Protein engineering studies often suggest the emergence of completely new enzyme functionalities to be highly improbable. However, enzymes likely catalysed many different reactions already in the last universal common ancestor. Mechanisms for the emergence of completely new active sites must therefore either plausibly exist or at least have existed at the primordial protein stage. Here, we use resurrected Precambrian proteins as scaffolds for protein engineering and demonstrate that a new active site can be generated through a single hydrophobic-to-ionizable amino acid replacement that generates a partially buried group with perturbed physico-chemical properties. We provide experimental and computational evidence that conformational flexibi...
Evolutionary history of native proteins, shaping observed sequences by complex interplay between mut...
The creation of enzymes capable of catalyzing any desired chemical reaction is a grand challenge for...
The routine generation of enzymes with completely new active sites is a major unsolved problem in pr...
Protein engineering studies often suggest the emergence of completely new enzyme functionalities to ...
Protein engineering studies often suggest the emergence of completely new enzyme functionalities to ...
The combination of computational enzyme design and laboratory evolution provides an attractive platf...
We report a sequence reconstruction analysis targeting several Precambrian nodes in the evolution of...
The emergence of enzymes through the neofunctionalization of noncatalytic proteins is ultimately res...
Protein design is a challenging problem. We do not fully understand the rules of protein folding, an...
Developments in computational chemistry, bioinformatics, and laboratory evolution have facilitated t...
Almost all modern proteins possess well-defined, relatively rigid scaffolds that provide structural ...
The ability of one enzyme to catalyse multiple, mechanistically distinct transformations likely play...
Abstract Modern organisms commonly use the same set of 20 genetically coded amino acids for protein ...
We review the standard model for de novo computational design of enzymes, which primarily focuses on...
The contemporary proteinogenic repertoire contains 20 amino acids with diverse functional groups and...
Evolutionary history of native proteins, shaping observed sequences by complex interplay between mut...
The creation of enzymes capable of catalyzing any desired chemical reaction is a grand challenge for...
The routine generation of enzymes with completely new active sites is a major unsolved problem in pr...
Protein engineering studies often suggest the emergence of completely new enzyme functionalities to ...
Protein engineering studies often suggest the emergence of completely new enzyme functionalities to ...
The combination of computational enzyme design and laboratory evolution provides an attractive platf...
We report a sequence reconstruction analysis targeting several Precambrian nodes in the evolution of...
The emergence of enzymes through the neofunctionalization of noncatalytic proteins is ultimately res...
Protein design is a challenging problem. We do not fully understand the rules of protein folding, an...
Developments in computational chemistry, bioinformatics, and laboratory evolution have facilitated t...
Almost all modern proteins possess well-defined, relatively rigid scaffolds that provide structural ...
The ability of one enzyme to catalyse multiple, mechanistically distinct transformations likely play...
Abstract Modern organisms commonly use the same set of 20 genetically coded amino acids for protein ...
We review the standard model for de novo computational design of enzymes, which primarily focuses on...
The contemporary proteinogenic repertoire contains 20 amino acids with diverse functional groups and...
Evolutionary history of native proteins, shaping observed sequences by complex interplay between mut...
The creation of enzymes capable of catalyzing any desired chemical reaction is a grand challenge for...
The routine generation of enzymes with completely new active sites is a major unsolved problem in pr...