The immunoglobulin G (IgG) molecule has a long circulating serum half-life (~3 weeks) through pH- dependent FcRn binding-mediated recycling. To hijack the intracellular trafficking and recycling mechanism of IgG as a way to extend serum persistence of non-antibody therapeutic proteins, we have evolved the ectodomain of a low-affinity human FcγRIIa for enhanced binding to the lower hinge and upper CH2 region of IgG, which is very far from the FcRn binding site (CH2-CH3 interface). High-throughput library screening enabled isolation of an FcγRIIa variant (2A45.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDespite remarkable contribution of green fluorescent protein and its variants for better understanding of various biological functions, its application for anaerobic microorganisms has been limited because molecular oxygen is essential for chromophore formation. To overcome the limitation, we engineered a plant-derived light, oxygen, or voltage (LOV) domain containing flavin mononucleotide for enhanced spectral properties. The resulting LOV variants exhibited improved fluorescence intensity (20 and 70% higher for SH3 and 70% for BR1, respectively) compared to iLOV, an LOV variant isolated in a previous study, and the quantum yields of the LOV variants (0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMultimer formation is indispensable to the intrinsicbiologicalfunctions of many natural proteins. For example, the human immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibody has two variable regions (heavy chain variable domain [VH] and light chain variable domain [VL]) that must be assembled for specific antigen binding, and homodimerization of the antibody's Fc domain is essential for eliciting therapeutic effector functions. For the more efficient high-throughput directed evolution of multimeric proteins with ease of cultivation and handling, here we report a membrane protein drift and assembly (MPDA) system, in which a multimeric protein is displayed on a bacterial inner membrane by drifting and auto-assembling membrane-anchored subunit polypeptides.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA new approach for synthesizing well-defined hollow nanochanneled-silica nanosphere particles is demonstrated, and the structural details of these particles are described for the first time. Positively charged styrene copolymer nanospheres with a clean, smooth surface and a very narrow size distribution are synthesized by surfactant-free emulsion copolymerization and used as a thermal sacrificial core template for the production of core-shell nanoparticles. A surfactant/silica composite shell with a uniform thickness is successfully produced and deposited onto the polymeric core template by charge density matching between the polymer nanosphere template surface and the negatively charged silica precursors and then followed by selective thermal decomposition of the polymeric core and the surfactant cylinder domains in the shell, producing the hollow nanochanneled-silica nanospheres.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMonodisperse core-shell-structured poly(styrene-co-butyl acrylate-co-[2-(methacryloxy)ethyl] trimethylammonium chloride)/silica (PSBM/SiO2) nanoparticles were applied as new electrorheological (ER) materials in which the particles were dispersed in an insulating oil. These nanoparticles were prepared by the consecutive precipitation of cetyltrimethylammonium bromide and negatively charged tetraethylorthosilicate onto the cationic surfaces of PSBM colloidal particles. The successful deposition of the shell phase of the particles and their morphology was examined by transmission and scanning electron microscopy.
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