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@PHDTHESIS{Krfer:661859,
      author       = {Körfer, Georgette Dorothea Johanna},
      othercontributors = {Schwaneberg, Ulrich and Elling, Lothar},
      title        = {{D}evelopment of a flow cytometer-based in vitro
                      compartmentalization screening platform for directed protein
                      evolution},
      school       = {RWTH Aachen University},
      type         = {Dissertation},
      address      = {Aachen},
      reportid     = {RWTH-2016-06001},
      pages        = {1 Online-Ressource (X, 212 Seiten) : Illustrationen,
                      Diagramme},
      year         = {2016},
      note         = {Veröffentlicht auf dem Publikationsserver der RWTH Aachen
                      University; Dissertation, RWTH Aachen University, 2016},
      abstract     = {Directed evolution is a powerful algorithm for tailoring
                      industrially important biocatalysts. Methodological
                      andconceptual advancements in directed evolution in the past
                      decades enabled engineering of enzymes towardsunnatural
                      substrates with catalytic efficiencies beyond natural
                      enzymes. Despite all progress in the field ofdirected
                      evolution the exploration of generated sequence space and
                      acceleration of iterative rounds ofmutagenesis and screening
                      is limited by throughput of commonly employed screening
                      technologies.Development of ultrahigh throughput screening
                      (uHTS) represents the main challenge in today’s
                      state-of-theartdirected evolution and ideally, in contrast
                      to medium screening formats, enables rapid analysis of up to
                      $10^7events$ per hour using flow cytometry. The possibility
                      to screen millions of variants within one day using
                      uHTSoffers the opportunity to generate libraries of high
                      mutational load to successfully identify and
                      investigatestructure-function relationships or combinatorial
                      effects within directed evolution campaigns. The latter is
                      upto now unobtainable employing standard screening formats
                      due to cost and time limitations of directedevolution
                      campaigns. Most of reported uHTS screening systems employ in
                      vivo screening where the bacterialhost is used as carrier of
                      enzyme variants. The main limitation of the cell-based
                      systems is the lowtransformation efficiency resulting in
                      reduced gene diversity. In this study we developed an uHTS
                      platform inwhich cells were replaced by cell-free
                      transcription-translation machinery encapsulated within
                      artificial cell-likecompartments (water-in-oil-in-water
                      (w/o/w) emulsions). Each emulsion compartment encapsulates a
                      singlegene copy of a highly diverse gene library $(10^8).$
                      Upon cell-free transcription and translation of genes,
                      encodingactive enzyme variants, compartments are labelled by
                      conversion of fluorogenic substrate into fluorescentproduct
                      and are analyzed by flow cytometry. In vitro
                      compartmentalization (IVC) enables genotype-phenotypelinkage
                      and isolation of genes encoding for active enzyme variants
                      from an excess of genes encoding inactiveenzymes. The uHTS
                      screening platform was developed for cellulase (CelA2) using
                      in vitro production of CelA2enzyme within (w/o/w) emulsions
                      and fluorescein-di-beta-D-cellobioside (FDC)-fluorescein
                      substrate-product pair(Ex.: 494 nm/Em.: 516 nm). The
                      developed uHTS cell-free compartmentalization platform was
                      validated byscreening of a random epPCR cellulase
                      mutagenesis library and yielded an improved cellulase
                      variant withinonly two weeks. The identified variant
                      CelA2-H288F-M1 (N273D/N468S) showed 5-fold reduced KM value
                      and13.3-fold increased specific activity (220.60 U/mg)
                      compared to cellulase wild type (16.57 U/mg). The uHTS
                      invitro based platform was employed to study differences
                      between three focused mutagenesis approaches(iterative
                      site-saturation mutagenesis, multiple site-saturation
                      mutagenesis, and simultaneous saturationmutagenesis of four
                      amino acid positions i.e. OmniChange) in order to explore
                      combinatorial effects. As anoutcome the best performing
                      variant contained only two amino acid substitutions (F288
                      and Q524) andshowed 8-fold improvement in specific activity
                      compared to parent.In order to expand the uHTS platform on
                      other enzymes, in this study in vitro based screening assay
                      for Yersiniamollaretii phytase wildtype (YmPhWT) was
                      optimized. Due to discrepancies between pH optimum for
                      cell-freeexpression machinery (pH 7) and acidic pH optimum
                      of YmPhWT, optimization of YmPhWT through a
                      directedevolution campaign was performed. The goal of the
                      campaign was to broaden the activity of the phytasetowards
                      neutral pH. Phytase libraries were generated via epPCR and
                      subsequent simultaneous site-saturationmutagenesis based on
                      identified beneficial positions in the epPCR library
                      screening. The variants YmPh-M10and -M16, showing 7-fold
                      improved specific activity at pH 6.6 towards the model
                      substrate4-methylumbelliferylphosphate (4-MUP) compared to
                      YmPhWT, were isolated.The flow cytometer-based uHTS-IVC
                      technology platform drastically reduces time requirements
                      for one roundof directed evolution from several months to
                      only one day and enables an efficient screening of
                      mutantlibraries $(10^10)$ with high diversity covering a
                      significant portion of the generated sequence space in a
                      timeefficient manner. Consequently, the flow cytometer-based
                      uHTS-IVC technology platform offers an efficientsolution to
                      tackle present challenges of directed evolution, like the
                      performance of multiple, iterative rounds ofdiversity
                      generation and screening of mutant libraries with unlimited
                      diversity, in order to successfully identifybeneficial
                      variants with altered selectivity, specificity or activity.
                      In addition, the flow cytometer-based uHTSIVCtechnology
                      platform has an impressive potential to study
                      demanding/challenging scientific questions e.g.the
                      exploration of combinatorial effects and answering
                      fundamental questions on structure-functionrelationships
                      within biocatalysts. Additionally, the uHTS technology
                      platform can - from our point of view - beadapted to other
                      enzyme classes since it uses a widely applicable
                      fluorescence sorting of cell-free expressedactive enzyme
                      variants within (w/o/w) emulsions compartments.},
      cin          = {162610 / 160000},
      ddc          = {570},
      cid          = {$I:(DE-82)162610_20140620$ / $I:(DE-82)160000_20140620$},
      typ          = {PUB:(DE-HGF)11},
      urn          = {urn:nbn:de:hbz:82-rwth-2016-060015},
      url          = {https://publications.rwth-aachen.de/record/661859},
}