CA2217162A1 - Subtilisin variants - Google Patents

Subtilisin variants Download PDF

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CA2217162A1
CA2217162A1 CA002217162A CA2217162A CA2217162A1 CA 2217162 A1 CA2217162 A1 CA 2217162A1 CA 002217162 A CA002217162 A CA 002217162A CA 2217162 A CA2217162 A CA 2217162A CA 2217162 A1 CA2217162 A1 CA 2217162A1
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residues
subtilase
composition according
enzyme
subtilisin
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Jan Klugkist
Peter Markvardsen
Claus Von Der Osten
Laurens Nicolaas Sierkstra
Peter Bauditz
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Unilever PLC
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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C11ANIMAL OR VEGETABLE OILS, FATS, FATTY SUBSTANCES OR WAXES; FATTY ACIDS THEREFROM; DETERGENTS; CANDLES
    • C11DDETERGENT COMPOSITIONS; USE OF SINGLE SUBSTANCES AS DETERGENTS; SOAP OR SOAP-MAKING; RESIN SOAPS; RECOVERY OF GLYCEROL
    • C11D3/00Other compounding ingredients of detergent compositions covered in group C11D1/00
    • C11D3/16Organic compounds
    • C11D3/38Products with no well-defined composition, e.g. natural products
    • C11D3/386Preparations containing enzymes, e.g. protease or amylase
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12NMICROORGANISMS OR ENZYMES; COMPOSITIONS THEREOF; PROPAGATING, PRESERVING, OR MAINTAINING MICROORGANISMS; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING; CULTURE MEDIA
    • C12N9/00Enzymes; Proenzymes; Compositions thereof; Processes for preparing, activating, inhibiting, separating or purifying enzymes
    • C12N9/14Hydrolases (3)
    • C12N9/48Hydrolases (3) acting on peptide bonds (3.4)
    • C12N9/50Proteinases, e.g. Endopeptidases (3.4.21-3.4.25)
    • C12N9/52Proteinases, e.g. Endopeptidases (3.4.21-3.4.25) derived from bacteria or Archaea
    • C12N9/54Proteinases, e.g. Endopeptidases (3.4.21-3.4.25) derived from bacteria or Archaea bacteria being Bacillus

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  • Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
  • Oil, Petroleum & Natural Gas (AREA)
  • Detergent Compositions (AREA)
  • Enzymes And Modification Thereof (AREA)
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Abstract

Detergent compositions are provided comprising a subtilase variant wherein one o r more amino acid residues situated in or the vicinity of a hydrophobic domain of the parent subtilase have been substituted for an amino acid residue more hydrophobic than the original residue, said hydrophobic domain comprising t he residues P129, P131, I165, Y167, Y171 of BLS309 (in BASBPN numbering), and the residues in the vicinity thereof c omprise residues corresponding to the residues E136, G159, S164, R170, A194 and G195 of BLS309 (in BASBPN numbering), with the exception of the R170M, R170I and R170V variants of BABP92. The enzymes exhibit improved stability and/or wash performance in detergents especially liquid detergents and soap bars, in comparison to their wild type par ent enzymes. The enzymes are well-suited for use in liquid detergent compositions and soap bars.

Description

W 096J34935 PCTnEP96/01610 SUBTILISIN VARIANTS

C~iL FIELD
This invention relates to novel mutant enzymes or enzyme variants useful in ~ormulating detergent compositions and exhibiting improved storage stability while ret~;n;ng or improving their wash perform~nce; cleaning and detergent compositions cont~;n;ng said enzymes; mutated genes coding for the expression of said enzymes when inserted into a suitable host cell or org~n;cm; and such host cells trans~ormed therewith and capable of expressing said enzyme variants .

R~t~Rt~:UO~lND OF TEIE lNv~ lON
In the detergent industry enzymes have for more than 30 years been implemented in washing formulations.
Enzymes used in such formulations comprise proteases, lipases, a-m-ylases~ cellulases, as well as other enzymes, or mixtures thereof. Cnmm~rcially most important are proteases.
Although proteases have been used in the detergent industry for more than 30 years, much r~m~;n~ unknown as to details of how these enzymes interact with substrates and/other substances present in e.g. detergent compositions.
Some ~actors related to specific residues and influencing certain properties, such as oxidative and ~herm~l stability in general have been elucidated, but much r~m~;n~ to be found out. Also, it is still not exactly known which physical or chemical characteristics are responsible for a good washing performance or ability of a protease in a specific detergent composition.
The currently used proteases have for the most part been found by isolating proteases from nature and testing them in detergent formulations.
~ 35 PROTE~SES
Enzymes cleaving the amide linkages in protein substrates are classified as proteases, or (interchangeably) peptidases (see Walsh, 1979, ~nzymatic Reaction Mechanisms.
W.H. Freeman and ~mp~ny, San Francisco, Chapter 3).
Bacteria of the Bacillus species secrete two extracellular species of protease, a neutral, or metalloprotease, and an alkaline protease which is functionally a serine endopeptidase and usually referred to as subtilisin.
Secretion of these proteases has been linked to the bacterial growth cycle, with greatest expression of protease during the stationary phase, when sporulation also occurs.
Joliffe et al. (1980) J. Bacteriol 141 1199-1208, have suggested that Bacillus proteases function in cell wall turnover.

Su~ll~ASES
A serine protease is an enzyme which catalyses the hydrolysis of peptide bonds, and in which there is an essen-tial serine residue at the active site (White, Handler and Smith, 1973 "Principles of Biochemistry," Fifth Edition, McGraw-Hill Book Comr~ny, NY, pp. 271-272).
The bacterial serine proteases have molecular weights in the 20,000 to 45,000 range. They are inhibited by diisopropyl-fluorophosphate. They hydrolyse simple t~m; n~ 1 esters and are s;m;l~ in activity to eukaryotic chymotrypsin, also a serine protease. A more narrow term, alkaline protease, covering a sub-group, reflects the high pH optimum of some of the serine proteases, from pH 9.0 to 11.0 (for review, see Priest (1977) Bacteriological Rev. 41 711-753).
A sub-group of the serine proteases tentatively designated subtilases has been proposed by Siezen et al., Protein Engng. 4 (1991) 719-737. They are defined by homology analysis of more than 40 amino acid sequences of serine proteases previously referred to as subtilisin-like proteases. A subtilisin was previously defined as a serine protease produced by Gram-positive bacteria or fungi, and according to Siezen et al. now is a subgroup of the subtilases. A wide variety of subtilisins have been identified, and the amino acid sequence of a number of W 096t34935 . PCT~EP96/01610 subtili3ins have been det~rm; n~l, These include more than six subtilisins ~rom Bacillus strains, namely, subtilisin 168, subtilisin BPN', subtilisin Carlsberg, subtilisin Y, subtilisin amylosacchariticus, and mesentericopeptidase S (Kurihara et al. (1972) ~. Biol. Chem. 247 5629-5631; Wells et al. (1983) Nucleic Acids Res. 11 7911-7925; Stahl and Ferrari (1984) J.Bacteriol. 159 811-819, Jacobs et al.
(1985) Nucl. Acids Res. 13 8913-8926; Nedkov et al. tl985) Biol. Chem. Hoppe-Seyler 366 421-430, Svendsen et al. (1986) 0 FEBS Le~t. 196 228-232), one subtilisin from an actinomycetales, th~rm; tase from Th~ actinoIr~ces vulgaris (Meloun et al. (1985) FEBS Lett. 198 195-200), and one ~ungal subtilisin, proteinase K from Triti~achium album (Jany and Mayer (1985) Biol.Chem. Hoppe-Seyler 366 584-492).
lS for further reference Table I from Siezen et al. has been reproduced below.
Subtilisins are well-characterized physically and chemically. In addition to knowledge of the primary struc-ture (amino acid sequence) of these enzymes, over 50 high resolution X-ray structures of subtilisins have been deter-mined which delineate the binding o~ substrate, transition state, products, at least three different protease inhibitors, and define the structural consequences for natural variation (Kraut (1977) Ann. Rev. Biochem. 46 331-25 358).
In the context of this application substrate should be interpreted in its broadest form as comprising a compound cont~;n;ng at least one peptide bond susceptible to hydrolysis by a subtilisin protease.
Also the expression "product" should in the context of this invention be interpreted to include the products of a hydrolysis reaction involving a subtilisin ~ protease. A product may be the substrate in a subsequent hydrolysis reaction.
~ 35 One subgroup of the subtilases, I-Sl, comprises the "classical" subtilisins, such as subtilisin 168, subtilisin BPN', subtilisin Carlsberg (ALCALASE~, NOVO
NORDISK A/S), and subtilisin DY.

A further subgroup of the subtilases I-S2, is recognised by Siezen et al. (supra). Sub-group I-S2 proteases are described as highly alkaline subtilisins and comprise enzymes such as subtilisin PB92 (l!~rA~Z~ T~ Gist-~rocades NV), subtilisin 309 (SAVINASE~, NOVO NORDISK A/S),subtilisin 147 (ESPERASE~, NOVO NORDISK A/S), and alkaline elastase YaB.
In the context of this invention, a subtilase variant or mutated subtilase means a subtilase that has been produced by an org~ni~m which is expressing a mutant gene derived ~rom a parent microorganism which possessed an original or parent gene and which produced a corresponding parent enzyme, the parent gene having been mutated in order to produce the mutant gene from which said mutated subtilisin protease is produced when expressed in a suitable host.
RAn~nm and site-directed mutations of the subtilase gene have both arisen from knowledge o~ the physical and chemical properties of the enzyme and contributed information relating to subtilase's catalytic activity, substrate specificity, tertiary structure, etc.
(Wells et al. (1987) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 84; 1219-1223; Wells et al. (1986) Phil. Trans. R. Soc. ~ond.A. 317 415-423; Hwang and Warshel (1987) Biochem. 26 2669-2673; Rao et al., (1987) Nature 328 551-554.
More recent publications covering this area are Carter et al. (1989) Proteins 6 240-248 relating to design o~ variants that cleave a specific target sequence in a substrate (positions 24 and 64); Graycar et al. (1992) Armals of the New York Academy of Sciences 672 71- 79 discussing a number of previously published results; and Takagi (1993) Int. ~. Biochem. 25 307-312 also reviewing previous results.
Especially site-directed mutagenesis of the subti-lisin genes has attracted much attention, and various muta-tions are described in the following patent applications and patents:
EP-A-130 756 (GENENTECH)(corresponding to US

W 096134935 PCTAE~96/01610 Reissue Patent No. 34,606 (GENENCOR)) relating to site specific or r~n~nmly generated mutations in "carbonyl hydrola~es" and subsequent screening of the mutated enzymes for various properties, such as kCa~/~ ratio, pH-activity profile, and oxidation stability. This publication reveals that site-specific mutation is feasible, and that mutation of subtilisin BPN' in certain specified positions, i.e. ~
Tyr, 2Asp, 155Asn, l04Tyr, 222Met, l66Gly 64His l69Gly l89ph 33Ser 22lSer 2l7Tyr 156Glu or l52Ala, provide for enzymes exhibiting altered properties. Since these positions all except position -1 were known to be involved in the ~unctioning of the enzyme prior to the filing of the application, and therefore evident to select, this application does not contribute much to solving the problem lS of deciding where to introduce mutations in order to obtain enzymes with desired properties.
EP-A-214 435 (H~:NK~:I.) relating to cloning and expression of subtilisin Carlsberg and two mutants thereof.
In this application no reason for mutation of ls8Asp to l53Ser and l6lSer to l6lAsp is provided In International patent publication WO-A-87/04461 (AMGEN) it is proposed to reduce the number of Asn-Gly seque~ces present in the parent enzyme in order to obtain mutated enzymes exhibiting improved pH and heat stabilities, in the application ~mph~is is put on removing, mutating, or modifying the l09Asn and the 2l3Asn residues in subtilisin BPN~. No examples are provided for any deletions or for modifying the Gly-residues.
International patent publication WO-A-87/05050 (GENEX) discloses r~n~om mutation and subsequent screening of a large number of mutants of subtilisin BPN' for improved properties. In the application mutations are described in 218A 13lGly 254Thr 166Gly, ll6Ala, 138Ser, Leu, and 53Ser.
In EP-A-251 446 (GENENCOR) it is described how homolog~ considerations at both primary and tertiary struc~ural levels may be applied to identify equivalent amino acid residues whether conserved or not. This W 096/34935 . PCTAEP96/01610 information together with the inventors knowledge of the tertiary structure o~ subtilisin BPN~ lead the inventors to select a number of positions susceptible to mutation with an expectation of obt~; n; ng mutants with altered properties.
The positions so identified are: l24Met, 222Met, l04T~r, ls2Ala, 156 l l66Gl l69Gly l89Phe, 2l'Tyr. Also l5sAsn, Tyr, Thr, ~Ser 32Asp 33Ser 36A~3p, 46Gly, 48Ala, 49Ser, s~Met, 7'Asn~
~Ser, 94~ys, 95Val, 96Leu, l07Ile, ll~Gly, l70Lys l7lTyr l72pro l97 199Met 204Ser 2l3Lys and 22lSer, which positions are identified as being expected to influence various properties of the enzyme. Also, a number of mutations are exemplified to support these suggestions. In addition to single mutations in these positions the inventors also performed a number of multiple mutations. Further the inventors identify 2lsGly, 67His, l26Leu, l3sLeu, and amino acid residues within the segments 97-103, 126-129, 213-215, and 152-172 as having interest, but mutations in any of these positions are not exemplified.
Especially of interest for the purpose of the present invention the inventors of EP-A-251 446 suggest to substitute l70Lys (in subtilisin BPN', type I-S1), specifically they suggest to introduce Glu or Arg for the original Lys. It appears that the Glu variant was produced and it was found that it was highly susceptible to autolytic degradation (cf. pages 48, 121, 123 (Table XXI includes an obvious error, but indicates a reduction in autolysis halftime from 86 to 13 minutes) and Fig. 32).
EP-A-260 105 (GENENCOR) describes modification of certain properties in enzymes cont~;n;ng a catalytic triad by selecting an amino acid residue within about 15 A from the catalytic triad and replace the selected amino acid residue with another residue. Enzymes of the subtilase type described in the present specification are specifically mentioned as belonging to the class of enzymes cont~; n; ng a catalytic triad. In subtilisins positions 222 and 217 are indicated as preferred positions for replacement.
Also, it has been shown by Thomas, Russell, and Fersht (1985) Nature 318 375-376 that ~r~h~nge of 99Asp into 99Ser in subtilisin BPN' changes the pH dependency o~ the enzyme.
In a subsequent article (1987) J. Mol. Biol. 193 803-813, the same authors also discuss the substitution o~
l56Ser in place of l56Glu. Both these mutations are within a distance of about 15A from the active 64His.
In Nature 328 496-500 (1987) Russel and Fersht discus~ the results of their experiments and present rules for changing pH-activity profiles by mutating an enzyme to obtain changes in surface charge.
WO-A-88/08028 (Genex) and WO-A-88/08033 (Amgen) both relate to modifications o~ amino acid residues in the calcium binding sites of subtilisin BPN ' . The enzyme is said to be stabilized by substituting more negatively charged residues ~or the original ones.
In WO-A-89/06279 (NOVO NORDISK A/S) position 170 is indicated as interesting and it is suggested to replace the existing residue with Tyr. However, no data are given in respect of such a variant. In WO-A-91/00345 (NOVO NORDISK
A/S) the same suggestion is made, and it is shown that the Tyr variant of position 170 in subtilisin 309 (type I-S2) exhibits an improved wash performance in detergents at a pH
of about 8 (variant S003 in Tables III, IV, V, VI, VIII, X).
The same substitution in combination with other substitutions in other positions also indicates an improved wash performance(S004, S011-S014, S022-S024, S019, S020, S203, S225, S227 in the same table and Table VII) all in accordance with the generic concept of said application.
In EP-A-525 610 (SOLVAY) it is suggested to improve the stability of the enzyme (a type I-S2 subtilase closely related to subtilisin PB92) towards ionic tensides by decreasing the hydrophobicity in certain surface regions ~ thereof. It is consequently suggested to substitute Gln for the Arg in position 164 (170 if using BPN~ numbering). No variants comprising this substitution are disclosed in the application.
In WO-A-94/02618 (GIST-BROCADES N.V.) a number o~
position 164 (170 if using BPN' numbering) variants of the W 096/3493S . L~1/~96/01610 I-S2 type subtilisin PB92 are described. Examples are provided showing substitution of Met, Val, Tyr, Ile, for the original Arg. Wash performance testing in powder detergents of the variants indicates a slight imp~uv~llent~
S Especially for the Ile variant wash perform~nce tests on cacao an i~..~.~ve...ellt of about 20-30~ is indicated. No stability data are provided.

