Author:
Cui Yinglu,Chen Yanchun,Liu Xinyue,Dong Saijun,Tian Yu’e,Qiao Yuxin,Mitra Ruchira,Han Jing,Li Chunli,Han Xu,Liu Weidong,Chen Quan,Du Wenbin,Tang Shuangyan,Xiang Hua,Liu Haiyan,Wu Bian
Abstract
AbstractThe excessive use of plastics has been accompanied by severe ecologically damaging effects. The recent discovery of a PETase from Ideonella sakaiensis that decomposes poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) under mild conditions provides an attractive avenue for the biodegradation of plastics. However, the inherent instability of the enzyme limits its practical utilization. Here, we devised a novel computational strategy (greedy accumulated strategy for protein engineering, GRAPE). A systematic clustering analysis combined with greedy accumulation of beneficial mutations in a computationally derived library enabled the design of a variant, DuraPETase, which exhibits an apparent melting temperature that is drastically elevated by 31 °C and strikingly enhanced degradation performance toward semicrystalline PET films (23%) at mild temperatures (over two orders of magnitude improvement). The mechanism underlying the robust promotion of enzyme performance has been demonstrated via a crystal structure and molecular dynamics simulations. This work shows the capabilities of computational enzyme design to circumvent antagonistic epistatic effects and provides a valuable tool for further understanding and advancing polyester hydrolysis in the natural environment.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
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