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New Disulphide Bond in Cystatin-Based Protein Scaffold Prevents Domain-Swap-Mediated Oligomerization and Stabilizes the Functionally Active Form
- Source :
- ACS Omega, ACS Omega, Vol 4, Iss 19, Pp 18248-18256 (2019), Zalar, M & Golovanov, A P 2019, ' New Disulphide Bond in Cystatin-Based Protein Scaffold Prevents Domain-Swap-Mediated Oligomerization and Stabilizes the Functionally Active Form ', ACS Omega, vol. 4, no. 19, pp. 18248-18256 . https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.9b02269
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Abstract
- Peptide aptamers built using engineered scaffolds are a valuable alternative to monoclonal antibodies in many research applications because of their smaller size, versatility, specificity for chosen targets, and ease of production. However, inserting peptides needed for target binding may affect the aptamer structure, in turn compromising its activity. We have shown previously that a stefin A-based protein scaffold with AU1 and Myc peptide insertions (SQT-1C) spontaneously forms dimers and tetramers and that inserted loops mediate this process. In the present study, we show that SQT-1C forms tetramers by self-association of dimers and determine the kinetics of monomer–dimer and dimer–tetramer transitions. Using site-directed mutagenesis, we show that while slow domain swapping defines the rate of dimerization, conserved proline P80 is involved in the tetramerization process. We also demonstrate that the addition of a disulphide bond at the base of the engineered loop prevents domain swapping and dimer formation, also preventing subsequent tetramerization. Formation of SQT-1C oligomers compromises the presentation of inserted peptides for target molecule binding, diminishing aptamer activity; however, the introduction of the disulphide bond locking the monomeric state enables maximum specific aptamer activity, while also increasing its thermal and colloidal stability. We conclude that stabilizing scaffold proteins by adding disulphide bonds at peptide insertion sites might be a useful approach in preventing binding-epitope-driven oligomerization, enabling creation of very stable aptamers with maximum binding activity.
- Subjects :
- chemistry.chemical_classification
Scaffold protein
0303 health sciences
General Chemical Engineering
Dimer
Aptamer
030302 biochemistry & molecular biology
Mutagenesis
Peptide
General Chemistry
Article
Turn (biochemistry)
Chemistry
03 medical and health sciences
chemistry.chemical_compound
Monomer
chemistry
Biophysics
Molecule
QD1-999
030304 developmental biology
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 24701343
- Volume :
- 4
- Issue :
- 19
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- ACS Omega
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....8753e9e27d17460fb29f4ad7eeb3e8c1
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.9b02269