (Figure 1). Five
232
key amino acids that constituted the active site, correspondingly positioned in M1 are
233
Asp162, Glu216, His271, Asp273 and Cys398.30-32 A number of 10 amino acid
234
residues with the highest b-factor values calculated by B-FITTER program were listed
235
in Table 1 and presented in the modeled structure of M1 (Figure 2c). Figure 2d
236
represents the space-filling of M1 structure, where the locations of these ten residues
237
are clearly shown on the surface of M1, which may have direct relation to the rise in
238
the optimum temperature. Previous studies have shown that the rigidity of surface
239
residues is of great importance in the maintenance of protein thermostability.28,30-31
240
Therefore, it is a common strategy to modify the surface amino acids for enhanced
241
enzyme thermostability.19,20 In addition, abundant researches of protein engineering
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have revealed that the amino acids around the active site are crucial to the enzyme
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activity besides the catalytic triads.33, 34 To achieve a thermostability improved variant
244
with minimum time and cost, three residues, Gly292, Phe269 and Gly264, were
245
chosen as sites for point mutagenesis because (i) Gly292 possesses the highest
246
b-factor value indicating its flexibility in the structure and (ii) Phe269 and Gly264 are
247
close to the active site and located on the extruding loop that might be of
248
conformational importance for substrate binding (Figure 3).
249
Next, instead of site-saturation mutagenesis, site-directed mutagenesis was
250
applied on three selected residues for the courtesy of time, labor and expenses. Amino
251
acids substituted were expected to be more rigid than the original amino acids with
252
respect to the changes of the melting temperature calculated by HoTMuSiC, the value
253
of which is an indicator of protein structure stability.28 Three selected residues (G292,
254
F269 and G264) were in silico mutated and the predicted melting temperature
255
changes were summarized in Table S2. As a result, three mutations of each selected
256
residue with the highest melting temperature (G292D, G292C, G292P, F269D, F269Y,
257
F269P, G264S, G264F, G264P) were constructed, and their crude enzyme activities at
258
45 °C and pH 6.0 were determined to preclude those variants with decreased enzyme
259
activities compared to M1.
260
Crude Enzyme Activities of M1 Variants. The crude enzyme activities of M1
261
(R15K) variants at position 292, 269 and 264 (G292D, G292C, G292P, F269D,
262
F269Y, F269P, G264S, G264F, G264P) were determined using L-arginine as substrate
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in 20 mM potassium phosphate buffer, at pH 6.0 and 45 °C for 10 min and the results
264
were summarized in Table 2. Variant R15K/G292P displayed an enzyme activity
265
value of 16.65 U mL-1, and variants R15K/G264P and R15K/F269Y showed enzyme
266
activity values (6.77 and 6.42 U mL-1) similar to that of M1 (parent, 6.66 U mL-1).
267
The enzyme activities of other variants decreased to 7-33% of M1. Therefore, three
268
variants, R15K/G292P, R15K/F269Y and R15K/G264P, out of nine M1 variants, were
269
selected for the enzyme characterizations including pH and temperature profiles and
270
kinetic parameters.
271
Effects of pH and Temperature on M1 and Its Variants. The pH profile and
272
pH stability of variant M1 (R15K), R15K/G292P, R15K/F269Y and R15K/G264P
273
were investigated and shown in Figure 4a and 4b, respectively. Variant M1 (R15K),
274
used as parent of site-directed mutagenesis, displayed an optimal pH of 5.5 that was
275
the same as that of the wild-type EfADI10. All three variants, R15K/G292P,
276
R15K/F269Y and R15K/G264P, showed an optimal pH shift in favor of neutral
277
environment from 5.5 to 6.5, 6.0 and 6.5, respectively (Figure 4a). In particular,
278
variant R15K/G264P exhibited over 90% of its enzyme activity in a broad pH range
279
from 5.5 to 7.5 (Figure 4a) and retained over 80% of its enzyme activity after 12 h
280
incubation in a pH range from 6.5 to 7.5 (Figure 4b). The pH range of variant
281
R15K/G292P also expanded (pH 6.0-7.5) with over 80% of its enzyme activity
282
retained. The optimal pH of an enzyme is influenced by various factors, such as the
283
pKa of the active site residues, enzyme-substrate binding, or enzyme surface charge.38
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In case of EfADI, residues G292P, F269Y and G264P were located on the surface of
285
the protein and was speculated that the surface charges were changed due to the
286
mutation. However, further experiments (e.g. ionization status and pKa value of each
287
residue) should be carried out, to gain an insight into the mechanism of pH shift by
288
mutations on residues G292P, F269Y and G264P.
