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Improved thermostability of creatinase from Alcaligenes Faecalis through non-biased phylogenetic consensus-guided mutagenesis
Microbial Cell Factories volume 19, Article number: 194 (2020)
Abstract
Background
Enzymatic quantification of creatinine has become an essential method for clinical evaluation of renal function. Although creatinase (CR) is frequently used for this purpose, its poor thermostability severely limits industrial applications. Herein, we report a novel creatinase from Alcaligenes faecalis (afCR) with higher catalytic activity and lower KM value, than currently used creatinases. Furthermore, we developed a non-biased phylogenetic consensus method to improve the thermostability of afCR.
Results
We applied a non-biased phylogenetic consensus method to identify 59 candidate consensus residues from 24 creatinase family homologs for screening afCR mutants with improved thermostability. Twenty-one amino acids of afCR were selected to mutagenesis and 11 of them exhibited improved thermostability compared to the parent enzyme (afCR-M0). Combination of single-site mutations in sequential screens resulted in a quadruple mutant D17V/T199S/L6P/T251C (M4-2) which showed ~ 1700-fold enhanced half-life at 57 °C and a 4.2 °C higher T5015 than that of afCR-M0. The mutant retained catalytic activity equivalent to afCR-M0, and thus showed strong promise for application in creatinine detection. Structural homology modeling revealed a wide range of potential molecular interactions associated with individual mutations that contributed to improving afCR thermostability.
Conclusions
Results of this study clearly demonstrated that the non-biased-phylogenetic consensus design for improvement of thermostability in afCR is effective and promising in improving the thermostability of more enzymes.
Background
Creatinine is the final product of phosphocreatine metabolism in humans [1], and has been established as a reliable clinical marker for the determination of renal and muscular dysfunction. One of the most commonly used methods for the detection of creatinine is based on an enzymatic cascade [2] that includes creatininase (E.C.3.5.2.10), creatinase (E.C.3.5.3.3), and sarcosine oxidase (E.C.1.5.3.1) (Fig. 1). In this way, creatinine is eventually converted into H2O2, and thus the concentration of creatinine can be determined by converting H2O2 into detectable signal by horseradish peroxidase (Fig. 1). In this system, creatinase is the rate-limiting enzyme and several reported creatinases exhibit low catalytic activity and poor thermostability [3,4,5,6]. Consequently, genome mining for new homologs of this enzyme, with subsequent protein engineering to improve its catalytic properties and thermostability have recently become the focus of increasing research attention.
Scheme for enzymatic detection of creatinine. Creatinine is converted by three enzymes in sequential cascade: creatininase, creatinase, and sarcosine oxidase. First, creatininase catalyzes creatinine to creatine; creatinase catalyzes hydrolysis of creatine in the second step; sarcosine oxidase catalyzes sarcosine to detectable hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) in the third step. Horseradish peroxidase catalyzes H2O2 to generate a purple color caused by a coupler reagent 4-AA (4-Aminoantipyrine) and a color-generating substance TOOS (N-Ethyl-N-(2-hydroxy-3-sulfopropyl)-3-methylaniline)
Over the years, many different approaches have been used to modify the stability of proteins. Classic protein stability design strategies are usually based on disulfide bonds design [7], optimization of protein surface charges [8], B-factor design [9], Proline effect design [10]. Recently, design tools rely on the energy function or the machine-learning algorithm have been developed to predict changes in protein stability, such as CC/PBSA [11], I-Mutant 2.0 [12], Fold-X [13], MUpro [14], PopMUSIC [15], Rosetta [16]. However, these approaches usually require a crystal structure of target protein and in-depth understanding of the structure–function relationship, which limited their widely applications.
