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1.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Oct 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37961673

RESUMO

Intercellular adhesion complexes must withstand mechanical forces to maintain tissue cohesion, while also retaining the capacity for dynamic remodeling during tissue morphogenesis and repair. Most cell-cell adhesion complexes contain at least one PSD95/Dlg/ZO-1 (PDZ) domain situated between the adhesion molecule and the actin cytoskeleton. However, PDZ-mediated interactions are characteristically nonspecific, weak, and transient, with several binding partners per PDZ domain, micromolar dissociation constants, and bond lifetimes of seconds or less. Here, we demonstrate that the bonds between the PDZ domain of the cytoskeletal adaptor protein afadin and the intracellular domains of the adhesion molecules nectin-1 and JAM-A form molecular catch bonds that reinforce in response to mechanical load. In contrast, the bond between the PDZ3-SH3-GUK (PSG) domain of the cytoskeletal adaptor ZO-1 and the JAM-A intracellular domain becomes dramatically weaker in response to ∼2 pN of load, the amount generated by single molecules of the cytoskeletal motor protein myosin II. These results suggest that PDZ domains can serve as force-responsive mechanical anchors at cell-cell adhesion complexes, and that mechanical load can enhance the selectivity of PDZ-peptide interactions. These results suggest that PDZ mechanosensitivity may help to generate the intricate molecular organization of cell-cell junctions and allow junctional complexes to dynamically remodel in response to mechanical load.

2.
ACS Synth Biol ; 10(10): 2689-2704, 2021 10 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34506711

RESUMO

Developing potent antimicrobials, and platforms for their study and engineering, is critical as antibiotic resistance grows. A high-throughput method to quantify antimicrobial peptide and protein (AMP) activity across a broad continuum would be powerful to elucidate sequence-activity landscapes and identify potent mutants. Yet the complexity of antimicrobial activity has largely constrained the scope and mechanistic bandwidth of AMP variant analysis. We developed a platform to efficiently perform sequence-activity mapping of AMPs via depletion (SAMP-Dep): a bacterial host culture is transformed with an AMP mutant library, induced to intracellularly express AMPs, grown under selective pressure, and deep sequenced to quantify mutant depletion. The slope of mutant growth rate versus induction level indicates potency. Using SAMP-Dep, we mapped the sequence-activity landscape of 170 000 mutants of oncocin, a proline-rich AMP, for intracellular activity against Escherichia coli. Clonal validation supported the platform's sensitivity and accuracy. The mapped landscape revealed an extended oncocin pharmacophore contrary to earlier structural studies, clarified the C-terminus role in internalization, identified functional epistasis, and guided focused, successful synthetic peptide library design, yielding a mutant with 2-fold enhancement in both intracellular and extracellular activity. The efficiency of SAMP-Dep poises the platform to transform AMP engineering, characterization, and discovery.


Assuntos
Antibacterianos/farmacologia , Sequenciamento de Nucleotídeos em Larga Escala/métodos , Engenharia de Proteínas , Escherichia coli/efeitos dos fármacos , Testes de Sensibilidade Microbiana , Engenharia de Proteínas/métodos
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