Abstract

Enzymes have evolved to rapidly and selectively hydrolyze diverse natural and anthropogenic polymers, but only a limited group of related enzymes have been shown to hydrolyze synthetic polyamides. In this work, we synthesized and characterized a panel of 95 diverse enzymes from the N-terminal nucleophile hydrolase superfamily with 30-50% pairwise amino acid identity. We found that nearly 40% of the enzymes had substantial nylon hydrolase activity, in many cases comparable to that of the best-characterized nylon hydrolase, NylC. There was no relationship between phylogeny and activity, nor any evidence of prior selection for nylon hydrolase activity. Several newly-identified hydrolases showed significant substrate selectivity, generating up to 20-fold higher product titers with Nylon 6,6 versus Nylon 6. Finally, we determined the crystal structure and oligomerization state of a Nylon 6,6-selective hydrolase to elucidate structural factors that could affect activity and selectivity. These new enzymes provide insights into the widespread potential for nylon hydrolase evolution and opportunities for analysis and engineering of improved hydrolases.

Competing Interest Statement

E.E.D, J.F.C, P.M.B.S-V, S.H.C, and J.K.M. are inventors on a patent application involving enzymes described in this work.

Details

Title
Identification and characterization of substrate- and product-selective nylon hydrolases
Author
Drufva, Erin; Cahill, John F; Saint-Vincent, Patricia; Williams, Alexis; Bocharova, Vera; Capra, Nikolas; Meilleur, Flora; Carper, Dana; Celestin Bourgery; Miyazaki, Kaito; Maina Yonemura; Shiraishi, Yuki; Parks, Jerry; Zhou, Muchu; Dishner, Isaiah; Foster, Jeffrey; Koehler, Stephen; Valentino, Hannah; Sedova, Ada; Kertesz, Vilmos; Vasileva, Delyana; Hochanadel, Leah; Figg, Adrian; Negoro, Seiji; Dai-Ichiro Kato; Chen, Serena H; Michener, Joshua K
University/institution
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
Section
New Results
Publication year
2024
Publication date
Nov 14, 2024
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
ISSN
2692-8205
Source type
Working Paper
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
3128428109
Copyright
© 2024. This article is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0/ (“the License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.