Engineering of a phosphotriesterase with improved stability and enhanced activity for detoxification of the pesticide metabolite malaoxon

Laura Job, Anja Köhler, Mauricio Testanera, Benjamin Escher, Franz Worek, Arne Skerra

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Organophosphorus (OP) pesticides are still widely applied but pose a severe toxicological threat if misused. For in vivo detoxification, the application of hydrolytic enzymes potentially offers a promising treatment. A well-studied example is the phosphotriesterase of Brevundimonas diminuta (BdPTE). Whereas wild-type BdPTE can hydrolyse pesticides like paraoxon, chlorpyrifos-oxon and mevinphos with high catalytic efficiencies, kcat/KM >2 × 107 M−1 min−1, degradation of malaoxon is unsatisfactory (kcat/KM ≈ 1 × 104 M−1 min−1). Here, we report the rational engineering of BdPTE mutants with improved properties and their efficient production in Escherichia coli. As result, the mutant BdPTE(VRNVVLARY) exhibits 37-fold faster malaoxon hydrolysis (kcat/KM = 4.6 × 105 M−1 min−1), together with enhanced expression yield, improved thermal stability and reduced susceptibility to oxidation. Therefore, this BdPTE mutant constitutes a powerful candidate to develop a biocatalytic antidote for the detoxification of this common pesticide metabolite as well as related OP compounds.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbergzad020
JournalProtein Engineering, Design and Selection
Volume36
DOIs
StatePublished - 2023

Keywords

  • bioscavenger
  • enzyme engineering
  • organophosphate hydrolase
  • organophosphorus compound
  • phosphotriesterase

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