Abstract
AbstractEnzymes inherently exhibit molecule-to-molecule heterogeneity in catalytic activity or function, which underlies the acquisition of new functions in evolutionary processes. However, correlations between the functional heterogeneity of an enzyme and its multi-functionality or promiscuity remain elusive. In addition, the modulation of functional heterogeneity upon genetic perturbation is currently unexplored. Here, we quantitatively analyzed functional heterogeneity in the wild-type and 69 single-point mutants of Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase (AP) by employing single-molecule assay with a femtoliter reactor array device. Most mutant enzymes exhibited higher functional heterogeneity than the wild-type enzyme, irrespective of catalytic activity. These results indicated that the wild-type AP minimizes functional heterogeneity, and single-point mutations can significantly expand the span of functional heterogeneity in AP. Moreover, we identified a clear correlation between functional heterogeneity and promiscuous activities. These findings suggest that enzymes can acquire greater functional heterogeneity following marginal genetic perturbations that concomitantly promote catalytic promiscuity.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory