The health benefits of human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs) make them attractive targets as supplements for infant formula milks. However, HMO synthesis is still challenging and only two HMOs have been marketed. Engineering glycoside hydrolases into transglycosylases may provide biocatalytic routes to the synthesis of complex oligosaccharides. Lacto--biosidase from (LnbB) is a GH20 enzyme present in the gut microbiota of breast-fed infants that hydrolyzes lacto--tetraose (LNT), the core structure of the most abundant type I HMOs. Here we report a mutational study in the donor subsites of the substrate binding cleft with the aim of reducing hydrolytic activity and conferring transglycosylation activity for the synthesis of LNT from -nitrophenyl β-lacto--bioside and lactose. As compared with the wt enzyme with negligible transglycosylation activity, mutants with residual hydrolase activity within 0.05% to 1.6% of the wild-type enzyme result in transglycosylating enzymes with LNT yields in the range of 10-30%. Mutations of Trp394, located in subsite -1 next to the catalytic residues, have a large impact on the transglycosylation/hydrolysis ratio, with W394F being the best mutant as a biocatalyst producing LNT at 32% yield. It is the first reported transglycosylating LnbB enzyme variant, amenable to further engineering for practical enzymatic synthesis of LNT.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms22063230 | DOI Listing |
Biotechnol Biofuels Bioprod
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College of Life Sciences, Henan Agricultural University, 218 Ping-an Ave., Zhengzhou, 450046, China.
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Institute of Chemistry, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Dúbravská Cesta 9, SK-845 38 Bratislava, Slovakia.
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View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Biol Macromol
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Faculty of Food Science and Engineering, Kunming University of Science and Technology, Kunming, Yunnan 650500, China. Electronic address:
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