Structural Basis of the Conversion of T4 Lysozyme into a Transglycosidase by Reengineering the Active Site

In contrast to hen egg-white lysozyme, which retains the β -configuration of the substrate in the product, T4 lysozyme (T4L) is an inverting glycosidase. The substitution Thr-26 → His, however, converts T4L from an inverting to a retaining enzyme. It is shown here that the Thr-26 → His mutant is als...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 1999-08, Vol.96 (16), p.8949-8954
Hauptverfasser: Kuroki, Ryota, Weaver, Larry H., Matthews, Brian W.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In contrast to hen egg-white lysozyme, which retains the β -configuration of the substrate in the product, T4 lysozyme (T4L) is an inverting glycosidase. The substitution Thr-26 → His, however, converts T4L from an inverting to a retaining enzyme. It is shown here that the Thr-26 → His mutant is also a transglycosidase. Indeed, the transglycosylation reaction can be more effective than hydrolysis. In contrast, wild-type T4L has no detectable transglycosidase activity. The results support the prior hypothesis that catalysis by the Thr-26 → His mutant proceeds via a covalent intermediate. Further mutations (Glu-11 → His, Asp-20 → Cys) of the T26H mutant lysozyme indicate that the catalytic mechanism of this mutant requires Glu-11 as a general acid but Asp-20 is not essential. The results help provide an overall rationalization for the activity of glycosidases, in which a highly conserved acid group (Glu-11 in T4L, Glu-35 in hen egg-white lysozyme) on the β -side of the substrate acts as a proton donor, whereas alterations in the placement and chemical identity of residues on the α -side of the substrate can lead to catalysis with or without retention of the configuration, to transglycosidase activity, or to the formation of a stable enzyme-substrate adduct.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.96.16.8949