Consensus design for protein engineering is a method for identifying conserved amino acid residues across a set of homologous sequences to find sites that can serve as strong candidates for mutagenesis to improve thermostability [17,18,19], and which could make accurate predictions independent of structural information. In 1994, Steipe et al. first proposed the consensus concept and successfully applied it to design stable immunoglobulin variable domains [20]. Subsequently, Lehmann et al. created consensus sequences from a set of homologous phytases to achieve an astonishingly ~ 26 °C higher melting temperature than the wild-type phytase [21, 22]. Thus far, this method has also been successfully applied to improve the thermostability of sucrose phosphorylase, β-lactamase, and fibronectin type III (FN3) domain [23,24,25].
Although often effective, the consensus approach suffers from a major flaw, that is, the overrepresentation of one or a few sub-families of homologous sequences in the sequence space, which results in bias in the final consensus sequence. This bias may obscure conserved residues, thereby limiting access to the potentially high thermostable properties offered by less-characterized families and evolutionary lineages [26]. Consequently, a purely statistical approach of simply replacing all non-consensus residues in conserved positions of a sequence or motif with the consensus residue may fail to result in a more stable protein [17]. In a previous study, Bloom et al. demonstrated that utilizing a likelihood-based method to account for bias in a phylogeny can relatively reduce database bias for homologous sequences [27].
In this work, we cloned and characterized a novel creatinase from Alcaligenes faecalis (afCR). The enzyme showed relatively high catalytic efficiency and a low KM value compared with previous reported CR from Flavobacterium, Pseudomonas, which make it a promising candidate for the applications in the enzymatic determination of creatinine [28, 29]. However, the thermostability of afCR is poor, thus limiting its use with many reagents. To address this issue, we used a non-biased consensus method based on phylogenetic analyses to identify conserved residues to target for improving thermostability of afCR. We determined the optimal conditions for wild-type afCR activity, and generated combinatorial mutants to increase afCR thermostability. In addition, we used structural homology modeling to examine the interactions potentially underlying the improvements conferred by individual mutations, and found a wide range of interactions that increase the thermostability of the creatinase enzyme without reducing its activity. This work modifies our conventional understanding of the effects of some amino acid substitutions on thermostability, and provides a reliable system for similar engineering of other proteins for industrial applications.
Results and discussion
Cloning, expression, and characterization of wild-type afCR gene
Creatinase is used as a key enzyme for enzymatic measurement of creatinine which catalyzes the hydrolysis of creatine to sarcosine and urea. It has been found in various kinds of bacteria such as Flavobacterium, Pseudomonas, Arthrobacter and Bacillus [6, 28, 30,31,32]. In this work, we analyzed the creatinase family sequences base on phylogenetic tree (Additional file 1: Fig. S1) and found a creatinase gene from Alcaligenes faecalis in the NCBI database. Its amino acid sequence comparison between creatinase from Pseudomonas, Flavobacterium, and Arthrobacter creatinase showed about 60% homology. We amplified afCR gene and cloned it into pANY1 expression vector. The recombinant DNA was expressed in E. coli BL21 (DE3), then purified by affinity chromatography and its activity was determined. The results of afCR enzymatic characterization showed maximum activity of 14 U/mg (activity was determined by using the 1 mg/ml enzyme at 37 °C) and a lower KM value (23.6 mM), providing a new source of creatinase for the enzymatic determination of creatinine.
Effects of temperature, pH, and metal ions on wild-type afCR activity
In order to provide an initial characterization of the optimal temperature for wild-type afCR (WT), we first examined its activity across temperatures ranging 25–55 °C. We found that WT activity gradually increased from 30 to 37 °C but was rapidly inactivated at higher temperatures, thus indicating that 37 °C was the optimum temperature for afCR reactions (Fig. 2a). Therefore, we examined WT activity over a range of reaction pH values (4.5–10.0) to determine at which values it functioned most efficiently (Fig. 2b). The results revealed a marked change in activity over this range, steadily increasing up to pH 8.0, after which the rate of afCR relative activity declined, with more than 50% of maximum activity observed at a broad pH plateau between 7.5 and 9.0. These results thus demonstrated that pH 8.0 and 37 °C were optimal conditions for afCR reactions.
