BBa_M45136

BBa_M45136 Version 1

Component

Source:
http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_M45136
Generated By: https://synbiohub.org/public/igem/igem2sbol/1
Created by: Ozkan Fidan
Date created: 2014-04-11 11:00:00
Date modified: 2015-05-08 01:14:09

ChrR30, Chromate and Uranium Reductase



Types
DnaRegion

Roles
Coding

CDS

Sequences BBa_M45136_sequence (Version 1)

Description

This part has a function to reduce uranium (VI) and chromate (VI) to more stable and insoluble form of uranium (IV) and chromate (III). It can also function in the reduction of some other heavy metals such plutonium and technetium.
E.Coli ChrR is an obligate two-electron reducer membrane-bound enzyme that is soluble and easy to manipulate. It reduces the chromate and uranium (uranyl) intracellularly from their unstable high valent states to stable and lower valent states. Since the reduction process takes place intracellularly the reduced product can be partially sequestered, resulting in minimization of the possibilities of reoxidation ans resolubilization of these nuclear wastes which happens in bacterial cell-surface-mediated reduction. Another striking point of this enzyme is that it isNAD(P)H oxidoreductase, meaning it is active under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions as long as cofactors are present in the environment. Additionally, this enzyme can be effective in the reduction various of substrates such as; quinines, potassium ferricyanide, Mo (VI), 2,6-dichloroindophenol, methylene blue, cytichrome c, mitomycin C, 5-aziri-dinyl-2,4-dinitrobenzamide and 17-allyl-amino-17-demethoxygeldanamycin. Thus, it can remediate additional contaminants as well as chromate and uranyl radioactive wastes.
As seen in figure 1 its crystal structure, solved at 2.2 A resolution, indicates that it belongs to the flavodoxin superfamily in which flavin mononucleotide (FMN) is anchored to the protein. ChrR was crystallized as tetramer, and then size exclusion chromatography was performed and showed that oligomeric form leads to chromate reduction. Within the tetramer, the dimers interact with a pair of two hydrogen bond networks, each involving Tyr128 and Glu146 of one dimer and Arg125 and Tyr85 of the other. Changes in each of these amino acids enhanced chromate reductase activity of the enzyme. Therefore, this network is significantly involved in chromate reduction process.

Figure 1. Structure of Chromate Reductase, ChrR
Barak et al. (2006) improved ChrR by changing a few amino acids (Val120Ala, Tyr128Asn, Thr160Asn and Glu175Leu) to ChrR6 enzyme for chromate and uranyl reduction as seen in Figure 2. When they alter each amino acid individually, they found Tyr128Asn amino acid change is the most effective one among others in terms of enzyme activity because when this amino acid change is not done the enzyme activity becomes less than ChrR. Thus, Tyr128Asn was responsible for improvement of enzyme for chromate and uranyl reduction.

Figure 2. Chromate reductase specific activities of crude extracts of recombinant E. coli cells expressing E. coli ChrR and ChrR6.
The same research group formed a lot of distinct versions of ChrR by changing different amino acids in 2008. They had a novel statistical approach to improve the enzyme in the absence of exact structural information. One of the modified ChrR enzymes, ChrR30, exhibits the highest chromate and uranyl reductase activity as seen Table 1 which shows the uranyl reduction kinetic data. For chromate reductase, the enzyme activity (Vmax) goes up from 295??27 to 458 300??83 600 for ChrR and ChrR30, respectively. The amino acid changes are Y128N, G150S and N154T. These amino acid changes give rise to sharp increase in uranyl and chromate reductase enzyme activity.
Table 1. Uranyl reduction kinetics of selected evolved mutants

As a conclusion, the modified version of ChrR enzyme, ChrR30, reduces more effectively uranium (VI) and chromate (VI) to uranium (IV) and chromate (III) valent states intracellularly. This enzyme has also potential activity of reducing other metals or radionuclides such as; plutonium and technetium.

References:
1-http://www.proteopedia.org/wiki/index.php/3svl
2-Barak Y et al."Analysis of novel soluble chromate and uranyl reductases and generation of an improved enzyme by directed evolution" Applied Environmental Microbiology 2006;72:7074-7082
3-Barak Y et al. "Enzyme improvement in the absence of structural knowledge: a novel statistical approach" International Society for Microbial Ecology 2008;2:171-179

Notes

ChrR30 and ChrR6 are improved by directed evolution.

Source

The source of this gene sequence is E. Coli. ChrR and ChrR6 were formerly referred to as YieF protein and Y6. ChrR6 and ChrR30 are the evolved forms of ChrR.

Sequence Annotation Location Component / Role(s)
Start Codon
Coding Sequence
Stop Codon
Mutation 1
Mutation 2
Mutation 3
1,3
1,567
565,567
382,382
448,448
461,461
start_codon feature/start
CDS feature/cds
feature/stop stop_codon
sequence_alteration feature/mutation
feature/mutation sequence_alteration
feature/mutation sequence_alteration
igem#experience
None
 
igem#sampleStatus
Not in stock
igem#status
Unavailable
 
synbiohub#ownedBy
user/james
 
synbiohub#ownedBy
user/myers
 
synbiohub#topLevel
BBa_M45136/1