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High-resolution Structural and Thermodynamic Analysis of Extreme Stabilization of Human Procarboxypeptidase by Computational Protein Design

Recent efforts to design de novo or redesign the sequence and structure of proteins using computational techniques have met with significant success. Most, if not all, of these computational methodologies attempt to model atomic-level interactions, and hence high-resolution structural characterizati...

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Autores principales: Dantas, Gautam, Corrent, Colin, Reichow, Steve L., Havranek, James J., Eletr, Ziad M., Isern, Nancy G., Kuhlman, Brian, Varani, Gabriele, Merritt, Ethan A., Baker, David
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3764424/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17196978
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2006.11.080
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author Dantas, Gautam
Corrent, Colin
Reichow, Steve L.
Havranek, James J.
Eletr, Ziad M.
Isern, Nancy G.
Kuhlman, Brian
Varani, Gabriele
Merritt, Ethan A.
Baker, David
author_facet Dantas, Gautam
Corrent, Colin
Reichow, Steve L.
Havranek, James J.
Eletr, Ziad M.
Isern, Nancy G.
Kuhlman, Brian
Varani, Gabriele
Merritt, Ethan A.
Baker, David
author_sort Dantas, Gautam
collection PubMed
description Recent efforts to design de novo or redesign the sequence and structure of proteins using computational techniques have met with significant success. Most, if not all, of these computational methodologies attempt to model atomic-level interactions, and hence high-resolution structural characterization of the designed proteins is critical for evaluating the atomic-level accuracy of the underlying design force-fields. We previously used our computational protein design protocol RosettaDesign to completely redesign the sequence of the activation domain of human procarboxypeptidase A2. With 68% of the wild-type sequence changed, the designed protein, AYEdesign, is over 10 kcal/mol more stable than the wild-type protein. Here, we describe the high-resolution crystal structure and solution NMR structure of AYEdesign, which show that the experimentally determined backbone and side-chains conformations are effectively superimposable with the computational model at atomic resolution. To isolate the origins of the remarkable stabilization, we have designed and characterized a new series of procarboxypeptidase mutants that gain significant thermodynamic stability with a minimal number of mutations; one mutant gains more than 5 kcal/mol of stability over the wild-type protein with only four amino acid changes. We explore the relationship between force-field smoothing and conformational sampling by comparing the experimentally determined free energies of the overall design and these focused subsets of mutations to those predicted using modified force-fields, and both fixed and flexible backbone sampling protocols.
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spelling pubmed-37644242013-09-09 High-resolution Structural and Thermodynamic Analysis of Extreme Stabilization of Human Procarboxypeptidase by Computational Protein Design Dantas, Gautam Corrent, Colin Reichow, Steve L. Havranek, James J. Eletr, Ziad M. Isern, Nancy G. Kuhlman, Brian Varani, Gabriele Merritt, Ethan A. Baker, David J Mol Biol Article Recent efforts to design de novo or redesign the sequence and structure of proteins using computational techniques have met with significant success. Most, if not all, of these computational methodologies attempt to model atomic-level interactions, and hence high-resolution structural characterization of the designed proteins is critical for evaluating the atomic-level accuracy of the underlying design force-fields. We previously used our computational protein design protocol RosettaDesign to completely redesign the sequence of the activation domain of human procarboxypeptidase A2. With 68% of the wild-type sequence changed, the designed protein, AYEdesign, is over 10 kcal/mol more stable than the wild-type protein. Here, we describe the high-resolution crystal structure and solution NMR structure of AYEdesign, which show that the experimentally determined backbone and side-chains conformations are effectively superimposable with the computational model at atomic resolution. To isolate the origins of the remarkable stabilization, we have designed and characterized a new series of procarboxypeptidase mutants that gain significant thermodynamic stability with a minimal number of mutations; one mutant gains more than 5 kcal/mol of stability over the wild-type protein with only four amino acid changes. We explore the relationship between force-field smoothing and conformational sampling by comparing the experimentally determined free energies of the overall design and these focused subsets of mutations to those predicted using modified force-fields, and both fixed and flexible backbone sampling protocols. Elsevier 2007-03-02 /pmc/articles/PMC3764424/ /pubmed/17196978 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2006.11.080 Text en © 2007 Elsevier Ltd. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Open Access under CC BY 3.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) license
spellingShingle Article
Dantas, Gautam
Corrent, Colin
Reichow, Steve L.
Havranek, James J.
Eletr, Ziad M.
Isern, Nancy G.
Kuhlman, Brian
Varani, Gabriele
Merritt, Ethan A.
Baker, David
High-resolution Structural and Thermodynamic Analysis of Extreme Stabilization of Human Procarboxypeptidase by Computational Protein Design
title High-resolution Structural and Thermodynamic Analysis of Extreme Stabilization of Human Procarboxypeptidase by Computational Protein Design
title_full High-resolution Structural and Thermodynamic Analysis of Extreme Stabilization of Human Procarboxypeptidase by Computational Protein Design
title_fullStr High-resolution Structural and Thermodynamic Analysis of Extreme Stabilization of Human Procarboxypeptidase by Computational Protein Design
title_full_unstemmed High-resolution Structural and Thermodynamic Analysis of Extreme Stabilization of Human Procarboxypeptidase by Computational Protein Design
title_short High-resolution Structural and Thermodynamic Analysis of Extreme Stabilization of Human Procarboxypeptidase by Computational Protein Design
title_sort high-resolution structural and thermodynamic analysis of extreme stabilization of human procarboxypeptidase by computational protein design
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3764424/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17196978
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2006.11.080
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