03 Fakultät Chemie
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://elib.uni-stuttgart.de/handle/11682/4
Browse
51 results
Search Results
Item Open Access The Bacteroidetes Aequorivita sp. and Kaistella jeonii produce promiscuous esterases with PET-hydrolyzing activity(2022) Zhang, Hongli; Perez-Garcia, Pablo; Dierkes, Robert F.; Applegate, Violetta; Schumacher, Julia; Chibani, Cynthia Maria; Sternagel, Stefanie; Preuss, Lena; Weigert, Sebastian; Schmeisser, Christel; Danso, Dominik; Pleiss, Juergen; Almeida, Alexandre; Höcker, Birte; Hallam, Steven J.; Schmitz, Ruth A.; Smits, Sander H. J.; Chow, Jennifer; Streit, Wolfgang R.Certain members of the Actinobacteria and Proteobacteria are known to degrade polyethylene terephthalate (PET). Here, we describe the first functional PET-active enzymes from the Bacteroidetes phylum. Using a PETase-specific Hidden-Markov-Model- (HMM-) based search algorithm, we identified several PETase candidates from Flavobacteriaceae and Porphyromonadaceae. Among them, two promiscuous and cold-active esterases derived from Aequorivita sp. (PET27) and Kaistella jeonii (PET30) showed depolymerizing activity on polycaprolactone (PCL), amorphous PET foil and on the polyester polyurethane Impranil® DLN. PET27 is a 37.8 kDa enzyme that released an average of 174.4 nmol terephthalic acid (TPA) after 120 h at 30°C from a 7 mg PET foil platelet in a 200 μl reaction volume, 38-times more than PET30 (37.4 kDa) released under the same conditions. The crystal structure of PET30 without its C-terminal Por-domain (PET30ΔPorC) was solved at 2.1 Å and displays high structural similarity to the IsPETase. PET30 shows a Phe-Met-Tyr substrate binding motif, which seems to be a unique feature, as IsPETase, LCC and PET2 all contain Tyr-Met-Trp binding residues, while PET27 possesses a Phe-Met-Trp motif that is identical to Cut190. Microscopic analyses showed that K. jeonii cells are indeed able to bind on and colonize PET surfaces after a few days of incubation. Homologs of PET27 and PET30 were detected in metagenomes, predominantly aquatic habitats, encompassing a wide range of different global climate zones and suggesting a hitherto unknown influence of this bacterial phylum on man-made polymer degradation.Item Open Access Mechanistic studies on the DNA methyltransferases DNMT3A and DNMT3B(2021) Dukatz, Michael; Jeltsch, Albert (Prof. Dr.)In this work, both regulatory and catalytic mechanisms of de novo methyltransferases were investigated, which include interactions with other proteins and the specific recognition of the substrate sequence. Another part of this work strived to elucidate how enzymatic generation of 3-methylcytosine by DNMT3A can occur.Item Open Access The triple variant K170D/N174L/D239A compensates the destabilizing effect of variant K170D/N174L in β-hydroxyacid dehydrogenase (βHAD) from Arabidopsis thaliana(2020) Schelle, Luca S.; Stockinger, Peter; Pleiss, Jürgen; Nestl, Bettina M.Chiral amines are essential building blocks in biologically active compounds, fine chemicals, agrochemicals and pharmaceuticals. In the last ten years, various enzymes were identified as new biocatalysts for chiral amine synthesis. Promising enzymes for the synthesis of primary, secondary, and tertiary amines are NADPH-dependent imine reductases (IREDs). Bioinformatics analysis revealed that IREDs are closely related to β-hydroxyacid dehydrogenases (βHADs). In recent work, we engineered the βHAD from Arabidopsis thaliana (βHAD_At) into imine-reducing enzymes by a single amino acid exchange. The exchange of the proton-donor described lysine (K170) in βHAD_At by aspartic acid, the most common amino acid at this position in R-selective IREDs, led to a 12-fold increase in activity for the model substrate 2-methylpyrroline. At the same time, the activity for the natural substrate glyoxylic acid is reduced 885-fold, resulting in a total of 8200-fold change in catalytic activity through the exchange of an amino acid. At the same time, highly decreased soluble expression has been observed by exchanging asparagine at position 174 (N174) with leucine. We thus hypothesized, that the aspartic acid residue (D239) in near proximity to N174 will stabilize the underlying α-helix. Consequently, replacement of D239 with alanine should result in soluble expression of variants containing the N174 mutations. We generated variants K170D/D239A, as well as, and tested them on imine reduction of test substrates 2-methylpyrroline, 3,4-dihydroisoquinoline and 6-phenyl-2,3,4,5-tetrahydropyridine. Due to loss of essential