Home > Publications database > Systematically scrutinizing the impact of substitution sites on thermostability and detergent tolerance for Bacillus subtilis lipase A |
Journal Article | FZJ-2020-00116 |
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2020
American Chemical Society64160
Washington, DC
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Please use a persistent id in citations: http://hdl.handle.net/2128/24592 doi:10.1021/acs.jcim.9b00954
Abstract: Improving an enzyme’s (thermo )stability or tolerance against solvents and detergents is highly relevant in protein engineering and biotechnology. Recent developments have tended towards data-driven approaches, where available knowledge about the protein is used to identify substitution sites with high potential to yield protein variants with improved stability and, subsequently, substitutions are engineered by site directed or site saturation (SSM) mutagenesis. However, the development and validation of algorithms for data-driven approaches has been hampered by the lack of availability of large-scale data measured in a uniform way and being unbiased with respect to substitution types and locations. Here, we extend our knowledge on guidelines for protein engineering following a data-driven approach by scrutinizing the impact of substitution sites on thermostability or / and detergent tolerance for Bacillus subtilis lipase A (BsLipA) at very large-scale. We systematically analyze a complete experimental SSM library of BsLipA containing all 3439 possible single variants, which was evaluated as to thermostability and tolerances against four detergents under respectively uniform conditions. Our results provide systematic and unbiased reference data at unprecedented scale for a biotechnologically important protein, identify consistently defined hot spot types for evaluating the performance of data-driven protein engineering approaches, and show that the rigidity theory and ensemble-based approach Constraint Network Analysis yields (CNA) hot spot predictions with an up to 9-fold gain in precision over random classification.
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