289
M1 variants, including R15K/G292P, R15K/F269Y and R15K/G264P, exhibited
290
an identical molecular weight of 49 kDa in SDS-PAGE (Figure S1) and optimal
291
temperature of 55 °C as that of the wild-type EfADI and variant M1 (Figure 4c). The
292
thermostabilities of M1 and three variants were evaluated at 45 °C (Figure 4d), at
293
which temperature the bioconversion of L-arginine was carried out by EfADI10. The
294
half-lives (t1/2, 45°C) of the wild-type EfADI, M1 and its variants were listed in Table 3.
295
The half-life of variant R15K/G264P was similar to that of the wild-type EfADI and
296
M1. The results showed a remarkable increase in half-life values of variant
297
R15K/F269Y (t1/2, 45 °C = 48.0 min) and R15K/G292P (t1/2, 45 °C = 82.5 min), which
298
were ~3.3 fold and ~5.7 fold to the half-life value of the wild-type EfADI (t1/2, 45 °C =
299
14.3 min), respectively. Interestingly, the P. plecoglossicida ADI variant M13-9
300
harbored a residue substitution at position 276 (Ala to Trp) which is in consistent with
301
the mutated position of EfADI at residue 269 (Figure 1).16 The enhanced
302
thermostability of ADI in both cases indicated that the residue at position 269 plays
303
an important role in protein stabilization. As variant R15K/G292P showed a
304
remarkable improvement in thermostability, it implies that the residue on position 292
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is crucial to the enzyme stability as well.
306
Specific Activities and Kinetics of M1 and Its Variants. The specific activities
307
and kinetics of M1 and its variants (R15K/G292P, R15K/F269Y and R15K/G264P)
308
were determined and tabulated in Table 3. Variant R15K/G264P and F269Y exhibited
309
similar specific activity as the wild-type EfADI and their parent enzyme M1.
310
Noticeably, R15K/G292P displayed a significantly enhanced specific activity value of
311
296.8 U mg-1 at pH 6.5, which is ~2.5-fold of the wild-type EfADI. Variants
312
R15K/G292P and R15K/F269Y both exhibited decreased Km values to 6.4 and 9.3
313
mM in comparison with that of the wild-type EfADI (Km = 10.1 mM). As expected, an
314
increased catalytic efficiency (Kcat/Km = 55.4 s-1 mM-1) was obtained for R15K/G292P
315
compared with the values of the wild-type EfADI (Kcat/Km = 30.6 s-1 mM-1) and M1
316
(Kcat/Km = 23.1 s-1 mM-1). Because variant R15K/G292P resulted in an increased
317
specific activity and catalytic efficiency, a lower Km and an extended half-life time
318
discussed above, meanwhile variant R15K/F269Y exhibited an increased catalytic
319
efficiency and half-life time, therefore, a triple-site variant (R15K/F269Y/G292P) will
320
be constructed for the investigation of its enzymatic properties.
321
Properties of A Triple-site EfADI Variant (R15K/F269Y/G292P). Recent
322
studies have shown that a double-site or even triple-site variant exhibited superior
323
properties compared with a single-site variant.19, 20 Therefore, based on the results of
324
enzyme activity, pH stability, thermostability and kinetics of the double-site variants
325
(R15K/G292P, R15K/F269Y, R15K/G264P), a triple-site variant R15K/F269Y/G292P
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of EfADI was constructed to achieve an enzyme with improved enzyme activity and
327
thermostability.
