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Design of a hyperstable 60-subunit protein dodecahedron. [corrected]

Authors :
Neil P. King
Rashmi Ravichandran
Shane Gonen
Yang Hsia
David Baker
Una Nattermann
Po-Ssu Huang
Trisha N. Davis
Chunfu Xu
William Sheffler
Jacob B. Bale
Sue Yi
Tamir Gonen
Kimberly K. Fong
Dan Shi
Source :
Nature
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

The dodecahedron [corrected] is the largest of the Platonic solids, and icosahedral protein structures are widely used in biological systems for packaging and transport. There has been considerable interest in repurposing such structures for applications ranging from targeted delivery to multivalent immunogen presentation. The ability to design proteins that self-assemble into precisely specified, highly ordered icosahedral structures would open the door to a new generation of protein containers with properties custom-tailored to specific applications. Here we describe the computational design of a 25-nanometre icosahedral nanocage that self-assembles from trimeric protein building blocks. The designed protein was produced in Escherichia coli, and found by electron microscopy to assemble into a homogenous population of icosahedral particles nearly identical to the design model. The particles are stable in 6.7 molar guanidine hydrochloride at up to 80 degrees Celsius, and undergo extremely abrupt, but reversible, disassembly between 2 molar and 2.25 molar guanidinium thiocyanate. The dodecahedron [corrected] is robust to genetic fusions: one or two copies of green fluorescent protein (GFP) can be fused to each of the 60 subunits to create highly fluorescent ‘standard candles’ for use in light microscopy, and a designed protein pentamer can be placed in the centre of each of the 20 pentameric faces to modulate the size of the entrance/exit channels of the cage. Such robust and customizable nanocages should have considerable utility in targeted drug delivery, vaccine design and synthetic biology.

Details

ISSN :
14764687
Volume :
535
Issue :
7610
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1653a94adb3e0e16af765ed0e019e26e