Amylosucrase from Neisseria polysaccharea naturally catalyzes the synthesis of α-1,4 glucans from sucrose. The product profile is quite polydisperse, ranging from soluble chains called maltooligosaccharides to high-molecular weight insoluble amylose. This enzyme was recently subjected to engineering of its active site to enable recognition of non-natural acceptor substrates. Libraries of variants were constructed and screened on sucrose, allowing the identification of a mutant that showed a 6-fold enhanced activity toward sucrose compared to the wild-type enzyme. Furthermore, its product profile was unprecedented, as only soluble maltooligosaccharides of controlled size chains (2<DP<21) with a narrow polydispersity were observed. This variant, containing 9 mutations in the active site, was characterized at both biochemical and structural levels. Its x-ray structure was determined and further investigated by molecular dynamics to understand the molecular origins of its higher activity on sucrose and higher production of small maltooligosaccharides, with a totally abolished insoluble glucan synthesis.
Keywords: Amylosucrase; Enzyme engineering; Malto-oligosaccharide synthesis; Sucrose; Transglucosylation.
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