lNL~ ~IAL APPL.ICATIONS OF ~;UD~ C1Z~
Proteases such as subtilisins have found much utility in industry, particularly in detergent formulations, as they are useful for removing proteinaceous stains.
At present at least the following proteases are known to be commercially available and many of them are marketed in large quantities in many countries of the world:
Subtilisin BPN' or Novo, available from e.g.
SIGMA, St. Louis, U.S.A.
Subtilisin Carlsberg, marketed by NOVO NORDISK A/S
(Denmark) as AIICAI~SE~ and by IBIS (Holland) as MA~Z~TA~C~E0;
Both of these belong to subtilase subgroup I-Sl.
Among the subtilase sub-group I-S2 the following are known to be marketed:
A Bacillus lentus subtilisin, subtilisin 309, marketed by NOVO NORDISK A/S (Denmark) as SAVINASE0. A
protein engineered variant of this enzyme is marketed as DURAZYM~.
Enzymes closely resembling SAVINASE~, such as subtilisin PB92, MAXACAL~ marketed by Gist-Brocades N.V. (a protein engineered variant of this enzyme is marketed as MAXAPEM~), OPTICLEAN~ marketed by SOLVAY et Cie. and PURAFECT~ marketed by ~N~N-~OR International.
A Bacillus lentus subtilisin, subtilisin 147, marketed by NOVO NORDISK A/S (Denmark) as ESPERASE~;
To be effective, however, such enzymes must not only exhibit activity under washing conditions, but must also be compatible with other detergent components during detergent production and storage.

For example, subtilisins may be used in combination with other enzymes active against other substrates, and the selected subtilisin should possess stability towards such enzymes, and also the selected subtilisin preferably should not catalyze degradation of the other enzymes. Also, the chosen subtilisin should be resista~t to the action from other components in the deter~ent formulation, such as bleaching agents, oxidizing agents, etc., in particular an enzyme to be used in a deter-gent formulation should be stable with respect to the oxidi-zing power, calcium binding properties, and pH conditions rendered by the non-enzymatic components in the detergent during storage and in the wash liquor during wash.
The ability o~ an enzyme to catalyze the degradation of various naturally occurring substrates present on the objects to be cleaned during e.g. wash is o~ten re~erred to as its washing ability, washability, deteryency, or wash perform~nce~ Throughout this application the term wash performance will be used to encompass this property.
The ability of an enzyme to remain active in the presence o~ other components o~ a detergent composition prior to being put to use (nor~ly by adding water in the washing process) is usually referred to as storage stability or shel~ e. It is o~ten measured as hal~-life, t*. We will use the expression storage stability for this property throughout this application to enC~mr~s this property.
Naturally occurring subtilisins have been found to possess properties which are highly variable in relation to their washing power or ability under variations in parame-ters such as pH. Several of the above marketed detergent proteases, indeed, have a better performance than those ~ marketed about 20 years ago, but for optimal per~ormance each enzyme has its own specific conditions regarding formulation and wash conditions, e.g. pH, temperature, ionic strength (=I), active system (tensides, surfactants, bleaching agent, etc.), builders, etc.

W 096/34935 PCTAEP96/01610 1~
As a consequence it is found that an enzyme possessing desirable properties at low pH and low I may be less attractive at more alkaline conditions and high I, or an enzyme exhibiting fine properties at high pH and high I
may be less attractive at low pH, low I conditions.
Also, it has been found that the storage stability differs between the enzymes, but it has further been found that a specific enzyme exhibits large variations in storage stability in respect of di~ferent detergent formulations, dependent upon a number of parameters, such as pH, pI, bleach system, tensides, etc., and upon the physical state of the detergent compositions, which may be in powder, dust, or liquid form. Furth~rmnre it may be concentrated or dilute.
lS The advent and development of recombinant DNA
techniques has had a profound influence in the field of protein rh~;stry, Through the application of this technology it is possible now to construct enzymes having desired amino acid sequences, and as indicated above a ~air amount of research has been devoted to designing subtilisins with altered properties.
Among the proposals the technique of producing and screening a large number of mutated enzymes as described in EP-A-130 756 (~N~Nl~CH) (US Reissue Patent No. 34,606 (~N~N~O~) ) and International patent publ. no. WO-A-87/05050 (GEN-EX) correspond to a large extend to the classical method of isolating native enzymes, submit them to classical mutagenesis programs (using radiation or chemical mutagens) and screen them for their properties. The difference lies in that these methods are more efficient through the knowledge of the presence of a large number of variant enzymes substituted in a specific position.
A subtilisin enzyme typically comprises about 275 amino acid residues. Each residue is capable of being 1 out of 20 possible naturally occurring amino acids. Therefore one very serious draw-back in that procedure is the very large number o~ mutations generated that have to be ll submitted to a number of prel;m;n~ry screenings to determine their properties.
A procedure as outlined in these patent applications will consequently only be slightly better than the traditional r~n~nm mutation procedures which have been known for years.
The other known techni~ues relate to changing specific properties, such as oxidation stability, ~hPrm~1 stability, Ca-stability, transesterification and hydrolysis rate (E~-A-260 105 (~N~OR)), pH-activity profile (Thomas, Russell, and Fersht, supra), and substrate specificity (International patent publ. WO-A-88/07578 (~N~l~CH)). None of these publications relates to changing either the wash perfol~m~nce of enzymes or their storage stability.
In International Patent Application no. PCT/DK
88/00002 (NOVO NORDISK A/S) it is proposed to use the concept of homology comparison to determ;n~ which amino acid positions should be selected for mutation and which amino acids should be substituted in these positions in order to obtain a desired change in wash perform~nce.
By using such a procedure the task of screening is reduced drastically, since the number of mutants generated is much smaller, but with that procedure it is only foreseen that enzymes exhibiting the combined useful properties of the parent enzyme and the enzyme used in the comparison may be obt~;n~
Thus, as indicated above no relationship has yet been identified between well defined properties of an enzyme such as those mentioned above and the wash performance and storage stability of an enzyme in various detergent compositions.
The problem seems to be that although much research has been directed at revealing the mech~n;~m of enzyme activity, still only little is known about the factors in structure and amino acid residue combination that deterM;ne the properties, such as storage stability in detergents, of enzymes in relation to most of their characteristics, especially when the enzymes are present in complex mixtures.
Conseguently, there still exists a need for ~urther improvement and tailoring of enzymes to detergent systems, as well as a better underst~n~;ng of the mech~n;~m S of protease action and degradation in the practical use of cleaning or detergent compositions. Such an understAn~;ng could result in rules which may be applied for selecting mutations that with a reasonable degree of certainty will result in an enzyme exhibiting improved storage stability and/or performance under specified conditions in a detergent composition.

STlMMA~ OF T~E lNV~ ON
It has now surprisingly been found that a subtilase variant having improved storage stability and/or improved performance in detergent compositions can be obt~;n~ by substituting one or more amino acid residues situated in, or in the vicinity of a hydrophobic ~nm~;n of the parent subtilase for an amino acid residue more hydrophobic than the original residue, said hydrophobic ~om~;n comprising the residues corresponding to residues P129, P131, I165, Y167, Y171 of BLS309 (in BASBPN
numbering), and said residues in the vicinity thereof comprises residues corresponding to the residues E136, G159, S164, S164, R170, A194 and 195 of BLS309 (in BASBPN
numbering), with the exception of the R170M, R170I and R170V
variants of BABP92.
The present invention relates consequently in its first aspect to enzyme variants exhibiting improved stability and/or wash performance in detergents, in particular in liquid detergents, especially concentrated liquid detergents, and in soap bars.
In its second aspect the invention relates to DNA
constructs capable of expressing the enzymes of the first aspect, when inserted in a suitable manner into a host cell that subsequently is brought to express the subtilisin en-zyme(s) of the first aspect.
In a third aspect the invention relates to the W 096/34935 PCT~EP96/01610 production o~ the subtilisin enzymes o~ the invention by inserting a DNA construct according to the second aspect into a suitable host, cultivating the host to express the desired subtilase enzyme, and recovering the enzyme product.
The invention relates, in part, but is not limited to, mutants of the genes expressing the subtilase sub-group I-S2 enzymes and the ensuing enzyme variants, as indicated above.
Other subtilase gene variants encompassed by the invention are such as those o~ the subtilase subgroup I-S1, e.g. Subtilisin BPN', and Subtilisin Carlsberg genes and ensuing variant Subtilisin BPNI, Proteinase K, and Subtilisin Carlsberg enzymes, which exhibit improved stability and/or wash performance in detergents.
Still ~urther subtilase gene variants encompassed by the invention are such as Proteinase K and other genes and ensuing variant Proteinase K, and other subtilase enzymes~ which exhibit improved stability and/or performance in detergents.
Other examples of parent subtilase enzymes that can be modi~ied in accordance with the invention are listed in Table I.
Further the invention relates to the use o~ the mutant enzymes in cleaning compositions and cleaning compositions comprising the mutant enzymes, especially detergent compositions comprising the mutant subtilisin enzymes. Specifically the invention relates to liquid detergent compositions, especially concentrated liquid detergents and to soap bars comprising such enzyme variants.

~P.R~;!VIATIONS
AMINO ACIDS
A = Ala = ~l~n;n~
V = Val = Valine S L = Leu = Leucine I = Ile = Isoleucine P = Pro = Proline F = Phe = Phenyl~l~n~ne W = Trp = Tryptophan M = Met = Methionine G = Gly = Glycine S = Ser = Serine T = Thr = Threonine C = Cys = Cysteine 1~ Y = Tyr = Tyrosine N = Asn = Asparagine Q = Gln = Glut~m;ne D = Asp = Aspartic Acid E = Glu = Glutamic Acid K = Lys = Lysine R = Arg = Arginine H = His = Histidine NUCLEIC ACID BASES
A = ~n;ne G = Gll~n;ne C = Cytosine T = Thymine (only in DNA) U = Uracil (only in RNA) VARIANTS
In describing the various enzyme variants produced or contemplated according to the invention, the following nomenclatures have been adapted for ease o~ reference:
Original amino acid(s) - position(s) - substituted amino acid(s).
According to this the substitution o~ Glutamic acid for glycine in position 195 is designated as:

1~
Gly 195 Glu or G195E
a deletion of glycine in the same position is:
Gly 195 * or G195*
and insertion of an additional amino acid residue such as lysine is:
Gly 195 GlyLys or G195GK

Where a deletion is indicated in Table I, or present in a subtilisin not indicated in Table I, an insertion in such a position is indicated as:
* 36 Asp or *36D
~or insertion of an aspartic acid in position 36.
Multiple mutations are separated by pluses, i.e.:
Ary 170 Tyr + Gly 195 Glu or R170Y+G195E
representing mutations in positions 170 and 195 substituting tyrosine and glutamic acid for arginine and glycine, respec-tively.

POSITIONS
In describing the variants in this application and in the ,appended claims use is made of the alignment of various subtilases in Siezen et al., Supra. In other publications relating to subtilases other alignments or the numbering of speci~ic enzymes have been used. It is a routine matter for the skilled person to establish the position of a specific residue in the numbering used here.
Reference is also made to Fig. 1 showing an alignment of residues relevant for the present invention from a large number of subtilases. Reference is also made to Table I of WO-A-91/00345 showing an alignment of residues relevant for the present invention from a large number of subtilases.

