RESUMO
Allosteric transcription factors (aTFs) are used in a myriad of processes throughout biology and biotechnology. aTFs have served as the workhorses for developments in synthetic biology, fundamental research, and protein manufacturing. One of the most utilized TFs is the lactose repressor (LacI). In addition to being an exceptional tool for gene regulation, LacI has also served as an outstanding model system for understanding allosteric communication. In this perspective, we will use the LacI TF as the principal exemplar for engineering alternate functions related to allostery-i.e., alternate protein DNA interactions, alternate protein-ligand interactions, and alternate phenotypic mechanisms. In addition, we will summarize the design rules and heuristics for each design goal and demonstrate how the resulting design rules and heuristics can be extrapolated to engineer other aTFs with a similar topology-i.e., from the broader LacI/GalR family of TFs.
Assuntos
Biotecnologia , Fatores de Transcrição , Fatores de Transcrição/genética , Comunicação , Engenharia , Modelos BiológicosRESUMO
Protein allostery is a vitally important protein function that has proven to be a vexing problem to understand at the molecular level. Allosteric communication is a hallmark of many protein functions. However, despite more than four decades of study the details regarding allosteric communication in protein systems are still being developed. Engineering of LacI and related homologues to confer alternate allosteric communication has shed light on the pre-requisites for the de novo design of allosteric communication. While the de novo design of an allosteric pathway and complementary functional surfaces has not been realized, this review highlights recent advances that set the stage for true predictive design for a given protein topology.