328
After cultivation and purification, the enzymatic properties of the triple-site
329
variant R15K/F269Y/G292P were studied. It showed an optimal pH and temperature
330
of 7.5 and 55 °C (Figure 4a and 4c), with a specific activity of 332.8 U mg-1. The
331
specific activity was increased by 11% compared to the double-site variant
332
R15K/G292P (296.8 U mg-1). The triple-site variant displayed the lowest substrate
333
affinity towards arginine of 6.4 mM and the highest catalytic efficiency of 57.0 s-1
334
mM-1
335
R15K/F269Y/G292P increased further to 86.7 min at 45 °C. Its thermal stability at
336
60 °C was tested and the half-life time was 12 min. The previous studies have
337
reported some ADIs with good thermal stability as well. For instance, an ADI from L.
338
lactis ssp. lactis ATCC 7962 was presented with the half-lives of 90 min at 50 °C and
339
15 min at 60 °C16 and a P. plecoglossicida ADI variant (M13-9) showed an increased
340
half-life value of 17.5 min at 60 °C (parent: 4 min at 60 °C)16. Interestingly, the
341
optimal pH value of the variant R15K/F269Y/G292P showed a 2-unit shift to pH 7.5
342
compared to wild-type EfADI. Thus, this triple-site mutation at position 15, 269 and
343
292, in some aspects, offers the possibility of site-directed mutagenesis to those ADIs
344
studied for anti-tumor drugs, e.g. P. plecoglossicida ADI36, which should work in the
345
physiological environment (pH 7.4), but showed lower enzyme activity comparing to
346
that of its natural enzyme.
among
all
the
EfADI
variants.
The
half-life
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of
variant
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347
Additionally, we performed MD simulations at 450 K for 50 ns for variant M1
348
(parent) and variant R15K/F269Y/G292P using the modeled structures for a deeper
349
understanding of its conformational changes. As shown in Figure 5, the backbone
350
root-mean-square deviation (RMSD) values were similar in the first 30 ns, however,
351
variant R15K/F269Y/G292P showed a lower RMSD value (maximum 0.79 nm)
352
during the last 20 ns whereas variant M1 displayed an increment after 44 ns to an
353
RMSD value of 1.28 nm, suggesting that variant R15K/F269Y/G292P was more
354
stable than M1 during the simulations, which is in consistence with the experimental
355
results of half-life values.
356
Bioconversion of L-Citrulline. The bioproductions of L-citrulline by wild-type
357
EfADI and its variants were shown in Figure 6. All the reactions can finally reach the
358
conversion rate of 95.8%, 96.5%, 97.5%, 96.0%, 93.2% and 97.4% at 45 °C,
359
corresponding to wild-type EfADI, M1, R15K/G264P, R15K/G292P, R15K/F269Y
360
and R15K/G292P/F269Y in 4 h, 5 h, 4 h, 4 h, 10 h and 5 h, respectively. In particular,
361
variant R15K/G264P reached 95% conversion rate after 2 h incubation, almost half
362
the time needed for the wild-type to reach the same conversion rate. The conversion
363
rate of variant R15K/G292P/F269Y (97.4%) is higher than that of wild-type (95.8%).
364
Song et al. reported an ADI from Lactococcus lactis of 92.6% conversion rate after 8
365
h incubation at 50 °C6 (Table 4). In summary, the results demonstrate the
366
improvement of L-citrulline production by EfADI variants and high productivity of
367
L-citrulline
can be achieved by enzymatic conversion, which provides preliminary
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basis for industrial scale production of L-citrulline. Structural
Analysis
of
EfADI
and
the
Triple-site
Variant
370
R15K/F269Y/G292P. To gain deeper insights of the rationale behind the effects of
371
mutations at position 292 and 269 on the activity and thermostability enhancement,
372
the modeled structures of EfADI and its variant R15K/F269Y/G292P with substrate
373
L-arginine
374
ID: 1RXX), group A. streptococcus (PDB ID: 4BOF), Mycoplasma penetrans (4E4J)
375
and M. arginini (PDB ID: 1LXY) have been experimentally analyzed.17,
376
Comparative crystallographic studies have shown that the entrance to the active site is
377
decorated with four loops (loop 1: 37-44 aa, loop 2: 174-178 aa, loop 3: 263-271 aa,
378
loop 4: 393-400 aa) that undergo conformational transitions upon arginine binding
379
(Figure 3).39 In variant R15K/F269Y/G292P, one of the mutated amino acids, Phe269
380
was located on loop 3. The substitution tyrosine was similar to the previous amino
381
acid phenylalanine in structure with one more hydroxide group on the benzene ring.
