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Engineering of Multi-Substrate Enzyme Specificity and Conformational Equilibrium Using Multistate Computational Protein Design

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Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa

Abstract

The creation of enzymes displaying desired substrate specificity is an important objective of enzyme engineering. To help achieve this goal, computational protein design (CPD) can be used to identify sequences that can fulfill interactions required to productively bind a desired substrate. Standard CPD protocols find optimal sequences in the context of a single state, for example an enzyme structure with a single substrate bound at its active site. However, many enzymes catalyze reactions requiring them to bind multiple substrates during successive steps of the catalytic cycle. The design of multi-substrate enzyme specificity requires the ability to evaluate sequences in the context of multiple substrate-bound states because mutations designed to enhance activity for one substrate may be detrimental to the binding of a second substrate. Additionally, many enzymes undergo conformational changes throughout their catalytic cycle and the equilibrium between these conformations can have an impact on their substrate specificity. In this thesis, I present the development and implementation of two multistate computational protein design methodologies for the redesign of multi-substrate enzyme specificity and the modulation of enzyme conformational equilibrium. Overall, our approaches open the door to the design of multi-substrate enzymes displaying tailored specificity for any biocatalytic application.

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Protein Engineering, Computational protein design, Branched Chain Amino Acid Aminotransferase, Aspartate Aminotransferase

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