%0 Journal Article %T Enhancing the Thermostability and Catalytic Activity of the Lipase from Rhizopus oryzae via Introducing N-Glycosylation. %A Wang Y %A Wang Z %A Yu H %A Teng H %A Wu J %A Xu J %A Yang L %J J Agric Food Chem %V 72 %N 26 %D 2024 Jul 3 %M 38913033 %F 5.895 %R 10.1021/acs.jafc.4c02623 %X Lipase from Rhizopus oryzae (ROL) exhibits remarkable sn-1,3 stereoselectivity and catalytic activity, but its poor thermostability limits its applications in the production of 1,3-dioleoyl-2-palmitoyl glycerol (OPO, a high-quality substitute for human milk fat). In this work, a semirational method was proposed to engineer the thermostability and catalytic activity of 4M (ROL mutant in our previous study). First, a computer-aided design is performed using 4M as a template, and N-glycosylation mutants are then recombinantly expressed and screened in Pichia pastoris, the optimal mutant N227 exhibited a half-life of 298.8 h at 45 °C, which is 7.23-folds longer than that of 4M. Its catalytic activity also reached 1043.80 ± 61.98 U/mg, representing a 29.2% increase compared to 4M (808.02 ± 47.02 U/mg). Molecular dynamics simulations of N227 suggested that the introduction of glycan enhanced the protein rigidity, while the strong hydrogen bonds formed between the glycan and the protein stabilized the lipase structure, thereby improving its thermostability. The acidolysis reaction between oleic acid (OA) and glycerol tripalmitate (PPP) was successfully carried out using immobilized N227, achieving a molar conversion rate of 90.2% for PPP. This engineering strategy guides the modification of lipases, while the glycomutants obtained in this study have potential applications in the biosynthesis of OPO.