Issue 8, 2025

Structure-guided engineering of a polyphosphate kinase 2 class III from an Erysipelotrichaceae bacterium to produce base-modified purine nucleotides

Abstract

Nucleobase-modified nucleoside-5′-triphosphates (NTPs) are important building blocks for the enzymatic synthesis of non-coding RNAs and mRNAs with improved properties. Chemical phosphorylation of base-modified nucleotides to NTPs remains challenging. Here, we report the enzymatic phosphorylation of purine-modified nucleoside-5′-monophosphates (NMPs) to the corresponding NTPs by the polyphosphate kinase 2 class III from an Erysipelotrichaceae bacterium (EbPPK2). The enzyme is highly promiscuous, accepting a range of NMPs with purine modifications. EbPPK2 efficiently catalyses the formation of the corresponding di-, tri- and tetraphosphates, typically with >70% conversion to the NTP. Slower conversion was observed for analogues with oxo- or thio-substitutions at the C6-position. To better understand nucleotide binding and catalysis, we determined the crystal structure of EbPPK2 at 1.7 Å resolution bound to a non-hydrolysable ATP analogue and polyphosphate. This enabled structure-guided design of EbPPK2 variants that efficiently convert GMP analogues, while retaining activity for AMP. Apart from being the preferred industrial-scale ATP recycling catalyst, EbPPK2 and variants bear potential to become the favoured enzyme family for purine-modified NTP production.

Graphical abstract: Structure-guided engineering of a polyphosphate kinase 2 class III from an Erysipelotrichaceae bacterium to produce base-modified purine nucleotides

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
30 Apr 2025
Accepted
04 Jul 2025
First published
07 Jul 2025
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

RSC Chem. Biol., 2025,6, 1328-1335

Structure-guided engineering of a polyphosphate kinase 2 class III from an Erysipelotrichaceae bacterium to produce base-modified purine nucleotides

R. M. Mitton-Fry, R. Rasche, A. Lawrence-Dörner, J. Eschenbach, A. Tekath, A. Rentmeister, D. Kümmel and N. V. Cornelissen, RSC Chem. Biol., 2025, 6, 1328 DOI: 10.1039/D5CB00108K

This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence. You can use material from this article in other publications without requesting further permissions from the RSC, provided that the correct acknowledgement is given.

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