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Tailorable Tetrahelical Bundles as a Toolkit for Redox Studies

[Image: see text] Oxidoreductases have evolved over millions of years to perform a variety of metabolic tasks crucial for life. Understanding how these tasks are engineered relies on delivering external electron donors or acceptors to initiate electron transfer reactions. This is a challenge. Small-...

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Autores principales: Solomon, Lee A., Witten, Joshua, Kodali, Goutham, Moser, Christopher C., Dutton, P. Leslie
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2022
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9589594/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36219580
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.2c05119
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author Solomon, Lee A.
Witten, Joshua
Kodali, Goutham
Moser, Christopher C.
Dutton, P. Leslie
author_facet Solomon, Lee A.
Witten, Joshua
Kodali, Goutham
Moser, Christopher C.
Dutton, P. Leslie
author_sort Solomon, Lee A.
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Oxidoreductases have evolved over millions of years to perform a variety of metabolic tasks crucial for life. Understanding how these tasks are engineered relies on delivering external electron donors or acceptors to initiate electron transfer reactions. This is a challenge. Small-molecule redox reagents can act indiscriminately, poisoning the cell. Natural redox proteins are more selective, but finding the right partner can be difficult due to the limited number of redox potentials and difficulty tuning them. De novo proteins offer an alternative path. They are robust and can withstand mutations that allow for tailorable changes. They are also devoid of evolutionary artifacts and readily bind redox cofactors. However, no reliable set of engineering principles have been developed that allow for these proteins to be fine-tuned so their redox midpoint potential (E(m)) can form donor/acceptor pairs with any natural oxidoreductase. This work dissects protein-cofactor interactions that can be tuned to modulate redox potentials of acceptors and donors using a mutable de novo designed tetrahelical protein platform with iron tetrapyrrole cofactors as a test case. We show a series of engineered heme b-binding de novo proteins and quantify their resulting effect on E(m). By focusing on the surface charge and buried charges, as well as cofactor placement, chemical modification, and ligation of cofactors, we are able to achieve a broad range of E(m) values spanning a range of 330 mV. We anticipate this work will guide the design of proteinaceous tools that can interface with natural oxidoreductases inside and outside the cell while shedding light on how natural proteins modulate E(m) values of bound cofactors.
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spelling pubmed-95895942022-10-25 Tailorable Tetrahelical Bundles as a Toolkit for Redox Studies Solomon, Lee A. Witten, Joshua Kodali, Goutham Moser, Christopher C. Dutton, P. Leslie J Phys Chem B [Image: see text] Oxidoreductases have evolved over millions of years to perform a variety of metabolic tasks crucial for life. Understanding how these tasks are engineered relies on delivering external electron donors or acceptors to initiate electron transfer reactions. This is a challenge. Small-molecule redox reagents can act indiscriminately, poisoning the cell. Natural redox proteins are more selective, but finding the right partner can be difficult due to the limited number of redox potentials and difficulty tuning them. De novo proteins offer an alternative path. They are robust and can withstand mutations that allow for tailorable changes. They are also devoid of evolutionary artifacts and readily bind redox cofactors. However, no reliable set of engineering principles have been developed that allow for these proteins to be fine-tuned so their redox midpoint potential (E(m)) can form donor/acceptor pairs with any natural oxidoreductase. This work dissects protein-cofactor interactions that can be tuned to modulate redox potentials of acceptors and donors using a mutable de novo designed tetrahelical protein platform with iron tetrapyrrole cofactors as a test case. We show a series of engineered heme b-binding de novo proteins and quantify their resulting effect on E(m). By focusing on the surface charge and buried charges, as well as cofactor placement, chemical modification, and ligation of cofactors, we are able to achieve a broad range of E(m) values spanning a range of 330 mV. We anticipate this work will guide the design of proteinaceous tools that can interface with natural oxidoreductases inside and outside the cell while shedding light on how natural proteins modulate E(m) values of bound cofactors. American Chemical Society 2022-10-11 2022-10-20 /pmc/articles/PMC9589594/ /pubmed/36219580 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.2c05119 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Permits non-commercial access and re-use, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained; but does not permit creation of adaptations or other derivative works (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Solomon, Lee A.
Witten, Joshua
Kodali, Goutham
Moser, Christopher C.
Dutton, P. Leslie
Tailorable Tetrahelical Bundles as a Toolkit for Redox Studies
title Tailorable Tetrahelical Bundles as a Toolkit for Redox Studies
title_full Tailorable Tetrahelical Bundles as a Toolkit for Redox Studies
title_fullStr Tailorable Tetrahelical Bundles as a Toolkit for Redox Studies
title_full_unstemmed Tailorable Tetrahelical Bundles as a Toolkit for Redox Studies
title_short Tailorable Tetrahelical Bundles as a Toolkit for Redox Studies
title_sort tailorable tetrahelical bundles as a toolkit for redox studies
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9589594/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36219580
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.2c05119
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