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김용환

Kim, Yong Hwan
Enzyme and Protein Engineering Lab.
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Engineering a Horseradish Peroxidase C Stable to Radical Attacks by Mutating Multiple Radical Coupling Sites

Author(s)
Kim, Su JinJoo, Jeong ChanSong, Bong KeunYoo, Young JeKim, Yong Hwan
Issued Date
2015-04
DOI
10.1002/bit.25483
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/20332
Fulltext
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/bit.25483/abstract
Citation
BIOTECHNOLOGY AND BIOENGINEERING, v.112, no.4, pp.668 - 676
Abstract
Peroxidases have great potential as industrial biocatalysts. In particular, the oxidative polymerization of phenolic compounds catalyzed by peroxidases has been extensively examined because of the advantage of this method over other conventional chemical methods. However, the industrial application of peroxidases is often limited because of their rapid inactivation by phenoxyl radicals during oxidative polymerization. In this work, we report a novel protein engineering approach to improve the radical stability of horseradish peroxidase isozyme C (HRPC). Phenylalanine residues that are vulnerable to modification by the phenoxyl radicals were identified using mass spectrometry analysis. UV-Vis and CD spectra showed that radical coupling did not change the secondary structure or the active site of HRPC. Four phenylalanine (Phe) residues (F68, F142, F143, and F179) were each mutated to alanine residues to generate single mutants to examine the role of these sites in radical coupling. Despite marginal improvement of radical stability, each single mutant still exhibited rapid radical inactivation. To further reduce inactivation by radical coupling, the four substitution mutations were combined in F68A/F142A/F143A/F179A. This mutant demonstrated dramatic enhancement of radical stability by retaining 41% of its initial activity compared to the wild-type, which was completely inactivated. Structure and sequence alignment revealed that radical-vulnerable Phe residues of HPRC are conserved in homologous peroxidases, which showed the same rapid inactivation tendency as HRPC. Based on our site-directed mutagenesis and biochemical characterization, we have shown that engineering radical-vulnerable residues to eliminate multiple radical coupling can be a good strategy to improve the stability of peroxidases against radical attack.
Publisher
WILEY-BLACKWELL
ISSN
0006-3592
Keyword (Author)
horseradish peroxidaseradical stabilityradical couplingmass spectrometrysite-directed mutagenesis
Keyword
CIRCULAR-DICHROISM SPECTRAHYDROGEN-PEROXIDEDIRECTED MUTAGENESISCATALYZED POLYMERIZATIONINACTIVATIONREMOVALENZYMEISOENZYMESADDITIVESMUTANTS

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