382
However, the interactions of Phe or Tyr with the surrounding amino acids were
383
different and were shown in Figure 7a and 7d, respectively. Phenylalanine (F269) was
384
found one hydrogen bond with H266, whereas the mutated residue tyrosine (F269Y)
385
showed three additional hydrogen bonds including His287, Glu289 and Glu242.
386
Furthermore, F269Y was covalently bonded with M270, the latter of which composed
387
a covalent bond with H271 that was one of the five key amino acids in the active site.
388
The mutated residue proline at position 292 showed interactions with E291 and G293,
were discussed. By far, crystal structures of ADI from P. aeruginosa (PDB
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and further with E289 and F269Y, whereas G292 presented no interactions with the
390
surrounding amino acids (Figure 7b and 7e). Therefore, the reinforced interactions
391
between G292P or F269Y with the surrounding amino acids, especially on the protein
392
surface, might (i) improve the rigidity of the structure due to an increased number of
393
hydrogen bonds and covalent bonds, (ii) increase the steric hindrance of other cavities
394
near the active site and thus facilitate the correct entrance of the substrate into the
395
active site, and (iii) expediate the conformational changes in the loop 3 and hence
396
promote the arginine conversion (Figure 7c and 7f). Consequently, the improved
397
thermostability and enzyme activity of the triple-site variant R15K/F269Y/G292P of
398
an arginine deiminase from E. faecalis SK23.001 offers a possibility in anti-tumor
399
drugs or a large-scale L-citrulline production. In addition, the structural analysis
400
revealed an increased number of hydrogen and covalent bonds between the mutated
401
residues (G292P and F269Y) and the surrounded residues that might explain for its
402
increased stability and enzyme activity.
403 404
ASSOCIATED CONTENT
405
AUTHOR INFORMATION
406
Corresponding Author
407
* E-mail:
[email protected]. Phone: (86) 510-85919161.
408
ORCID
409
Bo Jiang: 0000-0002-0638-6456
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Wanmeng Mu: 0000-0001-6597-527X ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
412
Many thanks go to Dr. Hinawi A. M. Hassanin (Jiangnan University) for his help
413
regarding the structure modeling and the docking of EfADI and L-arginine and M.S.
414
Qiuming Chen (Jiangnan University) for MD simulation analysis.
415
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
416 417 418 419
The authors declare no competing financial interest. COMPLIANCE WITH ETHICAL STANDARDS This article does not contain any studies with human participants or animals performed by any of the authors.
420
Supporting Information. Changes of melting temperature with amino acid
421
substitutions at position G292, F269 and G264 calculated by the online server
422
HoTMuSiC (Table S1), primers for site-directed mutagenesis (Table S2) and
423
SDS-PAGE analysis (Figure S1).
424 425
REFERENCES
426
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role as an emerging biomarker in future. Fundam. Clin. Pharmacol. 2013, 27, 35-50.
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Effects of
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oxidative burst and nitric oxide production after exercise. Free Radic. Res. 2009, 43,
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828-835.
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(5) Hao, N.; Mu, J.; Hu, N.; Xu, S.; Yan, M.; Li, Y.; Guo, K.; Xu, L. Improvement of
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(6) Song, W.; Sun, X.; Chen, X.; Liu, D.; Liu, L. Enzymatic production of L-citrulline
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by hydrolysis of the guanidinium group of L-arginine with recombinant arginine
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Accumulation of citrulline by microbial arginine metabolism during alcoholic
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fermentation of soy sauce. J. Agric. Food Chem. 2018, 66, 2108-2113.
