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Futile Encounter Engineering of the DSR-M Dextransucrase Modifies the Resulting Polymer Length.

Marion ClaverieGianluca CiociMatthieu GuionnetJulia SchörghuberRoman LichteneckerClaire MoulisMagali Remaud-SimeonGuy Lippens
Published in: Biochemistry (2019)
The factors that define the resulting polymer length of distributive polymerases are poorly understood. Here, starting from the crystal structure of the dextransucrase DSR-M in complex with an isomaltotetraose, we define different anchoring points for the incoming acceptor. Mutation of one of these, Trp624, decreases the catalytic rate of the enzyme but equally skews the size distribution of the resulting dextran chains toward shorter chains. Nuclear magnetic resonance analysis shows that this mutation influences both the dynamics of the active site and the water accessibility. Monte Carlo simulation of the elongation process allows interpretation of these results in terms of enhanced futile encounters, whereby the less effective binding increases the pool of effective seeds for the dextran chains and thereby directly determines the length distribution of the final polymers.
Keyphrases
  • magnetic resonance
  • monte carlo
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • computed tomography
  • solar cells
  • transcription factor