Rational design of phase separating peptides based on phase separating protein sequence of p53.

Sci Rep

Department of Biointerface Chemistry, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Toyama, 2630 Sugitani, Toyama, 930-0194, Japan.

Published: April 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Artificial phase-separating (PS) peptides have potential applications in microreactors and drug delivery, but designing them is challenging due to limitations in relevant residues and interactions with target proteins.
  • This study introduces a rational method to create artificial PS peptides based on the sequence of target PS proteins, using p53 as a model.
  • The designed peptides displayed effective phase separation properties, showed rapid diffusion within droplets, and enhanced the uptake of p53 oligomers, demonstrating a new strategy for creating functional artificial PS peptides.

Article Abstract

Artificial phase-separating (PS) peptides can be used in various applications such as microreactors and drug delivery; however, the design of artificial PS peptides remains a challenge. This can be attributed to the limitation of PS-relevant residues that drive phase separation by interactions of their pairs in short peptides and the difficulty in the design involving interaction with target PS proteins. In this study, we propose a rational method to design artificial PS peptides that satisfy the requirements of liquid droplet formation and co-phase separation with target PS proteins based on the target PS protein sequence. As a proof of concept, we designed five artificial peptides from the model PS protein p53 using this method and confirmed their PS properties using differential interference contrast and fluorescence microscopy. Single-molecule fluorescent tracking demonstrated rapid diffusion of the designed peptides in their droplets compared to that of p53 in p53 droplets. In addition, size-dependent uptake of p53 oligomers was observed in the designed peptide droplets. Large oligomers were excluded from the droplet voids and localized on the droplet surface. The uptake of high-order p53 oligomers into the droplets was enhanced by the elongated linker of the designed peptides. Furthermore, we found that the designed peptide droplets recruited p53 to suppress gel-like aggregate formation. Finally, we discuss aspects that were crucial in the successful design of the artificial PS peptides.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10079954PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-32632-2DOI Listing

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