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fumigatus KJ434941: anticancer activity in vitro. Biotechnol. Prog. 2015, 31,
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(9) Li, L.; Li, Z.; Wang, C.; Xu, D.; Mariano, P. S.; Guo, H.; Dunaway-Mariano, D.
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The electrostatic driving force for nucleophilic catalysis in L-arginine deiminase: a
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combined experimental and theoretical study. Biochemistry 2008, 47, 4721-4732.
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recombinant arginine deiminase from Enterococcus faecalis SK32.001 for L-citrulline
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(11) Park, B.; Hirotani, A.; Nakano, Y.; Kitaoka, S. Purification and some properties of
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arginine deiminase in Euglena gracilis. J. Agric. Food. Chem. 1984, 48, 483-489.
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salinarium. Purification and properties. Biochem. J. 1991, 273, 739-745.
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(13) Kim, J. E.; Jeong, D. W.; Lee, H. J. Expression, purification, and characterization
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of arginine deiminase from Lactococcus lactis ssp. lactis ATCC 7962 in Escherichia
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coli BL21. Protein Expr. Purif. 2007, 53, 9-15.
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(14) Noh, E. J.; Kang, S. W.; Shin, Y. J.; Kim, D. C.; Park, I. S.; Kim, M. Y.; Chun, B.
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arginine deiminase from Pseudomonas plecoglossicida CGMCC2039 in Escherichia
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Chhatwal, G. S.; Aquilina, J. A.; Batzloff, M. R.; Kobe, B.; Walker, M. J.
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Structure-informed design of an enzymatically inactive vaccine component for group
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A Streptococcus. MBio. 2013, 4, e00509-e00513.
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(18) Stepankova, V.; Bidmanova, S.; Koudelakova, T.; Prokop, Z.; Chaloupkova, R.;
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Clostridium bolteae ATCC BAA-613 using site-directed mutagenesis. J. Agric. Food
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Chem. 2016, 64, 3386-3393.
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behavior of DFA I-Forming inulin fructotransferase from Streptomyces davawensis
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with site-directed mutagenesis. J. Agric. Food Chem. 2017, 65, 7579-7587.
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(21) Jamil, S.; Liu, M.-H.; Liu, Y.-M.; Han, R.-Z.; Xu, G.-C.; Ni, Y. Hydrophobic
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mutagenesis and semi-rational engineering of arginine deiminase for markedly
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enhanced stability and catalytic efficiency. Appl. Biochem. Biotechnol. 2015, 176,
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1335-1350.
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(22) Ni, Y.; Liu, Y.; Schwaneberg, U.; Zhu, L.; Li, N.; Li, L.; Sun, Z. Rapid evolution
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of arginine deiminase for improved anti-tumor activity. Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol.
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2011, 90, 193-201.
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many protein sequences. Protein Sci. 2018, 27, 135-145.
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ENDscript server. Nucleic Acids Res. 2014, 42, W320-W424.
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(25) Guex, N.; Peitsch, M. C.; Schwede, T. Automated comparative protein structure
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modeling with SWISS-MODEL and Swiss-PdbViewer: a historical perspective.
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Electrophoresis 2009, 30, S162-S173.
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(26) Wojciechowski, M. Simplified AutoDock force field for hydrated binding sites. J.
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Mol. Graph. Model 2017, 78, 74-80.
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(27) Reetz, M. T. Laboratory evolution of stereoselective enzymes: a prolific source of
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catalysts for asymmetric reactions. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. Engl. 2011, 50, 138-174.
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upon point mutations using statistical potentials: Introducing HoTMuSiC. Sci. Rep.
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2016, 6, 23257.
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(29) Abraham, M. J.; Murtola, T.; Schulz, R.; Pall, S.; Smith, J. C.; Hess, B.; Lindahl,
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Structural characterization of the enzymes composing the arginine deiminase pathway
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in Mycoplasma penetrans. PLoS One 2012, 7, e47886.
