TY - JOUR
T1 - Transfer of a rational crystal contact engineering strategy between diverse alcohol dehydrogenases
AU - Walla, Brigitte
AU - Bischoff, Daniel
AU - Janowski, Robert
AU - Von Den Eichen, Nikolas
AU - Niessing, Dierk
AU - Weuster-Botz, Dirk
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 by the author. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
PY - 2021/8
Y1 - 2021/8
N2 - Protein crystallization can serve as a purification step in biotechnological processes but is often limited by the non-crystallizability of proteins. Enabling or improving crystallization is mostly achieved by high-throughput screening of crystallization conditions and, more recently, by rational crystal contact engineering. Two selected rational crystal contact mutations, Q126K and T102E, were transferred from the alcohol dehydrogenases of Lactobacillus brevis (LbADH) to Lactobacillus kefir (LkADH). Proteins were expressed in E. coli and batch protein crystallization was performed in stirred crystallizers. Highly similar crystal packing of LkADH wild type compared to LbADH, which is necessary for the transfer of crystal contact engineering strategies, was achieved by aligning purification tag and crystallization conditions, as shown by X-ray diffraction. After comparing the crystal sizes after crystallization of LkADH mutants with the wild type, the mean protein crystal size of LkADH mutants was reduced by 40–70% in length with a concomitant increase in the total amount of crystals (higher number of nucleation events). Applying this measure to the LkADH variants studied results in an order of crystallizability T102E > Q126K > LkADH wild type, which corresponds to the results with LbADH mutants and shows, for the first time, the successful transfer of crystal contact engineering strategies.
AB - Protein crystallization can serve as a purification step in biotechnological processes but is often limited by the non-crystallizability of proteins. Enabling or improving crystallization is mostly achieved by high-throughput screening of crystallization conditions and, more recently, by rational crystal contact engineering. Two selected rational crystal contact mutations, Q126K and T102E, were transferred from the alcohol dehydrogenases of Lactobacillus brevis (LbADH) to Lactobacillus kefir (LkADH). Proteins were expressed in E. coli and batch protein crystallization was performed in stirred crystallizers. Highly similar crystal packing of LkADH wild type compared to LbADH, which is necessary for the transfer of crystal contact engineering strategies, was achieved by aligning purification tag and crystallization conditions, as shown by X-ray diffraction. After comparing the crystal sizes after crystallization of LkADH mutants with the wild type, the mean protein crystal size of LkADH mutants was reduced by 40–70% in length with a concomitant increase in the total amount of crystals (higher number of nucleation events). Applying this measure to the LkADH variants studied results in an order of crystallizability T102E > Q126K > LkADH wild type, which corresponds to the results with LbADH mutants and shows, for the first time, the successful transfer of crystal contact engineering strategies.
KW - Crystal image analysis
KW - Downstream processing
KW - Rational crystal contact engineering
KW - Technical protein crystallization from impure sources
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85113518751&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3390/cryst11080975
DO - 10.3390/cryst11080975
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85113518751
SN - 2073-4352
VL - 11
JO - Crystals
JF - Crystals
IS - 8
M1 - 975
ER -