Issue 8, 2023

Design of highly active substrates using molecular docking for microbial transglutaminase detection

Abstract

The transglutaminase (TGase) family catalyzes a transamidation reaction between glutamine (Gln) and lysine (Lys) residues on protein substrates. Highly active substrates are important for cross-linking and modifying proteins of TGase. In the present work, high-activity substrates have been designed based on the principles of enzyme–substrate interaction, using microbial transglutaminase (mTGase) as a research model of the TGase family. Substrates with high activity were screened using a combination of molecular docking and traditional experiments. Twenty-four sets of peptide substrates all produced good catalytic activity with mTGase. FFKKAYAV as the acyl acceptor and VLQRAY as the acyl donor group had the best reaction efficiency with highly sensitive detection of 26 nM mTGase. In addition, the substrate grouping, KAYAV and AFQSAY, detected 130 nM mTGase under physiological conditions (37 °C, pH 7.4), producing 20-fold higher activity than the natural substrate, collagen. The experimental results confirmed the potential for design of high-activity substrates by a combination of molecular docking and traditional experiments under physiological conditions.

Graphical abstract: Design of highly active substrates using molecular docking for microbial transglutaminase detection

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
13 Oct 2022
Accepted
06 Feb 2023
First published
13 Feb 2023
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

RSC Adv., 2023,13, 5259-5265

Design of highly active substrates using molecular docking for microbial transglutaminase detection

L. Zou, X. Geng, Z. Li and T. Li, RSC Adv., 2023, 13, 5259 DOI: 10.1039/D2RA06467G

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