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Strong Enrichment of Aromatic Residues in Binding Sites from a Charge-neutralized Hyperthermostable Sso7d Scaffold Library

The Sso7d protein from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Sulfolobus solfataricus is an attractive binding scaffold because of its small size (7 kDa), high thermal stability (T(m) of 98 °C), and absence of cysteines and glycosylation sites. However, as a DNA-binding protein, Sso7d is highly positively c...

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Autores principales: Traxlmayr, Michael W., Kiefer, Jonathan D., Srinivas, Raja R., Lobner, Elisabeth, Tisdale, Alison W., Mehta, Naveen K., Yang, Nicole J., Tidor, Bruce, Wittrup, K. Dane
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5077188/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27582495
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M116.741314
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author Traxlmayr, Michael W.
Kiefer, Jonathan D.
Srinivas, Raja R.
Lobner, Elisabeth
Tisdale, Alison W.
Mehta, Naveen K.
Yang, Nicole J.
Tidor, Bruce
Wittrup, K. Dane
author_facet Traxlmayr, Michael W.
Kiefer, Jonathan D.
Srinivas, Raja R.
Lobner, Elisabeth
Tisdale, Alison W.
Mehta, Naveen K.
Yang, Nicole J.
Tidor, Bruce
Wittrup, K. Dane
author_sort Traxlmayr, Michael W.
collection PubMed
description The Sso7d protein from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Sulfolobus solfataricus is an attractive binding scaffold because of its small size (7 kDa), high thermal stability (T(m) of 98 °C), and absence of cysteines and glycosylation sites. However, as a DNA-binding protein, Sso7d is highly positively charged, introducing a strong specificity constraint for binding epitopes and leading to nonspecific interaction with mammalian cell membranes. In the present study, we report charge-neutralized variants of Sso7d that maintain high thermal stability. Yeast-displayed libraries that were based on this reduced charge Sso7d (rcSso7d) scaffold yielded binders with low nanomolar affinities against mouse serum albumin and several epitopes on human epidermal growth factor receptor. Importantly, starting from a charge-neutralized scaffold facilitated evolutionary adaptation of binders to differentially charged epitopes on mouse serum albumin and human epidermal growth factor receptor, respectively. Interestingly, the distribution of amino acids in the small and rigid binding surface of enriched rcSso7d-based binders is very different from that generally found in more flexible antibody complementarity-determining region loops but resembles the composition of antibody-binding energetic hot spots. Particularly striking was a strong enrichment of the aromatic residues Trp, Tyr, and Phe in rcSso7d-based binders. This suggests that the rigidity and small size of this scaffold determines the unusual amino acid composition of its binding sites, mimicking the energetic core of antibody paratopes. Despite the high frequency of aromatic residues, these rcSso7d-based binders are highly expressed, thermostable, and monomeric, suggesting that the hyperstability of the starting scaffold and the rigidness of the binding surface confer a high tolerance to mutation.
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spelling pubmed-50771882016-11-01 Strong Enrichment of Aromatic Residues in Binding Sites from a Charge-neutralized Hyperthermostable Sso7d Scaffold Library Traxlmayr, Michael W. Kiefer, Jonathan D. Srinivas, Raja R. Lobner, Elisabeth Tisdale, Alison W. Mehta, Naveen K. Yang, Nicole J. Tidor, Bruce Wittrup, K. Dane J Biol Chem Protein Structure and Folding The Sso7d protein from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Sulfolobus solfataricus is an attractive binding scaffold because of its small size (7 kDa), high thermal stability (T(m) of 98 °C), and absence of cysteines and glycosylation sites. However, as a DNA-binding protein, Sso7d is highly positively charged, introducing a strong specificity constraint for binding epitopes and leading to nonspecific interaction with mammalian cell membranes. In the present study, we report charge-neutralized variants of Sso7d that maintain high thermal stability. Yeast-displayed libraries that were based on this reduced charge Sso7d (rcSso7d) scaffold yielded binders with low nanomolar affinities against mouse serum albumin and several epitopes on human epidermal growth factor receptor. Importantly, starting from a charge-neutralized scaffold facilitated evolutionary adaptation of binders to differentially charged epitopes on mouse serum albumin and human epidermal growth factor receptor, respectively. Interestingly, the distribution of amino acids in the small and rigid binding surface of enriched rcSso7d-based binders is very different from that generally found in more flexible antibody complementarity-determining region loops but resembles the composition of antibody-binding energetic hot spots. Particularly striking was a strong enrichment of the aromatic residues Trp, Tyr, and Phe in rcSso7d-based binders. This suggests that the rigidity and small size of this scaffold determines the unusual amino acid composition of its binding sites, mimicking the energetic core of antibody paratopes. Despite the high frequency of aromatic residues, these rcSso7d-based binders are highly expressed, thermostable, and monomeric, suggesting that the hyperstability of the starting scaffold and the rigidness of the binding surface confer a high tolerance to mutation. American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2016-10-21 2016-08-30 /pmc/articles/PMC5077188/ /pubmed/27582495 http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M116.741314 Text en © 2016 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc. Author's Choice—Final version free via Creative Commons CC-BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0) .
spellingShingle Protein Structure and Folding
Traxlmayr, Michael W.
Kiefer, Jonathan D.
Srinivas, Raja R.
Lobner, Elisabeth
Tisdale, Alison W.
Mehta, Naveen K.
Yang, Nicole J.
Tidor, Bruce
Wittrup, K. Dane
Strong Enrichment of Aromatic Residues in Binding Sites from a Charge-neutralized Hyperthermostable Sso7d Scaffold Library
title Strong Enrichment of Aromatic Residues in Binding Sites from a Charge-neutralized Hyperthermostable Sso7d Scaffold Library
title_full Strong Enrichment of Aromatic Residues in Binding Sites from a Charge-neutralized Hyperthermostable Sso7d Scaffold Library
title_fullStr Strong Enrichment of Aromatic Residues in Binding Sites from a Charge-neutralized Hyperthermostable Sso7d Scaffold Library
title_full_unstemmed Strong Enrichment of Aromatic Residues in Binding Sites from a Charge-neutralized Hyperthermostable Sso7d Scaffold Library
title_short Strong Enrichment of Aromatic Residues in Binding Sites from a Charge-neutralized Hyperthermostable Sso7d Scaffold Library
title_sort strong enrichment of aromatic residues in binding sites from a charge-neutralized hyperthermostable sso7d scaffold library
topic Protein Structure and Folding
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5077188/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27582495
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M116.741314
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