posted on 2021-06-07, 17:06authored byKun Chen, Yang Hu, Xiaoyan Dong, Yan Sun
The accumulation of polyethylene
terephthalate (PET) in the environment
has brought an enormous threat to the global ecosystem. Although the
recently reported PET hydrolase (PETase) displays an efficient decomposition
to PET, the low activity and thermostability limit its practical applications.
Herein, we introduce a biomodification strategy by fusing a zwitterionic
polypeptide (5–30 kDa) consisting of alternating-charged glutamic
acid (E) and lysine (K) residues to the C-terminus of PETase and find
that increasing the fusion peptide length leads to the improved catalytic
performance. The product release in the degradation of highly crystallized
PET films (45.2% in crystallinity) by PETase-EK30 is promoted by over
11 times as compared with PETase. The molecular mechanism of the enhanced
catalytic performance is investigated via structural analysis, substrate
binding, and molecular simulations. Characterizations of the secondary
and tertiary structures verify a strengthened structural stability
of the EKylated PETases. Synchronous fluorescence spectra indicate
a more open substrate-binding pocket after EKylation. MD simulations
of enzyme–substrate complexes support that the EKylation induces
the exposure of hydrophobic amino acids (W185, I208, and W159) in
the substrate-binding pocket and the rotation of the benzene ring
of Y87, which promote the substrate binding kinetics. This leads to
the enhanced substrate affinity, exactly represented by the increased
association constant and the decreased binding free energy. Besides,
a shortened catalytic distance is observed from the MD simulations,
which might also contribute to the enhanced catalytic activity toward
PET degradation. The molecular insights into the enhanced enzyme performance
would benefit in extending the application of the EKylation strategy
in various enzymes.