W 096/34935 PCT~EP96/01610 TABLE I
Presently establ J7 ~he~ Subtila~es (from Siezen et al. ~ supra) Organism cDNA,gene enzyme acronym Bacteria: Gram-~ositive Bacillus subtilis 168 apr A subt;~;sin I168,apr ABSS168 R~C~; 7 7~c amylolic7uefacienS apr 81lht; ~ i 8in BPN'(NOVO) BASBPN
10 Bacillus subtilis DY - subt;l;sin DY BSSDY
Bacillus licheniformis + subt;~;sin Carlsberg BLSCAR
R~; 7 7n.c lentus + subt;l;sin 147 BLS147 Bacillus al ~A 7 o~hi 7 US PB92 +
subt;lis;n PB92 BAPB92 15 Bacillus sp. DSM 4828 - AlkAl ;n~ protease BDSM48 ,R~;77--.c YaB ale AlkAl;ne elagtase YaB BYSYAB
Bacillus slbtilis 168 epr min. extracell. prot. BSEPR
Bacillus subtilis bpf bacillopeptidase F BSBPF
R~i77--c subtilis IFO3013 ispl intracell.ser. prot.l BSISP1 20 Bacillus subtilis A50 - intracell.ser. pros. BSIA50 R~; 7 7~.c t-h-uringiensis - extracell. ser. prot. BTFINI
R~i 7 7--.c cereus - extracell. ser. prot. BCESPR
Nocar~;ops;.c dassonvillei - Al7~l;no ser. prot. NDAPII
Th~rm~tinomyces w lgaris - thermitase TVTHER
25 Enterococcus f~ 7; q cylA cytolysin component A EFCYLA
Staphylococc~l.c ep;ç7~r7n;dis epiP ep;~O n lead. prot. SEEPIP
SL~Lococ~ .c ~y~.es scpA C5a peptidase SPSCPA
Lactococc~.c lactis SKll prtP SKll cell wall prot. LLSK11 Bacteria: Gram-neqative 30 Dichelohacter nnr7r.S1-c + basic protease DNEBPR
Xanth~n~.c campestris + extracellular prot. XCEXPR
Serratia marC~ccr~nq + ~Y~A~el 1 . ser. prot. SMEXSP
Th~r~ .c aquaticus YT-1 pstI açlualysin I TAAQUA
Th~r~--C rT41A + T41A protease TRT41A
35 Vibrio alginolyticus proA protease A VAPROA
SL,~LGu.~ces rutgersensis - proteinase D S,~ESPD
Archaea halophilic strain 172Pl - halophil extra. prot ARB172 (Table I, c~nt;n~
40 Organism cDNA,gene enzyme acronym Cvanobacteria An.. h Ir~n~ vari~hi 7 i c prcA Ca-dependent protease AVPRCA
LOWER EUKARYOTES
F~n~i 4~ Tritir~hium albun Lin.~ber + proteinase K TAPROK
Tritirachi~m album + proteinase R TAPROR

W 096134935 PCT~EP96/01610 l~
Trit;~rhium album proT prote~nA~e T TAPROT
Aspergillus oryzae + ~lk~l ;n~ protease AOALPR
M~7h--A--rh~z~ p--7rhF~7 7~ - th~ y~lin MPTE ~
A~ ~ 7m ~ySO9~u~- alp ~ l; n~ protease ACALPR
5 Yeasts Kl~y~. ~ces lactis kexl Kexl ser, protein~e KT~R~
S~hA~o~yces cerevisiae kex2 Kex2 ser. prote;n~e SCKEX2 ~rrh~a~yce5 cerevisiae prbl protease B SCPRBl Yarrowia lipolytica xpr2 alk. ~yt~cell~ prot. YLXPR2 HIGHER EUn~RYOTES
Worms Ç~n~h~h~;tis ~7e~nq bli4 cuticle protease CEBLI4 Insect~
15 Drosopi~i7~ (~ruit fly) ~url ~urin l DMFURl Drosophila (fruit fly) ~ur2 furin 2 DMF~R2 Plants ~ melo (melon) - c~ m~in CMCUCU
r~ 1~:
20 Human (al~o rat, mouse) fur ~urin ~u~I
Human tal~o mouse) + insl-l;- PC2 prot. HSIPC2 Mouse + pituitary PC3 prot NMPPC3 Human + tripeptidyl peptid.II HSTPP

References used for Table I
References to amino acid sequences (GpnR~nk~/EMLRL Data Bank accession numbers are shown in brackets):
ARB172 Kamekura and Seno, (1990) Biochem. Cell Biol. 68 352-359 (amino acid sequencing of mature protease residues 1-35; residue I4 not det~rm; n~
BSS168 Stahl. and Ferrari. (1984) ~. Bacteriol. 158, 411-418 (K01988). Yosh;m~to, Oyama et al. (I488) ~.
Biochem. 103, 1060-1065 (the mature subtilisin ~rom B.subtilis var. amylosacchariticus differs in having T130S and T162S). Svendsen, et al. (1986) FEBS Lett. 196, 228-232 (PIR A23624; amino acid sequencing; the mature alkaline mesentericopeptidase From B. mesentericus differs in having S85A, A88S, S89A. S183A and N259S).
BASBPN Wells, et al. (1983) Nucl.Acids Res. 11 7911-7925 (X00165). Vasantha et al., (1984) ~. Bacteriol.
159 811-814(K02496).

CA 022l7l62 l997-lO-Ol 1~
BSSDY Nedkov et al. (1983) Hoppe-Seyler'S Z. Physiol.
Chem. 364 1537-1540 (PIR A00969; amino acid sequencing).
B~S QR Jacobs et al. (1985) Nucleic Acids Res. 13 8913-8926 (X03341). Smith et al. (1968) J. Biol. Chem.
243 2184-2191 (PIR A00968; amino acid sequencing;
mature protease sequence differs in having T103S, P129A, S158N, N161S and S212N).
B~S147 Hastrup et al. (1989) PCT Patent Appl. WO 8906279.
Pub. July 13 1989. (Esperase~ from B. lentus).
Takami et al. (1990) Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol., 33 519-523 (amino acid sequencing of mature alkaline protease residues 1-20 from Bacillus sp.
no. AH-101; this sequence differs from BLS147 in having NllS).
BABP92 van der Laan et al. (1991) Appl. Environ.
Micro~iol. 57 901-909. (M~xacal~). Hastrup et al.
(1989) PCT Patent Appl. WO 8906279. Pub. 13 Jul 1989. (subtilisin 309. Savinase~, from B. lentus differs only in having N87S). Godette et al.
(1991) Abstracts 5th Protein Society Symposium, June 6, Baltimore: abstract M8 (a high-alkaline protease from B.lentus differs in having N87S, S99D. SlOlR, S103A, V104I and G159S).
25 BDSM48 Rettenmaier et al. (1990) PCT Patent Appl. WO
90/04022. Publ.April 19, 1990.
BYSYAB Kaneko et al. (1989) J. Bacteriol. 171 5232-5236 (M28537).
BSEPR Sloma et al. (1988) J. Bacteriol. 170 5557-5563 (M22407). Bruckner (1990) Mol. Gen. Genet. 221 486-490 (X53307).
BSBPF Sloma et al. (1990) J. Bacteriol. 172 1470-1477 (M29035; corrected). Wu et al. (1990) J.
Biol.Chem. 265 6845-6850 (J05400; this sequence differs in having A169V and 586 less C-term;n~l residues due to a frameshift).
BSISP1 Koide et al. (1986) J. Bacteriol. 167 110-116 (M13760).

l9 BSIA50 Strongin et al. (1978) J. Bacteriol. 133 1401-1411 (amino acid se~l~nc;ng of mature protease residues 1-54; residues 3. 39, 40. 45, 46, 49 and 50 not det~m;n~) S ~ 'lNJ Chestukhina et al. (1985) Biokhimiya 50 1724-1730 (amino acid se~l~nc;ng o~ mature protease residues 1-14 from B. thuringiensis variety israeliensis, and residues 1-16 and 223-243 from ~ariety finitimus). Kunitate et al. (1989) Agric. Biol.
0 Chem. 53 3251-3256 (amino acid sequencing of mature protease residues 6-20 from variety kurstaki. BTKu~S).
BCESP~ Chestllkhin~ et al. (1985) Biokhimiya 50 1724-1730 (amino acid se~uencing of mature residues 1-16 and 1~ 223-243).
NDAPI~ Tsujibo et al. (1990) Agric. Biol. Chem. 54 2177-2179 (amino acid sequencing of mature residues 1-26).
'l'V'l'll~;K Meloun et al. (1985) FEBS I,ett. 183 195-200 (PIR
A00973; amino acid sequencing of mature protease residues 1-274).
EFCYhA Segarra et al. (1991) Infect. Immun. 59 1239-1246.
SEEPIP Schnell et al. (1991) personal c~mmlln;cation (Siezen et al. (supra)).
25 SPSCPA Chen et al. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265 3161-3167 (J05224).
DNEBPR Kortt et al. (1991) Abstracts 5th Protein Society Symposium, June 22-26, Baltimore.abstract S76.
LLSK11 Vos et al. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264 13579-13585 (J04962). Kok et al. (1988) Appl. Environ.
Microbiol. 54 231-238 (M24767; the sequence from strain Wg2 differs in 44 positions, including 18 - differences in the protease ~om~in, and a deletion of residues 1617-1676). Kiwaki et al. (1989) 35 Mol.Microbiol... 3 359-369 (X14130; the sequence from strain NCD0763 differs in 46 positions, including 22 in the protease domain, and a deletion of residues 1617-1676).
XCEXPR ~iu et al. (I990) Mol. Gen. Genet. 220 433-440.
SMEXSP Yanagida et al. (1986) J. Bacteriol. 166 937-994 (M13469).
TAAQUA Terada et al. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265 6576-6581 (J054I4).
TRT41A McHale et al. (1990) Abstracts 5th Eur. Congr.
Biotechn. Christiansen, Munck and Villadsen (eds), Munksgaard Int. Publishers, Copenhagen.
VAPROA Deane et al. (1989) Gene 76 281-288 (M25499).
10 SRESPD Lavrenova et al. (1984) Biochemistry USSR. 49 447-454 (amino acid sequencing o~ residues 1-23;
residues 13, 18 and 19 not detPrm~n~) AVPRCA Maldener et al (1991) Mol. Gen. Genet. 225 113-120 (the published sequence has 28 uncertain residues near position 200-210 due to a frAmesh;~t reading error).
TAPROK Gunkel and Gassen (1989) Eur. J. Biochem. 179 185-194 (X14688/XI4689). Jany et al. (1986) J. Biol.
Chem.Hoppe-Seyler 367 87(PIR A24541; amino acid sequencing; mature protease dif~ers in having S745G, SILST204-208DSL and VNLL264-267FN~).
TAPROR Samal et al. (1990) Mol. Microbiol. 4 1789-1792 (X56116).
TAPROT Samal et al. (1989) Gene 85 329-333.
25 AOA~PR Tatsumi et al. (1989) Mol. Gen. Genet. 219 33-38.
Cheev~h~n~ah et al. (1991) EMBL Data hibrary (X54726).
MPTHMY Gaucher and Stevenson (1976) Methods Enzymol. 45 4I5-433 (amino acid sequencing of residues 1-28,and hexapeptide LSGTSM with active si~e serine).
ACA~PR Isogai et al. (1991) Agric. Biol. Chem. 55 47I-477. Stepanov et al. (1986) Int. J. Biochem. 18 369-375 (amino acid sequencing o~ residues 1-27:
the mature protease di~ers in having H13[1]Q, R13t2]N and S13[6]A).
KT.K~l Tanguy-Rougeau, Wesolowski-Louvel and Fukuhara (1988) FEBS lett. 234 464-470 (X07038).

SCKEX2 Mizuno et al. (1988) Biochem. Biophys. Res.
~ ". 156 246-254(M24201).
SCPRBl Moehle et al. (1987) Mol. Cell. Biol. 7 4390-4399 (M18097).
S YLXYPR2 Davidow et al. (1987) J. Bacteriol. 169 4621-4629 ~M17741). Matoba et al. (1988) Mol. Cell Biol. 8 4904-4916 (M23353).
CEBL14 Peters and Rose (1991) The Worm Breeder's Gazette 11 28.
10 DMFUR1 Roebroek et al. (1991) FEBS Lett. 289 133-137 (X59384).
DMEUR2 Roebroek et al. (1992) 267 17208-17215.
CMCUCU ~Ane~ et al. (1984) J. Biochem. 95 825-829 (amino acid se~uencing o~ octapeptide NIISGTSM with lS active site serine).
HSFURI van den Ouweland et al. (1990) Nucl. Acids ~es. 18 664 (X04329) (the sequence o~ mouse ~urin di~ers in 51 positions, including five in the catalytic ~nm~;n A15E, Y21F, S223F, A232V and N258[2]D).
Misumi et al. (1990) Nucl. Acids Res. 18 6719 (X55660: the sequence of rat furin differs in 49 positions, including three in the catalytic ~nm~; n: A15E, Y2lF, H24R).
HSIPC2 Smeekens and Steiner (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265 2997-3000 (J05252). Seidah et al. (1990) DN~ Cell Biol. 9 415-424 (the sequence of mouse pituitary PC2 protease differs in 23 positions,including seven in the protease ~nm~tn: I4F, S42[2]Y, E45D, N76S, D133E, V134L and G239[1]D).
30 MMPPC3 Smeekens et al. (1991) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
88 340-344 (M58507). Seidah et al. (1990) DNA Cell Biol. 9 415-424 (M55668/M55669; partial sequence).
HSTPP Tomkinson and Jonsson (l991) Biochemistry 30 168-174 (J05299).
3~

W O 96t34935 PCTAEP96/01610 2~
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF T~ FIG~RES
In the drawings, Fig. 1 shows an alignment of a number of the subtilases mentioned in Table I;

S Fig. 2 is a 3-~;m~ional representation of subtilisin 309 showing the location of the hydrophobic ~nm~; n and some the amino acid residues in the vicinity thereof to be substituted according to the invention.

