7RNP
Engineered tryptophan synthase b-subunit from Pyrococcus furiosus, PfTrpB2B9_H275E with 4-Cl-Trp non-covalently bound
Summary for 7RNP
Entry DOI | 10.2210/pdb7rnp/pdb |
Descriptor | Tryptophan synthase beta chain 1, 4-chloro-L-tryptophan, SODIUM ION, ... (4 entities in total) |
Functional Keywords | tryptophan synthase, biosynthetic protein |
Biological source | Pyrococcus furiosus |
Total number of polymer chains | 4 |
Total formula weight | 175008.05 |
Authors | Higgins, P.M.,Buller, A.R. (deposition date: 2021-07-29, release date: 2022-08-03, Last modification date: 2023-11-15) |
Primary citation | McDonald, A.D.,Higgins, P.M.,Buller, A.R. Substrate multiplexed protein engineering facilitates promiscuous biocatalytic synthesis. Nat Commun, 13:5242-5242, 2022 Cited by PubMed Abstract: Enzymes with high activity are readily produced through protein engineering, but intentionally and efficiently engineering enzymes for an expanded substrate scope is a contemporary challenge. One approach to address this challenge is Substrate Multiplexed Screening (SUMS), where enzyme activity is measured on competing substrates. SUMS has long been used to rigorously quantitate native enzyme specificity, primarily for in vivo settings. SUMS has more recently found sporadic use as a protein engineering approach but has not been widely adopted by the field, despite its potential utility. Here, we develop principles of how to design and interpret SUMS assays to guide protein engineering. This rich information enables improving activity with multiple substrates simultaneously, identifies enzyme variants with altered scope, and indicates potential mutational hot-spots as sites for further engineering. These advances leverage common laboratory equipment and represent a highly accessible and customizable method for enzyme engineering. PubMed: 36068220DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-32789-w PDB entries with the same primary citation |
Experimental method | X-RAY DIFFRACTION (2.25 Å) |
Structure validation
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