Substitution of one calcium-binding amino acid strengthens substrate binding in a thermophilic alginate lyase

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Abstract

Ligand binding is sensitive to temperatures since noncovalent bonds between the binding site and ligand could be broken by heat. How metal ion-binding amino acids in alginate lyase evolve to achieve tight substrate binding in a hostile environment remains unknown. An endolytic alginate lyase AlgAT0 specifically cleaved the M–G glycosidic bond and released disaccharides as the main end product. Four conserved calcium-binding sites were predicted and the supplement of Ca2+ led to enhanced substrate binding and protein stability. Among the four conserved calcium-binding sites, one substitution of aspartate for glutamate in AlgAT0 was proved to stimulate Ca2+ affinity. This study suggested that substrate affinity of polysaccharide lyases could be improved by tight binding to Ca2+ via one amino acid substitution.

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Wang, B., Ji, S. Q., Ma, X. Q., Lu, M., Wang, L. S., & Li, F. L. (2018). Substitution of one calcium-binding amino acid strengthens substrate binding in a thermophilic alginate lyase. FEBS Letters, 592(3), 369–379. https://doi.org/10.1002/1873-3468.12965

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