In order to investigate the effects of metal ions on WT afCR enzyme stability, the WT was individually incubated with equimolar concentrations of Co2+, Fe2+, Fe3+, Mn2+, Zn2+, Ca2+, Mg2+, Cu2+, and Na+. The WT exhibited differences in sensitivity to the metal ions (Fig. 2c). Specifically, Mn2+ and Mg2+ ions enhanced WT afCR activity. In the presence of EDTA, Fe3+, Fe2+, Ca2+ WT retained > 80% of its initial activity, which has little effect on afCR activity; in contrast, Cu2+, Co2+, Zn2+ and Na+ ions inhibited WT activity to varying degrees.
In particular, we have observed that the presence of Cu2+ have a significant inhibition effect on the activity of afCR, which is similar to other previous reports on creatinase [2, 33]. It has been reported in previous studies that the metal-ions-induced enzyme inactivation may be due to protein aggregation [34]. However, the aggregation of afCR was not observed in our experiments. We speculated that Cu2+ may interact with some key amino acid residues and lead to the loss of catalytic activity of afCR. However, the detailed mechanism of this effect requires further study.
Non-biased phylogenetic consensus method reveals 21 target consensus residues for mutagenesis
In order to employ a non-biased phylogenetic consensus method for identifying specific residues that will most effectively improve thermostability through mutation, we used wild-type afCR as a query for a blastP search of proteins in the NCBI database. This search yielded 45 CR sequences with a sequence similarity greater than 50% (Additional file 1: Table S1) compared with wild-type afCR. We then aligned these sequences and deleted duplicates, as well as sequences that were too long or too short. A final set of 24 CR homologous sequences were selected for the construction of phylogenetic tree. In order to reduce the branch bias that may be introduced by the overrepresentation family in the database, we developed a non-biased phylogenetic consensus method based on phylogenetic relationships. To this end, we first constructed a neighbor-joining phylogenetic tree and determined the branch lengths for each sequence, representing the evolutionary distance between CR homologous sequences as a ratio of the number of non-identical residue pairs to the minimum length of the sequence (Fig. 3 and Additional file 1: Fig. S4).
Thus, the phylogenetic tree serves as a model for CR divergence caused by evolutionary pressures, with branch lengths used to calculate the weight of each sequence. The use of branch weights thus provided statistical independence among the different protein sequences, enabling the identification of conserved target residues by optimizing the occurrence frequency of amino acid residues (Table 1). We used a proprietary consensus wi.py script to introduce branch weights to calculating the consensus sequence (Additional file 1: Figs. S2, S4). Compared with the wild-type query sequence, 59 of the 404 amino acid positions were selected as candidate consensus residues if they appeared at a given position with > 40% frequency among aligned sequences. This consensus cut-off can be adjusted according to the screening method of consensus mutants and the accuracy of other criteria.
In order to further narrow the pool of candidate residues for mutagenesis, we then considered the impacts on protein structure associated with each position of the 59 residues by applying the following criteria: (1) the substitution should be farther than 6Â Ã… away from the active site to avoid the disruption of catalysis; and (2) we excluded amino acids with side chains that directly formed hydrogen bonds or salt bridges with other residues to avoid decreasing protein structure stability. Based on these screening criteria, we selected 21 mutations for further protein engineering by mutagenesis, including E349V, W59F, C331S, K351E, T251C, F108Y, Y109F, D73T, L162A, V340L, P20T, G58D, Q165I, L6P, V362I, T117P, D17V, T199S, V33L, C52N, and K166A (see Table 1 for residue positions and distance from the active site).
Previously, there are many studies have reported that the distances in the range of 5–10 Å from active sites could be selected to design the mutagenesis library [35,36,37]. For different enzymes, the optimal distances may depend on their different structure and mechanism, which may not be consistent. Herein, we chose the criteria of > 6 Å based on the structural analysis and substrate docking mode of our creatinase. In fact, our successful design of the enzyme also proved that it is a reasonable consideration.
