TY - JOUR
T1 - Structure-Guided Engineering Unveils Deeper Substrate Channel in Processive Endoglucanase EG5C-1 Contributing to Enhanced Catalytic Efficiency and Processivity
AU - Wang, Jialing
AU - Chen, Jie
AU - Lv, Kemin
AU - Gao, Zhen
AU - Li, Jiahuang
AU - Wu, Bin
AU - He, Bingfang
AU - Schenk, Gerhard
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2024/12/20
Y1 - 2024/12/20
N2 - Processive endoglucanases have generated significant interest due to their bifunctionality in the degradation of cellulose and low product inhibition. However, enhancing their catalytic efficiency through engineering remains a formidable challenge. To address this bottleneck, our engineering efforts targeted loop regions located in the substrate channel of processive endoglucanase EG5C-1. Guided by a comparative analysis of characteristic structural features of the substrate channels in cellobiohydrolase, endoglucanase, and processive endoglucanase, a highly active triple mutant CM6 (N105H/T205S/D233L) was generated that had a 5.1- and 4.7-fold increase in catalytic efficiency toward soluble substrate carboxymethyl cellulose-Na and insoluble substrate phosphoric acid-swollen cellulose (PASC), compared with wild-type EG5C-1. Furthermore, this mutant exhibited greater processivity compared to EG5C-1. Molecular dynamics simulations unveiled that the mutations in the loop regions reshaped the substrate channel, leading to a deeper cleft, resembling the closed channel configuration of cellobiohydrolases. The increased compactness of the substrate channel induced changes in the substrate binding mode and substrate deformation, thereby enhancing both binding affinity and catalytic efficiency. Moreover, metadynamics simulations demonstrated that the processive velocity of cellulose chain through the binding channel in mutant CM6 surpassed that observed in EG5C-1.
AB - Processive endoglucanases have generated significant interest due to their bifunctionality in the degradation of cellulose and low product inhibition. However, enhancing their catalytic efficiency through engineering remains a formidable challenge. To address this bottleneck, our engineering efforts targeted loop regions located in the substrate channel of processive endoglucanase EG5C-1. Guided by a comparative analysis of characteristic structural features of the substrate channels in cellobiohydrolase, endoglucanase, and processive endoglucanase, a highly active triple mutant CM6 (N105H/T205S/D233L) was generated that had a 5.1- and 4.7-fold increase in catalytic efficiency toward soluble substrate carboxymethyl cellulose-Na and insoluble substrate phosphoric acid-swollen cellulose (PASC), compared with wild-type EG5C-1. Furthermore, this mutant exhibited greater processivity compared to EG5C-1. Molecular dynamics simulations unveiled that the mutations in the loop regions reshaped the substrate channel, leading to a deeper cleft, resembling the closed channel configuration of cellobiohydrolases. The increased compactness of the substrate channel induced changes in the substrate binding mode and substrate deformation, thereby enhancing both binding affinity and catalytic efficiency. Moreover, metadynamics simulations demonstrated that the processive velocity of cellulose chain through the binding channel in mutant CM6 surpassed that observed in EG5C-1.
KW - catalytic efficiency
KW - loop engineering
KW - processive endoglucanase
KW - processivity
KW - substrate channel
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85209913658&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acssynbio.4c00562
DO - 10.1021/acssynbio.4c00562
M3 - 文章
C2 - 39579149
AN - SCOPUS:85209913658
SN - 2161-5063
VL - 13
SP - 4131
EP - 4142
JO - ACS Synthetic Biology
JF - ACS Synthetic Biology
IS - 12
ER -