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Catalytic improvement and evolution of atrazine chlorohydrolase.


ABSTRACT: The atrazine chlorohydrolase AtzA has evolved within the past 50 years to catalyze the hydrolytic dechlorination of the herbicide atrazine. It is of wide research interest for two reasons: first, catalytic improvement of the enzyme would facilitate its application in bioremediation, and second, because of its recent evolution, it presents a rare opportunity to examine the early stages in the acquisition of new catalytic activities. Using a structural model of the AtzA-atrazine complex, a region of the substrate-binding pocket was targeted for combinatorial randomization. Identification of improved variants through this process informed the construction of a variant AtzA enzyme with 20-fold improvement in its k(cat)/K(m) value compared with that of the wild-type enzyme. The reduction in K(m) observed in the AtzA variants has allowed the full kinetic profile for the AtzA-catalyzed dechlorination of atrazine to be determined for the first time, revealing the hitherto-unreported substrate cooperativity in AtzA. Since substrate cooperativity is common among deaminases, which are the closest structural homologs of AtzA, it is possible that this phenomenon is a remnant of the catalytic activity of the evolutionary progenitor of AtzA. A catalytic mechanism that suggests a plausible mechanistic route for the evolution of dechlorinase activity in AtzA from an ancestral deaminase is proposed.

SUBMITTER: Scott C 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC2663207 | biostudies-literature | 2009 Apr

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Catalytic improvement and evolution of atrazine chlorohydrolase.

Scott Colin C   Jackson Colin J CJ   Coppin Chris W CW   Mourant Roslyn G RG   Hilton Margaret E ME   Sutherland Tara D TD   Russell Robyn J RJ   Oakeshott John G JG  

Applied and environmental microbiology 20090206 7


The atrazine chlorohydrolase AtzA has evolved within the past 50 years to catalyze the hydrolytic dechlorination of the herbicide atrazine. It is of wide research interest for two reasons: first, catalytic improvement of the enzyme would facilitate its application in bioremediation, and second, because of its recent evolution, it presents a rare opportunity to examine the early stages in the acquisition of new catalytic activities. Using a structural model of the AtzA-atrazine complex, a region  ...[more]

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