Improving the thermostability of a GH11 xylanase by directed evolution and rational design guided by B-factor analysis

2021 
Abstract Operational stability under high temperature is required for enzyme application in industrial processes. Error-prone PCR and B-factor analyses were employed to enhance the thermostability of a xylanase from GH family 11 in this study. Based on the top 10 mutants screened from the random mutation libraries, mutant Xyn371 was derived from the optimal mutant Xyn370 by integrating the beneficial residues identified in the other 9 screened mutants. Subsequently, a best-saturation mutant Xyn372 based on Xyn371 was selected with a 60-min half-life at 70 °C (0.5-min half-life for the wild-type enzyme). Based on the site-saturated mutagenesis of 10 residues with higher B-factors in Xyn372, mutants Xyn375 and Xyn376 were screened; their half-lives at 70 °C were 410 and 360 min, respectively. The substituted residues located in the “palm” region of the N-terminus and the newly generated hydrogen bonds in the mutants might contribute to improved thermostability. The significantly improved thermostability of mutants will pave the way for applications in different industrial areas.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    41
    References
    4
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []