Mutation choice to eliminate buried free cysteines in protein therapeutics.

J Pharm Sci

Department of Biomedical Sciences, Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida, 32306-4300.

Published: February 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • Buried free-cysteine residues can cause protein aggregation and reduce the effectiveness of protein therapies, so mutating these residues can improve stability and storage.
  • Common mutations include replacing these cysteine residues with either Ser (polar) or Ala/Val (hydrophobic), but there's a lack of detailed understanding of how these changes affect protein structure.
  • A study on the fibroblast growth factor-1 found that most mutations destabilized the protein, with the best substitution being Ala, contrary to expectations that Ser would be equally effective.

Article Abstract

Buried free-cysteine (Cys) residues can contribute to an irreversible unfolding pathway that promotes protein aggregation, increases immunogenic potential, and significantly reduces protein functional half-life. Consequently, mutation of buried free-Cys residues can result in significant improvement in the storage, reconstitution, and pharmacokinetic properties of protein-based therapeutics. Mutational design to eliminate buried free-Cys residues typically follows one of two common heuristics: either substitution by Ser (polar and isosteric), or substitution by Ala or Val (hydrophobic); however, a detailed structural and thermodynamic understanding of Cys mutations is lacking. We report a comprehensive structure and stability study of Ala, Ser, Thr, and Val mutations at each of the three buried free-Cys positions (Cys16, Cys83, and Cys117) in fibroblast growth factor-1. Mutation was almost universally destabilizing, indicating a general optimization for the wild-type Cys, including van der Waals and H-bond interactions. Structural response to Cys mutation characteristically involved changes to maintain, or effectively substitute, local H-bond interactions-by either structural collapse to accommodate the smaller oxygen radius of Ser/Thr, or conversely, expansion to enable inclusion of novel H-bonding solvent. Despite the diverse structural effects, the least destabilizing average substitution at each position was Ala, and not isosteric Ser.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jps.24188DOI Listing

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Mutation choice to eliminate buried free cysteines in protein therapeutics.

J Pharm Sci

February 2015

Department of Biomedical Sciences, Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida, 32306-4300.

Article Synopsis
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  • Common mutations include replacing these cysteine residues with either Ser (polar) or Ala/Val (hydrophobic), but there's a lack of detailed understanding of how these changes affect protein structure.
  • A study on the fibroblast growth factor-1 found that most mutations destabilized the protein, with the best substitution being Ala, contrary to expectations that Ser would be equally effective.
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