Engineering non-conservative substrate recognition sites of extradiol dioxygenase: Computation guided design to diversify and accelerate degradation of aromatic compounds

Int J Biol Macromol. 2024 Apr;264(Pt 2):130739. doi: 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2024.130739. Epub 2024 Mar 8.

Abstract

Extradiol dioxygenases (EDOs) catalyzing meta-cleavage of catecholic compounds promise an effective way to detoxify aromatic pollutants. This work reported a novel scenario to engineer our recently identified Type I EDO from Tcu3516 for a broader substrate scope and enhanced activity, which was based on 2,3-dihydroxybiphenyl (2,3-DHB)-liganded molecular docking of Tcu3516 and multiple sequence alignment with other 22 Type I EDOs. 11 non-conservative residues of Tcu3516 within 6 Å distance to the 2,3-DHB ligand center were selected as potential hotspots and subjected to semi-rational design using 6 catecholic analogues as substrates; the mutants V186L and V212N returned with progressive evolution in substrate scope and catalytic activity. Both mutants were combined with D285A for construction of double mutants and final triple mutant V186L/V212N/D285A. Except for 2,3-DHB (the mutant V186L/D285A gave the best catalytic performance), the triple mutant prevailed all other 5 catecholic compounds for their degradation; affording the catalytic efficiency kcat/Km value increase by 10-30 folds, protein Tm (structural rigidity) increase by 15 °C and the half-life time enhancement by 10 times compared to the wild type Tcu3516. The molecular dynamic simulation suggested that a stabler core and a more flexible entrance are likely accounting for enhanced catalytic activity and stability of enzymes.

Keywords: Bio-remediation; Catecholic pollutants; Semi-rational design; Structural plasticity; Substrate recognition site.

MeSH terms

  • Molecular Docking Simulation
  • Organic Chemicals*
  • Oxygenases* / chemistry
  • Sequence Alignment
  • Substrate Specificity

Substances

  • extradiol dioxygenase
  • Oxygenases
  • Organic Chemicals