PMID: 2104836Jan 25, 1990Paper

An engineered change in substrate specificity of ribulosebisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase.

The Journal of Biological Chemistry
H B SmithF C Hartman

Abstract

The potential for altering the specificity of ribulosebisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase toward gaseous substrates is explored through a modest perturbation of the active site microenvironment. Specifically, replacement of active site Glu-48 with carboxy-methylcysteine is achieved in a two-step process in which the catalytically incompetent Cys-48 mutant protein is first generated and then treated with iodoacetic acid. This regimen of concerted site-directed mutagenesis and chemical modification, effectively lengthening the glutamyl side chain by insertion of a sulfur atom between the beta- and gamma-methylene groups, results in a protein possessing 4-6% of wild-type carboxylase activity. Concomitantly, the engineered enzyme exhibits a specificity factor 5-fold lower than that of wild-type enzyme. This represents the first example of a major change in substrate specificity, albeit in favor of oxygenation, effected by structural alteration of an active site side chain.

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