DET~TT~!n DESCRIPTION OF T~IE lWV ~.~ lON
It has surprisingly been ~ound that the storage stability and/or performance of subtilases in detergents is improved when amino acid residues situated in the vicinity of a hydrophobic ~om~;n comprising the residues P129, P131, I165, Y167, Y171 of subtilisin 309 are substituted for a more hydrophobic residue. The residues in question are especially E136, G159, S164, R170, A194, and G195.
Fig. 2 shows the hydrophobic ~nm~; n in subtilisin 309 and residues in the vicinity thereof a number o~ which are to be substituted in order to increase the hydrophobicity of the ~nm~; n . This may be achieved by substituting hydrophobic residues for non-hydrophobic residues and/or by substituting residues to become even more hydrophobic than in the parent enzyme.
The same principle applies to the corresponding hydrophilic ~nm~; n in other subtilases, the identification of which is within the skills of the average person working in this technical field. Graphic representations like the one in Fig. 2 can be produced for other subtilases to det~rm;ne the target residues to be substituted according to the invention.
A number hereof is indicated in Table II below:

Table II
residues in hydrophobic ~om~; n and in the vicinity thereo~

Pos\Enz. BASBP~ BLSCAR BLS309 BLS147 'l'V'l'~
5 rl~m;~; n 167 y Y Y Y Y

Vicinity Table II was constructed using the alignment shown in Fig.
2. It is obvious that s~m; l~r or larger tables covering other subtilases may easily be produced by the skilled person.
Consequently, the invention relates to subtilase variants in which the amino acid sequence has been changed through mutating the gene o~ the subtilisin enzyme, which it is desired to modify (the parent enzyme or gene), in the codon responsible ~or the expression o~ the amino acid residue in positions 129, 131, 165, 167, 171, 136, 159, 164, 170, 194, and 195, which residues are more hydrophobic than the residue(s) in the parent enzyme, especially such hydrophobic residues that comprise a relatively long =

W 096/34935 PCT~P96/01610 hydrophobic chain, such as Ile, Leu, and Val, whereby, when the mutated gene is expressed, the amino acid residue is substituted by a more hydrophobic residue, which increases the hydrophobicity of the ~om~; n as such.
S Hydrophobic amino acid residues are generally the ~ollowing: Val (V), Ile (I), heu (L), Met (M), Phe (F), Pro (P) and Trp(W). Among these Val, Ile and Leu are preferred.
By looking at Table II and applying the principle o~ the invention a number o~ candidates for substitution become clear.
For both BASBPN and BLSCAR it seems appropriate to make substitutions in positions 136, 159, 164, 167, 170 and 195. In BLS309 positions 136, 164, 167 and 170 would be the first choices, and positions 159 and 195 also would be a second choice. In BLS147 positions 136, 167, 170, and 195 are the first choice, while positions 159 and 164 are second. Finally, in 'l'V'l'~l~;K positions 136, 167 and 194 are the first choices, with 164 as a second one.
According to the invention it would entail an advantage to substitute the Gly residues in the hydrophobic ~nm~; n to bulkier and more hydrophobic residues.
Such considerations apply for any hydrophilic or hydrophobic residue that may occupy any of the above mentioned position, m~n;ng that any increase in hydrophobicity seems to be advantageous. This means that e.g. a very hydrophilic residue such as the charged residues Arg (R), Asp (D), Glu (E) or Lys (K) may be substituted by any residue that is less hydrophilic. Such less hydrophilic residues comprises the residues Gly (G), Cys (C), Ser (S), Ala (A), Thr (T), Tyr (Y), Gln (Q), His (H) or Asn (N).
Similar considerations can be applied to other subtilases having a hydrophobic ~m~; n in this part o~ the surface of the enzyme.
In the context of this invention a subtilase is defined in accordance with Siezen et al . supra . In a more narrow sense, applicable to many embodiments o~ the invention, the subtilases of interest are those belonging to the subgroups I-S1 and I-S2. In a more speci~ic sense, many W O 96/34~35 PCTAEP96/01610 2~
o~ the embo~m~nts o~ the invention relate to serine proteases of gram-positive bacteria which can be brought into substantially unambiguous homology in their primary structure, with the subtilases listed in Table I above.
The present invention also comprises any one or more substitutions in the above mentioned positions in combination with any other substitution, deletion or addition to the amino acid sequence of the parent enzyme.
Especially combinations with other substitutions known to~0 provide i~ uved properties to the enzyme are envisaged.
Such combinations comprise the positions: 222 (improve oxidation stability), 218 (improves th~rm~l stabil.ity), substitutions in the Ca-binding sites stabilising the enzyme, e.g. position 76, and many other apparent ~rom the prior art. Furthermnre, combinations with the variants mentioned in EP-A-405 901 are also contemplated speci~ically.

VARIAMTS
A: Single variants:
Subtil.isin BPN', Subtilisin Carlsberg, Subtilisin 168, and Subtilisin DY variants:
K136V, K136I, K136L, K136M, K136F, S159V, S159I, S159L, S159M, S159F, T164V, T164I, T164~, T164M, T164F, K170V, K170I, K170L, K170M, K170F, E195V, E195I, E195~, E195M, E195F, Thermitase variants:
Q136V, Q136I, Q136~, Q136M, Q136F, T159V, T159I, T159L, T159M, T159F, A164V, A164I, A164L, A164M, A164F, Y167V, Y167I, Y167L, Y167M, Y167F, Y170V, Y170I, Y170L, Y170M, Y170F, S194V, S194I, S194L, S194M, S194F, Subtilisin 309, Subtilisin 147, and Bacillus PB92 protease variants:

Z~
E136V, E136I, E136L, E136M, E136F, G159V, G159I, G159L, G159M, G159F, G164V, G164I, G164L, G164M, G164F, (BLS147) S164V, S164I, S164L, S164M, S164F, (B~S309 AND BAPB92) Y167V, Y167I, Y167L, Y167M, Y167F, R170V, R170I (both discl~;m~ for PAPB92), R170L, R170M (diScl~;m~ for PAPB92), R170F, R170G, R170C, A194V, A194I, A194L, A194M, A194F, (BLS309 AND BAPB92) P194V, P194I, P194L, P194M, P194F, (BLS147) E195V, E195I, E195L, E195M, E195F, (BLS147) G195V, G195I, G195L, G195M, G195F, (BLS309 AND BAPB92) B: Combination Variants:

Any of the above variants are contemplated to prove advantageous if combined with other variants in any of the positions: 27, 36, 57, 76, 101, 104, 123, 218, 222, 224 and 274.
Specifically the following BhS309 variants are considered appropriate for combination:
K27R, *36D, S57P, N76D, SlOlG, V104A, V104N, V104Y, N123S, A194P, Q206E, N218S, M222S, M222A, T224S and T274A.
2S Also such variants comprising any one or two of the substitutions X167L, X167I, X170L, and/or X170I in combination with.any one or more of the other substitutions, deletions and/or insertions mentioned above are advantageous.
Furth~rmore, variants comprising any of the variants V104N+SlOlG, K27R+V104Y+N123S+T274A, or N76D+V104A, in combination with any one or more of the substitutions, deletions and/or insertions mentioned above are deemed to exhibit improved properties.
Specific combinations to be mentioned are:
a) S57P+R170L
a') S57P+R170I
b) R170L+N218S

W 096/34935 PCT~EP96~0I610 b') R170I+N218S
c) S57P+R170L+N218S
c') S57P+R170I+N218S
c'') S57P+V104Y+R170L+N218S
c''') S57P+V104Y+R170I+N218S
d) R170L+N218S+M222A
d') R170I+N218S+M222S
d") R170L+N218S+M222A
d'") R170I+N218S+M222S
e) S57P+R170L+S188P+A194P
e') S57P+R170I+S188P+A194P
f) Y167L+R170L
fl) Y167~+R170I
g) Y167I+R170L
g') Y167I+R170I
h) N76D+R170L+N218S
h') N76D+R170I+N218S
i) S57P+N76D+R170L+N218S
i') S57P+N76D+R170I+N218S
j) N76D+R170L+N218S+M222A
j') N76D+R170I+N218S+M222S
jll) N76D+R170L+N218S+M222A
j n I ) N76D+R170L+N218S+M222S
k) S57P+R170I+S188P+A194P+N218S
k') S57P+R170I+S188P+A194P+N218S
1) *36D+N76D+H120D+R170L+G195E+K235L
l') *36D+N76D+H12OD+R170I+G195E+K235L
m) N76D+H120D+R170L+G195E+K235L
m') N76D+H120D+R170I+G195E+K235L
n) *36D+G97N+V104Y+H120D+R170L+A194P+G195E+K235L
n') *36D+G97N+V104Y+H120D+R170I+A194P+G195E+K235L
o) S57P+R170L+Q206E
o') S57P+R170I+Q206E
p) R170L+Q206E
. 35 p') R170I+Q206E
q) Y167I+R170L+Q206E
q') Y167I+R170I+Q206E
r) Y167F+R170L

CA 022l7l62 1997-lO-Ol W 096/34935 PCT~EP96/01610 Z~
r') Y167F+R170I
t) Y167I+R170LIAl94P
t') Y167I+R170I+A194P
u) Y167I+R170L+N218S
u) Y167I+R170I+N218S
v) Y167I+R170L+A194P+N218S
v') Y167I+R170I+A194P+N218S
x) R170L+P131V
x') R170I+P131V
l0 y) *36D+Y167I+R170L
y') *36D+Y167I+R170I
z) Y167I+Y171I
aa) Y167V+R170L
aa') Y167V+R170I
DETERGENT COMPOSITIONS COMPRISING THE MUTANT ENZYMES
The present invention also comprises the use of the mutant enzymes of the invention in cleaning and detergent compositions and such compositions comprising the mutant subtilisin enzymes. Such cleaning and detergent compositions can in principle have any physical form, but the subtilase variants are preferably incorporated in liquid detergent compositions or in detergent compositions in the form of bars, tablets, sticks and the like for direct application, wherein they exhibit improved enzyme stability.
Among the detergent compositions of the present invention are first of all liquid detergents, especially aqueous liquid detergents having for example a homogeneous physical character, e.g. they can consist of a micellar solution of surfactants in a continuous aqueous phase, so-called isotropic liquids.
Alternatively and preferably, they can have a heterogeneous physical phase and they can be structured, for example they can consist of a dispersion of lamellar droplets in a continuous aqueous phase, for example comprising a deflocculating polymer having a hydrophilic backbone and at least one hydrophobic side chain, as described in EP-A-346 995 (Unilever) (incorporated herein by W O 96134935 r~l/~96lol6lo reference). These latter liquids are heterogeneous and may r~nt~; n suspended solid particles such as particles o~
builder materials e.g. of the kinds mentioned below.
Preferably, the liquid cleaning and detergent S compositions of the invention should have a high electrolyte concentration, such as described in EP-A-328 177, EP-A-359 308, EP A-328 176, EP-A-346 995 (all Unilever).
Such compositions comprise in addition to any one or more of the subtilisin enzyme variants in accordance to any of the preceding aspects o~ the invention alone or in combination any o~ the usual components included in such compositions which are well-known to the person skilled in the art.
Such components comprise builders, such as phosphate or zeolite builders, surfactants, such as anionic, catiollic, non-ionic or zwitterionic type sur~actants, polymers, such as acrylic or equivalent polymers, bleach systems, such as perborate- or amino-cont~;n~ng bleach precursors or activators, structurants, such as silicate structurants, alkali or acid to adjust pH, humectants, and/or neutral inorganic salts.
Furthermore, a number of optional ingredients are norm~lly present in the compositions of the invention, such as:
A. Optional Cosurfactants B. 'rartrate Succinate Builder C. ~eutralization System D. Suds Suppressor E. Other Enzymes F. Other Optional Components The weight ratio of synthetic anionic surfactant to etho~ylated nonionic surfactant is from 1:1 to 5:1. The - compositions have a pH in a 10~ by weight solution in water at 20~C of from 7.0 to 9.0, a Critical Micelle Concentration of less than or equal to 200 ppm, and an air/water Interfacial Tension at the Critical Micelle Concentration of less than or equal to 32 dynes/cm at 35~C in distilled water.
The compositions are pre~erably clear, homogeneous and phase CA 022l7l62 l997-lO-Ol stable, and have good cleaning perfonmance and enzyme stability.

VARIOUS COM~ONENTS:
1. Synthetic Anionic Surfactant The liquid detergent compositions of the present invention contain from about 10~ to about 50~, preferably from about 15~ to about 50~, more preferably from about 20~ to 40~, and most preferably from 20~ to about 30~, by weight of a natural or synthetic anionic surfactant. Suitable natural or synthetic anionic surfactants e.g. soaps and such as disclosed in US-A-4 285 841, and in US-A-3 929 678.
Useful anionic surfactants include the water-soluble salts, particularly the alkali metal, ~mmn~; um and alkylol~mmon;um (e.g., monoethanol~mmon;um or triethanol-~mmon;um) salts, of organic sulfuric reaction products having in their molecular structure an alkyl group cont~;n;ng from about 10 to about 20 carbon atoms and a sulphonic acid or sulphuric acid ester group. (Included in the term "alkyl" is the alkyl portion of aryl groups.) Examples of this group of synthetic surfactants are the alkyl sulfates, especially those obt~;n~ by sulfating the higher alcohols (C8-Cl8 carbon atoms) such as those produced by reducing the glycerides of tallow or coconut oil; and the alkylbenzene sulfonates in which the alkyl group contains from about 9 to about 15 carbon atoms, in straight chain or branched chain configuration, e.g., those of the type described in U.S. Patents 2 220 099 and 2 477 383.
Especially valuable are linear straight chain alkylbenzene sulfonates in which the average number of carbon atoms in the alkyl group is from about 11 to 14.
Other anionic surfactants herein are the water-soluble salts of: paraffin sulfonates cont~;n;ng from 8 to about 24 (preferably about 12 to 18) carbon atoms; alkyl glyceryl ether sulfonates, especially those ethers of C8-C18 alcohols (e.g., those derived from tallow and coconut oil);
alkyl phenol ethylene oxide ether sulfates cont~;n;ng from 1 to about 4 units of ethylene oxide per molecule and from 8 W 096~34935 PCTAEP96/OI6IO

