AI Article Synopsis

  • The study presents a method to create small, high-affinity proteins (VH domains) for targeting drug interactions inside cells, overcoming challenges of stability and expression.
  • Researchers developed a unique VH domain that can function without disulfide bonds and created a diverse library for effective screening.
  • Identified VH domains showed strong binding to a cancer-related protein, eIF4E, and their intracellular use led to reduced cancer cell growth and malignancy markers.

Article Abstract

An attractive approach to target intracellular macromolecular interfaces and to model putative drug interactions is to design small high-affinity proteins. Variable domains of the immunoglobulin heavy chain (VH domains) are ideal miniproteins, but their development has been restricted by poor intracellular stability and expression. Here we show that an autonomous and disufhide-free VH domain is suitable for intracellular studies and use it to construct a high-diversity phage display library. Using this library and affinity maturation techniques we identify VH domains with picomolar affinity against eIF4E, a protein commonly hyper-activated in cancer. We demonstrate that these molecules interact with eIF4E at the eIF4G binding site via a distinct structural pose. Intracellular overexpression of these miniproteins reduce cellular proliferation and expression of malignancy-related proteins in cancer cell lines. The linkage of high-diversity in vitro libraries with an intracellularly expressible miniprotein scaffold will facilitate the discovery of VH domains suitable for intracellular applications.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9388512PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-32463-1DOI Listing

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