Front Matter

(Tina Sui) #1
binding pocket and is positioned near C 4 of the scissile fatty acid chain. Replacing it

by the hydrophilic threonine decreases activity 5- to 10-fold. Replacing F111, which

is near to C 6 , by tryptophan increases the relative specificity for short-chain tri-

glycerides. L208 and F94 line the hydrophobic crevice near C 10 and C 12. Replacing

them by bulkier and more hydrophilic residues decreases activity and increases re-

lative specificity for fatty acids of short and medium chain length. F213 is located at

the end of the hydrophobic crevice near C 16. Replacing it by the more bulky and

hydrophilic tyrosine reduces relative specificity for oleic and stearic acid. As a strat-

egy to predict mutants with specificity for chain lengths below a given cut-off, bind-

ing of longer chains can be inhibited by increasing size and polarity of a residue

positioned at thex-end of the longest chain to be accepted. Binding of substrates

of different chain length might also influence flexibility of the lipase, as it has been

concluded from molecular dynamics simulations of RML with and without inhibitor

(Peters et al., 1997). Opening of the lid and binding of fatty acid analogs substantially

reduced fluctuations of solvent-exposed loops, thus making the lipase more rigid.

90 5 Molecular Basis of Specificity and Stereoselectivity of Microbial Lipases

Figure 2. Two perpendicular schematic views of theRhizomucorlipase binding site, and a modeled
scissile fatty acid chain of length C 18 (Pleiss et al., 1998). The narrow bottom of the binding pocket and a
hydrophobic patch are shaded dark and light gray, respectively, as calculated by GRID (Goodford, 1985).
The position of five residues (see Table 1) which have been shown to mediate chain length specificity in
the homologous RDL and ROL are marked as dots.

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