Abstract
Directed evolution has revolutionized protein engineering. Still, enzyme optimization by random library screening remains a sluggish process, in large part due to futile probing of mutations that are catalytically neutral and/or impair stability and folding. FuncLib (funclib-weizmann.ac.il) is a novel automated computational procedure which uses phylogenetic analysis and Rosetta design to rank enzyme variants with multiple mutations, on the basis of a stability metric. Here, we use it to target the active site region of a minimalist-designed, de novo Kemp eliminase. The similarity between the Michaelis complex and transition state for the enzymatic reaction makes this a particularly challenging system to optimize. Yet, experimental screening of a very small number of active-site, multi-point variants at the top of the predicted stability ranking leads to catalytic efficiencies and turnover numbers (~2·104 M-1 s-1 and ~102 s-1) that compare well with modern natural enzymes, and that approach the catalysis levels for the best Kemp eliminases derived from extensive screening. This result illustrates the promise of FuncLib as a powerful tool with which to speed up directed evolution, by guiding screening to regions of the sequence space that encode stable and catalytically diverse enzymes. Empirical valence bond calculations reproduce the experimental activation energies for the optimized eliminases to within ~2 kcal·mol-1 and indicate that the improvements in activity are linked to better geometric preorganization of the active site. This raises the possibility of further enhancing the stability-guidance of FuncLib by EVB-based computational predictions of catalytic activity, as a generalized approach for computational enzyme design.