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Abstract
Enzyme engineering is a powerful tool for improving or altering the properties of biocatalysts for industrial, research, and therapeutic applications. Fast and accurate screening of variant libraries is often the bottleneck of enzyme engineering and may be overcome by growth-based screening strategies with simple processes to enable high throughput. The currently available growth-based screening strategies have been widely employed for enzymes but not yet for catalytically potent and oxygen-sensitive metalloenzymes. Here, we present a screening system that couples the activity of an oxygen-sensitive formate dehydrogenase to the growth of Escherichia coli. This system relies on the complementation of the E. coli formate hydrogenlyase (FHL) complex by Mo-dependent formate dehydrogenase H (EcFDH-H). Using an EcFDH-Hdeficient strain, we demonstrate that growth inhibition by acidic glucose fermentation products can be alleviated by FHL complementation. This allows the identification of catalytically active EcFDH-H variants at a readily measurable cell density readout, reduced handling efforts, and a low risk of oxygen contamination. Furthermore, a good correlation between cell density and formate oxidation activity was established using EcFDH-H variants with variable catalytic activities. As proof of concept, the growth assay was employed to screen a library of 1,032 EcFDH-H variants and reduced the library size to 96 clones. During the subsequent colorimetric screening of these clones, the variant A12G exhibiting an 82.4% enhanced formate oxidation rate was identified. Since many metal-dependent formate dehydrogenases and hydrogenases form functional complexes resembling E. coli FHL, the demonstrated growth-based screening strategy may be adapted to components of such electron-transferring complexes.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | e01472-24 |
| Number of pages | 16 |
| Journal | Applied and Environmental Microbiology |
| Volume | 90 |
| Issue number | 9 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Sept 2024 |
| MoE publication type | A1 Journal article-refereed |
Funding
The authors wish to thank Prof. Shelley Minteer affiliated with the Utah State University (USA) for providing the E. coli strain JG-X and Niko Vuorio from VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland for gas chromatography analysis of headspace samples. The authors acknowledge the Aalto University Raw Materials Research Infrastructures and Bioeconomy facilities (Finland) and computational resources provided by CSC–IT Center for Science (Finland). This research has received financial support from the Research Council of Finland in the form of an Academy Research Fellowship grant awarded to M.L. and funding for the ExtremoForm project granted to S.S. (Decision Nos. 321723 and 329510, respectively).
Keywords
- enzyme engineering
- formate dehydrogenase
- formate hydrogenlyase
- growth-based screening
- metalloenzyme
- oxygen sensitivity
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'A growth-based screening strategy for engineering the catalytic activity of an oxygen-sensitive formate dehydrogenase'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 1 Finished
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ExtremoForm: ExtremoForm: Extremophile microorganisms as a source of highly productive enzymes for CO2 reduction to formic acid and other C1 fuels and platform chemicals
Scheller, S. (Principal investigator), Tian, Y. (Project Member), von Ossowski, I. (Project Member), Lamminjoki, L. (Project Member), Mekki, C. (Project Member), Alameldin, Y. (Project Member) & Deska, J. (Co-PI)
01/01/2020 → 31/12/2023
Project: RCF Academy Project targeted call
Equipment
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Bioeconomy Research Infrastructure
Seppälä, J. (Manager)
School of Chemical EngineeringFacility/equipment: Facility
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Raw Materials Research Infrastructure
Karppinen, M. (Manager)
School of Chemical EngineeringFacility/equipment: Facility