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Phage display selection of hairpin loop soyacystatin variants that mediate high affinity inhibition of a cysteine proteinase

Authors :
Richard E. Shade
Hisashi Koiwa
Haejung An
Ray A. Bressan
Larry L. Murdock
Keyan Zhu-Salzman
Werner Machleidt
Paul M. Hasegawa
Matilde Paino D'Urzo
Irmgard Assfalg-Machleidt
Source :
The Plant Journal. 27:383-391
Publication Year :
2001
Publisher :
Wiley, 2001.

Abstract

*Summary Two hairpin-loop domains in cystatin family proteinase inhibitors form an interface surface region that slots into the active site cleft of papain-like cysteine proteinases, and determine binding affinity. The slot region surface architecture of the soybean cysteine proteinase inhibitor (soyacystatin N, scN) was engineered using techniques of in vitro molecular evolution to define residues that facilitate interaction with the proteinase cleft and modulate inhibitor affinity and function. Combinatorial phage display libraries of scN variants that contain mutations in the essential motifs of the first (QVVAG) and second (EW) hairpin-loop regions were constructed. Approximately 10 10 ‐10 11 phages expressing recombinant scN proteins were subjected to biopanning selection based on binding affinity to immobilized papain. The QVVAG motif in the first hairpin loop was invariant in all functional scN proteins. All selected variants (30) had W79 in the second hairpin-loop motif, but there was diversity for hydrophobic and basic amino acids in residue 78. Kinetic analysis of isolated scN variants identified a novel scN isoform scN(LW) with higher papain affinity than the wild-type molecule. The variant contained an E78L substitution and had a twofold lower K i (2.1 pM) than parental scN, due to its increased association rate constant (2.6 6 0.09 3 10 7 M ‐1 sec ‐1 ). These results define residues in the first and second hairpin-loop regions which are essential for optimal interaction between phytocystatins and papain, a prototypical cysteine proteinase. Furthermore, the isolated variants are a biochemical platform for further integration of mutations to optimize cystatin affinity for specific biological targets.

Details

ISSN :
09607412
Volume :
27
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Plant Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........8683c7e5a1461ea8a8882b6e412e0875
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-313x.2001.01104.x