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1.
Bioconjug Chem ; 35(2): 174-186, 2024 02 21.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38050929

Biotin- and digoxigenin (DIG)-conjugated therapeutic drugs are critical reagents used for the development of anti-drug antibody (ADA) assays for the assessment of immunogenicity. The current practice of generating biotin and DIG conjugates is to label a therapeutic antibody with biotin or DIG via primary amine groups on lysine or N-terminal residues. This approach modifies lysine residues nonselectively, which can impact the ability of an ADA assay to detect those ADAs that recognize epitopes located at or near the modified lysine residue(s). The impact of the lysine modification is considered greater for therapeutic antibodies that have a limited number of lysine residues, such as the variable heavy domain of heavy chain (VHH) antibodies. In this paper, for the first time, we report the application of site-specifically conjugated biotin- and DIG-VHH reagents to clinical ADA assay development using a model molecule, VHHA. The site-specific conjugation of biotin or DIG to VHHA was achieved by using an optimized reductive alkylation approach, which enabled the majority of VHHA molecules labeled with biotin or DIG at the desirable N-terminus, thereby minimizing modification of the protein after labeling and reducing the possibility of missing detection of ADAs. Head-to-head comparison of biophysical characterization data revealed that the site-specific biotin and DIG conjugates demonstrated overall superior quality to biotin- and DIG-VHHA prepared using the conventional amine coupling method, and the performance of the ADA assay developed using site-specific biotin and DIG conjugates met all acceptance criteria. The approach described here can be applied to the production of other therapeutic-protein- or antibody-based critical reagents that are used to support ligand binding assays.


Biotin , Lysine , Biotin/chemistry , Digoxigenin/chemistry , Antibodies , Amines
2.
Mol Cell ; 51(5): 584-93, 2013 Sep 12.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23954347

Secretion systems require high-fidelity mechanisms to discriminate substrates among the vast cytoplasmic pool of proteins. Factors mediating substrate recognition by the type VI secretion system (T6SS) of Gram-negative bacteria, a widespread pathway that translocates effector proteins into target bacterial cells, have not been defined. We report that haemolysin coregulated protein (Hcp), a ring-shaped hexamer secreted by all characterized T6SSs, binds specifically to cognate effector molecules. Electron microscopy analysis of an Hcp-effector complex from Pseudomonas aeruginosa revealed the effector bound to the inner surface of Hcp. Further studies demonstrated that interaction with the Hcp pore is a general requirement for secretion of diverse effectors encompassing several enzymatic classes. Though previous models depict Hcp as a static conduit, our data indicate it is a chaperone and receptor of substrates. These unique functions of a secreted protein highlight fundamental differences between the export mechanism of T6 and other characterized secretory pathways.


Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Bacterial Secretion Systems/physiology , Hemolysin Proteins/metabolism , Pseudomonas aeruginosa/metabolism , Amidohydrolases/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Hemolysin Proteins/chemistry , Hemolysin Proteins/genetics , Models, Molecular , Molecular Chaperones/metabolism , Muramidase/metabolism , Mutation , Protein Conformation , Pseudomonas aeruginosa/genetics , Substrate Specificity
3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 110(15): 5909-14, 2013 Apr 09.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23530228

Terminase enzymes are viral motors that package DNA into a preformed capsid and are of interest both therapeutically and as potential nano-machines. The enzymes excise a single genome from a concatemeric precursor (genome maturation) and then package the duplex to near-crystalline density (genome packaging). The functional motors are oligomers of protomeric subunits and are the most powerful motors currently known. Here, we present mechanistic studies on the terminase motor from bacteriophage λ. We identify a mutant (K76R) that is specifically deficient in packaging activity. Biochemical analysis of this enzyme provides insight into the linkage between ATP hydrolysis and motor translocation. We further use this mutant to assemble chimeric motors with WT enzyme and characterize the catalytic activity of the complexes. The data demonstrate that strong coordination between the motor protomers is required for DNA packaging and that incorporation of even a single mutant protomer poisons motor activity. Significant coordination is similarly observed in the genome maturation reaction; however, although the motor is composed of a symmetric tetramer of protomers, the maturation complex is better described as a "dimer-of-dimers" with half-site reactivity. We describe a model for how the motor alternates between a stable genome maturation complex and a dynamic genome packaging complex. The fundamental features of coordinated ATP hydrolysis, DNA movement, and tight association between the motor and the duplex during translocation are recapitulated in all of the viral motors. This work is thus of relevance to all terminase enzymes, both prokaryotic and eukaryotic.


