Published January 1, 2020 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Haloadaptation: insights from comparative modeling studies between halotolerant and non-halotolerant dehalogenases

  • 1. Ondokuz Mayis Univ, Agr Fac, Dept Plant Protect, Samsun, Turkey
  • 2. Univ Teknol Malaysia, Fac Sci, Dept Chem, Johor Baharu, Malaysia

Description

Halophiles are extremophilic microorganisms that grow optimally at high salt concentrations by producing a myriad of equally halotolerant enzymes. Structural haloadaptation of these enzymes adept to thriving under high-salt environments, though are not fully understood. Herein, the study attempts an in silico investigation to identify and comprehend the evolutionary structural adaptation of a halotolerant dehalogenase, DehHX (GenBank accession number: KR297065) of the halotolerant Pseudomonas halophila, over its non-halotolerant counterpart, DehMX1 (GenBank accession number KY129692) produced by Pseudomonas aeruginosa. GC content of the halotolerant DehHX DNA sequence was distinctively higher (58.9%) than the non-halotolerant dehalogenases (55% average GC). Its acidic residues, Asp and Glu were 8.27% and 12.06%, respectively, compared to an average 5.5% Asp and 7% Glu, in the latter; but lower contents of basic and hydrophobic residues in the DehHX. The secondary structure of DehHX interestingly revealed a lower incidence of alpha-helix forming regions (29%) and a higher percentage of coils (57%), compared to 49% and 29% in the non-halotolerant homologues, respectively. Simulation models showed the DehHX is stable under a highly saline environment (25% w/v) by adopting a highly negative-charged surface with a concomitant weakly interacting hydrophobic core. The study thus, established that a halotolerant dehalogenase undergoes notable evolutionary structural changes related to GC content over its non-halotolerant counterpart, in order to adapt and thrive under highly saline environments. Communicated by Ramaswamy H. Sarma

Files

bib-fbdeabae-638b-4f0b-b805-51844788cb6a.txt

Files (244 Bytes)

Name Size Download all
md5:5c1e978106ba088f2c2252615e6949fd
244 Bytes Preview Download