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Recent "enzyme" articles

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Chaperonin overexpression promotes genetic variation and enzyme evolution
Nobuhiko Tokuriki and Dan Tawfik
Nature 459 (7247), 668-73 (04 Jun 2009)
 
Alteration of enzyme specificity by computational loop remodeling and design
Paul Murphy et al.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 106 (23), (09 Jun 2009)
 
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&_udi=B6T0S-4CMHYFV-1&_user=125872&_rdoc=1&_fmt=&_orig=search&_sort=d&view=c&_acct=C000010240&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=125872&md5=568d468d2396735817d4a680c79344f7
 
DNA Polymerases as Therapeutic Targets†
Anthony Berdis
Biochemistry 47 (32), 8253-60 (01 Aug 2008)
Posted by ChemGenomics to enzyme on Thu Jun 04 2009 at 17:53 UTC | info | related
 
New Structure Revisits History
Chemical & Engineering News: Latest News, (25 May 2009)
Enzyme played key role in World War I and history of enzymology
 
Kemp elimination catalysts by computational enzyme design
Daniela Rothlisberger et al.
Nature 453 (7192), 190-5 (19 Mar 2008)
The design of new enzymes for reactions not catalysed by naturally occurring biocatalysts is a challenge for protein engineering and is a critical test of our understanding of enzyme catalysis. Here we describe the computational design of eight enzymes that use two different catalytic motifs to catalyse the Kemp elimination—a model reaction for proton transfer from carbon—with measured rate enhancements of up to 105 and multiple turnovers. Mutational analysis confirms that catalysis depends on the computationally designed active sites, and a high-resolution crystal structure suggests that the designs have close to atomic accuracy. Application of in vitro evolution to enhance the computational designs produced a >200-fold increase in kcat/Km (kcat/Km of 2,600 M-1s-1 and kcat/kuncat of >106). These results demonstrate the power of combining computational protein design with directed evolution for creating new enzymes, and we anticipate the creation of a wide range of useful new catalysts in the future.
 
De Novo Computational Design of Retro-Aldol Enzymes
De novo computational design of retroaldol enzymes
Science (New York, N.Y.) 319 (5868), 1387-91 (07 Mar 2008)
The creation of enzymes capable of catalyzing any desired chemical reaction is a grand challenge for computational protein design. Using new algorithms that rely on hashing techniques to construct active sites for multistep reactions, we designed retro-aldolases that use four different catalytic motifs to catalyze the breaking of a carbon-carbon bond in a nonnatural substrate. Of the 72 designs that were experimentally characterized, 32, spanning a range of protein folds, had detectable retro-aldolase activity. Designs that used an explicit water molecule to mediate proton shuffling were significantly more successful, with rate accelerations of up to four orders of magnitude and multiple turnovers, than those involving charged side-chain networks. The atomic accuracy of the design process was confirmed by the x-ray crystal structure of active designs embedded in two protein scaffolds, both of which were nearly superimposable on the design model.
 
Natural Enzyme Degrades Nanotubes
pubs.acs.org
Posted by yidohun to enzyme Nanotube on Tue May 19 2009 at 07:03 UTC | info | related
 
Ceria Nanoparticles Act Like Enzymes
pubs.acs.org
 
Next Generation Chemical Proteomic Tools for Rapid Enzyme Profiling
Mahesh Uttamchandani, Candy Lu, and Shao Yao
Accounts of Chemical Research
Posted by ChemGenomics to enzyme on Mon May 18 2009 at 14:20 UTC | info | related

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