| Literature DB >> 34590762 |
Ryan M Woloschuk1, P Maximilian M Reed1, Anna S I Jaikaran1, Karl Z Demmans1, Jeffrey Youn1, Voula Kanelis1, Maruti Uppalapati2, G Andrew Woolley1.
Abstract
Photo-control of affinity reagents offers a general approach for high-resolution spatiotemporal control of diverse molecular processes. In an effort to develop general design principles for a photo-controlled affinity reagent, we took a structure-based approach to the design of a photoswitchable Z-domain, among the simplest of affinity reagent scaffolds. A chimera, designated Z-PYP, of photoactive yellow protein (PYP) and the Z-domain, was designed based on the concept of mutually exclusive folding. NMR analysis indicated that, in the dark, the PYP domain of the chimera was folded, and the Z-domain was unfolded. Blue light caused loss of structure in PYP and a two- to sixfold change in the apparent affinity of Z-PYP for its target as determined using size exclusion chromatography, UV-Vis based assays, and enyzme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). A thermodynamic model indicated that mutations to decrease Z-domain folding energy would alter target affinity without loss of switching. This prediction was confirmed experimentally with a double alanine mutant in helix 3 of the Z-domain of the chimera (Z-PYP-AA) showing >30-fold lower dark-state binding and no loss in switching. The effect of decreased dark-state binding affinity was tested in a two-hybrid transcriptional control format and enabled pronounced light/dark differences in yeast growth in vivo. Finally, the design was transferable to the αZ-Taq affibody enabling tunable light-dependent binding both in vitro and in vivo to the Z-Taq target. This system thus provides a framework for the focused development of light switchable affibodies for a range of targets.Entities:
Keywords: affibody; affinity reagent; optogenetics; photo-control; photoactive yellow protein; protein design
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34590762 PMCID: PMC8605370 DOI: 10.1002/pro.4196
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Protein Sci ISSN: 0961-8368 Impact factor: 6.725