| Literature DB >> 33602850 |
Travis R Blum1,2,3, Hao Liu4,5, Michael S Packer1,2,3, Xiaozhe Xiong4,5, Pyung-Gang Lee4,5, Sicai Zhang4,5, Michelle Richter1,2,3, George Minasov6, Karla J F Satchell6, Min Dong7,5, David R Liu8,2,3.
Abstract
Although bespoke, sequence-specific proteases have the potential to advance biotechnology and medicine, generation of proteases with tailor-made cleavage specificities remains a major challenge. We developed a phage-assisted protease evolution system with simultaneous positive and negative selection and applied it to three botulinum neurotoxin (BoNT) light-chain proteases. We evolved BoNT/X protease into separate variants that preferentially cleave vesicle-associated membrane protein 4 (VAMP4) and Ykt6, evolved BoNT/F protease to selectively cleave the non-native substrate VAMP7, and evolved BoNT/E protease to cleave phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) but not any natural BoNT protease substrate in neurons. The evolved proteases display large changes in specificity (218- to >11,000,000-fold) and can retain their ability to form holotoxins that self-deliver into primary neurons. These findings establish a versatile platform for reprogramming proteases to selectively cleave new targets of therapeutic interest.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33602850 PMCID: PMC8175023 DOI: 10.1126/science.abf5972
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728