Institute of Chemistry, Technical University of Berlin, Müller-Breslau-Strasse 10, Berlin, 10623, Germany.
Chair of Chemical Synthetic Biology, Department of Chemistry, University of Manitoba, 144 Dysart Road, R3T 2N2, Winnipeg, MB, Canada.
Chembiochem. 2019 Sep 2;20(17):2163-2190. doi: 10.1002/cbic.201900030. Epub 2019 Jun 24.
Catechols are a biologically relevant group of aromatic diols that have attracted much attention as mediators of adhesion of "bio-glue" proteins in mussels of the genus Mytilus. These organisms use catechols in the form of the noncanonical amino acid l-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA) as a building block for adhesion proteins. The DOPA is generated post-translationally from tyrosine. Herein, we review the properties, natural occurrence, and reactivity of catechols in the design of bioinspired materials. We also provide a basic description of the mussel's attachment apparatus, the interplay between its different molecules that play a crucial role in adhesion, and the role of post-translational modifications (PTMs) of these proteins. Our focus is on the microbial production of mussel foot proteins with the aid of orthogonal translation systems (OTSs) and the use of genetic code engineering to solve some fundamental problems in the bioproduction of these bioadhesives and to expand their chemical space. The major limitation of bacterial expression systems is their intrinsic inability to introduce PTMs. OTSs have the potential to overcome these challenges by replacing canonical amino acids with noncanonical ones. In this way, PTM steps are circumvented while the genetically programmed precision of protein sequences is preserved. In addition, OTSs should enable spatiotemporal control over the complex adhesion process, because the catechol function can be masked by suitable chemical protection. Such caged residues can then be noninvasively unmasked by, for example, UV irradiation or thermal treatment. All of these features make OTSs based on genetic code engineering in reprogrammed microbial strains new and promising tools in bioinspired materials science.
儿茶酚是一类具有生物学相关性的芳香二醇,作为贻贝属(Mytilus)贻贝中“生物胶”蛋白黏附的介质而受到广泛关注。这些生物体以非典型氨基酸 L-3,4-二羟基苯丙氨酸(DOPA)的形式将儿茶酚作为黏附蛋白的构建块。DOPA 是从酪氨酸经翻译后生成的。本文综述了儿茶酚在仿生材料设计中的特性、天然存在和反应性。我们还提供了贻贝附着装置的基本描述,以及其不同分子在附着过程中相互作用的描述,以及这些蛋白质的翻译后修饰(PTMs)的作用。我们的重点是借助正交翻译系统(OTS)微生物生产贻贝足蛋白,并利用遗传密码工程解决这些生物黏附剂生物生产中的一些基本问题,并扩展其化学空间。细菌表达系统的主要局限性是其内在缺乏引入 PTM 的能力。OTS 有可能通过用非典型氨基酸替代典型氨基酸来克服这些挑战。这样,在保留蛋白质序列遗传编程精度的同时,可以避免 PTM 步骤。此外,OTS 应该能够实现对复杂附着过程的时空控制,因为儿茶酚功能可以通过适当的化学保护来掩盖。这种笼状残基可以通过例如紫外线辐射或热处理非侵入性地去掩蔽。所有这些特征使得基于遗传密码工程的 OTS 在重新编程的微生物菌株中成为仿生材料科学的新的有前途的工具。