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De novo active sites for resurrected Precambrian enzymes.

Valeria A RissoSergio Martinez-RodriguezAdela M CandelDennis M KrügerDavid Pantoja-UcedaMariano Ortega-MuñozFrancisco Santoyo-GonzalezEric A GaucherShina C L KamerlinMarta BruixJosé Antonio GaviraJose M Sanchez-Ruiz
Published in: Nature communications (2017)
Protein engineering studies often suggest the emergence of completely new enzyme functionalities to be highly improbable. However, enzymes likely catalysed many different reactions already in the last universal common ancestor. Mechanisms for the emergence of completely new active sites must therefore either plausibly exist or at least have existed at the primordial protein stage. Here, we use resurrected Precambrian proteins as scaffolds for protein engineering and demonstrate that a new active site can be generated through a single hydrophobic-to-ionizable amino acid replacement that generates a partially buried group with perturbed physico-chemical properties. We provide experimental and computational evidence that conformational flexibility can assist the emergence and subsequent evolution of new active sites by improving substrate and transition-state binding, through the sampling of many potentially productive conformations. Our results suggest a mechanism for the emergence of primordial enzymes and highlight the potential of ancestral reconstruction as a tool for protein engineering.
Keyphrases
  • amino acid
  • protein protein
  • binding protein
  • molecular dynamics
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • transcription factor
  • human health