Biotechnology and Bioengineering, Vol.74, No.4, 295-308, 2001
Effect of crown ethers on structure, stability, activity, and enantioselectivity of subtilisin Carlsberg in organic solvents
Colyophilization or codrying of subtilisin Carlsberg with the crown ethers 18-crown-6, 15-crown-5, and 12-crown-4 substantially improved enzyme activity in THF, acetonitrile, and 1,4-dioxane in the transesterification reactions of N-acetyl-L-phenylalanine ethylester and 1-propanol and that of (+/-)-1-phenylethanol and vinylbutyrate. The acceleration of the initial rate, V-o, ranged from less than 10-fold to more than 100-fold. All crown ethers activated subtilisin substantially, which excludes a specific macrocyclic effect from being responsible. The secondary structure of subtilisin was studied by Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy. 18-Crown-6 and 15-crown-5 led to a more nativelike structure of subtilisin in the organic solvents employed when compared with that of the dehydrated enzyme obtained from buffer alone. However, the high level of activation with 12-crown-4 where this effect was not observed excluded overall structural preservation from being the primary cause of the observed enzyme activation. The conformational mobility of subtilisin was investigated by performing thermal denaturation experiments in 1,4-dioxane. Although only a small effect of temperature on subtilisin structure was observed for the samples prepared with or without 12-crown-4, both 18-crown-6 and 15-crown-5 caused the enzyme to denature at quite low temperatures (38 degreesC and 56 degreesC, respectively). No relationship between this property and V-o was evident, but increased conformational mobility of the protein decreased its storage stability. The possibility of a "molecular imprinting" effect was also tested by removing 18-crown-6 from the subtilisin-18-crown-6 colyophilizate by washing. V-o was only halved as a result of this procedure, an effect insignificant compared with the ca. 80-fold rate enhancement observed prior to washing in THF. This suggests that molecular imprinting is likely the primary cause of subtilisin activation by crown ethers, as recently suggested.
Keywords:crown ether;enzyme activation;Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy;nonaqueous enzymology;subtilisin Carlsberg