Petersen_1998_J.Biotechnol_66_11

Reference

Title : Protein engineering the surface of enzymes - Petersen_1998_J.Biotechnol_66_11
Author(s) : Petersen SB , Jonson PH , Fojan P , Petersen EI , Petersen MT , Hansen S , Ishak RJ , Hough E
Ref : J Biotechnol , 66 :11 , 1998
Abstract :

The protein surface is the interface through which a protein senses the external world. Its composition of charged, polar and hydrophobic residues is crucial for the stability and activity of the protein. The charge state of seven of the twenty naturally occurring amino acids is pH dependent. A total of 95% of all titratable residues are located on the surface of soluble proteins. In evolutionary related families of proteins such residues are particularly prone to substitutions, insertions and deletions. We present here an analysis of the residue composition of 4038 proteins, selected from 125 protein families with < 25% identity between core members of each family. Whereas only 16.8% of the residues were truly buried, 40.7% were > 30% exposed on the surface and the remainder were < 30% exposed. The individual residue types show distinct differences. The data presented provides an important new approach to protein engineering of protein surfaces. Guidelines for the optimization of solvent exposure for a given residue are given. The cutinase family of enzymes has been investigated. The stability of native cutinase has been studied as a function of pH, and has been compared with the cutinase activity towards tributyrin. Whereas the onset of enzymatic activity is linked with the deprotonation of the active site HIS188, destabilization of the 3D structure as determined by differential scanning calorimetry is coupled with the loss of activity at very basic pH values. A modeling investigation of the pH dependence of the electrostatic potentials reveals that the activity range is accompanied by the development of a highly significant negative potential in the active site cleft. The 3D structures of three mutants of the Fusarium solani pisi cutinase have been solved to high resolution using X-ray diffraction analysis. Preliminary X-ray data are presented.

PubMedSearch : Petersen_1998_J.Biotechnol_66_11
PubMedID: 9866858

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Citations formats

Petersen SB, Jonson PH, Fojan P, Petersen EI, Petersen MT, Hansen S, Ishak RJ, Hough E (1998)
Protein engineering the surface of enzymes
J Biotechnol 66 :11

Petersen SB, Jonson PH, Fojan P, Petersen EI, Petersen MT, Hansen S, Ishak RJ, Hough E (1998)
J Biotechnol 66 :11