cofactor and precipitation of purified proteins during purification procedure, activities of variants were determined using cell lysates. Notably, variants N174L/D239A and K170D/N174L/D239A demonstrated soluble expression and imine-reducing activities of up to 98 mU per mg of variant.Item Open Access Harnessing the structure and dynamics of the squalene‐hopene cyclase for (-)‐ambroxide production(2023) Schneider, Andreas; Curado, Christian; Lystbaek, Thomas B.; Osuna, Sílvia; Hauer, BernhardTerpene cyclases offer enormous synthetic potential, given their unique ability to forge complex hydrocarbon scaffolds from achiral precursors within a single cationic rearrangement cascade. Harnessing their synthetic power, however, has proved to be challenging owing to their generally low catalytic performance. In this study, we unveiled the catalytic potential of the squalene‐hopene cyclase (SHC) by harnessing its structure and dynamics. First, we synergistically tailored the active site and entrance tunnel of the enzyme to generate a 397‐fold improved (-)‐ambroxide synthase. Our computational investigations explain how the introduced mutations work in concert to improve substrate acquisition, flow, and chaperoning. Kinetics, however, showed terpene‐induced inactivation of the membrane‐bound SHC to be the major turnover limitation in vivo. Merging this insight with the improved and stereoselective catalysis of the enzyme, we applied a feeding strategy to exceed 10 5 total turnovers. We believe that our results may bridge the gap for broader application of SHCs in synthetic chemistry.Item Open Access Biochemical analysis of DNA- and protein methyltransferases using recombinant designer nucleosomes(2022) Bröhm, Alexander; Jeltsch, Albert (Prof. Dr.)Item Open Access Mechanistic insights into the allosteric regulation of the Clr4 protein lysine methyltransferase by autoinhibition and automethylation(2020) Khella, Mina S.; Bröhm, Alexander; Weirich, Sara; Jeltsch, AlbertClr4 is a histone H3 lysine 9 methyltransferase in Schizosaccharomyces pombe that is essential for heterochromatin formation. Previous biochemical and structural studies have shown that Clr4 is in an autoinhibited state in which an autoregulatory loop (ARL) blocks the active site. Automethylation of lysine residues in the ARL relieves autoinhibition. To investigate the mechanism of Clr4 regulation by autoinhibition and automethylation, we exchanged residues in the ARL by site-directed mutagenesis leading to stimulation or inhibition of automethylation and corresponding changes in Clr4 catalytic activity. Furthermore, we demonstrate that Clr4 prefers monomethylated (H3K9me1) over unmodified (H3K9me0) histone peptide substrates, similar to related human enzymes and, accordingly, H3K9me1 is more efficient in overcoming autoinhibition. Due to enzyme activation by automethylation, we observed a sigmoidal dependence of Clr4 activity on the AdoMet concentration, with stimulation at high AdoMet levels. In contrast, an automethylation-deficient mutant showed a hyperbolic Michaelis–Menten type relationship. These data suggest that automethylation of the ARL could act as a sensor for AdoMet levels in cells and regulate the generation and maintenance of heterochromatin accordingly. This process could connect epigenome modifications with the metabolic state of cells. As other human protein lysine methyltransferases (for example, PRC2) also use automethylation/autoinhibition mechanisms, our results may provide a model to describe their regulation as well.Item Open Access Structure, activity and function of the NSD3 protein lysine methyltransferase(2021) Rathert, PhilippNSD3 is one of six H3K36-specific lysine methyltransferases in metazoans, and the methylation of H3K36 is associated with active transcription. NSD3 is a member of the nuclear receptor-binding SET domain (NSD) family of histone methyltransferases together with NSD1 and NSD2, which generate mono- and dimethylated lysine on histone H3. NSD3 is mutated and hyperactive in some human cancers, but the biochemical mechanisms underlying such dysregulation are barely understood. In this review, the current knowledge of NSD3 is systematically reviewed. Finally, the molecular and functional characteristics of NSD3 in different tumor types according to the current research are summarized.Item Open Access Refined read‐out : the hUHRF1 Tandem‐Tudor domain prefers binding to histone H3 tails containing K4me1 in the context of H3K9me2/3(2023) Choudalakis, Michel; Kungulovski, Goran; Mauser, Rebekka; Bashtrykov, Pavel; Jeltsch, AlbertUHRF1 