Abstract
The exploitation of catalytic promiscuity and the application of de novo design have recently opened the access to novel, non-natural enzymatic activities. Here we describe a structural bioinformatic method for predicting catalytic activities of enzymes based on three-dimensional constellations of functional groups in active sites ('catalophores').. As a proof-of-concept we identify two enzymes with predicted promiscuous ene-reductase activity (reduction of activated C-C double bonds) and compare them with known ene-reductases, that is, members of the Old Yellow Enzyme family. Despite completely different amino acid sequences, overall structures and protein folds, high-resolution crystal structures reveal equivalent binding modes of typical Old Yellow Enzyme substrates and ligands. Biochemical and biocatalytic data show that the two enzymes indeed possess ene-reductase activity and reveal an inverted stereopreference compared with Old Yellow Enzymes for some substrates. This method could thus be a tool for the identification of viable starting points for the development and engineering of novel biocatalysts. © 2014 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
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CITATION STYLE
Steinkellner, G., Gruber, C. C., Pavkov-Keller, T., Binter, A., Steiner, K., Winkler, C., … Gruber, K. (2014). Identification of promiscuous ene-reductase activity by mining structural databases using active site constellations. Nature Communications, 5. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms5150
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