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The tandemly repeated domains of a β‐propeller phytase act synergistically to increase catalytic efficiency
Author(s) -
Li Zhongyuan,
Huang Huoqing,
Yang Peilong,
Yuan Tiezheng,
Shi Pengjun,
Zhao Junqi,
Meng Kun,
Yao Bin
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
the febs journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.981
H-Index - 204
eISSN - 1742-4658
pISSN - 1742-464X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1742-4658.2011.08223.x
Subject(s) - phytase , hydrolysis , histidine , phosphatase , chemistry , phosphate , synergistic catalysis , biochemistry , recombinant dna , enzyme , catalysis , c terminus , phytic acid , amino acid , gene
β‐Propeller phytases (BPPs) with tandemly repeated domains are abundant in nature. Previous studies have shown that the intact domain is responsible for phytate hydrolysis, but the function of the other domain is relatively unknown. In this study, a new dual‐domain BPP (PhyH) from Bacillus sp. HJB17 was identified to contain an incomplete N‐terminal BPP domain (PhyH‐DI, residues 41–318) and a typical BPP domain (PhyH‐DII, residues 319–644) at the C‐terminus. Purified recombinant PhyH and PhyH‐DII required Ca 2+ for phytase activity, showed activity at low temperatures (0–35 °C) and pH 6.0–8.0, and remained active (at 37 °C) after incubation at 60 °C and pH 6.0–12.0. Compared with PhyH‐DII, PhyH is catalytically more active against phytate (catalytic constant 27.72 versus 4.17 s −1 ), which indicates the importance of PhyH‐DI in phytate degradation. PhyH‐DI was found to hydrolyze phytate intermediate d ‐Ins(1,4,5,6) P 4 , and to act synergistically (a 1.2–2.5‐fold increase in phosphate release) with PhyH‐DII, other BPPs (PhyP and 168PhyA) and a histidine acid phosphatase. Furthermore, fusion of PhyH‐DI with PhyP or 168PhyA significantly enhanced their catalytic efficiencies. This is the first report to elucidate the substrate specificity of the incomplete domain and the functional relationship of tandemly repeated domains in BPPs. We conjecture that dual‐domain BPPs have succeeded evolutionarily because they can increase the amount of available phosphate by interacting together. Additionally, fusing PhyH‐DI to a single‐domain phytase appears to be an efficient way to improve the activity of the latter.