Publication details

Engineering the protein dynamics of an ancestral luciferase

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Authors

SCHENKMAYEROVÁ Andrea RANGEL PAMPLONA PIZARRO PINTO José Gaspar TOUL Martin MAREK Martin HERNYCHOVÁ Lenka PLANAS IGLESIAS Joan LIŠKOVÁ Veronika PLUSKAL Daniel VAŠINA Michal EMOND Stephane DÖRR Mark CHALOUPKOVÁ Radka BEDNÁŘ David PROKOP Zbyněk HOLLFELDER Florian BORNSCHEUER Uwe T. DAMBORSKÝ Jiří

Year of publication 2021
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Nature Communications
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
web https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-23450-z
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-23450-z
Keywords Enzymes; Hydrolases; Protein design; X-ray crystallography
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Description Directed evolution commonly relies on point mutations but InDels frequently occur in evolution. Here the authors report a protein-engineering framework based on InDel mutagenesis and fragment transplantation resulting in greater catalysis and longer glow-type bioluminescence of the ancestral luciferase. Protein dynamics are often invoked in explanations of enzyme catalysis, but their design has proven elusive. Here we track the role of dynamics in evolution, starting from the evolvable and thermostable ancestral protein Anc(HLD-RLuc) which catalyses both dehalogenase and luciferase reactions. Insertion-deletion (InDel) backbone mutagenesis of Anc(HLD-RLuc) challenged the scaffold dynamics. Screening for both activities reveals InDel mutations localized in three distinct regions that lead to altered protein dynamics (based on crystallographic B-factors, hydrogen exchange, and molecular dynamics simulations). An anisotropic network model highlights the importance of the conformational flexibility of a loop-helix fragment of Renilla luciferases for ligand binding. Transplantation of this dynamic fragment leads to lower product inhibition and highly stable glow-type bioluminescence. The success of our approach suggests that a strategy comprising (i) constructing a stable and evolvable template, (ii) mapping functional regions by backbone mutagenesis, and (iii) transplantation of dynamic features, can lead to functionally innovative proteins.
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