Published October 9, 2024 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Elucidation of the noncovalent interactions driving enzyme activity guides branching enzyme engineering for α-glucan modification

  • 1. Chinese Academy of Sciences
  • 2. University of Chicago
  • 3. University of Copenhagen

Description

Branching enzymes (BEs) confer to α-glucans, the primary energy-storage reservoir in nature, a variety of features, like slow digestion. The full catalytic cycle of BEs can be divided in six steps, namely two covalent catalytic steps involving glycosylation and transglycosylation, and four noncatalytic steps involving substrate binding and transfers (SBTs). Despite the ever-growing wealth of biochemical and structural information on BEs, clear mechanistic insights into SBTs from an industrial-performance perspective are still missing. Here, we report a Rhodothermus profundi BE (RpBE) endowed with twice as much enzymatic activity as the Rhodothermus obamensis BE currently used in industry. Furthermore, we focus on the SBTs for RpBE by means of large-scale computations supported by experiment. Engineering of the crucial positions responsible for the initial substrate-binding step improves enzymatic activity significantly, while offering a possibility to customize product types. In addition, we show that the high-efficiency substrate-transfer steps preceding glycosylation and transglycosylation are the main reason for the remarkable enzymatic activity of RpBE, suggestive of engineering directions for the BE family.

Data availability

The raw data generated in this study, the interaction-energy scripts, and simulation files have been deposited in the Figshare database under https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.26500141. Crystallographic data for the WT RpBE has been deposited at the Protein Data Bank with accession code 8ZQA. Source Data are provided with this paper as source data file. Source data are provided with this paper.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/s41467-024-53018-6
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:13693

Funding

Chinese Academy of Sciences
Strategic Priority Research Program
National Key R&D Program of China
2023YFC3403600
National Natural Science Foundation of China
22005157
Tianjin Synthetic Biotechnology Innovation Capacity Improvement Project
TSBICIP-CXRC-077

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology