Protein engineering is a powerful tool in drug design and therapeutics, where disulphide bridges are commonly introduced to stabilize proteins. However, these bonds also introduce covalent loops, which are often neglected. These loops may entrap the protein backbone on opposite sides, leading to a "knotted" topology, forming a so-called Pierced Lasso (PL). In this elegant system, the "knot" is held together with a single disulphide bridge where part of the polypeptide chain is threaded through. The size and position of these covalent loops can be manipulated through protein design in vitro, whereas nature uses polymorphism to switch the PL topology. The PL protein leptin shows genetic modification of an N-terminal residue, adding a third cysteine to the same sequence. In an effort to understand the mechanism of threading of these diverse topologies, we designed three loop variants to mimic the polymorphic sequence. This adds elegance to the system under study, as it allows the generation of three possible covalent loops; they are the original wild-type C-terminal loop protein, the fully circularized unthreaded protein, and the N-terminal loop protein, responsible for different lasso topologies. The size of the loop changes the threading mechanism from a slipknotting to a plugging mechanism, with increasing loop size. Interestingly, the ground state of the native protein structure is largely unaffected, but biological assays show that the activity is maximized by properly controlled dynamics in the threaded state. A threaded topology with proper conformational dynamics is important for receptor interaction and activation of the signaling pathways in vivo.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.6b11506 | DOI Listing |
J Chem Theory Comput
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Dipartimento di Chimica e Tecnologie Chimiche, Università della Calabria, Via P. Bucci Rende 87036, Italy.
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View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
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Department of Chemical Sciences and Centre for Advanced Functional Materials, Indian Institute of Science Education and Research (IISER) Kolkata, Mohanpur, 741246, India.
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View Article and Find Full Text PDFRSC Chem Biol
November 2024
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Florida Atlantic University Boca Raton Florida 33431 USA
Aberrant and dysregulated protein-protein interactions (PPIs) drive a significant number of human diseases, which is why they represent a major class of targets in drug discovery. Although a number of high-affinity antibody-based drugs have emerged in this therapeutic space, the discovery of smaller PPI inhibitors is lagging far behind, underscoring the need for novel scaffold modalities. To bridge this gap, we introduce a biomimetic platform technology - adaptive design of antibody paratopes into therapeutics () - that enables the paratope-forming binding loops of antibodies to be crafted into large β-hairpin scaffolds ().
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Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery, The First Affiliated Hospital of Zhengzhou University, Zhengzhou, China.
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View Article and Find Full Text PDFCancer Drug Resist
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Department of Breast Surgery, the First Affiliated Hospital, Guangzhou Medical University, Guangzhou 510120, Guangdong, China.
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small non-coding RNAs comprising 19-24 nucleotides that indirectly control gene expression. In contrast to other non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs), circular RNAs (circRNAs) are defined by their covalently closed loops, forming covalent bonds between the 3' and 5' ends. circRNAs regulate gene expression by interacting with miRNAs at transcriptional or post-transcriptional levels.
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