Tunnel engineering for modulating the substrate preference in cytochrome P450BsβHI

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Abstract

An active site is normally located inside enzymes, hence substrates should go through a tunnel to access the active site. Tunnel engineering is a powerful strategy for refining the catalytic properties of enzymes. Here, P450BsβHI (Q85H/V170I) derived from hydroxylase P450Bsβ from Bacillus subtilis was chosen as the study model, which is reported as a potential decarboxylase. However, this enzyme showed low decarboxylase activity towards long-chain fatty acids. Here, a tunnel engineering campaign was performed for modulating the substrate preference and improving the decarboxylation activity of P450BsβHI. The finally obtained BsβHI-F79A variant had a 15.2-fold improved conversion for palmitic acid; BsβHI-F173V variant had a 3.9-fold improved conversion for pentadecanoic acid. The study demonstrates how the substrate preference can be modulated by tunnel engineering strategy.[Figure not available: see fulltext.]

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APA

Meng, S., An, R., Li, Z., Schwaneberg, U., Ji, Y., Davari, M. D., … Liu, L. (2021). Tunnel engineering for modulating the substrate preference in cytochrome P450BsβHI. Bioresources and Bioprocessing, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s40643-021-00379-1

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