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Herzberg, O.; Mariano, P. S.; Martin, B. M.; Dunaway-Mariano, D. Kinetic analysis
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of Pseudomonas aeruginosa arginine deiminase mutants and alternate substrates
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studies of arginine deiminase catalysis: the protonation state of the Cys nucleophile. J.
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Phys. Chem. B 2011, 115, 3725-3733.
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critical residues in inulin fructotransferase (DFA III-Producing) thermostability from
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Arthrobacter sp. 161MFSha2.1. J. Agr. Food Chem. 2016, 64, 6188-6195.
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antitumor enzyme PpADI for improved thermal resistance. Chembiochem 2014, 15,
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(35) Ding, H.; Liu, H.; Yin, Y.; Ding, Y.; Jia, Y.; Chen, Q.; Zou, G.; Zheng, Z. Insights
531
into the modulation of optimum pH by a single histidine residue in arginine deiminase
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(36) Zhang, L.; Liu, M.; Jamil, S.; Han, R.; Xu, G.; Ni, Y. PEGylation and
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357, 346-354.
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(37) Das, K.; Butler, G. H.; Kwiatkowski, V.; Clark, A. D., Jr.; Yadav, P.; Arnold, E.
538
Crystal structures of arginine deiminase with covalent reaction intermediates;
539
implications for catalytic mechanism. Structure 2004, 12, 657-667.
540
(38) Gallego, P.; Planell, R.; Benach, J.; Querol, E.; Perez-Pons, J. A.; Reverter, D.
541
Structural characterization of the enzymes composing the arginine deiminase pathway
542
in Mycoplasma penetrans. PLoS One 2012, 7, e47886.
543
(39) Galkin, A.; Lu, X.; Dunaway-Mariano, D.; Herzberg, O. Crystal structures
544
representing the Michaelis complex and the thiouronium reaction intermediate of
545
Pseudomonas aeruginosa arginine deiminase. J. Biol. Chem. 2005, 280,
546
34080-34087.
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Figure captions
548
Figure 1. Multiple sequence alignment of arginine deiminases enzymes from S.
549
pyogenes (4BOF.A), E. faecalis (EFQ16080.1), P. aeruginosa (1RXX.A),
550
Mycoplasma arginine (1LXY.A), M. penetrans (4E4J.A), P. plecoglossicida
551
(ABS70718.1), L. lactis sub sp. (AGV74030.1). The alignment was prepared with
552
Clustal Omega23 and ESPript 3.024. Five key amino acids in the active site, D162,
553
E216, H271, D273 and C398, are denoted with blue circles. R15, G292, F269 and
554
G264 are denoted with green triangles. Strictly conserved residues are highlighted in
555
red, while equivalent residues are boxed in blue. The secondary structure elements of
556
S. pyogenes ADI are presented above the corresponding sequence. Helices are
557
represented as spirals and β-strands are represented as arrows. Turns are indicated
558
with TT.
559 560
Figure 2. Three-dimensional models. (a) Structure superposition of S. pyogenes
561
(4BOF) ADI (blue) and EfADI (gray). (b) Variant M1 of EfADI with a mutation at
562
position 15 from Arg to Lys. (c) 10 amino acids with high b-factor values in EfADI
563
were shown in sticks and colored in orange. Substrate arginine was docked in the
564
active site via AUTODOCK. (d) Space-filling representation of EfADI monomer of
565
the same angle as (c) showing the 10 amino acids with high b-factor values, which are
566
colored in orange, are located on the surface of the protein.
567
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Figure 3. Partial structural model of the wild-type EfADI in the active site. Five key
569
amino acids, D162, E216, H271, D273 and C398 were denoted in red. The residues
570
for site-mutagenesis, F269 and G292, were colored in yellow. Substrate arginine was
571
docked in the active site by AUTODOCK. Loop 1, 2, 3 and 4 were colored in blue.
572
The modeled protein structure was constructed by SWISS-MODEL and visualized
573
using PyMOL 2.0.6 (Schrödinger, LLC).
