Thermotolerant class A acid phosphatase active across broad pH range and diverse substrates
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Recio Muñoz, María Isabel; Gavira Gallardo, José Antonio; de la Torre, Jesús; Cano-Muñoz, Mario; Martínez Rodríguez, Sergio; Daddaoua, Abdelali; Duque, Estrella; Ramos, Juan LuisEditorial
Wiley Periodicals LLC
Materia
Bacteria bacterial acid phosphatase biomineralization
Fecha
2025-08-15Referencia bibliográfica
Recio M-I, Gavira JA, de La Torre J, Cano-Muñoz M, Martínez-Rodriguez S, Daddaoua A, et al. Thermotolerant class A acid phosphatase active across broad pH range and diverse substrates. Protein Science. 2025; 34(9):e70244. https://doi.org/10.1002/pro.70244
Patrocinador
Agencia Estatal de Investigacion (Grant/Award Number: PDI-2021-123469OBI00); Gobierno Regional de Andalucía (Grant/Award Number: P20-00049)Resumen
M2-32 is a non-specific acid phosphatase with a rare ability to function
across a broad pH range (3.5–8.5). Analysis using SWISS-PROT Prf Profiles classifies it as a class A acid phosphatase (Z-score: 78.97), sharing
50%–60% sequence similarity with enzymes such as PhoC and PhoN. For
detailed characterization, the gene encoding M2-32 was cloned into the
pET28(b) vector, overexpressed in Escherichia coli BL21 (DE3), and subsequently purified. Although the monomeric form of M2-32 has a molecular
weight of 28 kDa, size exclusion chromatography, dynamic light scattering, and sedimentation studies revealed a dimeric form in solution. Enzymatic assays using p-nitrophenyl phosphate, 4-methylumbelliferyl
phosphate, 30
-and 50
-adenosine monophosphate demonstrated robust activity over a pH range of 4.0–8.0 at both 30 and 50C. Differential scanning
fluorimetry indicated an unfolding temperature close to 47C; however, the
enzyme refolded after heat denaturation at 80C. We have determined the
x-ray crystal structure of M2-32 by molecular replacement using an
AlphaFold2-guided truncated model, achieving a resolution of 2.2 Å. The
protein crystallized as a dimer-of-dimers. Each monomer (residues 38–274)
adopts an all-alpha-helical fold composed of 14 helices and two disulfide
bonds. Docking studies with adenosine monophosphates, combined with
site-directed mutagenesis, identified His174, Arg207, His213, Asp217 as
critical catalytic residues, and Tyr136 and Ser172 probably involved in substrate recognition. Mutations at these positions resulted in over 90% loss of
enzymatic activity, highlighting their functional significance.





