Cao Yi, Yoo Teri, Zhuang Shulin, Li Hongbin
Department of Chemistry, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
J Mol Biol. 2008 May 16;378(5):1132-41. doi: 10.1016/j.jmb.2008.03.046. Epub 2008 Mar 28.
Elastomeric proteins are molecular springs found not only in a variety of biological machines and tissues, but also in biomaterials of superb mechanical properties. Regulating the mechanical stability of elastomeric proteins is not only important for a range of biological processes, but also critical for the use of engineered elastomeric proteins as building blocks to construct nanomechanical devices and novel materials of well-defined mechanical properties. Here we demonstrate that protein-protein interactions can potentially serve as an effective means to regulate the mechanical properties of elastomeric proteins. We show that the binding of fragments of IgG antibody to a small protein, GB1, can significantly enhance the mechanical stability of GB1. The regulation of the mechanical stability of GB1 by IgG fragments is not through direct modification of the interactions in the mechanically key region of GB1; instead, it is accomplished via the long-range coupling between the IgG binding site and the mechanically key region of GB1. Although Fc and Fab bind GB1 at different regions of GB1, their binding to GB1 can increase the mechanical stability of GB1 significantly. Using alanine point mutants of GB1, we show that the amplitude of mechanical stability enhancement of GB1 by Fc does not correlate with the binding affinity, suggesting that binding affinity only affects the population of GB1/human Fc (hFc) complex at a given concentration of hFc, but does not affect the intrinsic mechanical stability of the GB1/hFc complex. Furthermore, our results indicate that the mechanical stability enhancement by IgG fragments is robust and can tolerate sequence/structural perturbation to GB1. Our results demonstrate that the protein-protein interaction is an efficient approach to regulate the mechanical stability of GB1-like proteins and we anticipate that this new methodology will help to develop novel elastomeric proteins with tunable mechanical stability and compliance.
弹性蛋白不仅存在于各种生物机器和组织中,还存在于具有卓越机械性能的生物材料中。调节弹性蛋白的机械稳定性不仅对一系列生物过程至关重要,对于将工程化弹性蛋白用作构建纳米机械设备和具有明确机械性能的新型材料的基本组成部分也至关重要。在此,我们证明蛋白质 - 蛋白质相互作用可能是调节弹性蛋白机械性能的有效手段。我们表明,IgG抗体片段与小蛋白GB1的结合可显著增强GB1的机械稳定性。IgG片段对GB1机械稳定性的调节并非通过直接修饰GB1机械关键区域的相互作用;相反,它是通过IgG结合位点与GB1机械关键区域之间的远程耦合来实现的。尽管Fc和Fab在GB1的不同区域与GB1结合,但它们与GB1的结合均可显著提高GB1的机械稳定性。利用GB1的丙氨酸点突变体,我们发现Fc对GB1机械稳定性增强的幅度与结合亲和力无关,这表明结合亲和力仅在给定浓度的人Fc(hFc)下影响GB1/hFc复合物的数量,但不影响GB1/hFc复合物的固有机械稳定性。此外,我们的结果表明,IgG片段对机械稳定性的增强作用很强,并且能够耐受GB1的序列/结构扰动。我们的结果表明,蛋白质 - 蛋白质相互作用是调节类GB1蛋白机械稳定性的有效方法,我们预计这种新方法将有助于开发具有可调机械稳定性和顺应性的新型弹性蛋白。