Enzyme and Microbial Technology, Vol.96, 14-22, 2017
Catalytic efficiency and thermostability improvement of Suc2 invertase through rational site-directed mutagenesis
Engineering of invertases has come to attention because of increasing demand for possible applications of invertases in various industrial processes. Due to the known physicochemical properties, invertases from micro-organisms such as Saccharomyces cerevisiae carrying SUC2 gene are considered as primary models. To improve thermostability and catalytic efficiency of SUC2 invertase (SInv), six influential residues with Relative Solvent Accessibility < 5% were selected through multiple-sequence alignments, molecular modelling, structural and computational analyses. Consequently, Slnv and 5 mutants including three mutants with single point substitution [Mut1 = P152 V, Mut2 = S85 V and Mut3 = K153 F)1, one mutant with two points [Mut4= S305V-N463 V] and one mutant with three points [Mut5 =S85V-K153F-T271 V] were developed via site-directed mutagenesis and produced using Pichia pastoris as the host. Physicochemical studies on these enzymes indicated that the selected amino acids which were located in the active site region mainly influenced catalytic efficiency. The best improvement belonged to Mut1 (54% increase in K-cat/K-m) and Mut3 exhibited the worst effect (90% increase in K-m). These results suggest that Pro152 and Lys153 play key role in preparation of the right substrate lodging in the active site of Slnv. The best thermostability improvement (16%) was observed for Mut4 in which two hydrophilic residues located on the loops, far from the active site, were replaced by Valines. These results suggest that tactful simultaneous substitution of influential hydrophilic residues in both active site region and peripheral loops with hydrophobic amino acids could result in more thermostable invertases with enhanced catalytic efficiency. (C) 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.