| Literature DB >> 29084520 |
Sabine Oesterle1, Tania Michelle Roberts1, Lukas Andreas Widmer1,2,3, Harun Mustafa1,4, Sven Panke1, Sonja Billerbeck5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Internal tagging of proteins by inserting small functional peptides into surface accessible permissive sites has proven to be an indispensable tool for basic and applied science. Permissive sites are typically identified by transposon mutagenesis on a case-by-case basis, limiting scalability and their exploitation as a system-wide protein engineering tool.Entities:
Keywords: Cell-free biotechnology; Internal protein tagging; Permissive site; Protein knockdowns; TEV protease
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29084520 PMCID: PMC5661948 DOI: 10.1186/s12915-017-0440-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biol ISSN: 1741-7007 Impact factor: 7.431
Fig. 1Established workflow for identifying permissive stretches (PSs) in proteins and design of protein knockdowns. The established workflow is exemplified with adenylate kinase (Adk) and requires primary structure information alone. a Gaps in a multiple sequence alignment (MSA) of several (>5) homologous proteins indicate stretches in a protein likely permissive to insertion of additional amino acid residues. b The span of a PS is defined as the gap in the alignment plus its flanking residues. The four identified PSs within Adk are indicated with Roman numerals. c The design of protein knockdowns requires the insertion of a Tobacco etch virus protease recognition site (TEV-tag) into a flexible, surface accessible PS. Relative surface accessibility (RSA) and structural context of a PS can be predicted based on primary structure information. RSA values for each PS within Adk are indicated and were calculated by computing the geometric means of the RSA values of adjacent residue pairs within a given stretch and taking their maximum value. RSA values range from 0 (buried) to 1 (fully exposed). The average maximum geometric mean RSA of a random stretch was determined to be 0.30. For illustration, PSs were mapped onto the surface representation of the crystal structure of Adk (Protein Data Bank (PDB) 1AKE). d The information acquired above guides the identification of a potentially functional, surface exposed, and flexible PS for chromosomal TEV-tag insertion. PSII shows a high RSA, and secondary structure prediction indicates that it stretches across a 6-residue loop. PSIII shows the same RSA as PSII and it stretches across an 18-residue loop. But PSII was shown to be functionally relevant ([42] and Fig. 2) and therefore not chosen for TEV-tag insertion
Fig. 2Functionality of TEV-tagged protein variants in vivo. Upper and middle panels (a-d): functionality of plasmid encoded TEV-tagged protein variants in vivo. Variants were expressed from their natural promoter on low copy plasmids. a TpiA, b GpsA, c Adk, d Adk variants isolated from an insertion library around PSII. Insertion positions and corresponding permissive stretches (PSs) are given for each variant. Functionality was evaluated as the ability of a certain variant to support growth of the corresponding knockout strain on different carbon sources at 37 °C. Experiments were done in biological duplicates ± SD. Lower panel (e and f): functionality of chromosomally encoded TEV-tagged proteins variants in vivo. e Indicated strains carrying a TEV-tag on the chromosome were grown in LB medium or M9 glucose with casamino acids at 32 °C, and growth rates were compared to the appropriate parent strain (Ec or Ec*) which was used for chromosomal integration; in case of TpiAL70 the strain has an additional STOP codon in amn (Ec*) resulting in a translational knockout. f Growth rates on M9 succinate of strains carrying a TEV-tag in the α- (AtpA) and β- (AtpD) subunits of ATP synthase. A functional ATP synthase is essential for growth on the non-fermentable carbon source succinate. Strains having AtpA or AtpD replaced by a kanamycin cassette fail to grow on succinate. Experiments were done in triplicate ± SD
Overview of internally tagged protein variants
| Stretch | Span | Insertion site | Original sequencea | Sequence after insertionb | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Plasmid insertions | |||||
| Adk | PSI | I72-R78 | D76 | QED | 1-QED |
| PSII | D94-A95 | A93 | PQA | PQA | |
| K97 | AMKEAG | AMK | |||
| A99 | KEAGIN | 1-KEA | |||
| 2-KEA | |||||
| PSIII | V142-G150 | P140 | NPP | NPP | |
| PSIV | T191-P201 | A186 | KEA | KEA | |
| GpsA | PSI | P55-V57 | C49 | DRC | DRC |
| P60 | PFPDTL | PFP | |||
| PSII | P97-D102 | M99 | PLMRPD | PLM | |
| PSIII | L128-Q131 | I132 | DQIPLA | DQI | |
| PSV | D272-V273 | Q269 | LGQGMD | LGQ | |
| TpiA | PSIII | E53-I59 | E55 | EAEGSH | 1-EAE |
| 2-EAE | |||||
| 3-EAE | |||||
| PSIV | D67-N69 | N69 | DLNLSG | DLN | |
| PSVI | E133-A156 | T130 | GET | 1-GET | |
| 2-GET | |||||
| T153 | LKTQGA | LKT | |||
| Chromosomal insertions | |||||
| Adk | PSI | I72-R78 | D76 | QEDCRN | 3-QED |
| TpiA | PSIV | D67-N69 | L70 | LNLSGA | LNL |
| AtpA | PSIII | H123-F126 | H123 | LDHDGE | LDH |
| AtpD | PSIII | E101-E105 | E101 | KGEIGE | KGE |
| Extended TEV-tag | |||||
| Adk | PSI | I72-R78 | D76 | QEDCRN | 2-QED |
| 4-QED | |||||
| GpsA | PSI | P55-V57 | D56 | LPDVPS | 1-LPD |
| 2-LPD | |||||
aResidues deleted during the insertion process are shown in boldface. If no residues were deleted, a 6-residue stretch of the protein sequence is shown, and the insert was placed in the middle
bMinimal TEV-tag and extended derivatives used for insertion are shown in boldface
Fig. 3Cleavability of internally TEV-tagged protein variants. Cleavability of TEV-tagged Adk-6xHis variants was examined by incubating crude lysates derived from strains expressing the indicated Adk variant from a low copy vector under control of the natural Adk promoter in the presence or absence of TEV protease. Samples were separated by SDS PAGE and blotted. Cleavage products were detected with a 6xHis-tag-specific antibody. a AdkD76.1, b AdkA99, c AdkA186. The predicted secondary structure context of each residue is indicated in red. The loop length for variants AdkD76 and A99 was determined based on secondary structure prediction. d Cleavage of flanked TEV-tag variants inserted after residue D76. Purified AdkD76-Strep variants with differing TEV-tag flanking region lengths were incubated in the presence or absence of TEV protease and cleavage products were detected with a Strep-tag-specific antibody
Fig. 4Stabilisation of nucleotide pool in CFX using conditional protein knockouts. Time course of nucleotide inter-conversion in CFX with or without pre-treatment by TEV protease a Adk: ADP was added to a CFX prepared from strain EcAdk76.3. b AtpA and c AtpD: ATP was added to a CFX prepared from strains EcAtpA and EcAtpD. Nucleotide concentrations were quantified at indicated time points by HPLC in triplicate ± SD. 95% confidence intervals indicated the accuracy of the fits. d Specific half-life times (min) with 95% confidence bounds (min) of ATP or ADP before and after knocking out enzymatic activity by TEV protease cleavage