574 575
Figure 4. pH and temperature profiles of EfADI variants including M1 (R15K,
576
orange, diamond), R15K/G264P (blue, circle), R15K/F269Y (green, triangle),
577
R15K/G292P (purple, square), and R15K/F269Y/G292P (red, cross). (a) pH profiles
578
of EfADI variants. The assays were carried out at 45 °C for 10 min with L-arginine as
579
substrate in pH buffers ranging from 4.0 to 9.0 in 20 mM using HAc-NaAc buffer (pH
580
4.0-6.0), potassium phosphate buffer (pH 6.0-7.5), and Tris-HCl (pH 7.5-9.0). (b) pH
581
stability of EfADI variants. The enzymes were incubated in various pH for 12 h and
582
the residual enzyme activities were measured at pH 6.0 and 45 °C. (c) The optimal
583
temperature of EfADI variants. The enzymes were incubated with L-arginine at
584
temperatures from 30 °C to 70°C in the optimal pH of each variant for 10 min. (d)
585
Thermostabilities of the variants at 45 °C. The enzymes were incubated at 45 °C for
586
up to 90 min. The activity without heat treatment was defined as 100%. Error bars
587
correspond to the standard deviations of three independent determinations.
588
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589
Figure 5. Time dependence of RMSD values of wild-type EfADI (blue) and triple-site
590
variant R15K/F269Y/G292P (red) after simulation at 450 K for 50 ns.
591 592
Figure 6. Enzymatic production of L-citrulline by wild-type EfADI and its variants
593
using L-arginine as substrate. The symbols were: WT (black, inverse triangle), M1
594
(R15K, orange, diamond), R15K/G264P (blue, circle), R15K/F269Y (green, triangle),
595
R15K/G292P (purple, square), and R15K/F269Y/G292P (red, cross). Reaction
596
conditions: 100 g L-1 L-arginine with 10 U purified enzyme and 45 °C for 10 hours at
597
their respective optimal buffer and pH.
598 599
Figure 7. Structural features of EfADI and the triple-site variant R15K/F269Y/G292P
600
in the active site and the mutated residue. (a) and (b) presented the structural models
601
of interactions between residue Phe269 and Gly292 with the surrounding residues in
602
the wild-type EfADI, respectively. Red is oxygen, and blue is nitrogen. (d) and (e)
603
presented the structural models of the interactions between mutated residue
604
Phe269Tyr and Gly292Pro with the surrounding residues in the triple-site variant
605
R15K/F269Y/G292P, respectively. In a, b, d and e, red is oxygen, and blue is nitrogen.
606
(c) and (f) showed the space-filling representation of wild-type EfADI and variant
607
R15K/F269Y/G292P. The loops outside the active site are colored in blue, residues at
608
position 269 and 292 with its interacted residues are colored in green and pink,
609
respectively. The hydrogen bonds were presented with yellow dashed lines. The
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610
figure was generated using PyMOL 2.0.6 (Schrödinger, LLC). Tables Table 1. The 10 amino acid residues with the highest b-factor values of arginine deiminase from E. faecalis SK23.001. Three amino acid residues chosen for subsequent site-directed mutagenesis were highlighted in bold.
No.
Position Amino acid residue B-factor value
1
292
Gly
91.3
2
290
Ile
81.8
3
269
Phe
81.2
4
288
Pro
78.9
5
302
Lys
78.8
6
308
Gln
78.0
7
132
Pro
77.1
8
40
Asp
76.1
9
297
Tyr
75.6
10
264
Gly
75.0
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Table 2. Crude enzyme activities of nine M1 variants (100% vol. EAarginine=6.66 U mL-1).
Variant
Relative EA (%)
Variant
Relative EA (%)
M1
100
F269Y
96.4
G292P
253.6
F269D
21.5
G292D
13.6
G264F
9.3
G292C
9.5
G264P
102.6
F269P
32.9
G264S
6.9
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Table 3. Specific activities, the half-lives and kinetic parameters of the wild-type EfADI and its variants with residue substitutions at positions 292, 269 and 264.