to 12 carbon atoms in the alkyl group; and alkyl ethylene oxide ether sulfates co~t~; n; ng 1 to 4 units of ethylene oxide per molecule and from 10 to 20 carbon atoms in the alkyl group.
Other useful anionic surfactants include the water-soluble salts of esters o~ ~-sul~onated ~atty acids cont~;n;ng from 6 to 20 carbon atoms in the fatty acid group and from 1 to 10 carbon atoms in the ester group; water-soluble salts of 2-acyloxy-alkane-1-sulphonic acids cont~;n;ng from 2 to 9 carbon atoms in the acyl group and from 9 to 23 carbon atoms in the alkane moiety; water-soluble salts o~ ole~in sul~onates cont~;n;ng ~rom 12 to 24 carbon atoms; and ~-alkyloxy ~lk~n~ sulfonates cont~n~ng from 1 to 3 carbon atoms in the alkyl group and ~rom 8 to 20 carbon atoms in the alkane moiety.
Preferred anionic surfactants are the Cl0-Cl8 alkyl sulfates and alkyl ethoxy sulfates cont~;n;ng an average of up to 4 ethylene oxide units per mole of alkyl sulfate, Cll-Cl3 linear alkyl benzene sulfonates, and mixtures thereof.
2. Ethoxylated Nonionic Surfactant A second optional ingredient is from 2~ to 14~
preferably from 2~ to 8~, most preferably from 3~ to 5~ by weight, of an ethoxylated nonionic surfactant. The weight ratio of synthetic anionic surfactant (on an acid basis) to nonionic surfactant is from 1:1 to 5:1 preferably from 2:1 ~ to 5:1, most preferably from 3:1 to 4:1. This is to ensure the formation and adsorption of sufficient hardness surfactants at the air/water interface to provide good greasy/oily soil removal.
The ethoxylated nonionic surfactant is of the formula Rl(OC2H4) n OH, wherein R1 is a Cl0-Cl6 alkyl group or a C8-Cl2 alkyl phenyl group, n is from 3 to 9, and said nonionic surfactant has an H~B (Hydrophilic-Lipophilic Balance) of from 6 to 14, preferably from 10 to 13. These surfactants are more fully described in US-A-4 285 841, and US-A-4 284 532, Particularly preferred are condensation - products of C12-Cl5 alcohols with from 3 to 8 moles of ethylene oxide per mole of alcohol, e.g., Cl2-Cl3 alcohol con~en~ed with about 6.5 moles of ethylene oxide per mole of alcohol. Other nonionic surfactants to be mentioned are APG, EGE and glucamide surfactants.
s 3. Detergency Builder Among the usual detergent ingredients which may be present in usual amounts in the detergent compositions of this invention are the following: The compositions may be built or unbuilt, and may be of the zero-P type (i.e. not cont~;n;ng any phosphorus cont~;n;ng builders). Thus, the composition may contain in the aggregate for example from 1-50~, e.g. at least about 5~ and often up to about 35-40~
by weight, of one or more organic and/or inorganic builders.
Typical examples of builders include those already mentioned above, and more broadly include alkali metal ortho, pyro, and tripoly-phosphates, alkali metal carbonates, either alone or in ~m; ~t-ure with calcite, alkali metal citrates, alkali metal nitrilotriacetates, carboxymethyloxysuccinates, zeolites, polyacetalcarboxylates, and so on.
More specifically, the compositions herein contain from 5~ to 20~, preferably from 10~ to 15~, by weight of a detergency builder which can be a fatty acid cont~;n;ng from 10 to 18 carbon atoms and/or a polycarboxylate, zeolite, polyphoshon~te and/or polyphosphate a builder. Preferred are from 0 to 10~ (more preferably from 3~ to 10~) by weight of saturated fatty acids cont~; n~ ng from 12 to 14 carbon atoms, along with from 0 to 10~, more preferably from 2~ to 8~, most preferably from 2~ to 5~, by weight of a polycarboxylate builder, most preferably citric acid, in a weight ratio of from 1:1 to 3:1.
Since the proteolytic enzymes herein appear to provide optimum storage stability benefits versus other enzymes when the builder to water hardness ratio is close to one, the compositions preferably contain sufficient builder to sequester from 2 to 10, preferably from 3 to 8, grains per gallon of hardness.
Suitable saturated fatty acids can be obt~; n~
-from natural sources such as plant or ~n;m~l esters (e.g., palm k~n~l oil, palm oil and coconut oil) or synthetically prepared (e.g., via the oxidation o~ petroleum or by hydrogenation of carbon monox;de via the Fisher-Tropsch process). ~mrles o~ suitable saturated ~atty acids ~or use in the compositions of this invention include capric, ~ lauric, myristic, coconut and palm kernel fatty acid.
Pre~erred are saturated coconut ~atty acids; ~rom 5:1 to l:l (preferably about 3:1) weight ratio mixtures of lauric and myristic acid; mixtures of the above with minor amounts (e.g., 1~-30~ o~ total ~atty acid) o~ oleic acid; and palm kernel fatty acid.
The compositions herein preferably also contain the polycarboxylate, polyphosphonate and polyphosphate builders described in US-A-4 284 532, Water-soluble polycarboxylate builders, particularly citrates, are pre~erred o~ this group. Suitable polycarboxylate builders include the various aminopolycarboxylates, cyclo~lk~ne polycarboxylates, ether polycarboxylates, alkyl polycarboxylates, epoxy polycarboxylates, tetrahydrofuran polycarboxylates, benzene polycarboxylates, and polyacetal polycarboxylates.
Examples of such polycarboxylate builders are sodium and potassium ethyl~n~ m; n~tetraacetate; sodium and potassium nitrilotriacetate; the water-soluble salts o~
phytic acid, e.g., sodium and potassium phytates, disclosed in US-A-1 739 942, the polycarboxylate materials described in US-A-3 364 103; and the water-soluble salts of polycarboxylate polymers and copolymers described in US-A-3 308 067.
Other useful detergency builders include the water-soluble salts of polymeric aliphatic polycarboxylic acids having the ~ollowing structural and physical characteristics: (a) a m; n;mllm molecular weight of about 350 calculated as to the acid form; (b) an equivalent weight of 50 to 80 calculated as to acid ~orm; (3) at least 45 mole percent of the monomeric species having at least two carboxyl radicals separated ~rom each other by not more than W 096/34935 PCT~EP96/01610 3~
two carbon atoms: (d) the site of attach-m--ent of the polymer chain of any carboxyl-ront~;n;ng radical being separated by not more than three carbon atoms along the polymer chain from the site of atta~hm~nt of the next carboxyl-cont~;n~ng S radical. Specific examples of such builders are the polymers and copolymers of itaconic acid, aconitic acid, maleic acid, mesaconic acid, fumaric acid, methylene malonic acid, and citraconic acid.
Other suitable polycarboxylate builders include the water-soluble salts, especially the sodium and potassium salts, of mellitic acid, citric acid, ~yLulllellitic acid, benzene pentacarboxylic acid, oxydiacetic acid, carboxymethyloxysuccinic acid, carboxymethyloxymalonic acid, cis-cycloh~x~n~h~carboxylic acid, cis-cyclopentane-tetracarboxylic acid and oxydisuccinic acid.
Other polycarboxylates are the polyacetalcarboxylates described in US-A-4 144 226, and US-A-4 146 495.
Other detergency builders include the zeolites, such as the alllm;nosilicate ion ~xch~nge material described in US-A-4 405 483.
Other preferred builders are those of the general formula R-CH(COOH)CH2(COOH), i.e. derivatives of succinic 2S acid, wherein R is Cl0-C20 alkyl or alkenyl, preferably C12-Cl6, or wherein R may be substituted with hydroxyl, sulfo, sulfoxy or sulfone substituents. These succinate builders are preferably used in the form of their water soluble salts, including the sodium, potassium and ~lk~nol~mm~n;um salts. Specific examples of succinate builders include:
lauryl succinate, myristyl succinate, palmityl succinate, 2-dodecenyl succinate, and the like.
4. Proteolytic Enzyme The enzymes of the invention can be used in well-known st~n~rd amounts in detergent compositions. The amounts may range very widely, e.g. about 0.0002-0.1, e.g.
about 0.005-0.05, Anson units per gram of the detergent composition. Expressed in alternative units, the protease can be included in the compositions in amounts in the order of from about 0.1 to 100 GU/mg (e.g. 1-50, especially 5-20 GU/mg) of the detergent formulation, or any amount in a wide range centering at about 0.01-4, e.g. 0.1-0.4 KNPU per g o~
detergent formulation.
It may for ~A~rle be suitable to use the present enzymes at the rate of about 0.25 mg o~ enzyme protein per litre of wash liquor, corresponding to an enzyme activity of the order of 0.08 KNPU per litre. Corresponding detergent formulations can contain the enzymes in for example an amount of the order of 0.1-0.4 KNPU/g.
Expressed di~erently the compositions o~ the present invention contain from about 0.01~ to about 5~, lS preferably from about 0.1~ to about 2~, by weight of the proteolytic enzymes o~ the invention.
The described proteolytic enzyme is preferably included in an amount sufficient to provide an activity of from 0.05 to about 1.0, more preferably from about 0.1 to 0.75, most preferably from about 0.125 to about 0.5,mg of active enzyme per gram of composition.
5. Enzyme Stabilization System The liquid detergents according to the present invention may comprise An enzyme stabilization system, comprising calcium ion, boric acid, propylene glycol and/or short chain carboxylic acids. The enzyme stabilization system comprises from about 0.5~ to about 15~ by weight of the composition.
The composition pre~erably contains ~rom about 0.01 to about 50, preferably from about 0.1 to about 30, more pre~erably from about 1 to 20 millimoles of calcium ion per liter. The level of calcium ion should be selected so that there is always some m; n~mllm level available for the enzyme, after allowing ~or complexation with builders etc.
in the composition. Any water-soluble calcium salt can be used as the source of calcium ion, including calcium chloride, calcium formate, and calcium acetate. A small W 096/34935 PCT~EP96/01610 3~
amount of calcium ion, generally from about 0.05 to 0.4 millimoles per liter, is often also present in the composition due to calcium in the enzyme slurry and formula water. From about 0.03~ to about 0.6~ of calcium formate is preferred.
A second preferred enzyme stabilizer is polyols cont~ n; ng only carbon, hydrogen and oxy~e~l atoms. They preferably contain from 2 to 6 carbon atoms and from 2 to 6 hydroxy groups. Examples include propylene glycol (especially 1,2-prop~n~;ol, which is preferred), ethylene glycol, glycerol, sorbitol, mannitol, and glucose. The polyol generally represents from about 0.5~ to 15~, preferably from about 1.5~ to about 8~, by weight of the composition. Pre~erably, the weight ratio of polyol to any boric acid added is at least 1, more preferably at least 1.3.
The compositions preferably also contain the water-soluble, short chain carboxylates described in US-A-4 318 818. The formates are preferred and can be used at levels o~ ~rom about 0. 05~ to about 5~, preferably from about 0.2~ to about 2~, most preferably from 0.4~ to 1.5~, by weight of the composition. Sodium ~ormate is preferred.
The compositions herein also optionally contain from about 0.25~ to about 5~, most preferably from about 0.5~ to about 3~, by weight of boric acid. The boric acid may be, but is pre~erably not, formed by a compound capable of forming boric acid in the composition. Boric acid is preferred, although other compounds such as boric oxide, borax and other alkali metal borates (e.g., sodium ortho-, meta- and pyroborate, and sodium pentaborate) are suitable.
[Substituted boric acids (e.g., phenylboronic acid, butane boronic acid, and p-bromo phenylboronic acid) can also be used in place of boric acid.
6. Water The liquid detergent compositions of the present invention may be aqueous liquids or non-aqueous liquids.
When the are aqueous liquids, they contain from about 15~ to 3~
about 60~, preferably from about 25~ to about 45~, by weight o~ water.

kU~l~HER OPTIONAL CoMpo~N-A. ~ptional Cosurfactants Optional cosurfactants for use with the a~ove ethoxylated nonionic surfactants include amides of the formula ~ R2 Il I
~1 _ C - N - R3 wherein Rl is an alkyl,hydroxyalkyl or alkenyl radical lS cont~;n; ng from 8 to 20 carbon atoms, and R2 and R3 are selected from the group consisting of hydrogen, methyl, ethyl, propyl, isopropyl, 2-hydroxyethyl, 2-hydroxypropyl, 3-hydroxypropyl, and said radicals additionally COntA; n; ng up to 5 ethylene oxide units, provided at least one of R2 and R3 contains a hydroxyl group.
Preferred ~m; ~e~ are the C8-C20 fatty acid alkylol amides in which each alkylol group contains from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, and additionally can contain up to 2 ethylene oxide units. Particularly preferred are the Cl2-Cl6 fatty acid monoethanol and diethanol amides.
If used, amides are preferably present at a level such that the above ethoxylated nonionic surfactant and amide surfactant is in a weight ratio of from 4:1 to 1:4, preferably from 3:1 to 1:3.
Preferred and optional cosurfactants, used at a level of from 0.15~ to 1~, are the quaternary ~mm~n;um~
amine and amine oxide surfactants described in US-A-4 507 219.
Of the above, the C10- C14 alkyl trimethyl~mmo~;um salts are preferred, e.g., decyl trimethyl~mm~n;um methylsulfate, lauryl trimethyl~mmon;um chloride, myristyl trimethyl~mmon;um bromide, and coconut trimethyl~mm~n;um chloride and methylsulfate. From 0.2~ to 0.8~ of monoalkyl 3~
trimethyl~mmnn;um chloride is preferred.

B. Tartrate Succinate Builder The compositions herein preferably contain from 0 S to about 10~, preferably from 0 to about 6~, by weight on an acid basis, of a tartrate succinate builder material selected from the group consisting of:
i) HOCH - CH - O - CH -CH2 l l l l COOX COOX COOX COOX
wherein X is a salt-~orming cation;
ii) CH2- CH - 0 - CH - CH -0 - CH - CH2 COOX COOX COOX COOX COOX COOX
wherein X is a salt-forming cation; and iii) mixtures thereof.

The tartrate succinate compounds used herein are described in US-A-4 663 071.

C. Neutralization System The present compositions can also optionally contain from about 0 to about 0.04 moles, preferably from about 0.01 to 0.035 moles, more preferably from about 0.015 to about 0.03 moles, per 100 grams of composition of an alk~nol~m;n~ selected from the group consisting of monoethanol~m;ne, diethanolamine, triethanolamine,and mixtures thereof. Low levels of the alkanol~m;ne~, particularly monoethanol ~m; ne, are preferred to enhance product stability, detergency performance, and odour.
However, the amount of alkanolamine should be m;n;m;zed ~or best chlorine bleach compatibility.
In addition, the compositions contain sodium ions, and preferably potassium ions,at a level sufficient to W 096134935 PCT~EP96101610 3~
neutralize the anionic species and provide the desired product pH.

D. Suds Suppressor Another optional component for use in the liquid detergents herein is from 0 to about 1.5~, preferably from about 0.,5~ to about 1.0~, by weight of silicone based suds suppressor agent.
Silicones are widely known and taught for use as highly effective suds controlling agents. For example, US-A-3 455 839 relates to compositions and processes for defoaming aqueous solutions by incorporating therein small amounts of polydimethylsiloxane fluids.
Use~ul suds controlling silicones are mixtures of silicone and silanated silica as described, for instance, in German Patent Application DE-A-2 124 526.
Silicone de~oamers and suds controlling agents have been successfully incorporated into gr~n~ r detergent compositions by protecting them from detergent surfactants as in U.S. Patents 3 933 672 and 4 652 392.
A preferred silicone based suds suppressor for use herein is a suds suppressing am,ount of a suds controlling agent consisting essentially of:

(i) polydimethylsiloxane fluid having a viscosity of from about 20 cs. to about 1500 cs. at 25~C;

(ii) from about 5 to about 50 parts per 100 parts by weight of (i) of siloxane resin composed of (CH3)3 SiO1/2 units and SiO2 units in a ratio of from (CH3)3 SiOl~2 units and to SiO2 units o~ from about 0.6:1 to about 1.2:1; and (iii) from about 1 to about 20 parts per 100 parts by weight of (i) of a solid silica gel.

By "suds suppressing amount" is meant that the formulator of the composition can select an amount of this ~ o suds controlling agent that will control the suds to the extent desired. The amount of suds control will vary with the detergent surfactant selected. For example, with high sudsing surfactants, relatively more of the suds controlling agent is used to achieve the desired suds control than with low foaming surfactants.

