The practical need for highly efficient enzymes presents new challenges in enzyme engineering, in particular, the need to improve catalytic turnover (k(cat)) or efficiency (k(cat)/K-M) by several orders of magnitude. However, optimizing catalysis demands navigation through complex and rugged fitness landscapes, with optimization trajectories often leading to strong diminishing returns and dead-ends. When no further improvements are observed in library screens or selections, it remains unclear whether the maximal catalytic efficiency of the enzyme (the catalytic 'fitness peak') has been reached; or perhaps, an alternative combination of mutations exists that could yield additional improvements. Here, we discuss fundamental aspects of the process of catalytic optimization, and offer practical solutions with respect to overcoming optimization plateaus.
Journal article
Enzyme engineering: reaching the maximal catalytic efficiency peak
Current Opinion in Structural Biology, Vol.47, pp.140-150
Dec/2017
Preprint (Author's original)CC BY V4.0, Open Access
Abstract
Details
- Title
- Enzyme engineering; reaching the maximal catalytic efficiency peak
- Creators
- Moshe Goldsmith (Corresponding Author) - 972WIS_INST___112Dan S. Tawfik (null) - 972WIS_INST___112
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publication Details
- Current Opinion in Structural Biology, Vol.47, pp.140-150; Dec/2017
- Number of pages
- 11
- Language
- English
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sbi.2017.09.002
- Grant note
- Funding by a DTRA project grant (HDTRA1-11-C-0026), and by the European Commission H2020 FETOPEN grant project number: 686330 (Future Agriculture) are gratefully acknowledged.
- Record Identifier
- 993267727803596
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