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Assessing and enhancing foldability in designed proteins.

Authors :
Listov D
Lipsh-Sokolik R
Rosset S
Yang C
Correia BE
Fleishman SJ
Source :
Protein science : a publication of the Protein Society [Protein Sci] 2022 Sep; Vol. 31 (9), pp. e4400.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Recent advances in protein-design methodology have led to a dramatic increase in reliability and scale. With these advances, dozens and even thousands of designed proteins are automatically generated and screened. Nevertheless, the success rate, particularly in design of functional proteins, is low and fundamental goals such as reliable de novo design of efficient enzymes remain beyond reach. Experimental analyses have consistently indicated that a major reason for design failure is inaccuracy and misfolding relative to the design conception. To address this challenge, we describe complementary methods to diagnose and ameliorate suboptimal regions in designed proteins: first, we develop a Rosetta atomistic computational mutation scanning approach to detect energetically suboptimal positions in designs (available on a web server https://pSUFER.weizmann.ac.il); second, we demonstrate that AlphaFold2 ab initio structure prediction flags regions that may misfold in designed enzymes and binders; and third, we focus FuncLib design calculations on suboptimal positions in a previously designed low-efficiency enzyme, improving its catalytic efficiency by 330-fold. Furthermore, applied to a de novo designed protein that exhibited limited stability, the same approach markedly improved stability and expressibility. Thus, foldability analysis and enhancement may dramatically increase the success rate in design of functional proteins.<br /> (© 2022 The Authors. Protein Science published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of The Protein Society.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1469-896X
Volume :
31
Issue :
9
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Protein science : a publication of the Protein Society
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
36040259
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/pro.4400