학술논문

Directed evolution unlocks oxygen reactivity for a nicotine-degrading flavoenzyme
Document Type
article
Source
Nature Chemical Biology. 19(11)
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Medicinal and Biomolecular Chemistry
Chemical Sciences
Biological Sciences
Neurosciences
Tobacco Smoke and Health
Tobacco
Substance Misuse
Rats
Animals
Nicotine
Oxygen
Oxidoreductases
Oxidation-Reduction
Pseudomonas putida
Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Biochemistry and cell biology
Medicinal and biomolecular chemistry
Language
Abstract
The flavoenzyme nicotine oxidoreductase (NicA2) is a promising injectable treatment to aid in the cessation of smoking, a behavior responsible for one in ten deaths worldwide. NicA2 acts by degrading nicotine in the bloodstream before it reaches the brain. Clinical use of NicA2 is limited by its poor catalytic activity in the absence of its natural electron acceptor CycN. Without CycN, NicA2 is instead oxidized slowly by dioxygen (O2), necessitating unfeasibly large doses in a therapeutic setting. Here, we report a genetic selection strategy that directly links CycN-independent activity of NicA2 to growth of Pseudomonas putida S16. This selection enabled us to evolve NicA2 variants with substantial improvement in their rate of oxidation by O2. The encoded mutations cluster around a putative O2 tunnel, increasing flexibility and accessibility to O2 in this region. These mutations further confer desirable clinical properties. A variant form of NicA2 is tenfold more effective than the wild type at degrading nicotine in the bloodstream of rats.