Bacteriophage lambda/physiology , DNA Packaging , DNA, Viral/chemistry , Endodeoxyribonucleases/metabolism , Virus Assembly , Adenosine Triphosphate/chemistry , Bacteriophage lambda/genetics , Capsid/chemistry , Endodeoxyribonucleases/genetics , Genome, Viral , Hydrolysis , Mutation , Promoter Regions, Genetic
4.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 4(1): 180-188, 2013 Jan 03.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23525263

Topologically complex proteins fold by multiple routes as a result of hard-to-fold regions of the proteins. Oftentimes these regions are introduced into the protein scaffold for function and increase frustration in the otherwise smooth-funneled landscape. Interestingly, while functional regions add complexity to folding landscapes, they may also contribute to a unique behavior referred to as hysteresis. While hysteresis is predicted to be rare, it is observed in various proteins, including proteins containing a unique peptide cyclization to form a fluorescent chromophore as well as proteins containing a knotted topology in their native fold. Here, hysteresis is demonstrated to be a consequence of the decoupling of unfolding events from the isomerization or hula-twist of a chromophore in one protein and the untying of the knot in a second protein system. The question now is- can hysteresis be a marker for the interplay of landscapes where complex folding and functional regions overlap?

5.
Biochemistry ; 51(46): 9342-53, 2012 Nov 20.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23134123

Terminase enzymes are responsible for the excision of a single genome from a concatemeric precursor (genome maturation) and concomitant packaging of DNA into the capsid shell. Here, we demonstrate that lambda terminase can be purified as a homogeneous "protomer" species, and we present a kinetic analysis of the genome maturation and packaging activities of the protomeric enzyme. The protomer assembles into a distinct maturation complex at the cos sequence of a concatemer. This complex rapidly nicks the duplex to form the mature left end of the viral genome, which is followed by procapsid binding, activation of the packaging ATPase, and translocation of the duplex into the capsid interior by the terminase motor complex. Genome packaging by the protomer shows high fidelity with only the mature left end of the duplex inserted into the capsid shell. In sum, the data show that the terminase protomer exhibits catalytic activity commensurate with that expected of a bone fide genome maturation and packaging complex in vivo and that both catalytically competent complexes are composed of four terminase protomers assembled into a ringlike structure that encircles duplex DNA. This work provides mechanistic insight into the coordinated catalytic activities of terminase enzymes in virus assembly that can be generalized to all of the double-stranded DNA viruses.


Endodeoxyribonucleases/metabolism , Genome, Viral , Adenosine Triphosphate/metabolism , DNA Packaging , Hydrolysis , Kinetics , Promoter Regions, Genetic
6.
Biochemistry ; 51(1): 391-400, 2012 Jan 10.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22191393

The assembly of complex double-stranded DNA viruses includes a genome packaging step where viral DNA is translocated into the confines of a preformed procapsid shell. In most cases, the preferred packaging substrate is a linear concatemer of viral genomes linked head-to-tail. Viral terminase enzymes are responsible for both excision of an individual genome from the concatemer (DNA maturation) and translocation of the duplex into the capsid (DNA packaging). Bacteriophage λ terminase site-specifically nicks viral DNA at the cos site in a concatemer and then physically separates the nicked, annealed strands to mature the genome in preparation for packaging. Here we present biochemical studies on the so-called helicase activity of λ terminase. Previous studies reported that ATP is required for strand separation, and it has been presumed that ATP hydrolysis is required to drive the reaction. We show that ADP and nonhydrolyzable ATP analogues also support strand separation at low (micromolar) concentrations. In addition, the Escherichia coli integration host factor protein (IHF) strongly stimulates the reaction in a nucleotide-independent manner. Finally, we show that elevated concentrations of nucleotide inhibit both ATP- and IHF-stimulated strand separation by λ terminase. We present a model where nucleotide and IHF interact with the large terminase subunit and viral DNA, respectively, to engender a site-specifically bound, catalytically competent genome maturation complex. In contrast, binding of nucleotide to the low-affinity ATP binding site in the small terminase subunit mediates a conformational switch that down-regulates maturation activities and activates the DNA packaging activity of the enzyme. This affords a motor complex that binds tightly, but nonspecifically, to DNA as it translocates the duplex into the capsid shell. These studies have yielded mechanistic insight into the assembly of the maturation complex on viral DNA and its transition to a mobile packaging motor that may be common to all of the complex double-stranded DNA viruses.