Construction and characterization of the afCR mutants
Based on the report of a I304L/F395V double mutant variant of creatinase from Erwinia with lower KM than its wild type enzyme [38], we first examined the effects of introducing two non-synonymous mutations (I304L/F395V) into WT afCR. We then examined the KM value for the double mutant (15.3 mM) and found that it was lower than that of the WT afCR (23.6 mM), while retaining similar Kcat value. Accordingly, the I304L/F395V afCR variant (afCR-M0) was subsequently used as a parent template to construct more variants. To this end, 21 consensus variants were constructed based on the candidate residues identified above and expressed in E.coli. Eleven of the 21 variants showed improved thermostability compared to afCR-M0 at 55 °C with 80% or higher activity compared to afCR-M0 (Table 1). The best variant D17V (afCR-M1) exhibited the highest half-life at 55 °C (150 min), which was 12.9-fold higher than that of afCR-M0 (Fig. 2d). The thermostability of the other positive mutants was increased by one to twofold compared with that of afCR-M0.
In fact, in previous studies, some researchers have applied consensus approach to design thermostable enzymes, which shown a relatively low design success rate of 20–38% [39,40,41]. Compared with the other studies that used traditional consensus design method, the non-biased-phylogenetic consensus design method was performed in this work with a higher design success rate of 52%. Analysis of these results also further demonstrated that the non-biased-phylogenetic consensus design is an effective approach and promising in improving the thermostability of more enzymes.
Combination of beneficial mutations and thermostability of combinatorial variants
In order to further improve the thermostability of afCR-M1, we then gradually introduced additional positive mutations (i.e., L6P, G58D, Q165I, F108Y, Y109F, T117P, T199S, T251C, E349V, and K351E) (see Table 2). We found that thermostability improved with subsequent mutations and that these variants retained 80% or higher activity compared to afCR-M1. Obviously, during the experiment, the half-life of the mutant at 55 °C increased continuously with the improvement of the thermostability, the half-lives of some mutants became very long. For example, the mutant M2-4 (D17V/T199S) has an half-life ~ 700 min at 55 °C, which made it was difficult to be measured accurately. Therefore, we adjusted the temperature to 57 °C in the subsequent experiment to decrease the difficulty of our experiment.
Consequently, among the double mutants, D17V/T199S (afCR-M2-4) showed the highest thermostability, with a half-life of 210 min at 57 °C (~ 105-fold higher than that of afCR-M0) (Table 2). We then used it as a template to individually introduce other mutations (L6P, T251C, F108Y, Y109F, K351E). All triple mutant variants exhibited significant improvements in thermostability, with the highest increase found in mutant M3-4 (D17V/T199S/L6P), which had a half-life of 1258 min at 57 °C (~ 629-fold higher than afCR-M0) (Table 2). We then generated variants of M3-4 by introduction of T251C, F108Y, Y109F, and K351E, respectively. This third round of mutagenesis produced variant M4-2 (D17V/T199S/L6P/T251C), which exhibited the highest stability of all variants up to this point, i.e., a half-life of 3371 min at 57 °C (~ 1685-fold higher than afCR-M0). All the above triple and quadruple mutants retained similar catalytic activity to that of afCR-M0 in addition to showing improved thermostability. During the combination process, we also discarded some mutation sites that led to decreased activity or failed to significantly improve thermostability, such as D17V/G58D, D17V/Q165I, D17V/T117P, and D17V/E349V.
Notably, we found that some single-site mutants together produced a synergistic effect on thermostability. For example, compared with the single-site mutant D17V, the addition of T199S (D17V/T199S) resulted in another fivefold increase in thermostability, while T199S alone led to a 1.2-fold increase compared to afCR-M0 (Table 1). Further combination of D17V/T199S with L6P produced another sixfold increase in thermostability, whereas alone it only provided a 1.64-fold increase compared to afCR-M0 (Table 1). Thus, these results demonstrated that these amino acid residues function together resulting in a synergistic improvement to thermostability. However, we also observed that some combinations of single-site mutants resulted in antagonistic effects on the thermostability. For example, compared with the L6P (half-life of 19 min at 55 °C) and G58D (half-life of 17 min at 55 °C) single mutation variants, the L6P/G58D double mutant had reduced thermostability (half-life of 6 min at 55 °C), which was even lower than that of the afCR-M0 template. Further exploration of the contributions by each of these residues to overall thermostability will help to clarify the molecular mechanisms underlying the synergistic effects of these mutations, which will provide a useful reference for CR engineering through combinatorial mutagenesis.
