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Engineering oxidoreductases: maquette proteins designed from scratch

Authors :
Zhenyu Zhao
David Snell
Christopher C. Moser
Bruce R. Lichtenstein
Lee A. Solomon
Sarah E. Chobot
J. L. Ross Anderson
Chris Bialas
Sergei A. Vinogradov
Tatiana V. Esipova
Goutham Kodali
Joshua A. Mancini
Bryan A. Fry
Bohdana M. Discher
Tammer A. Farid
Nathan M. Ennist
P. Leslie Dutton
Craig T. Armstrong
Molly M. Sheehan
Source :
Biochemical Society Transactions. 40:561-566
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Portland Press Ltd., 2012.

Abstract

The study of natural enzymes is complicated by the fact that only the most recent evolutionary progression can be observed. In particular, natural oxidoreductases stand out as profoundly complex proteins in which the molecular roots of function, structure and biological integration are collectively intertwined and individually obscured. In the present paper, we describe our experimental approach that removes many of these often bewildering complexities to identify in simple terms the necessary and sufficient requirements for oxidoreductase function. Ours is a synthetic biology approach that focuses on from-scratch construction of protein maquettes designed principally to promote or suppress biologically relevant oxidations and reductions. The approach avoids mimicry and divorces the commonly made and almost certainly false ascription of atomistically detailed functionally unique roles to a particular protein primary sequence, to gain a new freedom to explore protein-based enzyme function. Maquette design and construction methods make use of iterative steps, retraceable when necessary, to successfully develop a protein family of sturdy and versatile single-chain three- and four-α-helical structural platforms readily expressible in bacteria. Internally, they prove malleable enough to incorporate in prescribed positions most natural redox cofactors and many more simplified synthetic analogues. External polarity, charge-patterning and chemical linkers direct maquettes to functional assembly in membranes, on nanostructured titania, and to organize on selected planar surfaces and materials. These protein maquettes engage in light harvesting and energy transfer, in photochemical charge separation and electron transfer, in stable dioxygen binding and in simple oxidative chemistry that is the basis of multi-electron oxidative and reductive catalysis.

Details

ISSN :
14708752 and 03005127
Volume :
40
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biochemical Society Transactions
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....72e761ce56ab1670f44ebc0eccb3e837
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1042/bst20120067