posted on 2022-05-04, 20:08authored byTian Yang, Zhixia Ye, Michael D. Lynch
Enzyme evolution has enabled numerous
advances in biotechnology
and synthetic biology, yet still requires many iterative rounds of
screening to identify optimal mutant sequences. This is due to the
sparsity of the fitness landscape, which is caused by epistatic mutations
that only offer improvements when combined with other mutations. We
report an approach that incorporates diverse substrate analogues in
the screening process, where multiple substrates act like multiple
agents navigating the fitness landscape, identifying epistatic mutant
residues without a need for testing the entire combinatorial search
space. We initially validate this approach by engineering a malonyl-CoA
synthetase and identify numerous epistatic mutations improving activity
for several diverse substrates. The majority of these mutations would
have been missed upon screening for a single substrate alone. We expect
that this approach can accelerate a wide array of enzyme engineering
programs.