Phenylalanine ammonia-lyases: combining protein engineering and natural diversity

Appl Microbiol Biotechnol. 2023 Feb;107(4):1243-1256. doi: 10.1007/s00253-023-12374-x. Epub 2023 Jan 20.

Abstract

In this study, rational design and saturation mutagenesis efforts for engineering phenylalanine ammonia-lyase from Petroselinum crispum (PcPAL) provided tailored PALs active towards challenging, highly valuable di-substituted substrates, such as the L-DOPA precursor 3,4-dimethoxy-L-phenylalanine or the 3-bromo-4-methoxy-phenylalanine. The rational design approach and saturation mutagenesis strategy unveiled identical PcPAL variants of improved activity, highlighting the limited mutational variety of the substrate specificity-modulator residues, L134, F137, I460 of PcPAL. Due to the restricted catalytic efficiency of the best performing L134A/I460V and F137V/I460V PcPAL variants, we imprinted these beneficial mutations to PALs of different origins. The variants of PALs from Arabidopsis thaliana (AtPAL) and Anabaena variabilis (AvPAL) showed higher catalytic efficiency than their PcPAL homologues. Further, the engineered PALs were also compared in terms of catalytic efficiency with a novel aromatic ammonia-lyase from Loktanella atrilutea (LaAAL), close relative of the metagenome-derived aromatic ammonia-lyase AL-11, reported recently to possess atypically high activity towards substrates with electron-donor aromatic substituents. Indeed, LaAAL outperformed the engineered Pc/At/AvPALs in the production of 3,4-dimethoxy-L-phenylalanine; however, in case of 3-bromo-4-methoxy derivatives it showed no activity, with computational results supporting the occurrence of steric hindrance. Transferring the unique array of selectivity modulator residues from LaAAL to the well-characterized PALs did not enhance their activity towards the targeted substrates. Moreover, applying the rational design strategy valid for these well-characterized PALs to LaAAL decreased its activity. These results suggest that distinct tailoring rationale is required for LaAAL/AL-11-like aromatic ammonia-lyases, which might represent a distinct PAL subclass, with natural reaction and substrate scope modified through evolutionary processes. KEY POINTS: • PAL-activity for challenging substrates generated by protein engineering • Rational/semi-rational protein engineering reveals constrained mutational variability • Engineered PALs are outperformed by novel ALs of distinct catalytic site signature.

Keywords: L-DOPA intermediate; Phenylalanine ammonia-lyases (PAL); Protein engineering; Saturation mutagenesis; Substrate scope extension.

MeSH terms

  • Catalytic Domain
  • Mutation
  • Phenylalanine
  • Phenylalanine Ammonia-Lyase* / genetics
  • Phenylalanine Ammonia-Lyase* / metabolism
  • Protein Engineering*

Substances

  • Phenylalanine Ammonia-Lyase
  • Phenylalanine