Cargando…

Improvement of a Potential Anthrax Therapeutic by Computational Protein Design

Past anthrax attacks in the United States have highlighted the need for improved measures against bioweapons. The virulence of anthrax stems from the shielding properties of the Bacillus anthracis poly-γ-d-glutamic acid capsule. In the presence of excess CapD, a B. anthracis γ-glutamyl transpeptidas...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Wu, Sean J., Eiben, Christopher B., Carra, John H., Huang, Ivan, Zong, David, Liu, Peixian, Wu, Cindy T., Nivala, Jeff, Dunbar, Josef, Huber, Tomas, Senft, Jeffrey, Schokman, Rowena, Smith, Matthew D., Mills, Jeremy H., Friedlander, Arthur M., Baker, David, Siegel, Justin B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3173206/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21768086
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M111.251041
_version_ 1782211933340958720
author Wu, Sean J.
Eiben, Christopher B.
Carra, John H.
Huang, Ivan
Zong, David
Liu, Peixian
Wu, Cindy T.
Nivala, Jeff
Dunbar, Josef
Huber, Tomas
Senft, Jeffrey
Schokman, Rowena
Smith, Matthew D.
Mills, Jeremy H.
Friedlander, Arthur M.
Baker, David
Siegel, Justin B.
author_facet Wu, Sean J.
Eiben, Christopher B.
Carra, John H.
Huang, Ivan
Zong, David
Liu, Peixian
Wu, Cindy T.
Nivala, Jeff
Dunbar, Josef
Huber, Tomas
Senft, Jeffrey
Schokman, Rowena
Smith, Matthew D.
Mills, Jeremy H.
Friedlander, Arthur M.
Baker, David
Siegel, Justin B.
author_sort Wu, Sean J.
collection PubMed
description Past anthrax attacks in the United States have highlighted the need for improved measures against bioweapons. The virulence of anthrax stems from the shielding properties of the Bacillus anthracis poly-γ-d-glutamic acid capsule. In the presence of excess CapD, a B. anthracis γ-glutamyl transpeptidase, the protective capsule is degraded, and the immune system can successfully combat infection. Although CapD shows promise as a next generation protein therapeutic against anthrax, improvements in production, stability, and therapeutic formulation are needed. In this study, we addressed several of these problems through computational protein engineering techniques. We show that circular permutation of CapD improved production properties and dramatically increased kinetic thermostability. At 45 °C, CapD was completely inactive after 5 min, but circularly permuted CapD remained almost entirely active after 30 min. In addition, we identify an amino acid substitution that dramatically decreased transpeptidation activity but not hydrolysis. Subsequently, we show that this mutant had a diminished capsule degradation activity, suggesting that CapD catalyzes capsule degradation through a transpeptidation reaction with endogenous amino acids and peptides in serum rather than hydrolysis.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3173206
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2011
publisher American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-31732062011-09-21 Improvement of a Potential Anthrax Therapeutic by Computational Protein Design Wu, Sean J. Eiben, Christopher B. Carra, John H. Huang, Ivan Zong, David Liu, Peixian Wu, Cindy T. Nivala, Jeff Dunbar, Josef Huber, Tomas Senft, Jeffrey Schokman, Rowena Smith, Matthew D. Mills, Jeremy H. Friedlander, Arthur M. Baker, David Siegel, Justin B. J Biol Chem Computational Biology Past anthrax attacks in the United States have highlighted the need for improved measures against bioweapons. The virulence of anthrax stems from the shielding properties of the Bacillus anthracis poly-γ-d-glutamic acid capsule. In the presence of excess CapD, a B. anthracis γ-glutamyl transpeptidase, the protective capsule is degraded, and the immune system can successfully combat infection. Although CapD shows promise as a next generation protein therapeutic against anthrax, improvements in production, stability, and therapeutic formulation are needed. In this study, we addressed several of these problems through computational protein engineering techniques. We show that circular permutation of CapD improved production properties and dramatically increased kinetic thermostability. At 45 °C, CapD was completely inactive after 5 min, but circularly permuted CapD remained almost entirely active after 30 min. In addition, we identify an amino acid substitution that dramatically decreased transpeptidation activity but not hydrolysis. Subsequently, we show that this mutant had a diminished capsule degradation activity, suggesting that CapD catalyzes capsule degradation through a transpeptidation reaction with endogenous amino acids and peptides in serum rather than hydrolysis. American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2011-09-16 2011-07-18 /pmc/articles/PMC3173206/ /pubmed/21768086 http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M111.251041 Text en © 2011 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc. Author's Choice—Final version full access. Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) applies to Author Choice Articles
spellingShingle Computational Biology
Wu, Sean J.
Eiben, Christopher B.
Carra, John H.
Huang, Ivan
Zong, David
Liu, Peixian
Wu, Cindy T.
Nivala, Jeff
Dunbar, Josef
Huber, Tomas
Senft, Jeffrey
Schokman, Rowena
Smith, Matthew D.
Mills, Jeremy H.
Friedlander, Arthur M.
Baker, David
Siegel, Justin B.
Improvement of a Potential Anthrax Therapeutic by Computational Protein Design
title Improvement of a Potential Anthrax Therapeutic by Computational Protein Design
title_full Improvement of a Potential Anthrax Therapeutic by Computational Protein Design
title_fullStr Improvement of a Potential Anthrax Therapeutic by Computational Protein Design
title_full_unstemmed Improvement of a Potential Anthrax Therapeutic by Computational Protein Design
title_short Improvement of a Potential Anthrax Therapeutic by Computational Protein Design
title_sort improvement of a potential anthrax therapeutic by computational protein design
topic Computational Biology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3173206/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21768086
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M111.251041
work_keys_str_mv AT wuseanj improvementofapotentialanthraxtherapeuticbycomputationalproteindesign
AT eibenchristopherb improvementofapotentialanthraxtherapeuticbycomputationalproteindesign
AT carrajohnh improvementofapotentialanthraxtherapeuticbycomputationalproteindesign
AT huangivan improvementofapotentialanthraxtherapeuticbycomputationalproteindesign
AT zongdavid improvementofapotentialanthraxtherapeuticbycomputationalproteindesign
AT liupeixian improvementofapotentialanthraxtherapeuticbycomputationalproteindesign
AT wucindyt improvementofapotentialanthraxtherapeuticbycomputationalproteindesign
AT nivalajeff improvementofapotentialanthraxtherapeuticbycomputationalproteindesign
AT dunbarjosef improvementofapotentialanthraxtherapeuticbycomputationalproteindesign
AT hubertomas improvementofapotentialanthraxtherapeuticbycomputationalproteindesign
AT senftjeffrey improvementofapotentialanthraxtherapeuticbycomputationalproteindesign
AT schokmanrowena improvementofapotentialanthraxtherapeuticbycomputationalproteindesign
AT smithmatthewd improvementofapotentialanthraxtherapeuticbycomputationalproteindesign
AT millsjeremyh improvementofapotentialanthraxtherapeuticbycomputationalproteindesign
AT friedlanderarthurm improvementofapotentialanthraxtherapeuticbycomputationalproteindesign
AT bakerdavid improvementofapotentialanthraxtherapeuticbycomputationalproteindesign
AT siegeljustinb improvementofapotentialanthraxtherapeuticbycomputationalproteindesign