Back to Search Start Over

Natural protein engineering: a uniquely salt-tolerant, but not halophilic, -type carbonic anhydrase from algae proliferating in low- to hyper-saline environments

Authors :
Lakshmanane Premkumar
Joel L. Sussman
Irena Gokhman
Umesh K. Bageshwar
Tatyana Savchenko
Ada Zamir
Source :
Protein Engineering Design and Selection. 17:191-200
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2004.

Abstract

Dunaliella salina is a unicellular green alga thriving in environments ranging from fresh water to hyper-saline lakes, such as the Dead Sea. An unusual, internally duplicated, 60 kDa alpha-type carbonic anhydrase (dCA I), located on the surface of this alga, is expected to function over a broad range of salinities. It would therefore differ from other carbonic anhydrases that already lose activity at low salinities and also from halophilic proteins that require high salinities for conformational stability. Enzymatic analyses indeed indicated that dCA I retained activity at salt concentrations ranging from low salt to at least 1.5 M NaCl or KCl for CO(2) hydration, 2.0 M NaCl for esterase activity and 0.5 M for bicarbonate dehydration. Although measurements at higher salinities were constrained by the interference of salt in the respective assayed reactions, activity was noticeable even at 4.0 M NaCl. Comparisons of the internally duplicated dCA I to single-domain derivatives indicated that inter-domain interactions played a decisive role in the stability, activity, salt tolerance and pH responses of dCA I. Hence dCA I is a uniquely salt- tolerant protein, retaining an active conformation over a large range of salinities and, as a Zn metalloenzyme, largely immune to the specific inhibitory effects of anions. Its unique features make dCA I a useful model to understand the physico-chemical basis of halotolerance and protein-salt interactions in general.

Details

ISSN :
17410134 and 17410126
Volume :
17
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Protein Engineering Design and Selection
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2a4b17598b04a1889aa357025c705ec5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/protein/gzh022