Kinetic and thermodynamic stability of the improved afCR combinatorial variants
To assess the kinetic stability of the variants, activity was measured across a range of temperatures (35–70 °C) to determine the temperatures at which enzyme activity was reduced by 50% after 15 min of incubation (T5015) (Fig. 4a). We found that the residual activity of M0 was only 7% after incubation at 60 °C for 15 min (Fig. 4a), whereas, M1 retained 40% activity, M2-4 and M3-4 retained 80% activity, M4-1 retained 68% activity, and M4-2 retained 50% activity. These results thus indicated that the T5015 of these variants was 3.6 to 6.7 °C higher than that of the afCR-M0 (Table 3). Notably, although M4-1 exhibited the highest half-life (T1/2), it had a lower T5015 value than that of M3-4. Since T1/2 and T5015 are both primary indicators of protein kinetic stability, this result also demonstrated that the improvements in stability among the combinatorial variants were not due to the simple additive effects of single mutations. However, to determine the contribution of each mutation to the overall effect on thermostability requires detailed exploration of the relationship between protein structure and external reaction conditions in determining protein kinetic stability [42].
To further examine how the combined mutations affected thermodynamic stability, the melting temperatures (Tm) was determined by nanoDSF. The underlying principle of this assay is that the 350/330 nm emission ratio for tryptophan fluorescence of a given protein can indicate the temperature at which the protein unfolds. The Tm values for M1, M2-4, M3-4, M4-1, and M4-2 ranged from 2 to 5.3 °C higher than that of afCR-M0 (Fig. 4b). Interestingly, unlike the changes in kinetic stability, the melting temperatures of the combined mutation variants increased only slightly over that of the template protein. In previous studies, some researchers has proposed that the unfolding free-energy barrier and the unfolding rate in protein are the key factors of the thermodynamic stability [43, 44]. Therefore, although the denaturation and unfolding process of the enzyme may be related, the results clearly reflected the different process for the enzyme in catalyzed reaction [45], and when measuring enzyme stability, kinetic stability, it should be differentiated from the thermodynamic stability.
Molecular mechanisms underlying higher thermostability conferred by individual mutations
Given our results of the higher thermostable mutants, we next investigated the mechanistic interactions associated with individual mutations that improved thermostability among the positive mutants using afCR structural homology modeling. To this end, we first checked if mutations introduced new interactions (Fig. 5 and Additional file 1: Table S3) and found that the F108Y substitution led to the formation of a new hydrogen bond with the Y68 side chain hydroxyl group (Fig. 5a). Similarly, the Y109F mutation was observed to form new π-π interactions with residues F133 and F108, which subsequently increased the stability of the two helical structures in which the residues are located (Fig. 5b). By contrast, the K351E mutation resulted in the loss of a hydrogen bond between that residue and E349. However, this mutation resulted in new salt bridge interactions and an H-bond formation between P352 and L350 (Fig. 5c). In addition, the T251C substitution introduced a new sulfhydryl group and may create a new disulfide bond with the neighboring C175 (Additional file 1: Fig. S5A).
