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Regulating substrate preference of phosphatase by reshaping the "cap domain" for multi-enzymatic biosynthesis of high-purity monosaccharides.

Xiao-Ling TangKe-Xin XuYu-Heng GengWen-Hao WangHong-Juan DiaoRen-Chao ZhengYu-Guo Zheng
Published in: Biotechnology and bioengineering (2022)
Phosphatases are a class of enzymes catalyzing the cleavage of monophosphate ester bonds from the phosphorylated substrates. They have important applications in construction of in vitro multi-enzymatic system for monosaccharides. However, the enzymes generally show substrate ambiguity, which has become a bottleneck for efficient biosynthesis of target products with high purity. In this study, semirational design was performed on phosphatase from Thermosipho atlanticus (Ta-PST). The hotspot amino acid residues forming a "cap domain" were identified and selected for saturation mutagenesis. The mutant F179T and F179M showed improved substrate preference toward fructose-6-phosphate and mannose-6-phosphate, respectively. Coupling with other enzymes involved in the multi-enzymatic system under optimized conditions, the application of F179T led to fructose yield of 80% from 10 g/L maltodextrin and the ratio between the target product and by-product glucose was increased from 2:1 to 19:1. On the other hand, the application of F179M led to mannose yield of 59% with ratio of mannose to the by-products glucose and fructose increased from 1:1:1 to 14:2:1. Moreover, the molecular understanding of the beneficial substitution was gained by structural analysis and molecular dynamic simulations, giving important guidance to regulate the enzyme's substrate preference.
Keyphrases
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  • structural basis
  • single molecule
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  • insulin resistance