Stevens Corey A, Semrau Joanna, Chiriac Dragos, Litschko Morgan, Campbell Robert L, Langelaan David N, Smith Steven P, Davies Peter L, Allingham John S
Protein Function Discovery Group and the Department of Biomedical and Molecular Sciences, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, K7L 3N6, Canada.
Protein Sci. 2017 Oct;26(10):1932-1941. doi: 10.1002/pro.3228. Epub 2017 Jul 25.
Antifreeze proteins (AFPs) are a class of ice-binding proteins that promote survival of a variety of cold-adapted organisms by decreasing the freezing temperature of bodily fluids. A growing number of biomedical, agricultural, and commercial products, such as organs, foods, and industrial fluids, have benefited from the ability of AFPs to control ice crystal growth and prevent ice recrystallization at subzero temperatures. One limitation of AFP use in these latter contexts is their tendency to denature and irreversibly lose activity at the elevated temperatures of certain industrial processing or large-scale AFP production. Using the small, thermolabile type III AFP as a model system, we demonstrate that AFP thermostability is dramatically enhanced via split intein-mediated N- and C-terminal end ligation. To engineer this circular protein, computational modeling and molecular dynamics simulations were applied to identify an extein sequence that would fill the 20-Å gap separating the free ends of the AFP, yet impose little impact on the structure and entropic properties of its ice-binding surface. The top candidate was then expressed in bacteria, and the circularized protein was isolated from the intein domains by ice-affinity purification. This circularized AFP induced bipyramidal ice crystals during ice growth in the hysteresis gap and retained 40% of this activity even after incubation at 100°C for 30 min. NMR analysis implicated enhanced thermostability or refolding capacity of this protein compared to the noncyclized wild-type AFP. These studies support protein backbone circularization as a means to expand the thermostability and practical applications of AFPs.
抗冻蛋白(AFPs)是一类冰结合蛋白,通过降低体液的冰点来促进多种适应寒冷环境的生物的存活。越来越多的生物医学、农业和商业产品,如器官、食品和工业流体,受益于抗冻蛋白在零下温度下控制冰晶生长和防止冰重结晶的能力。在这些后期应用中,抗冻蛋白使用的一个限制是它们在某些工业加工或大规模抗冻蛋白生产的高温下倾向于变性并不可逆地失去活性。以小的、热不稳定的III型抗冻蛋白作为模型系统,我们证明通过分裂内含肽介导的N端和C端连接可显著提高抗冻蛋白的热稳定性。为了构建这种环状蛋白,应用了计算建模和分子动力学模拟来确定一个外显肽序列,该序列可以填补抗冻蛋白自由端之间20埃的间隙,同时对其冰结合表面的结构和熵性质影响很小。然后在细菌中表达最佳候选序列,并通过冰亲和纯化从内含肽结构域中分离出环化蛋白。这种环化抗冻蛋白在滞后间隙的冰生长过程中诱导形成双锥体冰晶,即使在100°C孵育30分钟后仍保留40%的活性。核磁共振分析表明,与未环化的野生型抗冻蛋白相比,该蛋白的热稳定性或重折叠能力增强。这些研究支持蛋白质主链环化作为一种扩展抗冻蛋白热稳定性和实际应用的方法。