Specific EA
t1/2 at 45°C
Km
Kcat
Kcat / Km
(U mg-1)
(min)
(mM)
(s-1)
(s-1 mM-1)
Wild-type EfADI*
131.2±5.3
14.3
10.1±0.3
309±13
30.6
M1 (R15K)
143.2±3.2
14.5
11.6±0.5
268±11
23.1
R15K/G264P
134.7±3.5
14.9
12.5±0.4
291±12
23.3
R15K/F269Y
126.5±4.3
48.0
9.3±0.2
342±13
36.8
R15K/G292P
296.8±5.1
82.5
6.7±0.4
371±8
55.4
R15K/F269Y/G292P
332.8±2.9
86.7
6.4±0.5
365±16
57.0
Variant
*The data of wild-type EfADI was obtained from our previous report by Jiang et al.10
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Table 4. Comparison of characteristics of recombinant arginine deiminases from various microorganisms. Microorganism Pseudomonas plecoglossicida (PpADI)
PpADI variant M9 (K5T/D38H/D44E/A128T/ V140L/E296K/F325L/H404R) Pseudomonas putida Lactococcus lactis ssp. lactis Lactococcus lactis Aspergillus fumigatus
Streptococcus pyogenes Mycoplasma arginini Enterococcus faecalis (EfADI)
Opt. pH
Opt. Temp
Specific EA -1
t1/2
Km, L-arginine
Kcat
L-Citrulline
-1
Reference
(−)
(°C)
(U mg )
(min/h/day)
(mM)
(s )
Yield*
6.0
37
4.76
2.9
0.2
NR
16
7.4
37
NR
~5 min (50 °C)a ~4 min (60 °C) 3.5 days (37 °C)
NR
13.7
NR
34
6.0 7.2
37 60
101.2 U mL-1 140.3
NR 8.67
NR NR
100% (3 h) NR
15 13
7.2 5.0-8.0
50 57
195.7 26.7
3.5 8.76
NR 17.2a
92.6% (8 h) NR
6 8
6.5 6.4 5.5
37 41 55
1.1 72.3 131.2
1.33 0.37 10.1
NR NR 309
15 h (37 °C) 90 min (50 °C) 15 min (60 °C) NR 12.1 h (40 °C) 6.9 h (50 °C) 5.6 h (70 °C) NR 5 days (37 °C) 14.3 min (45 °C)
NR 17 NR 14 96.9% 10 (2 h, 45 °C) EfADI triple-site variant 7.5 55 332.8 86.7 min (45 °C) 6.4 365 97.4% This study (R15K/F269Y/G292P) 12 min (60 °C) (5 h, 45 °C) * Otherwise no additional description, the reaction was carried out at the optimal pH and temperature, substrate concentration is 100 g L-1. a Data calculated from the original paper by the author.
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NR, not reported.
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Figure Graphics Figure 1.
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Figure 2.
a
b
c
G292
d
Y297 Q308
R15K
P288 I290 F269
K302 G264 Arginine
D40
P132
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Figure 3.
G292 F269 Loop 4
D273 Loop 3
C398 Arginine Loop 1
H271 E216
D162
Loop 2
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Figure 4. 120
120
100
Relative Enzyme Activity (%)
Relative Enzyme Activity (%)
a 80
60
40
20
b
100
80
60
40
20
0
0 3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
3
4
5
6
pH (-) 120
8
9
10
120
c 100
Relative Enzyme Activity (%)
Relative Enzyme Activity (%)
7
pH (-)
80
60
40
d
100
80
60
40
20
20
0
0 25
30
35
40
45
50
Temperature
55
60
65
70
75
0
10
20
(oC)
30
40
50
Time (min)
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70
80
90
100
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Figure 5.
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Figure 6.
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Figure 7.
a
E289
H287
G292
K299
G293
I290
E289
F269
Q346
c
G292
Wild-type EfADI
V275
b
L294 H266
T274
I290 K268
F269
H271 Arginine
I290
H287
G292P
e
G293
E289
V275
G292P
E291 E289
I290
f
E301 L294
Q346 F269Y
K268
H266
F269Y
H271
M270 Arginine
E242
R267
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Variant R15K/F269Y/G292P
d
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TOC Graphic
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