Mutatomics analysis of the systematic thermostability profile of Bacillus subtilis lipase A

被引:0
|
作者
Feifei Tian
Cao Yang
Congcong Wang
Tailin Guo
Peng Zhou
机构
[1] Southwest Jiaotong University,School of Life Science and Engineering
[2] University of Electronic Science and Technology of China (UESTC),Center of Bioinformatics (COBI), School of Life Science and Technology
来源
关键词
lipase A; Mutatomics; Protein thermostability; Quantitative structure-thermostability relationship;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Use of point mutagenesis technique to improve protein thermostability is a routine strategy in the protein engineering community and directed evolution approach has been widely utilized to fulfill this. However, directed evolution often does not assure a minimalist design for obtaining a desired property in proteins, and other traditional methods such as error-prone PCR and iterative saturation mutagenesis are also too time-consuming and expensive to carry out a systemic search for protein mutation space. In the current study, we performed mutatomics analysis of the systematic thermostability profile of Bacillus subtilis lipase A (LipA) using a virtual scanning strategy. In the procedure, a new characterization method was proposed to describe structural variations upon protein residue mutation, and the generated descriptors were then statistically correlated with protein thermostability change associated with the mutation based on a large panel of structure-solved, melting temperature-known protein mutation data. As a result, linear and nonlinear quantitative structure-thermostability relationship (QSTR) models were built and their statistical quality was verified rigorously through internal cross-validation and external blind test. It is suggested that the nonlinear support vector machine (SVM) performed much better than linear partial least squares (PLS) regression in correlating protein structure and thermostability information. Thus, the SVM model was employed to systematically scan the complete mutation profile of LipA protein, resulting in a 181×19 matrix that characterizes the change in theoretical thermostability of LipA due to the mutation of wild-type residue at each of the 181 sequence sites to other 19 amino acid types. From the profile most mutations were predicted to (i) destabilize LipA structure and (ii) address modest effect on LipA thermostability. Satisfactorily, several known thermostable mutations such as G80V, G111D, M134D, and N161Y were identified properly and, expectedly, a number of mutations including L55Y, A75V, and S162P that have never been reported previously were inferred as hotspot mutations that have high potential to enhance LipA thermostability. The structural basis and energetic property of the five promising mutations were further examined in detail using atomistic molecular dynamics (MD) simulations and molecular mechanics Poisson-Boltzmann/surface area (MM-PB/SA) analysis, revealing intensive nonbonded interaction networks created by these mutations.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Mutatomics analysis of the systematic thermostability profile of Bacillus subtilis lipase A
    Tian, Feifei
    Yang, Cao
    Wang, Congcong
    Guo, Tailin
    Zhou, Peng
    JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR MODELING, 2014, 20 (06)
  • [2] Structural Rigidity and Protein Thermostability in Variants of Lipase A from Bacillus subtilis
    Rathi, Prakash Chandra
    Jaeger, Karl-Erich
    Gohlke, Holger
    PLOS ONE, 2015, 10 (07):
  • [3] Structural basis of selection and thermostability of laboratory evolved Bacillus subtilis lipase
    Acharya, P
    Rajakumara, E
    Sankaranarayanan, R
    Rao, NM
    JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 2004, 341 (05) : 1271 - 1281
  • [4] Thermostability of In Vitro Evolved Bacillus subtilis Lipase A: A Network and Dynamics Perspective
    Srivastava, Ashutosh
    Sinha, Somdatta
    PLOS ONE, 2014, 9 (08):
  • [5] Systematically Scrutinizing the Impact of Substitution Sites on Thermostability and Detergent Tolerance for Bacillus subtilis Lipase A
    Nutschel, Christina
    Fulton, Alexander
    Zimmermann, Olav
    Schwaneberg, Ulrich
    Jaeger, Karl-Erich
    Gohlke, Holger
    JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL INFORMATION AND MODELING, 2020, 60 (03) : 1568 - 1584
  • [6] Understanding the Thermostability and Activity of Bacillus subtilis Lipase Mutants: Insights from Molecular Dynamics Simulations
    Singh, Bipin
    Bulusu, Gopalakrishnan
    Mitre, Abhijit
    JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B, 2015, 119 (02): : 392 - 409
  • [7] Bacillus subtilis Lipase A-Lipase or Esterase?
    Bracco, Paula
    van Midden, Nelleke
    Arango, Epifania
    Torrelo, Guzman
    Ferrario, Valerio
    Gardossi, Lucia
    Hanefeld, Ulf
    CATALYSTS, 2020, 10 (03)
  • [8] Surface display of lipolytic enzyme, Lipase A and Lipase B of Bacillus subtilis on the Bacillus subtilis spore
    Junehyung Kim
    Biotechnology and Bioprocess Engineering, 2017, 22 : 462 - 468
  • [9] Surface display of lipolytic enzyme, Lipase A and Lipase B of Bacillus subtilis on the Bacillus subtilis spore
    Kim, Junehyung
    BIOTECHNOLOGY AND BIOPROCESS ENGINEERING, 2017, 22 (04) : 462 - 468
  • [10] Biophysical characterization of mutants of Bacillus subtilis lipase evolved for thermostability: Factors contributing to increased activity retention
    Augustyniak, Wojciech
    Brzezinska, Agnieszka A.
    Pijning, Tjaard
    Wienk, Hans
    Boelens, Rolf
    Dijkstra, Bauke W.
    Reetz, Manfred T.
    PROTEIN SCIENCE, 2012, 21 (04) : 487 - 497