We then examined changes in hydrophobic and hydrophilic substitutions among the mutants and found that D17V mainly improved hydrophobic packing in the protein interior and facilitated the interaction network between the neighboring residues His12, Asn13, Lys16, Trp90, and Arg91 (Additional file 1: Fig. S5B). Furthermore, we found that Q165I and E349V conversions, mutations similar to D17V, also stabilized the enzyme through increased hydrophobicity, using similar mechanisms as that of D17V. The advantages provided by these mutations apparently contradict conventional mutation theory, in that hydrophobic to hydrophilic amino acid conversion is more likely to improve protein thermostability. For example, the G58D and T199S mutations mainly contributed to higher stability by increasing the hydrophilicity of the protein surface, as well as the inter-helix hydrophobic interactions. In addition, introduction of proline substitutions has been previously shown to be a trend in the stabilization of proteins [46]. The leucine to proline substitution in the L6P mutation (Additional file 1: Fig.S5C) decreased the conformational entropy of local unfolded protein, which resulted in the protein space structure more rigid.
In summary, this analysis showed that individual mutations incurred a wide range of alterations to afCR-M0 structure and internal and external interactions, including changes in hydrogen bonds, salt bridge interactions, π-π interactions and disulfide bonds (F108Y, Y109F, K351E, T251C), increased hydrophilic interactions at the protein surface (T199S, G58D), reduction in the conformational entropy of local unfolded proteins (L6P), and improved hydrophobic packing in the protein interior or increased the interaction network (D17V, Q165I, E349V). Moreover, the introduction of the above interactions can improve the thermostability of proteins has been verified in other studies [47,48,49]. Through analysis of these mutations, we have modified our current understanding of the interaction mechanisms by which different types of amino acid conversions may improve thermostability and thereby provide guidance for engineering higher thermostability in other proteins.
Conclusions
In this study, we reported a new enzyme with excellent properties and characterized its enzymatic function. Moreover, we demonstrated the enhancement of afCR thermostability, guided by an improved non-biased phylogenetic consensus method, through combinatorial mutagenesis of several targeted residues in afCR led to significant improvements in thermostability. Specifically, afCR mutant M4-2 exhibited a 4.2 °C increase in the T5015 and ~ 1700-fold enhanced half-life at 57 °C than that of afCR-M0, while retaining 80% or higher activity. Consequently, these results showed that this design strategy for improvement of thermostability was effective, to providing a highly thermostable enzyme resource for creatinine detection, in addition can provide guidance for similar improvements in other commercially valuable enzymes.
Materials and methods
Experimental operations
Media and Reagents
The afCR gene (BAA88830.1) was synthesized at GenScript Crop (Nanjing, China) and cloned into a pANY1 expression vector (gift from College of Biosciences and Biotechnology, Shenyang Agricultural University) [50]. Restriction enzymes and T4 ligase were purchased from New England Biolabs (Ipswich, MA). QIAquick™ PCR purification kits were purchased from Qiagen (Hilden, Germany). E.coli BL21 (DE3) competent cells were purchased from WEIDI (Shanghai, China). E. coli was routinely cultured overnight at 37 °C in 2× YT broth containing Bacto tryptone (1.6%, w/v), Bacto yeast extract (1%, w/v), and sodium chloride (0.5%, w/v) or on 2× YT agar plates with (in both cases) 50 μg/ml kanamycin.
Protein expression and purification
Cells expressing recombinant afCR were cultivated in 2× YT medium with kanamycin (50 μg/ml) at 37 °C and rotary shaking at 220 rpm. For the expression of afCR, the E. coli cells were induced by adding isopropyl-β-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) at a final concentration of 0.5 mM when the OD600 value reached 0.6–0.8, then they were further cultured at 20 °C for 16 h. The collected cells were washed and resuspended in binding buffer (25 mM Tris–HCL, pH 8.0 containing 200 mM NaCl and 20 mM imidazole). Resuspended cells were lysed by an High Pressure Cell Disruptor (Union-Biotech, ShangHai, China) followed by centrifugation at 12,000g for 20 min to remove cell debris. The supernatant was loaded onto a pre-equilibrated Ni-NTA column (GE, USA), and proteins were eluted with a gradient of imidazole (from 20 to 200 mM). The purity of the collected fractions was analyzed by SDS-PAGE. Fractions containing the pure target protein were combined and desalted by ultrafiltration. The purified proteins were concentrated and stored in phosphate buffer saline (10 mM, pH 7.5) at − 80 °C.
