BLBS102-c07 BLBS102-Simpson March 21, 2012 11:12 Trim: 276mm X 219mm Printer Name: Yet to Come
148 Part 2: Biotechnology and EnzymologyFigure 7.17.A generalised schematic for the prediction of protein three-dimensional structure.- Genetic manipulation of the wild-type nucleotide
 sequence. A combination of previously published
 experimental literature and sequence/structure analysis
 information is usually necessary for the identification
 of functionally important sites in the protein. Once an
 adequate three-dimensional structural model of the protein
 of interest has been constructed, manipulation of the gene
 of interest is necessary for the construction of mutants.
 Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) mutagenesis is the
 basic tool for the genetic manipulation of the nucleotide
 sequences. The genetically redesigned proteins are
 engineered by the following:
 a. Site-directed mutagenesis: alteration of specific amino
 acid residues. There are a number of experimental
 approaches designed for this purpose. The basic
 principle involves the use of synthetic oligonucleotides
 (oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis) that are com-
 plementary to the cloned gene of interest but contain
 a single (or sometimes multiple) mismatched base(s)
 (Balland et al. 1985, Garvey and Matthews 1990,
 Wagner and Benkovic 1990). The cloned gene is
 either carried by a single-stranded vector (M13
 oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis) or a plasmid
 that is later denatured by alkali (plasmid DNA
 oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis) or heat
 (PCR-amplified oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis)
 in order for the mismatched oligonucleotide to anneal.
The latter then serves as a primer for DNA synthesis
catalysed by externally added DNA polymerase for the
creation of a copy of the entire vector, carrying, how-
ever, a mutated base. PCR mutagenesis is the most fre-
quently used mutagenesis method (Fig. 7.18). For ex-
ample, substitution of specific amino acid positions by
site-directed mutagenesis (S67D/H68D) successfully
converted the coenzyme specificity of the short-chain
carbonyl reductase from NADP(H) to NAD(H) as well
as the product enantioselectivity without disturbing
enzyme stability (Zhang et al. 2009). In another exam-
ple, engineering of the maize GSTF1–1 by mutating
selected G-site residues resulted in substantial changes
in the pH-dependence of kinetic parameters of the
enzyme (Labrou et al. 2004a). Mutation of a key
residue in the H-site of the same enzyme (Ile118Phe)
led to a fourfold improved specificity of the en-
zyme towards the herbicide alachlor (Labrou et al.
2005).
So far, substitution of a specific amino acid by an-
other has been limited by the availability of only 20
naturally occurring amino acids. However, it is chemi-
cally possible to construct hundreds of designer-made
amino acids. Incorporation of these novel protein
building blocks could help shed new light into the
cellular and protein functions (Wang and Schultz 2002,
Chin et al. 2003, Deiters et al. 2003, Arnold 2009).