DIRECTED EVOLUTION OF PECTIN METHYLESTERASE A OF ERWINIA CHRYSANTHEMI TOWARD HIGHER THERMOSTABILITY
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Date
2010-11
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Department
Hood College Biology
Program
Biomedical and Environmental Science
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Abstract
Pectin methylesterase (PME) catalyzes the demethylesterification of galacturonic
acid producing methanol, protons, and polygalacturonate. Directed evolution approaches
were used to construct a thermally stabilized variant of Erwinia chrysanthemi PME A for
potential use in the saccharification of sugar beet pulp in a biorefinery for biofuel. Using
error-prone polymerase chain reaction a library of PME variants were generated. Out of
a total of 3440 mutants screened, four thermostable PME variants harboring single amino
acid substitutions at T273R, V251A, R253K and Y158H were discovered. The PME
variant T273R was the most thermostable PME having a melting temperature (TO
approximately 5.5 °C greater than that of the wild-type enzyme. PME variant R253 K
showed activity comparable to that of wild-type but with a Tₘ that was 5 °C higher. The
directed evolution approach found thermostabilizing mutations at sites not known for
increasing thermostability and might have been missed by the rational design approach.