Activity measurement
The activity of afCR was measured by continuous coupled enzymatic assays, based on the action of sarcosine oxidase and horseradish peroxidase. The enzyme was appropriately diluted to 1 mg/ml with phosphate buffer (10 mM, pH 7.5). Enzyme activity was determined by adding 50 μl enzyme to 950 μl substrate solution. The substrate solution was composed of 500 μM creatine, 0.45 mM 4-AA (4-Aminoantipyrine), 0.5 mM TOOS (N-Ethyl-N-(2-hydroxy-3-sulfopropyl)-3-methylaniline) and phosphate buffered saline (10 mM, pH 7.5), which was incubated at 37 °C. The change in ultraviolet absorption at 555 nm in the enzyme reaction system was monitored using a UV2550 spectrophotometer (Shimadzu). One unit of activity was defined as the amount of enzyme producing 1 μM hydrogen peroxide per minute.
Thermostability assay
For determination of enzyme thermostability, the concentration of the purified enzyme was diluted to 1.0 mg/ml in phosphate buffered saline (10 mM, pH 7.5). T1/2 values were determined by incubating the purified enzyme at 55 °C or 57 °C for different time periods. Their residual enzymatic activities were assayed at 37 °C as described above. The half-life was calculated by fitting the linear part of the curves: T1/2 = − ln (2)/k, where k is the slope of the straight line, and plotting the natural logarithm of the residual relative activity of the enzyme versus heat treatment time.
T5015 values were determined by incubating the purified enzyme over a range of temperatures from 35 °C to 70 °C for 15 min. After incubation, the sample solution was then cooled immediately in an ice bath and the remaining afCR activity was measured as described above. The T5015 value is the temperature at which enzymatic activity is reduced to 50% after 15 min of heat treatment. The activity measured at 35 °C was considered to be 100%. The data was analyzed by calculating the inflection point of a fit of the residual activity at certain temperatures to a sigmoidal plot (sigmoidal Boltzmann fit using Origin 9.0).
Differential scanning fluorimetry
DSF experiments were performed on a nanoDSF device (Prometheus NT.48, NanoTemper Technologies GmbH). All samples were diluted to with phosphate buffered saline (10 mM, pH 7.5) to a final concentration of 1 mg/ml and loaded into high sensitivity capillaries. The protein unfolding process was subjected to a thermal ramp (20–95 °C, 1 °C/min). Data analysis was performed using the Prometheus PR ThermControl software. The Tm-value was determined by fitting the tryptophan 350/330 nm fluorescence emission ratio using a polynomial function in which the maximum slope is indicated by the peak of its first derivative.
Measurement of optimal pH and temperature for activity and stability
The optimal pH was determined by measuring afCR activity at 37 °C and at pH 4.5 to 10.0 for 60 min. The optimal temperatures of the WT afCR were determined at pH 7.0 for 60 min in the temperature range of 25–55 °C.
Effects of various metal ions on enzyme activity
The effects of metal ions on enzyme activity were investigated using EDTA, CoCl2, FeSO4, FeCl3, MnSO2, ZnCl2, CaCl2, MgCl2, CuSO4, and NaN3. WT afCR was preincubated in phosphate buffer (10 mM, pH 7.5) containing: Co2+, Fe2+, Fe3+, Mn2+, Zn2+, Ca2+, Mg2+, Cu2+, and Na+ at a final concentration of 1 mM for 3 min at 37 °C. After incubation, a residual enzymatic activity was measured as described above.
