Title of article :
Increasing the thermal stability of cellulase C using rules learned from thermophilic proteins: a pilot study Original Research Article
Author/Authors :
Attila Németh، نويسنده , , Szil?rd Kamondi، نويسنده , , Andr?s Szil?gyi، نويسنده , , Csaba Magyar، نويسنده , , Zolt?n Kov?ri، نويسنده , , Péter Z?vodszky، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
Pages :
13
From page :
229
To page :
241
Abstract :
Some structural features underlying the increased thermostability of enzymes from thermophilic organisms relative to their homologues from mesophiles are known from earlier studies. We used cellulase C from Clostridium thermocellum to test whether thermostability can be increased by mutations designed using rules learned from thermophilic proteins. Cellulase C has a TIM barrel fold with an additional helical subdomain. We designed and produced a number of mutants with the aim to increase its thermostability. Five mutants were designed to create new electrostatic interactions. They all retained catalytic activity but exhibited decreased thermostability relative to the wild-type enzyme. Here, the stabilizing contributions are obviously smaller than the destabilization caused by the introduction of the new side chains. In another mutant, the small helical subdomain was deleted. This mutant lost activity but its melting point was only 3 °C lower than that of the wild-type enzyme, which suggests that the subdomain is an independent folding unit and is important for catalytic function. A double mutant was designed to introduce a new disulfide bridge into the enzyme. This mutant is active and has an increased stability (ΔTm=3 °C, Δ(ΔGu)=1.73 kcal/mol) relative to the wild-type enzyme. Reduction of the disulfide bridge results in destabilization and an altered thermal denaturation behavior. We conclude that rules learned from thermophilic proteins cannot be used in a straightforward way to increase the thermostability of a protein. Creating a crosslink such as a disulfide bond is a relatively sure-fire method but the stabilization may be smaller than calculated due to coupled destabilizing effects.
Keywords :
DSC , thermostability , Cellulase C , mutagenesis , CD , Conformational stability
Journal title :
Biophysical Chemistry
Serial Year :
2002
Journal title :
Biophysical Chemistry
Record number :
1113074
Link To Document :
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