E. Other Enzymes The detergent compositions of the invention may also contain further enzymes.
For example, lipase can usefully be added in the form of a (gr~n~ ~ composition (alternatively a) solution or a slurry of lipolytic enzyme with carrier material (e.g. as in EP-A-258 068 (Novo Nordisk A/S).
The added amount of lipase can be chosen within wide limits, for example 50 to 30,000 LU/g per gram of the surfactant system or of the detergent composition, e.g.
often at least 100 ~U/g, very usefully at least 500 ~U/g, sometimes preferably above 1000, above 2000 ~U/g or above 4000 LU/g or more, thus very o~ten within the range of 50-4000 LU/g, and possibly within the range of 200-1000 LU/g. In this specification, lipase units are defined as they are in EP-A-258 068.
The lipolytic enzyme can be chosen among a wide range of lipases. In particular, the lipases described in for example the following patent specifications: EP-A-214 761 (Novo Nordisk A/S), EP-A-258 068, and especially lipases showing immunological cross reactivity with antisera raised against lipase from Th~,"-~",~ces lanuginosus ATCC 22070, EP-A-205 208 and EP-A-206 390, and especially lipases showing immunological cross-reactivity with antisera raised against lipase from Chromobacter viscosum var lipolyticum NRRL
B-3673, or against lipase from Alcaligenes PL-679, ATCC
31371 and FERM-P 3783, also the lipases described in specifications WO 87/00859 (Gist-Brocades) and EP-A-204 284 (Sapporo Breweries). Suitable, in particular, are for example the ~ollowing commercially available lipase pre-parations: Lipolase~ Novo Nordisk A/S, Amano lipases CE, P, CA 022l7l62 l997-lO-Ol 4l B, AP, M-AP, AML, and CES, and Meito lipases MY-30, OF, and PL, also Esterase~ MM, hipozym, SP225, SP285 (all Novo Nordisk), S~;ken lipase, Enzeco lipase, Toyo Jozo lipase and Diosynth lipase (Trade Marks), Lumafast~ (Genecor Inc.), Lipomax0 (Gist-Brocades N.V.), and lipases as described in WO-A-94/03578 (Unilever) Amylase can for example be used when desired, in an amount in the range o~ about 1 to about 100 MU (maltose units) per gram of detergent composition (or 0.014-1.4, e.g.
0.07-0.7, KNU/g (No~o units)). Amylases suitable are for example Termamyl~ and BAN (Novo Nordisk A/S). Cellulase can for ~mrle be used when desired, in an amount in the range of about 0.3 to about 35 CE W units per gram of the detergent composition. Suitable cellulases are for example Celluzyme~ and Carezyme~ (Novo Nordisk A/S).
~ther enzymes contemplated to be used in the present invention are oxidases and peroxida~es.

F. Other Optional Components Other optional components for use in the liquid detergents herein include soil ~e~ vdl agents, soil release polymers, antiredeposition agents such as tetraethylene pent~n-;ne ethoxylate (from about 0.5~ to 3~, preferably from about 1~ to about 3~, by weight), suds regulants, hydrotropes such as sodium cumene sulfonate, opacifiers, antioxidants, bactericides, dyes, perfumes, and brighteners known in the art. Such optional components generally represent less than about 15~, preferably from about 0.5~ to 10~, more preferably from about 1~ to about 10~, by weight of the composition.
The compositions may contain from 0~ to about 8~, preferably from 0~ to about 5~, by weight of a C12-C14 alkenyl - succinic acid or salt thereo~. These materials are of the general formula R-CH(COOX)CH2(COOX), wherein R is a C12-C14 alkenyl group and each X is H or a suitable cation, such as sodium, potassium, ~mmon;um or ~lk~nol~mmon;um (e.g., mono-, di-, or tri-ethanol~mmon;um)~ Specific examples are 2-dodecenyl succinate (preferred) and 2-tetradecenyl W 096/34935 PCTAEP96/01610 4~ .
succinate.
The compositions herein optionally contain from about 0.1~ to about 1~, preferably from about 0.2~ to about 0.6~, by weight of water-soluble salts of ethyl~n~;~m;ne tetramethyl~nephosphonic acid, diethylenetr; ~m; ne pentamethylenephosphonic acid, ethyl~n~A;~m; ne tetraacetic acid (preferred), or diethylenetr;~m;n~ pentaacetic acid (most pre~erred) to ~nh~nce cleaning performance when pretreating fabrics.
Furth~rmore~ the detergent compositions may contain from 1-35~ of a bleaching agent or a bleach precursor or a system comprising bleaching agent and/or precursor with ac-tivator therefor.
Further optional ingredients are lather boosters, anti-corrosion agents, soil-suspending agents, sequestering agents, anti-soil redeposition agents, and so on.
The compositions herein preferably contain up to about 10~ of ethanol.

G. Other Properties The instant composition usually has a pH, in a 10~ by weight solution in water at 20~C, of from about 7.0 to 9.0, preferably from about 8.0 to about 8.5.
The instant compositions also may have a Critical Micelle Concentration (CMC) of less than or equal to 200 parts per million (ppm), and an air/water Interfacial Tension above the CMC of less than or equal to 32, preferably less than or equal to about 30, dynes per centimetre at 35~C in distilled water. These measurements are described in ~Measurement of Interfacial Tension and Surface Tension - General Review for Practical Man" C. Weser, GIT
Fachzeitschrift fur das Laboratorium, 24 (1980) 642-648 and 734-742, FIT Verlag Ernst Giebeler, Darmstadt, and "Interfacial Phenomena - Equilibrium and Dynamic Effects", C. A. Miller and P. Neogi, Chapter 1, pp. 29-36 (1985), Marcel Dekker, Inc. New York.
The compositions of the invention can be used ~or the washing of textile materials, especially, but without W O 96/3493~ PCTAEP96/01610 limitation cotton and polyester based textiles and mixtures thereof. For example washing proces~es carried out at temperatures o~ about 60-65~C or lower, e.g. about 30-35~C
or lower, are particularly suitable. It can be very suitable to use the compositions at a rate sufficient to provide about e.g. 0.4-0.8 g/l o~ sur~actant in the wash liquor, although it is of course possible to use lower or higher concentrations, if desired. Without limitation it can for example be stated that a use-rate ~rom about 1 to 10 g/l, e.g. from about 3-6 g/l, o~ the detergent formulation is suitable ~or use in the case when the ~onmulations are substanl_ially as in the Examples.
In this aspect the invention is especially related to:
a) A detergent composition formulated as an aqueous detergent liquid comprising anionic surfactant, nonionic sur~actant, humectant, organic acid, caustic alkali, with a pH adjusted to a value between 9 and 10.

b) A detergent composition formulated as a non-aqueous detergent liquid comprising a liquid nonionic surfactant consisting essentially of linear ~lk~xylated primary alcohol, triacetin, sodium triphosphate, caustic alkali, perborate mnnohydrate bleach precursor, and tertiary amine bleach activator, with a pH adjusted to a value between about 9 and 10.

c) An enzymatic liquid detergent composition formulated to give a wash liquor pH of 9 or less when used at a rate corresponding to 0.4-0.8 g/l surfactant.

d) An enzymatic liquid detergent composition formulated to give a wash liquor pH o~ 8.5 or more when used at a rate corresponding to 0.4-0.8 g/l surfactant.
e) An enzymatic liquid detergent composition ~ormulated to give a wash liquor ionic strength of 0.03 or less, e.g.
0.02 or less, when used at a rate corresponding to 0.4-0.8 g/l surfactant.

f) An enzymatic liquid detergent composition formulated to give a wash liquor ionic strength of 0.01 or more, e.g.
0.02 or more, when used at a rate corresponding to 0.4-0.8 g/l surfactant.
It was found that the subtilase variants of the present invention can also be usefully incorporated in detergent composition in the form of bars, tablets, sticks and the like for direct application to fabrics, hard surfaces or any other surface. In particular, they can be incorporated into soap or soap/synthetic compositions in bar form, wherein they exhibit a remarkable enzyme stability.
Detergent composition in the form of bars, tablets, sticks and the like for direct application, are for example described in South African Patent 93/7274, incorporated herein by reference. Accordingly, the preferred bars in accordance with this invention comprise, in addition to the subtilase variant:
i) 25 to 80~, most preferably 25 to 70~, by weight of detergent active which is soap or a mixture of soap and synthetic detergent active, reckoned as anhydrous;
ii) 0 to 50 ~ and, most preferably, 10 to 30~ by weight of water;
iii) 0 to 35~ and, most pre~erably, 0.1 to 30~ by weight filler.
In general, the amount of subtilase variant to be included in such compositions of the invention is such that it corresponds with a proteolytic activity of 0.1 to 100 GU/mg based on the composition, preferably 0.5 to 20GU/mg, most preferably 1.0 to 10GU/mg, where GU/mg is glycine unit per milligram.

METHOD FOR PRODUCING MUTATIONS IN ~u~llLASE GENES
Many methods for introducing mutations into genes are well known in the art. After a brief discussion of cloning subtilase genes, methods for generating mutations in both W ~96/3493s PCTAEP96/01610 4~
r~n~om sites, and speci~ic sites, within the subtilase gene will be discussed.

CLONING A ~u~ll~ASE GENE
The gene encoding a subtilase may be cloned from any of the org~ni sm~ indicated in Table I, especially gram-positive bacteria or fungus, by various methods, well known in the art. First a genomic, and/or cDNA library of DNA must be constructed using chromosomal DNA or messenger RNA from the org~n;~ that produces the subtilase to be studied.
Then, if the amino-acid sequence of the subtilase is known, homologous, labelled oligonucleotide probes may be synthesi-zed and used to identify subtilisin-encoding clones from a genomic library of bacterial DNA, or from a cDNA library.
Alternatively, a labelled oligonucleotide probe cont~;n;ng sequences homologous to subtilase from another strain of bacteria or org~n; cm could be used as a probe to identify subtilase-encoding clones, using hybridization and washing conditions of lower stringency.
Yet another method for identifying subtilase-pro-ducing clones would involve inserting fragments of genomic DNA into an expression vector, such as a plasmid, transfor-ming protease-negative bacteria with the resulting genomic DNA library, and then plating the transformed bacteria onto agar cont~;n;ng a substrate for subtilase, such as skim milk. Those bacteria cont~;n;ng subtilase-bearing plasmid will produce colonies surrounded by a halo of clear agar, due to digestion of the skim milk by excreted subtilase.

GENERATION OF RANDOM MUTATIONS IN THE ~U~ll~ASE GENE
Once the subtilase gene has been cloned into a sui-table vector, such as a plasmid, several methods can be used to introduce random mutations into the gene.
One method would be to incorporate the cloned subti-lase gene, as part of a retrievable vector, into a mutatorstrain of Eschericia coli.
Another method would involve generating a single stranded form of the subtilase gene, and then annealing the 4~
fragment of DNA cont~;n;ng the subtilase gene with another DNA fragment such that a portion of the subtilase gene r~m~;ne~ single stranded. This discrete, single str~n~
region could then be exposed to any of a number of mutageni-zing agents, including, but not limited to, sodiumbisulfite, hydroxylamine, nitrous acid, formic acid, or hydralazine. A specific example of this method for generating random mutations is described by Shortle and Nathans (1978, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A.,75 2170-2174).
According to the Shortle and Nathans method, the plasmid bearing the subtilase gene would be nicked by a restriction enzyme that cleaves within the gene. This nick would be widened into a gap using the exonuclease action of DNA
polymerase I. The resulting single-stranded gap could then be mutagenized using any one of the above mentioned mutagenizing agents.
Alternatively, the subtilisin gene from a Bacillus species including the natural promoter and other control sequences could be cloned into a plasmid vector cont~;n;ng replicons for both E. coli and B. subtilis, a selectable phenotypic marker and the M13 origin of replication for production of single-stranded plasmid DNA upon superinfection with helper phage IR1. Single-stranded plasmid DNA cont~;n;ng the cloned subtilisin gene is isolated and ~nn~led with a DNA fragment cont~;n;ng vector sequences but not the coding region of subtilisin, resulting in a gapped duplex molecule. Mutations are introduced into the subtilisin gene either with sodium bisulfite, nitrous acid or formic acid or by replication in a mutator strain of E. coli as described above. Since sodium bisulfite reacts exclusively with cytosine in a single-stranded DNA, the mutations created with this mutagen are restricted only to the coding regions. Reaction time and bisulfite con-centration are varied in different experiments such that from one to five mutations are created per subtilisin gene on average. Incubation of 10 ~g of gapped duplex DNA in 4 M
Na-bisulfite, pH. 6.0, for 9 minutes at 37~C in a reaction volume of 400 ~l, de~m;n~tes about 1~ of cytosines in the W 09613493~ PCT~EP96/01610 4~
single-stranded region. The coding region o~ mature subtilisin contains about 200 cytosines, depending on the DNA strand. Advantageously, the reaction time is varied from about 4 minutes (to produce a mutation ~requency o~ about one in 200) to about 20 minutes (about 5 in 200).
After mutagenesis the gapped molecules are treated in vitr~ with DNA polymerase I (Klenow ~ragment) to make fully double-stranded molecules and fix the mutations. Competent E. coli are then transformed with the mutagenized DNA to produce an ampli~ied library o~ mutant subtilisins.
Amplified mutant libraries can also be made by growing the plasmid DNA in a Mut D strain o~ E. coli which increases the range o~ mutations due to its error prone DNA polymerase.
The mutagens nitrous acid and formic acid may also be lS used to produce mutant libraries. Because these chemicals are not as speci~ic ~or single-stranded DNA as sodium bi-sulfite, the mutagenesis reactions are performed according to the ~ollowing procedure. The coding portion o~ the subti-lisin gene is cloned in M13 phage by st~n~rd methods and single stranded phage DNA prepared. The single-str~n~ DNA
is t~en reacted with 1 M nitrous acid pH. 4.3 ~or 15-60 minutes at 23~C or 2.4 M formic acid for 1-5 minutes at 23~C. These ranges of reaction times produce a mutation ~requency of ~rom 1 in 1000 to 5 in 1000. A~ter mutagenesis, a universal primer is Anne~led to the M13 DNA and duplex DNA
is synthesized using the mutagenized single-stranded DNA as a template so that the coding portion o~ the subtilisin gene becomes fully double-stranded. At this point the coding region can be cut out o~ the M13 vector with restriction enzymes and ligated into an un-mutagenized expression vector so that mutations occur only in the restriction fragment.
(Myers et al., Science 229 242-257 (1985)).

