Computational enzyme design: Transitioning from catalytic proteins to enzymes

•We compare catalytic properties of computationally designed versus native enzymes.•We identify many strengths and difficulties of current enzyme design methods.•We postulate on future avenues for basic research in computational enzyme design. The widespread interest in enzymes stem from their abili...

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Veröffentlicht in:Current opinion in structural biology 2014-08, Vol.27, p.87-94
Hauptverfasser: Mak, Wai Shun, Siegel, Justin B
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creator Mak, Wai Shun
Siegel, Justin B
description •We compare catalytic properties of computationally designed versus native enzymes.•We identify many strengths and difficulties of current enzyme design methods.•We postulate on future avenues for basic research in computational enzyme design. The widespread interest in enzymes stem from their ability to catalyze chemical reactions under mild and ecologically friendly conditions with unparalleled catalytic proficiencies. While thousands of naturally occurring enzymes have been identified and characterized, there are still numerous important applications for which there are no biological catalysts capable of performing the desired chemical transformation. In order to engineer enzymes for which there is no natural starting point, efforts using a combination of quantum chemistry and force-field based protein molecular modeling have led to the design of novel proteins capable of catalyzing chemical reactions not catalyzed by naturally occurring enzymes. Here we discuss the current status and potential avenues to pursue as the field of computational enzyme design moves forward.
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subjects Biocatalysis
Computational Biology - methods
Enzymes - chemistry
Enzymes - genetics
Enzymes - metabolism
Protein Engineering - methods
Proteins - chemistry
Proteins - genetics
Proteins - metabolism
title Computational enzyme design: Transitioning from catalytic proteins to enzymes
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