Small molecule substrates for the rapid quantification of acyl transfer activity of nylon hydrolase NylCA
The widespread use of polyamides such as nylons has led to the accumulation of nylon waste, which is particularly resistant to decomposition due to the intrinsic stability of the amide bond. New methods are required for the true recycling of these waste materials by depolymerization. Enzymes that ar...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Analytical biochemistry 2024-10, Vol.693, p.115598, Article 115598 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The widespread use of polyamides such as nylons has led to the accumulation of nylon waste, which is particularly resistant to decomposition due to the intrinsic stability of the amide bond. New methods are required for the true recycling of these waste materials by depolymerization. Enzymes that are capable of hydrolyzing polyamides have been proposed as biocatalysts that may be suitable for this application. NylC is an enzyme that can mediate the hydrolysis of aminohexanoic acid oligomers, and to some extent, bulk polymers. However, current assays to characterize the activity of this enzyme require long reaction times and/or rely on secondary reactions to quantify hydrolysis. Herein, we have designed structurally-optimized small molecule chromogenic esters that serve as substrate analogues for monitoring NylC acyltransferase activity in a continuous manner. This assay can be performed in minutes at room temperature, and the substrate N-acetyl-GABA-pNP ester (kcat = 0.37 s−1, KM = 256 μM) shows selectivity for NylC in complex biological media. We also demonstrate that activity towards this substrate analogue correlates with amide hydrolysis, which is the primary activity of this enzyme. Furthermore, our screening of substrate analogues provides insight into the substrate specificity of NylC, which is relevant to biocatalytic applications.
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•Aminohexanoate oligomer hydrolase NylC reacts with a series of chromogenic esters.•Unprecedented substrate specificity indicates preference for binding and hydrolysis.•These ester substrates are hydrolyzed in a similar manner to amide substrates.•We propose the highest affinity substrate to serve as an activity assay for NylC. |
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ISSN: | 0003-2697 1096-0309 1096-0309 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ab.2024.115598 |