is an essential chromatin protein required for DNA methylation maintenance, mammalian development, and gene regulation. We investigated the Tandem-Tudor domain (TTD) of human UHRF1 that is known to bind H3K9me2/3 histones and is a major driver of UHRF1 localization in cells. We verified binding to H3K9me2/3 but unexpectedly discovered stronger binding to H3 peptides and mononucleosomes containing K9me2/3 with additional K4me1. We investigated the combined binding of TTD to H3K4me1-K9me2/3 versus H3K9me2/3 alone, engineered mutants with specific and differential changes of binding, and discovered a novel read-out mechanism for H3K4me1 in an H3K9me2/3 context that is based on the interaction of R207 with the H3K4me1 methyl group and on counting the H-bond capacity of H3K4. Individual TTD mutants showed up to a 10,000-fold preference for the double-modified peptides, suggesting that after a conformational change, WT TTD could exhibit similar effects. The frequent appearance of H3K4me1-K9me2 regions in human chromatin demonstrated in our TTD chromatin pull-down and ChIP-western blot data suggests that it has specific biological roles. Chromatin pull-down of TTD from HepG2 cells and full-length murine UHRF1 ChIP-seq data correlate with H3K4me1 profiles indicating that the H3K4me1-K9me2/3 interaction of TTD influences chromatin binding of full-length UHRF1. We demonstrate the H3K4me1-K9me2/3 specific binding of UHRF1-TTD to enhancers and promoters of cell-type-specific genes at the flanks of cell-type-specific transcription factor binding sites, and provided evidence supporting an H3K4me1-K9me2/3 dependent and TTD mediated downregulation of these genes by UHRF1. All these findings illustrate the important physiological function of UHRF1-TTD binding to H3K4me1-K9me2/3 double marks in a cellular context.Item Open Access Visual analysis of large‐scale protein‐ligand interaction data(2021) Schatz, Karsten; Franco‐Moreno, Juan José; Schäfer, Marco; Rose, Alexander S.; Ferrario, Valerio; Pleiss, Jürgen; Vázquez, Pere‐Pau; Ertl, Thomas; Krone, MichaelWhen studying protein‐ligand interactions, many different factors can influence the behaviour of the protein as well as the ligands. Molecular visualisation tools typically concentrate on the movement of single ligand molecules; however, viewing only one molecule can merely provide a hint of the overall behaviour of the system. To tackle this issue, we do not focus on the visualisation of the local actions of individual ligand molecules but on the influence of a protein and their overall movement. Since the simulations required to study these problems can have millions of time steps, our presented system decouples visualisation and data preprocessing: our preprocessing pipeline aggregates the movement of ligand molecules relative to a receptor protein. For data analysis, we present a web‐based visualisation application that combines multiple linked 2D and 3D views that display the previously calculated data The central view, a novel enhanced sequence diagram that shows the calculated values, is linked to a traditional surface visualisation of the protein. This results in an interactive visualisation that is independent of the size of the underlying data, since the memory footprint of the aggregated data for visualisation is constant and very low, even if the raw input consisted of several terabytes.Item Open Access Active-site loop variations adjust activity and selectivity of the cumene dioxygenase(2021) Heinemann, Peter M.; Armbruster, Daniel; Hauer, BernhardActive-site loops play essential roles in various catalytically important enzyme properties like activity, selectivity, and substrate scope. However, their high flexibility and diversity makes them challenging to incorporate into rational enzyme engineering strategies. Here, we report the engineering of hot-spots in loops of the cumene dioxygenase from Pseudomonas fluorescens IP01 with high impact on activity, regio- and enantioselectivity. Libraries based on alanine scan, sequence alignments, and deletions along with a novel insertion approach result in up to 16-fold increases in activity and the formation of novel products and enantiomers. CAVER analysis suggests possible increases in the active pocket volume and formation of new active-site tunnels, suggesting additional degrees of freedom of the substrate in the pocket. The combination of identified hot-spots with the Linker In Loop Insertion approach proves to be a valuable addition to future loop engineering approaches for enhanced biocatalysts.