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Functional Assembly of Protein Fragments Induced by Spatial Confinement

Natural proteins are often confined within their local microenvironments, such as three-dimensional confinement in organelles or two-dimensional confinement in lipid rafts on cytoplasmic membrane. Spatial confinement restricts proteins' entropic freedom, forces their lateral interaction, and in...

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Autores principales: Yu, Yongsheng, Wang, Jianpeng, Liu, Jiahui, Ling, Daishun, Xia, Jiang
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4398348/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25875003
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0122101
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author Yu, Yongsheng
Wang, Jianpeng
Liu, Jiahui
Ling, Daishun
Xia, Jiang
author_facet Yu, Yongsheng
Wang, Jianpeng
Liu, Jiahui
Ling, Daishun
Xia, Jiang
author_sort Yu, Yongsheng
collection PubMed
description Natural proteins are often confined within their local microenvironments, such as three-dimensional confinement in organelles or two-dimensional confinement in lipid rafts on cytoplasmic membrane. Spatial confinement restricts proteins' entropic freedom, forces their lateral interaction, and induces new properties that the same proteins lack at the soluble state. So far, the phenomenon of environment-induced protein functional alteration still lacks a full illustration. We demonstrate here that engineered protein fragments, although being non-functional in solution, can be re-assembled within the nanometer space to give the full activity of the whole protein. Specific interaction between hexahistidine-tag (His-tag) and NiO surface immobilizes protein fragments on NiO nanoparticles to form a self-assembled protein "corona" on the particles inside the nanopores of mesoporous silica. Site-specific assembly forces a shoulder-by-shoulder orientation and promotes fragment−fragment interaction; this interaction together with spatial confinement of the mesopores results in functional re-assembly of the protein half fragments. To our surprise, a single half fragment of luciferase (non-catalytic in solution) exhibited luciferase activity when immobilized on NiO in the mesopores, in the absence of the complimentary half. This shows for the first time that spatial confinement can induce the folding of a half fragment, reconstitute the enzyme active site, and re-gain the catalytic capability of the whole protein. Our work thereby highlights the under-documented notion that aside from the chemical composition such as primary sequence, physical environment of a protein also determines its function.
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spelling pubmed-43983482015-04-21 Functional Assembly of Protein Fragments Induced by Spatial Confinement Yu, Yongsheng Wang, Jianpeng Liu, Jiahui Ling, Daishun Xia, Jiang PLoS One Research Article Natural proteins are often confined within their local microenvironments, such as three-dimensional confinement in organelles or two-dimensional confinement in lipid rafts on cytoplasmic membrane. Spatial confinement restricts proteins' entropic freedom, forces their lateral interaction, and induces new properties that the same proteins lack at the soluble state. So far, the phenomenon of environment-induced protein functional alteration still lacks a full illustration. We demonstrate here that engineered protein fragments, although being non-functional in solution, can be re-assembled within the nanometer space to give the full activity of the whole protein. Specific interaction between hexahistidine-tag (His-tag) and NiO surface immobilizes protein fragments on NiO nanoparticles to form a self-assembled protein "corona" on the particles inside the nanopores of mesoporous silica. Site-specific assembly forces a shoulder-by-shoulder orientation and promotes fragment−fragment interaction; this interaction together with spatial confinement of the mesopores results in functional re-assembly of the protein half fragments. To our surprise, a single half fragment of luciferase (non-catalytic in solution) exhibited luciferase activity when immobilized on NiO in the mesopores, in the absence of the complimentary half. This shows for the first time that spatial confinement can induce the folding of a half fragment, reconstitute the enzyme active site, and re-gain the catalytic capability of the whole protein. Our work thereby highlights the under-documented notion that aside from the chemical composition such as primary sequence, physical environment of a protein also determines its function. Public Library of Science 2015-04-15 /pmc/articles/PMC4398348/ /pubmed/25875003 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0122101 Text en © 2015 Yu et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Yu, Yongsheng
Wang, Jianpeng
Liu, Jiahui
Ling, Daishun
Xia, Jiang
Functional Assembly of Protein Fragments Induced by Spatial Confinement
title Functional Assembly of Protein Fragments Induced by Spatial Confinement
title_full Functional Assembly of Protein Fragments Induced by Spatial Confinement
title_fullStr Functional Assembly of Protein Fragments Induced by Spatial Confinement
title_full_unstemmed Functional Assembly of Protein Fragments Induced by Spatial Confinement
title_short Functional Assembly of Protein Fragments Induced by Spatial Confinement
title_sort functional assembly of protein fragments induced by spatial confinement
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4398348/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25875003
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0122101
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