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'Designer enzymes'
created
April 7, 2008
Chemists
from UCLA and the University of Washington have succeeded in creating
"designer enzymes," a major milestone in computational chemistry and
protein engineering.
The research, by a UCLA chemistry group led by professor Kendall Houk
and a Washington group headed by biochemist David Baker, is reported
March 19 in the advance online publication of the journal Nature. The
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) supported the study.
Designer enzymes will have applications for defense against biological
warfare, by deactivating pathogenic biological agents, and for creating
more effective medications, according to Houk.
"The design of new enzymes for reactions not normally catalyzed in
nature is finally feasible," Houk said. "The goal of our research is to
use computational methods to design the arrangement of groups inside a
protein to cause any desired reaction to occur."
"Enzymes are such potent catalysts; we want to harness that catalytic
ability," said research co-author Jason DeChancie, an advanced UCLA
chemistry graduate student working with Houk's group. "We want to design
enzymes for reactions that naturally occurring enzymes don't do. There
are limits on the reactions that natural enzymes carry out, compared
with what we can dream up that enzymes can potentially do."
Combining chemistry, mathematics and physics, the scientists report in
the Nature paper that they have successfully created designer enzymes
for a chemical reaction known as the Kemp elimination, a non-natural
chemical transformation in which hydrogen is pulled off a carbon atom.
In a previous paper, published in the journal Science on March 7, the
chemists reported another successful chemical reaction that uses
designer enzymes to catalyze a retro-aldol reaction, which involves
breaking a carbon-carbon bond. The aldol reaction is a key process in
living organisms associated with the processing and synthesis of
carbohydrates. This reaction is also widely used in the large-scale
production of commodity chemicals and in the pharmaceutical industry,
Houk said.
"Previous reports of designed enzymes have not been very successful, and
some have been withdrawn," said Houk, UCLA's lead author of both papers.
"That is hardly surprising, considering the challenge of designing in
days or weeks what nature has perfected over billions of years of
evolution. The rate enhancements by our designer enzymes are modest and
hardly competitive, so far, with those observed for their natural
counterparts."
"We hope with improvements in technology, that we can close the gap
between designer enzymes and natural enzymes," DeChancie said.
"Most scientists thought this would be impossible, and we felt the same
way after many failures," said Fernando Clemente, a former UCLA
postdoctoral scholar and co-author of the Science paper. "But
improvements in design and sophistication eventually led to success."
Clemente is now at Gaussian Inc., the company that created the software
used in the Houk group's research.
The implementation of the aldol reaction in the active site of an enzyme
has been an important challenge. The reaction involves at least six
chemical transformations, requiring UCLA scientists to compute all six
chemical steps with their corresponding transition states. The
structures were then combined in such a way to allow all six steps to
occur.
Both studies were funded by DARPA, the U.S. Defense Department's central
research and development organization, with additional federal support
from the National Science Foundation.
Natural enzymes, which are relatively large protein molecules, are the
powerful catalysts that control the reactions that sustain life. They
play a central role in the chemical reactions involved in the
transformation of food into the essential nutrients that provide energy,
among many other critical functions.
Houk's team of 30 computational chemists uses quantum mechanical
calculations to explore chemical reactions with supercomputers. Quantum
mechanics is the fundamental theory that can predict all chemistry.
Houk and Baker's research groups have worked together for three years.
Using algorithms and supercomputers, the UCLA chemists design the active
site for the enzymes — the area of the enzymes in which the chemical
reactions take place — and give a blueprint for the active site to their
University of Washington colleagues. Baker and his group then use their
computer programs to design a sequence of amino acids that fold to
produce an active site like the one designed by Houk's group; Baker's
group produces the enzymes.
Houk's group uses modern computational methods based on the physical
laws of quantum mechanics to study in detail the mechanisms of chemical
reactions. They have been involved in the DARPA-funded Protein Design
Processes program, whose goal is to develop the technology that would
make possible the design and creation of man-made working enzymes. The
role of UCLA chemists has been the design of the active sites of the
enzymes. By exploring multiple combinations of chemical groups, they can
determine those that are most suitable to facilitate any given chemical
transformation. Then, they determine the precise three-dimensional
arrangement of these chemical groups, which is critical for the
specificity and activity of the enzyme, with an accuracy of less than a
hundredth of a nanometer.
Enzymes are the ultimate "green" catalysts by performing under ambient
conditions in water, Houk said.
This technology will find tremendous applications, Houk said.
How far off are designer enzymes with important applications?
"I think we're there," DeChancie said. "These papers are showing the
technology is now in place." |