Interactions of non-natural halogenated substrates with D-specific dehalogenase (DehD) mutants using studies.

Biotechnol Biotechnol Equip

Department of Biotechnology and Medical Engineering, Faculty of Biosciences and Medical Engineering (FBME), Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, Johor Bahru , Johor , Malaysia.

Published: September 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • The D-2-haloacid dehalogenase (DehD) from sp. RC1 converts D-haloalkanoic acids into L-hydroxyalkanoic acids through hydrolytic dehalogenation, changing substrate properties.
  • Researchers focused on DehD mutants R134A and Y135A to examine their interaction with various haloalkanoic acid substrates, identifying key catalytic residues for potential improvements.
  • The mutants exhibited enhanced binding to substrates, including those that wild-type DehD cannot interact with, suggesting their utility in bioremediation and biotechnology.

Article Abstract

The D-2-haloacid dehalogenase of D-specific dehalogenase (DehD) from sp. RC1 catalyses the hydrolytic dehalogenation of D-haloalkanoic acids, inverting the substrate-product configuration and thereby forming the corresponding L-hydroxyalkanoic acids. Our investigations were focused on DehD mutants: R134A and Y135A. We examined the possible interactions between these mutants with haloalkanoic acids and characterized the key catalytic residues in the wild-type dehalogenase, to design dehalogenase enzyme(s) with improved potential for dehalogenation of a wider range of substrates. Three natural substrates of wild-type DehD, specifically, monochloroacetate, monobromoacetate and D,L-2,3-dichloropropionate, and eight other non-natural haloalkanoic acids substrates of DehD, namely, L-2-chloropropionate; L-2-bromopropionate; 2,2-dichloropropionate; dichloroacetate; dibromoacetate; trichloroacetate; tribromoacetate; and 3-chloropropionate, were docked into the active site of the DehD mutants R134A and Y135A, which produced altered catalytic functions. The mutants interacted strongly with substrates that wild-type DehD does not interact with or degrade. The interaction was particularly enhanced with 3-chloropropionate, in addition to monobromoacetate, monochloroacetate and D,L-2,3-dichloropropionate. In summary, DehD variants R134A and Y135A demonstrated increased propensity for binding haloalkanoic acid and were non-stereospecific towards halogenated substrates. The improved characteristics in these mutants suggest that their functionality could be further exploited and harnessed in bioremediations and biotechnological applications.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4433833PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13102818.2014.960663DOI Listing

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