The increasing number of enzyme applications in chemical synthesis calls for new engineering methods to develop the biocatalysts of the future. An interesting concept in enzyme engineering is the generation of large-scale mutational data in order to chart protein mutability landscapes. These landscapes allow the important discrimination between beneficial mutations and those that are neutral or detrimental, thus providing detailed insight into sequence-function relationships. As such, mutability landscapes are a powerful tool with which to identify functional hotspots at any place in the amino acid sequence of an enzyme. These hotspots can be used as targets for combinatorial mutagenesis to yield superior enzymes with improved catalytic pro...
The ability to use proteins in nonnatural environments greatly expands their potential applications ...
Structural and mechanistic information, sequence comparisons, and site-directed mutagenesis data con...
Sequence–function relationship in a protein is commonly determined by the three-dimensional protein...
The increasing number of enzyme applications in chemical synthesis calls for new engineering methods...
Enzyme engineering is an important biotechnological process capable of generating tailored biocataly...
Directed evolution has emerged as one of the most effective protein engineering methods in basic res...
Enzymes do not only play a crucial role in nature, they are also increasingly used as biocatalysts f...
The concept of a protein’s fitness landscape – an abstract space in which related sequences are clos...
Enzymes are tremendously proficient catalysts, which can be used as extracellular catalysts for a wh...
A fundamental goal of protein biochemistry is to determine the sequence-function relationship, but t...
Thermostabilizing enzymes while retaining their activity and enantioselectivity for applied biocatal...
AbstractSome mutations of protein residues matter more than others, and these are often conserved ev...
International audienceDesigned enzymes are of fundamental and technological interest. Experimental d...
Directed evolution of stereo-, regio-, and chemoselective enzymes has enriched the toolbox of synthe...
The rational design of enzymes is an important goal for both fundamental and practical reasons. Here...
The ability to use proteins in nonnatural environments greatly expands their potential applications ...
Structural and mechanistic information, sequence comparisons, and site-directed mutagenesis data con...
Sequence–function relationship in a protein is commonly determined by the three-dimensional protein...
The increasing number of enzyme applications in chemical synthesis calls for new engineering methods...
Enzyme engineering is an important biotechnological process capable of generating tailored biocataly...
Directed evolution has emerged as one of the most effective protein engineering methods in basic res...
Enzymes do not only play a crucial role in nature, they are also increasingly used as biocatalysts f...
The concept of a protein’s fitness landscape – an abstract space in which related sequences are clos...
Enzymes are tremendously proficient catalysts, which can be used as extracellular catalysts for a wh...
A fundamental goal of protein biochemistry is to determine the sequence-function relationship, but t...
Thermostabilizing enzymes while retaining their activity and enantioselectivity for applied biocatal...
AbstractSome mutations of protein residues matter more than others, and these are often conserved ev...
International audienceDesigned enzymes are of fundamental and technological interest. Experimental d...
Directed evolution of stereo-, regio-, and chemoselective enzymes has enriched the toolbox of synthe...
The rational design of enzymes is an important goal for both fundamental and practical reasons. Here...
The ability to use proteins in nonnatural environments greatly expands their potential applications ...
Structural and mechanistic information, sequence comparisons, and site-directed mutagenesis data con...
Sequence–function relationship in a protein is commonly determined by the three-dimensional protein...