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Evolution of a designed protein assembly encapsulating its own RNA genome

Authors :
Butterfield, Gabriel L.
Lajoie, Marc J.
Gustafson, Heather H.
Sellers, Drew L.
Nattermann, Una
Ellis, Daniel
Bale, Jacob B.
Ke, Sharon
Lenz, Garreck H.
Yehdego, Angelica
Ravichandran, Rashmi
Pun, Suzie H.
King, Neil P.
Baker, David
Source :
Nature; December 2017, Vol. 552 Issue: 7685 p415-420, 6p
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

The challenges of evolution in a complex biochemical environment, coupling genotype to phenotype and protecting the genetic material, are solved elegantly in biological systems by the encapsulation of nucleic acids. In the simplest examples, viruses use capsids to surround their genomes. Although these naturally occurring systems have been modified to change their tropism and to display proteins or peptides, billions of years of evolution have favoured efficiency at the expense of modularity, making viral capsids difficult to engineer. Synthetic systems composed of non-viral proteins could provide a ‘blank slate’ to evolve desired properties for drug delivery and other biomedical applications, while avoiding the safety risks and engineering challenges associated with viruses. Here we create synthetic nucleocapsids, which are computationally designed icosahedral protein assemblies with positively charged inner surfaces that can package their own full-length mRNA genomes. We explore the ability of these nucleocapsids to evolve virus-like properties by generating diversified populations using Escherichia coli as an expression host. Several generations of evolution resulted in markedly improved genome packaging (more than 133-fold), stability in blood (from less than 3.7% to 71% of packaged RNA protected after 6 hours of treatment), and in vivo circulation time (from less than 5 minutes to approximately 4.5 hours). The resulting synthetic nucleocapsids package one full-length RNA genome for every 11 icosahedral assemblies, similar to the best recombinant adeno-associated virus vectors. Our results show that there are simple evolutionary paths through which protein assemblies can acquire virus-like genome packaging and protection. Considerable effort has been directed at ‘top-down’ modification of viruses to be safe and effective for drug delivery and vaccine applications; the ability to design synthetic nanomaterials computationally and to optimize them through evolution now enables a complementary ‘bottom-up’ approach with considerable advantages in programmability and control.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836 and 14764687
Volume :
552
Issue :
7685
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs44371953
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature25157