1. Quantitative characterization of all single amino acid variants of a viral capsid-based drug delivery vehicle
- Author
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Hartman, Emily C, Jakobson, Christopher M, Favor, Andrew H, Lobba, Marco J, Álvarez-Benedicto, Ester, Francis, Matthew B, and Tullman-Ercek, Danielle
- Subjects
Biological Sciences ,Bioinformatics and Computational Biology ,Genetics ,Biotechnology ,Amino Acids ,Capsid ,Capsid Proteins ,Endosomes ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions ,Levivirus ,Models ,Molecular ,Mutagenesis ,Site-Directed ,Mutation ,Protein Engineering ,Protein Stability ,Protein Structure ,Secondary ,Proteolysis ,Static Electricity ,Virion - Abstract
Self-assembling proteins are critical to biological systems and industrial technologies, but predicting how mutations affect self-assembly remains a significant challenge. Here, we report a technique, termed SyMAPS (Systematic Mutation and Assembled Particle Selection), that can be used to characterize the assembly competency of all single amino acid variants of a self-assembling viral structural protein. SyMAPS studies on the MS2 bacteriophage coat protein revealed a high-resolution fitness landscape that challenges some conventional assumptions of protein engineering. An additional round of selection identified a previously unknown variant (CP[T71H]) that is stable at neutral pH but less tolerant to acidic conditions than the wild-type coat protein. The capsids formed by this variant could be more amenable to disassembly in late endosomes or early lysosomes-a feature that is advantageous for delivery applications. In addition to providing a mutability blueprint for virus-like particles, SyMAPS can be readily applied to other self-assembling proteins.
- Published
- 2018