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Computational stabilization of a non-heme iron enzyme enables efficient evolution of new function.

Brianne R KingKiera H SumidaJessica L CarusoJulien S BakerJesse G Zalatan
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Directed evolution has emerged as a powerful tool for engineering new biocatalysts. However, introducing new catalytic residues can be destabilizing, and it is generally beneficial to start with a stable enzyme parent. Here we show that the deep learning-based tool ProteinMPNN can be used to redesign Fe(II)/αKG superfamily enzymes for greater stability, solubility, and expression while retaining both native activity and industrially-relevant non-native functions. For the Fe(II)/αKG enzyme tP4H, we performed site-saturation mutagenesis with both the wild-type and stabilized design variant and screened for activity increases in a non-native C-H hydroxylation reaction. We observed substantially larger increases in non-native activity for variants obtained from the stabilized scaffold compared to those from the wild-type enzyme. ProteinMPNN is user-friendly and widely-accessible, and straightforward structural criteria were sufficient to obtain stabilized, catalytically-functional variants of the Fe(II)/αKG enzymes tP4H and GriE. Our work suggests that stabilization by computational sequence redesign could be routinely implemented as a first step in directed evolution campaigns for novel biocatalysts.
Keyphrases
  • wild type
  • deep learning
  • copy number
  • poor prognosis
  • crispr cas
  • metal organic framework
  • dna methylation
  • aqueous solution