Peking University, November 4, 2021:
Chemical topology is a unique dimension for protein engineering. Over
the past few years, the discovery of topological nontrivial proteins in
nature has already revealed their many potential functional benefits,
such as enhanced thermal/mechanical/chemical stability. Engineering the
chemical topology of proteins thus holds the promise to engineer
therapeutically relevant proteins and industrial enzymes. The
assembly-reaction synergy has been established as an effective strategy
for the synthesis of topological proteins. Two types of genetically
encoded chemical tools are mandated: one for selective chain
entanglement into certain geometry, the other for site-specific covalent
ligation. To date, only a few motifs have been identified in the former
category and found suitable for the synthesis of topological proteins,
more effective entwined protein motifs are urgently needed. Recently,
Prof. Zhang Wen-Bin group has designed a highly efficient entwined
protein heterodimer via engineering the p53dim homodimer, and using it
to synthesize complexed protein higher order [n]catenanes, which showed
potential applications as artificial antibodies.
p53dim is an entangled homodimeric mutant of the tetramerization domain
of the tumor suppressor protein p53. In this work, by changing pairs of
neutral hydrophilic residues on its dimeric interface to either both
positively or both negatively charged residues, the electrostatic
repulsion between similarly charged residues prevents homodimer
formation while the electrostatic attraction between oppositely charged
residues promotes heterodimer formation, thus giving rise to a pair of
entwined protein heterodimer: X+(T5R/Q7R) and X−(T5E/Q7E)
(T: threonine, Q: glutamine, R: arginine, E: glutamic acid). The
engineered p53dim heterodimer enables the entanglement of different
protein chains selectively. Its combination with orthogonal genetically
encoded protein cyclization tools, such as split intein, allows the
cellular synthesis of protein heterocatenanes with various proteins of
interests (POIs). During co-expression of the primary protein ring
scaffold containing two or three tandem X− motifs and the secondary ring containing one X+,
their assembly followed by mutually orthogonal ring closure reactions
(split intein and SpyTag-SpyCatcher chemistry) promotes the effective
formation of protein [3] or [4]catenane. The higher order protein
catenane scaffold tolerates the insertion of various POIs, such as human
epidermal growth factor receptor 2-specific affibody (AffiHER2) or
sfGFP, providing a good candidate to design multivalent functional
protein systems. Incorporating AffiHER2 onto the [n]catenane scaffold
produces artificial antibody (termed [n]catbody) with improved binding
affinity (~8 folds for [4]catbody), prolonged serum half-life (~10
folds), and good tumor accumulation. This research successfully realized
the synthesis of complexed topological proteins via expanding the
toolkits of protein entangling motifs, promoting the study of their
structure-property relationships and leading to advanced protein
therapeutics.
This work was recently published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society (titled “Higher Order Protein Catenation Leads to an Artificial Antibody with Enhanced Affinity and In Vivo Stability”, DOI: 10.1021/jacs.1c06169).
The first author is Dr. Wu Wen-Hao and the corresponding authors are
Professors Zhang Wen-Bin and Wei Wei. This research was funded in part
by the National Key R&D Program of China, the National Natural
Science Foundation of China, Beijing Municipal Natural Science
Foundation, Beijing National Laboratory for Molecular Sciences, Clinical
Medicine Plus X Project of Peking University, Fundamental Research
Funds for the Central Universities, and Open Funding Project of the
State Key Laboratory of Biochemical Engineering.
Edited by: Zhang Jiang
Source: College of Chemistry and Molecular Engineering