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Download fileA Basis Set of de Novo Coiled-Coil Peptide Oligomers for Rational Protein Design and Synthetic Biology
journal contribution
posted on 2012-06-15, 00:00 authored by Jordan
M. Fletcher, Aimee L. Boyle, Marc Bruning, Gail J. Bartlett, Thomas
L. Vincent, Nathan R. Zaccai, Craig T. Armstrong, Elizabeth
H. C. Bromley, Paula J. Booth, R. Leo Brady, Andrew R. Thomson, Derek N. WoolfsonProtein engineering, chemical biology, and synthetic
biology would
benefit from toolkits of peptide and protein components that could
be exchanged reliably between systems while maintaining their structural
and functional integrity. Ideally, such components should be highly
defined and predictable in all respects of sequence, structure, stability,
interactions, and function. To establish one such toolkit, here we
present a basis set of de novo designed α-helical
coiled-coil peptides that adopt defined and well-characterized parallel
dimeric, trimeric, and tetrameric states. The designs are based on
sequence-to-structure relationships both from the literature and analysis
of a database of known coiled-coil X-ray crystal structures. These
give foreground sequences to specify the targeted
oligomer state. A key feature of the design process is that sequence
positions outside of these sites are considered non-essential for
structural specificity; as such, they are referred to as the background, are kept non-descript, and are available for
mutation as required later. Synthetic peptides were characterized
in solution by circular-dichroism spectroscopy and analytical ultracentrifugation,
and their structures were determined by X-ray crystallography. Intriguingly,
a hitherto widely used empirical rule-of-thumb for coiled-coil dimer
specification does not hold in the designed system. However, the desired
oligomeric state is achieved by database-informed redesign of that
particular foreground and confirmed experimentally. We envisage that
the basis set will be of use in directing and controlling protein
assembly, with potential applications in chemical and synthetic biology.
To help with such endeavors, we introduce Pcomp,
an on-line registry of peptide components for protein-design and synthetic-biology
applications.