GroEL minichaperones have potential in the biotechnology
industry for the refolding of recombinant proteins. With
the aim of enhancing and widening their use, we have created
two highly stable functional variants of minichaperone
GroEL(193–345). A sequence alignment of 130 members
of the chaperonin 60 (Cpn60) family was used to design
37 single mutations. Two small-to-large mutations, A223T,
A223V and one similar-size mutation, M233L, all located
in the hydrophobic core were found to stabilize the protein
by more than 1 kcal mol−1 each. Six stabilizing
mutations were combined, yielding two multiple mutants
that were 6.99 and 6.15 kcal mol−1 more
stable than wild-type protein. Even though some of the
substituted residue pairs are close to each other in the
protein structure, the energetic effects of mutation are
approximately additive. In particular, the stabilizing
substitution A223T is unexpected and would have been missed
by purely structural analysis. In the light of previously
reported successes employing similar methods with several
other proteins, our results show that a homology based
approach is a simple and efficient method of increasing
the stability of a protein.