GENERATION OF SITE DIRECTED MUTATIONS IN THE SUBTILASE GENE
Once the subtilase gene has been cloned, and de-sirable sites for mutation identified and the residue to substitute ~or the original ones have been decided, these mutations can be introduced using synthetic oligonucleotides. These oligonucleotides contain nucleotide sequences fl~nk;ng the desired mutation sites; mutant nucleotides are inserted during oligonucleotide synthesis.
In a preferred method, a single stranded gap o~ DNA, bridging the subtilase gene, is created in a vector bearing the subtilase gene. Then the synthetic nucleotide, bearing the desired mutation, is ~nne~led to a homologous portion o~
the single-stranded DNA. The r~m~;n;ng gap is then filled in by DNA polymerase I (Klenow fragment) and the construct is ligated using T4 ligase. A specific example of this method is described in Morinaga et al., (1984, Biotechnology 2 646-639 ) . According to Morinaga et al ., a fragment within the gene is removed using restriction en~on-lclease. The vector/gene, now cont~n;ng a gap, is then denatured and hybridized to a vector/gene which, instead of cont~;n;ng a gap, has been cleaved with another restriction ~n~o~llclease at a site outside the area involved in the gap. A single-stranded region of the gene is then available for hybridiza-tion with mutated oligonucleotides, the r~m~;n;ng gap is filled in by the Klenow fragment of DNA polymerase I, the insertions are ligated with T4 DNA ligase, and, after one cycle of replication, a double-stranded plasmid bearing the desired mutation is produced. The Morinaga method obviates the additional manipulation of constructing new restriction sites, and therefore facilitates the generation of mutations at multiple sites. U.S. Reissue Patent number 34,606 by Estell et al., issued May l0, 1994, is able to introduce oligonucleotides bearing multiple mutations by performing minor alterations of the cassette, however, an even greater variety of mutations can be introduced at any one time by the Morinaga method, because a multitude of oligonucleotides, of various lengths, can be introduced.

EXPRESSION OF ~u~ll~ASE MUTANTS
According to the invention, a mutated subtilase gene produced by methods described above, or any alternative methods known in the art, can be expressed, in enzyme form, using an expression vector. An expression vector generally W 0961349~5 PCTAEP96/01610 ~9 falls under the de~inition of a cloning vector, since an expression vector usually includes the components of a typical cloning vector, namely, an element that permits auto~mollR replication of the vector in a microorg~n;~m independent of the genome of the microorg~n; sm, and one or more phenotypic m~k~s ~or selection purposes. An expression vector includes control sequences encoding a promoter, operator, ribosome binding site, translation initiation signal, and, optionally, a repressor gene or various activator genes. To permit the secretion o~ the ex-pressed protein, nucleotides encoding a "signal sequence"
may be inserted prior to the coding sequence of the gene.
For e~pression under the direction of control sequences, a target gene to be treated according to the invention is l~ operably linked to the control sequences in the proper reading frame. Promoter se~lPnc~ that can be incorporated into plasmid vectors, and which can support the transcription of the mutant subtilase gene, include but are not limited to the prokaryotic B-lactamase promoter (Villa-20 Kamaroff, et al. (1978) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 75 3727-3731) and the tac promoter (DeBoer, et al. (1983) Proc.
Natl. Acad. Sci. ~.S.A. 80 21-25). Further references can also be found in " Useful proteins from recQmhin~nt bacteria"
in Scie~tific American (1980) 242 74-94.
According to one embodiment B. subtilis is transfor-med by an expression vector carrying the mutated DNA. I~ ex-pression is to take place in a secreting microorg~n;Rm such as B. sl~tilis a signal sequence may follow the translation initiation signal and precede the DNA sequence of interest.
The signal sequence acts to transport the expression product to the cell wall where it is cleaved from the product upon secretion. The term "control sequences" as defined above is - intended to include a signal sequence, when it is present.
Other host systems known to the skilled person are also contemplated for the expression and production of the protease variants of the invention. Such host systems comprise fungi, including filamentous fungi, plant, avian and m~mm~l ian cells as well as others.

MP-T~l~T~T~ AND ~ l'.tl~L S
Strains:
B. subtilis 309 and 147 are variants o~ Bacillus lentus, deposited with the NCIB and accorded the accession numbers NCIB 10309 and 10147, and described in US-A-3 723 250 incorporated by reference herein.

E. coli MC 1000 (M.J. C~A~h~n and S.N. Cohen (1980~; ~.
Mol. Biol. 138 179-207), was made r~,m+ by conventional methods and is also described in US Patent Application Serial No. 039,298.

Proteolytic Activity In the context of this invention proteolytic activity is expressed in Kilo NOVO Protease Units (KNPU). The activity is det~rm;n~ relatively to an enzyme st~n~d (SAVINASE~), and the determ;n~tion is based on the digestion of a dimethyl casein (DMC) solution by the proteolytic enzyme at st~n~rd conditions, i.e. 50~C, pH 8.3, 9 min.
reaction time, 3 min. measuring time. A ~older AF 220/1 is available upon request to Novo Nordisk A/S, Denmark, which folder is hereby included by reference.
A GU is a Glycine Unit, defined as the proteolytic enzyme activity which, under st~n~rd conditions, during a 15-minutes' incubation at 40 deg C, with N-acetyl casein as substrate, produces an amount of NH2-group equivalent to 1 ~mole of glycine.
Enzyme activity can also be measured using the PNA
assay, according to reaction with the soluble substrate succinyl-~l~n;n~ n;ne-proline-phenyl-alanine-para-nitrophenol, which is described in the Journal o~ A-m--erican Oil ~h~m;sts Society, Rothgeb, T.M., Goodlander, B.D., Garrison, P.H., and Smith, L.A., (1988).
EXAMPLES
For the generation of enzyme variants according to the invention the same materials and methods as described in i.a. WO-A-89/06279 (Novo Nordisk A/S), EP-A-130 756 (Genen-tech), EP-A-479 870 (Novo Nordisk A/S), EP-A-214 435 ~ Sl (~Pnk~l), W0-A- 87/04461 (Amgen), WO-A-87/050~0 (Genex), EP
application no. 87303761 (Genentech), EP-A-260 ~'05 (Genencor), WO-A-88/06624 (Gist-Brocades NV), WO-A-88/07578 (Genentech), WO-A-88/08028 (Genex), WO-A-88/08033 (Amgen), WO-A-~8/0816s (Genex), Thomas et al. (1985) Nature, 318 375-376; Thomas et al. (1987) J. Mol. Blol., 193, 803-813;
Russel and Fersht (1987) Nature 328 496-500. Other methods well established in the art may also be used.

Construction and Expression of Enzyme Variants:
A vector suited to a synthetic gene coding for sub-tilase 309 and its mutants was constructed. It is essen-tially a pUCl9 pl~m;d [Yanish-Perron and Messing (1985) Gene; 33 103-119], in which the multiple cloning site has been replaced by a linker cont~;n~ng the restriction sites used to separate five sub-fra~m~nts constituting the gene.
The new linker was inserted into EcoRI - HindIII cut pUC19 thereby destroying these sites. The details of this construction are described in WO 92/19729 on pages 25-26 and in figure 1 (sheets 1/7-7/7) thereof, the content of which is hereby included by reference.
Each subfragment was made from 6 to 12 oligonu-cleotides. The oligonucleotides were synthesised on an automatic DNA synthesizer using phosphoramidite chemistry on a controlled glass support [Beaucage and Carruthers (1981);
Tetrahedron ~etters 22 1859-1869].
The five subfragments were isolated on a 2~ agarose gel and inserted into pSX191. The sequence was verified by dideoxynucleotide sequencing. Fragments A-E were isolated and ligated together with KpnI-BamHI cut pSX191. The ligation mixtures were used to transform competent E coli - MC1000 r~,m+ selecting for ampicillin resistance. The 850 bp KpnI-~amHI fragment that constitutes the part of the subtilisin 309 gene coding for the mature part of the enzyme was then used to replace the wild type gene on pSX212 giving rise to pSX222, which was then transformed into a competent B. subtilis strain. After fermentation of the transformed W O 96/34935 ~1l~,.l01610 S~
strain and purification of the enzyme it was shown that the product was indistin~l;~h~hle from the wild type product.
Protease variants derived from the synthetic gene are made by using oligonucleotides with altered sequence at the place(s) where mutation is wanted (e.g. with se~uences as given below) and m;~;ng them with the rest of the oligo-nucleotides appropriate to the synthetic gene. Assembly o~
the variant gene is carried out with the variant materials in a m~nner otherwise analogous to that described above.
Further information on synthetic genes generally is available in Agarval et al (1970); Natu~e; 227 27-34.
A KpnI site was introduced into the beginning of the subtilase 309 synthetic gene encoding the mature part of the enzyme. The method used is called oligonucleotide directed double-strand break repair mutagenesis and is described by Mandecki (1986) Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. USA 83 7177-7181.
pSX172 is opened with NcoI at the beginning of the mature part of the subtilase 309 gene and is m;~ with the oligonucleotide NOR 789 (see WO-A-92/19729), heated to 100~C, cooled to 0~C, and transfonmed into E. coli. After retrans-formation, the recombinants can be screened by colony hybridisation using 32-P-labelled NOR 789. The recombinants that turned out to be positive during the screening had the KpnI site introduced right in front of NcoI by changing two bases without changing the amino acid se~uence. pSX172 is described in BP Patent Publication No. 405 901. The KpnI
site so created is inserted into pSX120 on a 400-bp PvuI-NheI fragment, giving rise to pSX212. pSX120 is also described in EP-A-405 901.
The synthetic gene is inserted between KpnI and BamHI
on pSX212, giving rise to pSX222.
Examples of mutations and corresponding sequences o~
oligonucleotides are as follows:

R170L (fragment D1) 5'- AATTCAGGTGCAGGCTCAATCAGCTATCCGGCGCTCTAT - 3' I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 1 1*1 1 1 1 5'- GTCCACGTCCGAGTTAGTCGATAGGCCGCGAGATACGCTTG -3' W 0961349~5 PCT~EP96101610 ~3 R170I (~ragment D1) 5'- AATTCAIGlGTGCIAIIIIClAlAITlClAIIITIAITCCGGfGATCTAT - 3 S S~- GTCCACGTCCGAGTTA~TCGATAG&CCGCTAGATACGCTTG -3' S57P (fragment B1) 5' - AGG~ ~lACCAGGGGAACCGCCGACT~ TGGG - 3' 111111.11111111111*11111111111111 3' - AACAl~l~CCTTGGCGGCTGAGTTCTACCCTTACCC - 5' These oligonucleotides were combined with the rest o~ the oligonucleotides from the synthetic gene that was not chan-ged.

~XAMPLE 2Purification of Enzyme Variants:
This procedure relates to puri~ication o~ a 10 litre scale f~rm~nt~tion of the Subtilisin 147 enzyme, the Subtilisin 309 enzyme or mutants thereof.
Approximately 8 litres of fermentation broth were centrifuged at 5000 rpm for 35 minutes in 1 litre beakers.
The supernatants were adjusted to pH 6.5 using 10~ acetic acid and filtered on Seitz Supra S100 filter plates.
The filtrates were concentrated to approximately 400 ml using an Amicon CH2A UF unit equipped with an Amicon SlY10 UF cartridge. The UF concentrate was centri~uged and filtered prior to absorption at room temperature on a Bacitracin affinity column at pH 7. The protease was eluted from the Bacitracin column at room temperature using 25~ 2-propanol and 1 M sodium chloride in a buffer solution with 0.01 dimethylglutaric acid, 0.1 M boric acid and 0.002 M
calcium chloride adjusted to pH 7.
The fractions with protease activity from the Ba-citracin purification step were combined and applied to a 750 ml Seph~ G25 column (5 cm dia.) equilibrated with a buffer cont~;n;ng 0.01 dimethylglutaric acid, 0.2 M boric acid and 0.002 m calcium chloride adjusted to pH 6.5.
Fractions with proteolytic activity ~rom the 5~
Seph~A~ G25 column were combined and applied to a 150 ml CM
Sepharose CL 6B cation ~ch~nge column (5 cm dia.) equilibr-ated with a buffer cont~in~ng 0.01 M dimethylglutaric acid, 0.2 M boric acid, and 0.002 M calcium chloride adjusted to pH 6.5.
The protease was eluted using a linear gradient o~
0-0.1 M sodium chloride in 2 litres of the same buffer (0-0.2 M sodium chloride in case o~ Subtilisin 147).
In a ~inal puri~ication step protease cont~;n;ng fractions from the CM Sepharose column were combined and concentrated in an Amicon ultrafiltration cell equipped with a GR81PP membrane (~rom the Danish Sugar Factories Inc.).
By using the techniques of Example 1 for the construction and the above isolation procedure the ~ollowing subtilisin 309 variants were produced and isolated:
A: G159I
B: S164I
C: Y167I
D: R170I
E: R170L
F: R170M
G: R170F
H: G195F
I: S57P+R170L
J: R170L+N218S
K: S57P+R170L+N218S
L: R170L+N218S+M222A
M: S57P+R170L+S188P+A194P
N: Y167I+R170L
0: S57P+R170L+Q206E
P: R170h+Q206E
Q: Y167I+R170L+Q206E
R: Y167I+R170L+A194P
S: Y167I+R170L+N218S
T: Y167I+R170L+A194P+N218S
U: Y167I+Y171I
V: R170G
W: R170C

SS

DETERGENT COMPOSITIONS COMPRISING ENZYME VARIANTS

Example D1:
S An (i~otropic) aqueous detergent liquid according to an embo~;~ent of the invention is formulated to contain:

Inqredient 10 Na~AS 8.0 - Neodol 25-9 8.0 AES 25-3S 14.0 NaCitrate.2H20 5.0 Propylene Glycol 5.0 15 Sorbitol 4.5 F-dye Tinopal 0.15 UNPA-GX
~ytron 614 0.03 Opaci~ier 20 Kathon 0.0003 Preservative Acid Blue 80 0.00117 Acid Violet 48 0.0033 Savinase 16L 0.25 2~ ~ipolase 100L 0.70 Fragrance 0.15 Water ad 100.0 The pH is adjusted to 7.1.

W 096t34935 PCTAEP96/01610 S~
Table III.
Residual enzyme activity (in percentage of original activity) after storage at 37~C for Example D1 comprising the BLS309 variant S57P+R170L+N218S.
Storage time (in days)Wild-typeS57P+R170L+N218S
From Table III it is evident that the variant S57P+R170h+N218S exhibits a remarkably improved stability in this type of detergent. Moreover, the variant S57P+R170L+N218S possesses excellent compatibility towards lipase.

Table IV.
Residual lipase acti~ity (in percentage of original activity) after storage at 37~C for Example D1 comprising the BLS309 variant S57P+R170L+N218S and hipolase (TM).

Storage time (in days) Lipolase plus: Wild-type S57P+R170L+N218S

From the above Table IV it is apparent that, in addition to the stability of the protease, the compatibility of the protease towards ~ipolase is also improved.

Example D2:
A non-aqueous detergent liquid according to an embodiment o~
the invention is formulated using 38.5~ C13-C15 linear primary alcohol alkoxylated with 4.9 mol/mol ethylene oxide W 096/34935 PCT~EP96/01610 and 2.7 mol/mol propylene oxide, 5~ triacetin, 30~ sodium triphosphate, 4~ soda ash, 15.5~ sodium perborate m~nohydrate con~;n;ng a minor proportion of oxoborate, 4 TAED, 0.25~ EDTA of which 0.1~ as phosphonic acid, Aerosil 0.6~, SCMC 1~, and O.6~ protease. The pH is adjusted to a value between g and 10, e.g. about 9.8.

