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Converting Aspartase into a β‐Amino Acid Lyase by Cluster Screening
Author(s) -
Vogel Andreas,
Schmiedel Ramona,
Hofmann Ute,
Gruber Karl,
Zangger Klaus
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
chemcatchem
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.497
H-Index - 106
eISSN - 1867-3899
pISSN - 1867-3880
DOI - 10.1002/cctc.201300986
Subject(s) - enantiopure drug , mutant , enzyme , substrate (aquarium) , amino acid , high throughput screening , population , biochemistry , substrate specificity , chemistry , stereochemistry , protein engineering , lyase , combinatorial chemistry , biology , gene , catalysis , medicine , ecology , environmental health , enantioselective synthesis
Aspartase, despite being one of the most specific enzymes known, shows potential for application in β‐amino acid synthesis. The substrate binding pocket of AspB from Bacillus sp. YM55‐1 was reshaped by enzyme engineering to accommodate crotonic acid. The mutant enzyme BSASP‐C6 yielded enantiopure ( R )‐3‐aminobutyrate from crotonic acid and ammonia. To obtain this mutant, a high‐throughput screening in combination with a focused permutational library was decisive for the success in this project. We achieved this by simultaneous randomisation of four residues within the substrate binding pocket and cluster screening in mixed population. Screening of 300 000 clones was necessary to find the BSASP‐C6 mutant which has β‐amino acid lyase activity. This exemplifies the need for efficient search and screening strategies in creating novel enzyme activities. The BSAPS‐C6 enzyme developed here surpasses the natural substrate functionality of aspartase and thus represents the proof‐of‐concept of application of this novel synthetic route to a broader set of β‐amino acids.