Engineering TM1459 for Stabilisation against Inactivation by Amino Acid Oxidation

Author:

Grill Birgit1,Pavkov-Keller Tea12,Grininger Christoph2,Darnhofer Barbara3,Gruber Karl12,Hall Mélanie4,Schwab Helmut15,Steiner Kerstin1

Affiliation:

1. Austrian Centre of Industrial Biotechnology Petersgasse 14 8010 Graz Austria

2. University of Graz Institute of Molecular Biosciences Humboldtstraße 50 8010 Graz Austria

3. Medical University of Graz Core Facility Mass Spectrometry Stiftingtalstraße 24 8010 Graz Austria

4. University of Graz Institute of Chemistry Heinrichstraße 28 8010 Graz Austria

5. Graz University of Technology Institute of Molecular Biotechnology Petersgasse 14 8010 Graz Austria

Abstract

AbstractOxidative alkene cleavage is a highly interesting reaction to obtain aldehydes and ketones. The Mn‐dependent protein TM1459 from Thermotoga maritima can catalyse alkene cleavage of styrene derivatives in the presence of tert‐butyl hydroperoxide. Despite the high thermal stability of the enzyme, it gets inactivated during the reaction. The data reported here indicate that auto‐oxidation is responsible for the low stability of TM1459 in the oxidative environment required for the alkene cleavage reaction. By targeting the exchange of residues prone to oxidation, this phenomenon was successfully prevented. Importantly, the stability to oxidation conveyed by the amino acid exchanges led to increased enzyme activity. However, the exchanges resulted in slightly modified positions of two of the four metal‐binding amino acids, thereby strongly impacting metal binding.

Funder

Bundesministerium für Wissenschaft, Forschung und Wirtschaft

Steirische Wirtschaftsförderungsgesellschaft

Standortagentur Tirol

Amt der NÖ Landesregierung

Österreichische Forschungsförderungsgesellschaft

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering,General Chemical Engineering,General Chemistry

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