TY - JOUR
T1 - Engineering Substrate Promiscuity of Nucleoside Phosphorylase Via an Insertions-Deletions Strategy
AU - Liu, Gaofei
AU - Wang, Jialing
AU - Chu, Jianlin
AU - Jiang, Tianyue
AU - Qin, Song
AU - Gao, Zhen
AU - He, Bingfang
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society.
PY - 2024/2/26
Y1 - 2024/2/26
N2 - Nucleoside phosphorylases (NPs) are the key enzymes in the nucleoside metabolism pathway and are widely employed for the synthesis of nucleoside analogs, which are difficult to access via conventional synthetic methods. NPs are generally classified as purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) and pyrimidine or uridine nucleoside phosphorylase (PyNP/UP), based on their substrate preference. Here, based on the evolutionary information on the NP-I family, we adopted an insertions-deletions (InDels) strategy to engineer the substrate promiscuity of nucleoside phosphorylase AmPNPΔS2V102 K, which exhibits both PNP and UP activities from a trimeric PNP (AmPNP) of Aneurinibacillus migulanus. Furthermore, the AmPNPΔS2V102 K exerted phosphorylation activities toward arabinose nucleoside, fluorosyl nucleoside, and dideoxyribose, thereby broadening the unnatural-ribose nucleoside substrate spectrum of AmPNP. Finally, six purine nucleoside analogues were successfully synthesized, using the engineered AmPNPΔS2V102 K instead of the traditional “two-enzymes PNP/UP” approach. These results provide deep insights into the catalytic mechanisms of the PNP and demonstrate the benefits of using the InDels strategy to achieve substrate promiscuity in an enzyme, as well as broadening the substrate spectrum of the enzyme.
AB - Nucleoside phosphorylases (NPs) are the key enzymes in the nucleoside metabolism pathway and are widely employed for the synthesis of nucleoside analogs, which are difficult to access via conventional synthetic methods. NPs are generally classified as purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) and pyrimidine or uridine nucleoside phosphorylase (PyNP/UP), based on their substrate preference. Here, based on the evolutionary information on the NP-I family, we adopted an insertions-deletions (InDels) strategy to engineer the substrate promiscuity of nucleoside phosphorylase AmPNPΔS2V102 K, which exhibits both PNP and UP activities from a trimeric PNP (AmPNP) of Aneurinibacillus migulanus. Furthermore, the AmPNPΔS2V102 K exerted phosphorylation activities toward arabinose nucleoside, fluorosyl nucleoside, and dideoxyribose, thereby broadening the unnatural-ribose nucleoside substrate spectrum of AmPNP. Finally, six purine nucleoside analogues were successfully synthesized, using the engineered AmPNPΔS2V102 K instead of the traditional “two-enzymes PNP/UP” approach. These results provide deep insights into the catalytic mechanisms of the PNP and demonstrate the benefits of using the InDels strategy to achieve substrate promiscuity in an enzyme, as well as broadening the substrate spectrum of the enzyme.
KW - evolutionary information
KW - insertions-deletions
KW - nucleoside phosphorylase
KW - purine nucleoside analogues
KW - substrate promiscuity
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85182581048&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/jacsau.3c00581
DO - 10.1021/jacsau.3c00581
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85182581048
SN - 2691-3704
VL - 4
SP - 454
EP - 464
JO - JACS Au
JF - JACS Au
IS - 2
ER -