Title
Thermophilic Enzyme or Mesophilic Enzyme with Enhanced Thermostability: Can We Draw a Line?
Date Issued
27 July 2017
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Jing X.
Baudry J.
Serpersu E.H.
University of Tennessee
Publisher(s)
American Chemical Society
Abstract
Aminoglycoside nucleotidyltransferase 4′ (ANT) is a homodimeric enzyme that modifies the C4′-OH site of aminoglycoside antibiotics by nucleotidylation. A few single- and double-residue mutants of this enzyme (T130K, D80Y, and D80Y/T130K) from Bacillus stearothermophilus show increased thermostability. This article investigates how such residue replacements, which are distant from the active site and monomer-monomer interface, result in various changes of the thermostability of the enzyme. In this work, we show that the thermodynamic properties of enzyme-ligand complexes and protein dynamics may be indicators of a thermophilic behavior. Our data suggests that one of the single-site mutants of ANT, D80Y, may be a thermophilic protein and the other thermostable mutant, T130K, is actually a more heat-stable variant of the mesophilic wild type (WT) with a higher Tm. Our data also suggest that T130K and D80Y adopt different global dynamics strategies to achieve different levels of thermostability enhancement and that the differences between the properties of the species can be described in terms of global dynamics rather than in terms of specific structural features. Thermophilicity of the D80Y comes at the cost of less favorable thermodynamic parameters for ligand binding relative to WT. On the other hand, the T130K species exhibits the same affinity to ligands and the same thermodynamic parameters of complex formation as the WT enzyme. These observations suggest that a quantitative characterization of ligand binding and protein dynamics can be used to differentiate thermophilic proteins from their simply more heat-stable mesophilic counterparts.
Start page
7086
End page
7094
Volume
121
Issue
29
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Química física Ciencias naturales
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85026547246
PubMed ID
Source
Journal of Physical Chemistry B
ISSN of the container
15206106
Sponsor(s)
We thank Dr. Francisco Barrera (Department of Biochemistry, Cellular and Molecular Biology, University of Tennessee) for providing generous access to CD. This work was supported by a grant from the National Science Foundation (MCB-0842743 to E.H.S.) and the Dr. Donald L. Akers Jr., Faculty Enrichment Award (to E.H.S.). Model constructions, simulations and data analysis were carried out on the Newton High-Performance computer at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, and on the Moldyn cluster in the UT/ORNL Center for Molecular Biophysics, Oak Ridge Tennessee.
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus