Structural Characterization of Sphingomonas sp. KT‑1 PahZ1-Catalyzed Biodegradation of Thermally SynthesizedPoly(aspartic acid)
2020
Poly(aspartic acid)
(PAA) is a green alternative to non-biodegradable
poly(carboxylates) and has applications in both industrial and biomedical
settings. PAA is synthesized by heating monomeric aspartic acid to
yield a polysuccinamide that can be ring-opened to yield thermal PAA
composed of 30% α-amide and 70% β-amide linkages. Here,
we report the first X-ray crystal structure of a PAA hydrolase from
the bacteria Sphingomonas sp. KT-1
(PahZ1KT‑1) which functions to degrade synthetic
PAA to oligo(aspartic acid) by selective cleavage of β-amide
linkages. The structure was solved to 2.45 A and shows a dimeric
assembly where each monomer maintains an α/β hydrolase
fold with a prominent, positively lined trough responsible for binding
the anionic polymeric substrate. The putative catalytic sites of each
monomer lie at the surface of the enzyme on opposite faces. The dimeric
interface, as supported by small-angle X-ray scattering/multi-angle
light scattering data, is primarily hydrophobic and is further stabilized
by flanking hydrogen bonds. Molecular dynamics simulations support
the previously determined specific cleavage of only the β-amide
linkage through a conformational change that aligns the substrate
with the active site Ser. These data provide a scaffold for further
understanding the mechanism of PAA hydrolysis and opens the opportunity
for using protein engineering to catalyze the biodegradation of other
xenobiotics.
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