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Engineering protein assemblies with allosteric control via monomer fold-switching

Authors :
European Research Council
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
Campos, Luis A
Sharma, Rajendra
Alvira, Sara
Ruiz, Federico M.
Ibarra-Molero, Beatriz
Sadqi, Mourad
Alfonso, Carlos
Rivas, Germán
Sánchez-Ruiz, Jose M.
Romero, Antonio
Valpuesta, José M.
Muñoz, Victor
European Research Council
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
Campos, Luis A
Sharma, Rajendra
Alvira, Sara
Ruiz, Federico M.
Ibarra-Molero, Beatriz
Sadqi, Mourad
Alfonso, Carlos
Rivas, Germán
Sánchez-Ruiz, Jose M.
Romero, Antonio
Valpuesta, José M.
Muñoz, Victor
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The macromolecular machines of life use allosteric control to self-assemble, dissociate and change shape in response to signals. Despite enormous interest, the design of nanoscale allosteric assemblies has proven tremendously challenging. Here we present a proof of concept of allosteric assembly in which an engineered fold switch on the protein monomer triggers or blocks assembly. Our design is based on the hyper-stable, naturally monomeric protein CI2, a paradigm of simple two-state folding, and the toroidal arrangement with 6-fold symmetry that it only adopts in crystalline form. We engineer CI2 to enable a switch between the native and an alternate, latent fold that self-assembles onto hexagonal toroidal particles by exposing a favorable inter-monomer interface. The assembly is controlled on demand via the competing effects of temperature and a designed short peptide. These findings unveil a remarkable potential for structural metamorphosis in proteins and demonstrate key principles for engineering protein-based nanomachinery.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1286554786
Document Type :
Electronic Resource