Example D3:
Structured liquid detergents can ~or example contain, in addition to a protease as described herein, 2-15~ nonionic surfactant, 5-40~ total surfactant, comprising nonionic and optionally anionic sur~actant, 5-35~
phosphate-cont~;n;ng or non-phosphate cont~;n;ng builder, 0.2-0.8~ polymeric thickener, e.g. cross-linked acrylic polymer with m.w. over lo6, at least 10~ sodium silicate, e.g. as neutral waterglass, alkali (e.g.
potassium-cont~n;ng alkali) to adjust to desired pH, pre~erably in the range 9-10 or upwards, e.g. above pH 11, with a ratio sodium cation: silicate anion (as free silica) (by weight) less than 0.7:1, and viscosity of 0.3-30 Pas (at 200C and 205-1)~
Suitable examples cont~;n about 5~ nonionic sur~actant C13-15 alcohol ~lkQ~ylated with about 5 EO groups per mole and with about 2.7 PO groups per mole, 15-23~
neutral waterglass with 3.5 weight ratio between silica and sodium oxide, 13-19~ KOH, 8-23~ STPP, 0-11~ sodium carbonate, 0.5~ Carbopol 941 (TM).
Protease may be incorporated at for example 0.5~.

Example D4:
(Decoupling polymer liquid) Priolene 6907 4.5 Ethoxylated Alcohol.7EO (Synperonic A7) 4.5 Ethoxylated Alcohol.3EO (Synperonic A3) 4.5 Zeolite 4A 15 Fluorescer Tinopal CBS-X 0.08 Narlex DC1 W 096/34935 PCTAE~96/01610 S~
Citric acid 8.23 Antifoam silicone DB100 0.3 LAS acid 16.5 Perfume 0.5 5 Water to 100 Table V.
Residual enzyme activity (in percentage of original activity) after storage at 37~C ~or Example D4 comprising the R170L variant of 8LS309.

Storage time (days) R170LWild-type 81 78 2.1 From Table V it is evident that the R170L variant exhibits a remarkably improved stability in this type o~ detergent.

Example D5:
(Decoupling polymer liquid) Priolene 6907 4.5 Ethoxylated Alcohol.7EO (Synperonic A7) 4.5 Ethoxylated Alcohol.3EO (Synperonic A3) 4.5 30 Zeolite 4A 15 Fluorescer Tinopal CBS-X 0.08 Narlex DC1 Citric acid 8.23 Antifoam silicone DB100 0.3 35 LAS acid 16.5 Lipolase 100L 0.6 Per~ume 0 5 Water to 100~

W 09613493~ PCTAEP96/01610 Sg Table VI.
Residual enzyme activity (in percentage o~ original activity) a~ter storage at 37~C ~or Example D5 comprising the BLS309 variant S57P+R170L+N218S.
Storage Residual ProteaseResidual Lipase time Activity Activity (day~) S57P+R170L+N218S - Wildtype - Wildtype -10 S57P+R170L+N218S
From Table VI it is evident that the variant S57P+R170L+N218S exhibits a remarkably improved stability in this type of detergent. Moreover, the variant S57P+R170L+N218S possesses excellent compatibility towards lipase .

Example D6:
Soap bars were produced cont~;n;ng 49.7 wt.~ 80/20 tallow /coconut soap, 49.0~ water, 20~ sodium citrate, 1.0~ citric acid and 0.031~ protease. A~ter preparation o~ the soap bars they were stored at ambient temperature and a~ter speci~ic time intervals samples were taken and measured for protease activity. The stability data are given below in Table VII:
storage W.T. R170L R170L+ R170L+
(days) N218S+S57P Y167I

6~

s From the above Table VII it is evident that the subtilase variants R170L, R170L+N218S+S57P and R170L+Y167I exhibit a remarkably improved stability in this type of detergent Example D7:
Soap bars were produced cont~;n;ng 63.88~ 80/20 tallow/coconut soap, 1~ coconut fatty acid, 25.1~ water, 10 sodium citrate and 0.021~ protease. The laundry soap bars were stored at 37~C and after speci~ic time intervals samples were taken and measured for protease activity.

Stability data:
storage (days) W.T. R170L+N218S+S57P

90.1 14 81.5 0 91.4 31 72.8 From the above Table VIII it is evident that the subtilase variant R170L+N218S+S57P exhibits a remarkably improved stability in this type of detergent.

W ~96134935 PCTAEP96/01610 G-EXAMP~E 4 Wash perform~nce of detergent compositions comprising enzyme variants .

The following examples provide results from a number of washing tests that were conducted under the conditions indicated.

Table IX: Experimental conditions ~or evaluation of Subtilisin 309 variants.
Detergent Protease model detergent l95 Detergent dose 3 g/l pH 9.5 Wash time 15 min.
Temperature 15~C
Water hardness 9~dH ~ 1.61 mM Ca'+/Mg'+
Enzymes Subtilisn 309 variants as listed below Enzyme conc. 0; 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4, 0.5, 1.0, 2.0, 3.0 mg/l Test method Miniwash *(SOP DEF-SM-0026.01/01)*
Swatch/volume 5 swatches (0 2.5 cm) / 50 ml Test material Grass on cotton (rinsed in water); *DF-9417718*

The above model detergent is a simple detergent formulation. The most characteristic features are that STP
is used as builder and the content of anionic tenside (LAS) is quite high. Further the pH is adjusted to 9.5, which is low for a powder detergent.

The composition of the model detergent is as follows:

Table X

6~
25 ~ STP (Nasp3olo) 25 ~ Na2S04 10 ~ Na2CO3 20 ~ LAS (Nansa 80S) 5 5 ~ Nonionic (Dobanol 25-7) 5 ~ Na2Si20s O.5 ~ Carboxymethylcellulose (CMC) 9.5 ~ water dose: 3 g/l pH is adjusted to 9.5 Measurement of remmision (R) on the testmaterial has been done at 460 nm using an Elrepho 2000 photometer (without W). The measured values have been fitted to the expression:

~R = a~ c ~ +a-c The improvement factor is calculated by use of the initial slope of the curve: IF = a ~R is the wash effect of the enzyme in remmision units.
a is the initial slope of the fitted curve (c~0).
aref. is the initial slope for the reference enzyme.
c is the enzyme concentration in mg/l W 096134935 PCT~EP96/01610 ~R~aX is the theoretical m~x~ml7m wash effect of the enzyme in remmision units (c~

Table XI: Variants and implov~l..ellt ~actors for Subtilisin 309.

5 Designation Variant IF
S003~ R170Y 2.8 S004~ R170Y + G195E 2.6 S012~ R170Y + G195E + K251E 1.6 G R170F 3.3 E R170~ 3.8 F R170M 2.4 D R170I 4.1 I S57P + R170L 3.9 J R170L + N218S 1.6 K S57P + R170L + N218S 2.3 N Y167I + R170L 6.2 P R170~ + Q206E 2.6 V R170G 2.0 W R170C 3.4 O S57P + R170L + Q206E 2.9 Q Y167I + R170L + Q206E 2.4 ~ Described in W0-A-91/00345 As it can be seen from Table XI, all the Subtilisin 309 25variants of the invention exhibit an improvement in wash performance.

****

Claims (16)

1. A detergent composition comprising a subtilase variant wherein one or more amino acid residues situated in or in the vicinity of a hydrophobic domain of the parent subtilase have been substituted for an amino acid residue more hydrophobic than the original residue, said hydrophobic domain comprising the residues P129, P131, I165, Y167, Y171 of BLS309 (in BASBPN numbering), and the residues in the vicinity thereof comprises residues corresponding to the residues E136, G159, S164, R170, A194 and G195 of BLS309 (in BASBPN numbering), with the exception of the R170M, R170I and R170V variants of BABP92.
2. Composition according to claim 1, comprising a subtilase variant wherein the original amino acid residue has been substituted for a residue selected from the group comprising Val (V), Ile (I), Leu (L), Met (M), Phe (F), and Trp (W), preferably Val, Ile or Leu.
3. Composition according to claims 1 or 2, wherein the parent subtilase is chosen from the sub-group I-S1.
4. Composition according to claim 3, wherein the parent subtilase is chosen from the group comprising ABSS168, BASBPN, BSSDY, and BLSCAR.
5. Composition according to claims 1 or 2, wherein the parent subtilase is chosen from the sub-group I-S2.
6. Composition according to claim 5, wherein the parent subtilase is chosen from the group comprising BLS147, BLS309, BAPB92 AND BYSYAB.
7. Composition according to claim 5, wherein the parent subtilase is TVTHER.
8. Composition according to any of claims 1 to 7, wherein said substitution(s) is/are combined with substitutions, insertions or deletions in any other position.
9. Composition according to claim 8, wherein said substitution(s) is/are combined with substitutions, insertions or deletions in any of the positions 36, 222, 218, 76.
10. Composition according to any of claims 1 to 9, being any of the following:
K136V, K136I, K136L, K136M, K136F, S159V, S159I, S159L, S159M, S159F, T164V, T164I, T164L, T164M, T164F, K170V, K170I, K170L, K170M, K170F, E195V, E195I, E195L, E195M, E195F, Q136V, Q136I, Q136L, Q136M, Q136F, T159V, T159I, T159L, T159M, T159F, A164V, A164I, A164L, A164M, A164F, Y170V, Y170I, Y170L, Y170M, Y170F, S194V, S194I, S194L, S194M, S194F, E136V, E136I, E136L, E136M, E136F, G159V, G159I, G159L, G159M, G159F, G164V, G164I, G164L, G164M, G164F, S164V, S164I, S164L, S164M, S164F, R170V, R170I, R170L, R170M, R170F, A194V, A194I, A194L, A194M, A194F, P194V, P194I, P194L, P194M, P194F, E195V, E195I, E195L, E195M, E195F, G195V, G195I, G195L, G195M, G195F,
11. Composition according to any of claims 1 to 10, wherein said variant is combined with further substitutions, deletions and/or insertions in any one or more of the positions:
36, 57, 76, 218, 222, and 224.
12. Compositions according to claim 11, wherein said subtilase belongs to the I-S2 sub-group and said further change is chosen from the group comprising *36D, S57P, N76D, N218S, M222S, M222A, and T224S.
13. Composition according to claim 12, wherein the variant is chosen from the group of variants comprising:
a) S57P+R170L

a') S57P+R170I
b) R170L+N218S
b') R170I+N218S
c) S57P+R170L+N218S
c') S57P+R170I+N218S
c'') S57P+V104Y+R170L+N218S
c''') S57P+V104Y+R170I+N218S
d) R170L+N218S+M222A
d') R170I+N218S+M222S
d") R170L+N218S+M222A
d'") R170I+N218S+M222S
e) S57P+R170L+S188P+A194P
e') S57P+R170I+S188P+A194P
f) Y167L+R170L
f') Y167L+R170I
g) Y167I+R170L

g') Y167I+R170I
h) N76D+R170L+N218S
h') N76D+R170I+N218S
i) S57P+N76D+R170L+N218S
i') S57P+N76D+R170I+N218S
j) N76D+R170L+N218S+M222A
j') N76D+R170I+N218S+M222S

j") N76D+R170L+N218S+M222A
j"') N76D+R170L+N218S+M222S
k) S57P+R170I+S188P+A194P+N218S
k') S57P+R170I+S188P+A194P+N218S
l) *36D+N76D+H120D+R170L+G195E+K235L
l') *36D+N76D+H120D+R170IG195E+K235L
m) N76D+H120D+R170L+G195E+K235L
m') N76D+H120D+R170I+G195E+K235L
n) *36D+G97N+V104Y+H120D+R170L+A194P+G195E+K235L
n') *36D+G97N+V104Y+H120D+R170I+A194P+G195E+K235L
o) S57P+R170L+Q206E
o') S57P+R170I+Q206E

p) R170L+Q206E
p') R170I+Q206E
q) Y167I+R170L+Q206E
q') Y167I+R170I+Q206E
r) Y167F+R170L
r') Y167F+R170I
t) Y167I+R170L+A194P
t') Y167I+R170I+A194P
u) Y167I+R170L+N218S
u) Y167I+R170I+N218S
v) Y167I+R170L+A194P+N218S

v') Y167I+R170I+A194P+N218S
x) R170L+P131V
x') R170I+P131V
y) *36D+Y167I+R170L
y') *36D+Y167I+R170I
z) Y167I+Y171I
aa) Y167V+R170L
aa') Y167V+R170I
14. Composition according to claim 1-13, wherein the subtilase variant is R170L or R170I and the composition is a liquid detergent and comprises a deflocculating polymer.
15. Composition according to claim 14, wherein the subtilase variant is S57P+V104Y+R170L+N218S or S57P+V104Y+R170I+N218S.
16. Composition according to claim 1-13, in shaped solid form.
CA002217162A 1995-05-05 1996-04-12 Subtilisin variants Abandoned CA2217162A1 (en)

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JP4246384B2 (en) 1997-11-21 2009-04-02 ノボザイムス アクティーゼルスカブ Protease variants and compositions
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EP1141260B1 (en) * 1998-12-18 2007-09-19 Novozymes A/S Subtilase enzymes of the i-s1 and i-s2 sub-groups having an additional amino acid residue in an active site loop region
JP4768128B2 (en) * 1998-12-18 2011-09-07 ノボザイムス アクティーゼルスカブ Subtilase enzyme subgroups I-S1 and I-S2 with additional amino acid residues in the active site loop region
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AU4393100A (en) * 1999-05-20 2000-12-12 Novozymes A/S Subtilase enzymes of the i-s1 and i-s2 sub-groups having at least one additionalamino acid residue between positions 125 and 126
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EP1183336B2 (en) * 1999-05-20 2012-12-19 Novozymes A/S Subtilase enzymes of the i-s1 and i-s2 sub-groups having at least one additional amino acid residue between positions 131 and 132
AU782372B2 (en) * 1999-12-15 2005-07-21 Novozymes A/S Subtilase variants having an improved wash performance on egg stains
US7888093B2 (en) 2002-11-06 2011-02-15 Novozymes A/S Subtilase variants
WO2008040818A1 (en) * 2006-10-06 2008-04-10 Novozymes A/S Detergent compositions and the use of enzyme combinations therein
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BR122013014156A2 (en) 2008-11-11 2015-07-14 Danisco Us Inc Cleaning composition comprising subtilisin variants as well as cleaning process
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WO1996034935A2 (en) 1996-11-07
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