| Literature DB >> 23109368 |
Koichiro Kitamura1, Masayuki Komatsu, Madhu Biyani, Masae Futakami, Tomoyo Kawakubo, Kenji Yamamoto, Koichi Nishigaki.
Abstract
Improving a particular function of molecules is often more difficult than identifying such molecules ab initio. Here, a method to acquire higher affinity and/or more functional peptides was developed as a progressive library selection method. The primary library selection products were utilized to build a secondary library composed of blocks of 4 amino acids, of which selection led to peptides with increased activity. These peptides were further converted to randomly generate paired peptides. Cathepsin E-inhibitors thus obtained exhibited the highest activities and affinities (pM order). This was also the case with cathepsin E-activating peptides, proving the methodological effectiveness. The primary, secondary, and tertiary library selections can be regarded as module-finding, module-shuffling, and module-pairing, respectively, which resembles the progression of the natural evolution of proteins. The mode of peptide binding to their target proteins is discussed in analogy to antibodies and epitopes of an antigen.Keywords: cDNA display; cathepsin E; in vitro evolution; module-shuffling; paired peptides
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23109368 DOI: 10.1002/psc.2453
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pept Sci ISSN: 1075-2617 Impact factor: 1.905