Effects of altering the properties of an active site in an enzymatic homogeneous catalyst have been extensively reported. However, the possibility of increasing the number of such sites, as commonly done in heterogeneous catalytic materials, remains unexplored, particularly because those have to accommodate appropriate residues in specific configurations. This possibility was investigated by using a serine ester hydrolase as the target enzyme. By using the Protein Energy Landscape Exploration software, which maps ligand diffusion and binding, we found a potential binding pocket capable of holding an extra catalytic triad and oxyanion hole contacts. By introducing two mutations, this binding pocket became a catalytic site. Its substrate specificity, substrate preference, and catalytic activity were different from those of the native site of the wild type ester hydrolase and other hydrolases, due to the differences in the active site architecture. Converting the binding pocket into an extra catalytic active site was proven to be a successful approach to create a serine ester hydrolase with two functional reactive groups. Our results illustrate the accuracy and predictive nature of modern modeling techniques, opening novel catalytic opportunities coming from the presence of different catalytic environments in single enzymes.
Owing
to their outstanding catalytic properties, enzymes represent
powerful tools for carrying out a wide range of (bio)chemical transformations
with high proficiency. In this context, enzymes with high biocatalytic
promiscuity are somewhat neglected. Here, we demonstrate that a meticulous
modification of a synthetic shell that surrounds an immobilized enzyme
possessing broad substrate specificity allows the resulting nanobiocatalyst
to be endowed with enantioselective properties while maintaining
a high level of substrate promiscuity. Our results show that control
of the enzyme nano-environment enables tuning of both substrate specificity
and enantioselectivity. Further, we demonstrate that our strategy
of enzyme supramolecular engineering allows the enzyme to be endowed
with markedly enhanced stability in an organic solvent (i.e., acetonitrile). The versatility of the method was assessed with
two additional substrate-promiscuous and structurally different enzymes,
for which improvements in enantioselectivity and stability were
confirmed. We expect this method to promote the use of supramolecularly
engineered promiscuous enzymes in industrially relevant biocatalytic
processes.
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