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Researchers engineered a novel artificial hydrolase using a protein scaffold for metal-free chemical reactions. A specific mutation created a catalytic triad, significantly enhancing enzyme activity for potential applications in bioinorganic chemistry.

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Area of Science:

  • Biochemistry
  • Protein Engineering
  • Catalysis

Background:

  • Artificial enzymes offer tailored catalytic functions.
  • Protein scaffolds provide robust frameworks for enzyme design.
  • Metal-free hydrolysis is desirable for green chemistry applications.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To develop a novel artificial hydrolase based on the Pizza6 beta-propeller protein.
  • To investigate the catalytic mechanism and optimize activity through site-specific mutagenesis.
  • To explore the potential applications of the artificial enzyme in various chemical fields.

Main Methods:

  • Protein engineering of the Pizza6 beta-propeller scaffold.
  • Site-specific mutagenesis to introduce catalytic residues.
  • Crystallisation studies to determine enzyme structure.
  • Enzyme kinetics assays to measure catalytic efficiency (kcat).

Main Results:

  • An artificial hydrolase was successfully developed for metal-free hydrolysis.
  • The catalytic mechanism was elucidated, involving a threonine-histidine dyad.
  • A mutant forming a His-His-Thr triad exhibited significantly enhanced kcat values.
  • The performance of the engineered enzyme rivaled that of metalloenzymes.

Conclusions:

  • The symmetrical Pizza6 beta-propeller serves as an effective scaffold for artificial hydrolase design.
  • Site-specific mutagenesis can precisely tune catalytic activity and mechanism.
  • The developed artificial enzyme shows promise for bioinorganic chemistry, supramolecular chemistry, and catalytic materials.