Title of article :
Biosynthetic phage display: a novel protein engineering tool combining chemical and genetic diversity Original Research Article
Author/Authors :
Mary A Dwyer، نويسنده , , Wuyuan Lu، نويسنده , , John F. Dwyer، نويسنده , , Michael Randal and Anthony A. Kossiakoff، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Pages :
12
From page :
263
To page :
274
Abstract :
Abstract Background: Molecular diversity in nature is developed through a combination of genetic and chemical elements. We have developed a method that permits selective manipulation of both these elements in one protein engineering tool. It combines the ability to introduce non-natural amino acids into a protein using native chemical ligation with exhaustive targeted mutagenesis of the protein via phage-display mutagenesis. Results: A fully functional biosynthetic version of the protease inhibitor eglin c was constructed. The amino-terminal fragment (residues 8–40) was chemically synthesized with a non-natural amino acid at position 25. The remaining carboxy-terminal fragment was expressed as a 30-residue peptide extension of gIIIp or gVIIIp on filamentous phage in a phage-display mutagenesis format. Native chemical ligation was used to couple the two fragments and produced a protein that refolded to its active form. To facilitate the packing of the introduced non-natural amino acid, residues 52 and 54 in the carboxy-terminal fragment were fully randomized by phage-display mutagenesis. Although the majority of the observed solutions for residues 52 and 54 were hydrophobic — complementing the stereochemistry of the introduced non-natural amino acid — a significant number of residues (unexpected because of stereochemical and charge criteria) were observed in these positions. Conclusions: Peptide synthesis and phage-display mutagenesis can be combined to produce a very powerful protein engineering tool. The physical properties of the environment surrounding the introduced non-natural residue can be selected for by evaluating all possible combinations of amino acid types at a targeted set of sites using phage-display mutagenesis. Article Outline
Keywords :
* Hydrophobic packing , * Molecular diversity , * Non-natural amino acids , * phage display , * native chemical ligation
Journal title :
Chemistry and Biology
Serial Year :
2000
Journal title :
Chemistry and Biology
Record number :
1158249
Link To Document :
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