Site-directed mutagenesis
In this work, a two-site variant of afCR-M0 (I304L/F395V), with an improved KM value compared to wild type afCR, was used as the template protein as a basis for subsequent mutations. Site-directed mutagenesis was performed according to the standard QuikChangeâ„¢ Site-Directed Mutagenesis kit. All mutations were constructed using whole plasmid PCR-based site-directed mutagenesis and the primers containing the mutation site are shown in Table S2. We utilized the pANY1 plasmid harboring afCR gene as a template and the correct mutation sites were confirmed by DNA sequencing. For the construction of combinatorial mutants, the most thermostable mutants in each round of construction were used as templates for the next round of site-directed mutagenesis.
Consensus approach
Multiple sequence alignment and Phylogenetic analysis
Using wild-type afCR sequence as a query for blastP searches of the NCBI database, we acquired 45 homologous sequences (identity > 50%). These sequences were aligned using the ClustalX 2.1 software package. Duplicate sequences, excessively long and excessively short were excluded from further analysis [51]. Finally, sequences of twenty-four CR homologs were selected for phylogenetic reconstruction and the sequences was displayed using ESPript3.0 (https://espript.ibcp.fr/ESPript/cgi-bin/ESPript.cgi).
Unrooted phylogenies were generated with the phylogenetic module in MEGA7.0 [52] using the Neighbor-Joining method [53]. To construct rooted trees for calculation of sequence weight, we added the outgroup sequence KJS40474.1 to the basal nodes of the unrooted tree (Fig. 3). Here, bias in the natural sequences was balanced by applying a weight to the sequence branch in the tree. The weight of each sequence was calculated according to the branch length in the phylogenetic tree (branch lengths shown in Additional file 1: Fig. S4). The sequence weight was equal to the weighted sum of the average distance of root node branches in the sequence module and the calculation followed Equation (Wa):

which the Wa was the weight of the target sequence a, Xi represents the total branch length of the tree, and the outgroup sequence d was used to add root nodes to the unrooted tree to construct the weighted phylogenetic tree.
Consensus sequence
Sequence alignment was performed using ClustalX 2.1 and the Phylogenetic tree was constructed using the same method as above with MEGA 7.0 Software Package [51]. The consensus sequence was calculated by the python script (10.5281/zenodo.3949790).
Structural homology modeling for improved variants
The structural homology models of afCR were constructed using the SWISS-MODEL [54] package based on the crystal structure of creatinase from Actinobacillus (PDB:1KP0, 75% identical to afCR). Amino acid residues were mutated using the Mutagenesis module of PyMOL software for subsequent research. All drawings were performed using PyMOL software.
Availability of data and materials
All data needed to evaluate the conclusions in the paper are present in the paper and/or the additional materials. Additional data related to this paper may be requested from the authors.
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Acknowledgments
We thank College of Biosciences and Biotechnology, Shenyang Agricultural University for providing the pANY1 plasmids.
Funding
This study was financially supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant number 21627812, 31670791, 31900911 and 21627812), Jiangsu Basic Research Plan of Natural Science (Grant Number SBK2019041665) and China Postdoctoral Science Foundation (Grant Number 2019M660129).
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XB performed most assays. FQM provided assistance in mutant designing. MJL and XD performed the enzyme activity tests. GYY, DXL and YF designed the experiments and prepared the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
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Additional file 1.
Fig. S1. Phylogenetic tree of CR homologous sequences. Fig. S2. AfCR homologous sequences alignment. Fig. S3. Distribution of the stability mutation sites in the CR structural homology model. Fig. S4. Sequence information and branch weight results. Fig. S5. The structural comparison between the wild type and thermostability-associated mutant CR variants. Table S1. CR homologous sequences information. Table S2. Primers of afCR single-site mutants. Table S3. Molecular mechanism of the stabilizing mutations.
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Bai, X., Li, D., Ma, F. et al. Improved thermostability of creatinase from Alcaligenes Faecalis through non-biased phylogenetic consensus-guided mutagenesis. Microb Cell Fact 19, 194 (2020). https://doiorg.publicaciones.saludcastillayleon.es/10.1186/s12934-020-01451-9
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DOI: https://doiorg.publicaciones.saludcastillayleon.es/10.1186/s12934-020-01451-9