User:Teresa Maria Carusone/Sandbox 1
From Proteopedia
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Ssopox belongs to the PLL family of enzyme which has the peculiar characteristic to have promiscuous activites toward lactones and organophosphates compounds. Owing to these promiscuous activities, the thermostability and rare properties, SsoPox is considered an excellent starting point for biotechnological applications directed towards the achievement of efficient bioscavengers for organophosphorus compounds and against certain pathogens. | Ssopox belongs to the PLL family of enzyme which has the peculiar characteristic to have promiscuous activites toward lactones and organophosphates compounds. Owing to these promiscuous activities, the thermostability and rare properties, SsoPox is considered an excellent starting point for biotechnological applications directed towards the achievement of efficient bioscavengers for organophosphorus compounds and against certain pathogens. | ||
In vitro directed evolution experiments demonstrated the possibility that, if there is an immediate selective advantage, promiscuous activities of enzymes can diverge quickly in new functions by means of a limited number of mutations. By enhancing the stability and, in particular, the thermostability of some hydrolytic enzymes the protein gains a structural stability; a convenient prerequisite for every in vitro evolutive approach. | In vitro directed evolution experiments demonstrated the possibility that, if there is an immediate selective advantage, promiscuous activities of enzymes can diverge quickly in new functions by means of a limited number of mutations. By enhancing the stability and, in particular, the thermostability of some hydrolytic enzymes the protein gains a structural stability; a convenient prerequisite for every in vitro evolutive approach. | ||
- | The protein’s tolerance to substitutions (its neutrality) allows the analysis of kinetically more mutated forms, allowing a wider screening and a complete overview of the amino acids’ position roles | + | The protein’s tolerance to substitutions (its neutrality) allows the analysis of kinetically more mutated forms, allowing a wider screening and a complete overview of the amino acids’ position roles. For these reasons SsoPox and other enzymes of the same family appear good candidates for engineering approaches aimed at biotechnological applications in the industrial field. |
One of the promising applications is the use of PLLs (Sso Pox) for enzymatic detoxification of Ops. This has become the subject of many studies because alternative methods of removing them, such as bleach treatments and incineration are impractical due to high costs or environmental concerns. OPs are toxic compounds for all vertebrates because they irreversibly inhibit acetylcholinesterase, a key enzyme of the nervous system. They have been distributed globally since the end of WorldWar II and their toxic properties have also been exploited for the development of chemical warfare agents such as sarin, soman and VX as well as for the production of agricultural insecticides. | One of the promising applications is the use of PLLs (Sso Pox) for enzymatic detoxification of Ops. This has become the subject of many studies because alternative methods of removing them, such as bleach treatments and incineration are impractical due to high costs or environmental concerns. OPs are toxic compounds for all vertebrates because they irreversibly inhibit acetylcholinesterase, a key enzyme of the nervous system. They have been distributed globally since the end of WorldWar II and their toxic properties have also been exploited for the development of chemical warfare agents such as sarin, soman and VX as well as for the production of agricultural insecticides. | ||
For this application, enzymes that catalyse the hydrolysis of phosphoester bonds in OPs represent an excellent bio-based solution. | For this application, enzymes that catalyse the hydrolysis of phosphoester bonds in OPs represent an excellent bio-based solution. |
Revision as of 14:48, 24 October 2017
Phosphotriesterase-Like Lactonase (PLL))
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