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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 263, Issue 35, 18598-18600, Dec, 1988
L Regan, L Buxbaum, K Hill and P Schimmel
Procedures are needed for the manipulation of enzymes to introduce improved
catalytic efficiencies and substrate affinities, even in the absence of
information on three-dimensional structure. We previously described a
selection for amino acid replacements that compensate for a large
polypeptide deletion in an enzyme. The rationale is that, because of the
missing polypeptide sequence, compensatory replacements must create new
enzyme-substrate contacts that are not present in the native protein. Here
we introduce into an undeleted enzyme a mutation that compensates for a
large deletion in the same enzyme. Binding and kinetic measurements show
that this mutation has the same effect on the undeleted as on the deleted
protein. The results suggest that a new enzyme-substrate interaction has
been created by the mutation and that its contribution to the interaction
energy is similar in both the deleted and undeleted molecules. Introduction
of this class of mutations into enzymes may in general be useful for
engineering them to have improved interactions with ligands and substrates.
Rationale for engineering an enzyme by introducing a mutation that compensates for a deletion
Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge 02139.
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