Learning from Protein Engineering by Deconvolution of Multi‐Mutational Variants

Author:

Hollmann Frank1ORCID,Sanchis Joaquin2,Reetz Manfred T.34ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biotechnology Delft University of Technology Van der Maasweg 9 2629HZ Delft Netherlands

2. Monash Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences Monash University Parkville, Victoria 3052 Australia

3. Max-Plank-Institut für Kohlenforschung Kaiser-Wilhelm-Platz 1 45481 Mülheim Germany

4. Tianjin Institute of Industrial Biotechnology Chinese Academy of Sciences Tianjin 300308 China

Abstract

AbstractThis review analyzes a development in biochemistry, enzymology and biotechnology that originally came as a surprise. Following the establishment of directed evolution of stereoselective enzymes in organic chemistry, the concept of partial or complete deconvolution of selective multi‐mutational variants was introduced. Early deconvolution experiments of stereoselective variants led to the finding that mutations can interact cooperatively or antagonistically with one another, not just additively. During the past decade, this phenomenon was shown to be general. In some studies, molecular dynamics (MD) and quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) computations were performed in order to shed light on the origin of non‐additivity at all stages of an evolutionary upward climb. Data of complete deconvolution can be used to construct unique multi‐dimensional rugged fitness pathway landscapes, which provide mechanistic insights different from traditional fitness landscapes. Along a related line, biochemists have long tested the result of introducing two point mutations in an enzyme for mechanistic reasons, followed by a comparison of the respective double mutant in so‐called double mutant cycles, which originally showed only additive effects, but more recently also uncovered cooperative and antagonistic non‐additive effects. We conclude with suggestions for future work, and call for a unified overall picture of non‐additivity and epistasis.

Funder

Max-Planck-Gesellschaft

European Commission

Publisher

Wiley

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