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Controlling Enzymatic Activity by Modulating the Oligomerization State via Chemical Rescue and Optical Control.

Cosimo KroppAstrid BruckmannPatrick Babinger
Published in: Chembiochem : a European journal of chemical biology (2021)
Selective switching of enzymatic activity has been a longstanding goal in synthetic biology. Drastic changes in activity upon mutational manipulation of the oligomerization state of enzymes have frequently been reported in the literature, but scarcely exploited for switching. Using geranylgeranylglyceryl phosphate synthase as a model, we demonstrate that catalytic activity can be efficiently controlled by exogenous modulation of the association state. We introduced a lysine-to-cysteine mutation, leading to the breakdown of the active hexamer into dimers with impaired catalytic efficiency. Addition of bromoethylamine chemically rescued the enzyme by restoring hexamerization and activity. As an alternative method, we incorporated the photosensitive unnatural amino acid o-nitrobenzyl-O-tyrosine (ONBY) into the hexamerization interface. This again led to inactive dimers, but the hexameric state and activity could be recovered by UV-light induced cleavage of ONBY. For both approaches, we obtained switching factors greater than 350-fold, which compares favorably with previously reported activity changes that were caused by site-directed mutagenesis.
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