Universiti Teknologi Malaysia Institutional Repository

Protein surface engineering and interaction studies of maltogenic amylase towards improved enzyme immobilisation

Jaafar, Nardiah Rizwana and Jailani, Nashriq and A. Rahman, Roshanida and Öner, Ebru Toksoy and Abdul Murad, Abdul Munir and Md. Illias, Rosli (2022) Protein surface engineering and interaction studies of maltogenic amylase towards improved enzyme immobilisation. International Journal of Biological Macromolecules, 213 (-). pp. 70-82. ISSN 0141-8130

Full text not available from this repository.

Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2022.05.169

Abstract

A combined strategy of computational, protein engineering and cross-linked enzyme aggregates (CLEAs) approaches was performed on Bacillus lehensis G1 maltogenic amylase (Mag1) to investigate the preferred amino acids and orientation of the cross-linker in constructing stable and efficient biocatalyst. From the computational analysis, Mag1 exhibited the highest binding affinity towards chitosan (−7.5 kcal/mol) and favours having interactions with aspartic acid whereas glutaraldehyde was the least favoured (−3.4 kcal/mol) and has preferences for lysine. A total of eight Mag1 variants were constructed with either Asp or Lys substitutions on different secondary structures surface. Mutant Mag1-mDh exhibited the highest recovery activity (82.3%) in comparison to other Mag1 variants. Mutants-CLEAs exhibited higher thermal stability (20–30% activity) at 80 °C whilst Mag1-CLEAs could only retain 9% of activity at the same temperature. Reusability analysis revealed that mutants-CLEAs can be recovered up to 8 cycles whereas Mag1-CLEAs activity could only be retained for up to 6 cycles. Thus, it is evident that amino acids on the enzyme's surface play a crucial role in the construction of highly stable, efficient and recyclable CLEAs. This demonstrates the necessity to determine the preferential amino acid by the cross-linkers in advance to facilitate CLEAs immobilisation for designing efficient biocatalysts.

Item Type:Article
Uncontrolled Keywords:computational analysis, enzyme immobilisation, protein engineering
Subjects:T Technology > TP Chemical technology
Divisions:Chemical and Energy Engineering
ID Code:100999
Deposited By: Narimah Nawil
Deposited On:18 May 2023 06:13
Last Modified:18 May 2023 06:13

Repository Staff Only: item control page