Bacteriophage lambda/enzymology , DNA Helicases/chemistry , DNA, Viral/chemistry , Genome, Viral , Molecular Motor Proteins/chemistry , Virus Assembly/genetics , Adenoviridae/enzymology , Adenoviridae/genetics , Bacillus Phages/enzymology , Bacillus Phages/genetics , Bacteriophage lambda/genetics , DNA Helicases/antagonists & inhibitors , DNA Helicases/genetics , DNA, Viral/genetics , Energy Metabolism/genetics , Models, Molecular , Molecular Motor Proteins/genetics
7.
J Mol Biol ; 412(4): 723-36, 2011 Sep 30.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21821043

Procapsid assembly is a process whereby hundreds of copies of a major capsid protein assemble into an icosahedral protein shell into which the viral genome is packaged. The essential features of procapsid assembly are conserved in both eukaryotic and prokaryotic complex double-stranded DNA viruses. Typically, a portal protein nucleates the co-polymerization of an internal scaffolding protein and the major capsid protein into an icosahedral capsid shell. The scaffolding proteins are essential to procapsid assembly. Here, we describe the solution-based biophysical and functional characterization of the bacteriophage lambda (λ) scaffolding protein gpNu3. The purified protein possesses significant α-helical structure and appears to be partially disordered. Thermally induced denaturation studies indicate that secondary structures are lost in a cooperative, apparent two-state transition (T(m)=40.6±0.3 °C) and that unfolding is, at least in part, reversible. Analysis of the purified protein by size-exclusion chromatography suggests that gpNu3 is highly asymmetric, which contributes to an abnormally large Stokes radius. The size-exclusion chromatography data further indicate that the protein self-associates in a concentration-dependent manner. This was confirmed by analytical ultracentrifugation studies, which reveal a monomer-dimer equilibrium (K(d,app)~50 µM) and an asymmetric protein structure at biologically relevant concentrations. Purified gpNu3 promotes the polymerization of gpE, the λ major capsid protein, into virus-like particles that possess a native-like procapsid morphology. The relevance of this work with respect to procapsid assembly in the complex double-stranded DNA viruses is discussed.


Bacteriophage lambda/physiology , Capsid/metabolism , Protein Folding , Viral Proteins/physiology , Virus Assembly/genetics , Amino Acid Sequence , Bacteriophage lambda/genetics , Bacteriophage lambda/metabolism , Capsid/chemistry , Capsid/physiology , Hydrolysis , Models, Biological , Molecular Sequence Data , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular , Protein Stability , Protein Structure, Secondary , Temperature , Ultracentrifugation , Viral Proteins/chemistry , Viral Proteins/genetics , Viral Proteins/metabolism
8.
J Biol Chem ; 285(31): 24282-9, 2010 Jul 30.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20525695

Many double-stranded DNA viruses employ ATP-driven motors to translocate their genomes into small, preformed viral capsids against large forces resisting confinement. Here, we show via direct single-molecule measurements that a mutation T194M downstream of the Walker B motif in the phage lambda gpA packaging motor causes an 8-fold reduction in translocation velocity without substantially changing processivity or force dependence, whereas the mutation G212S in the putative C (coupling) motif causes a 3-fold reduction in velocity and a 6-fold reduction in processivity. Meanwhile a T194M pseudorevertant (T194V) showed a near restoration of the wild-type dynamics. Structural comparisons and modeling show that these mutations are in a loop-helix-loop region that positions the key residues of the catalytic motifs, Walker B and C, in the ATPase center and is structurally homologous with analogous regions in chromosome transporters and SF2 RNA helicases. Together with recently published studies of SpoIIIE chromosome transporter and Ded1 RNA helicase mutants, these findings suggest the presence of a structurally conserved region that may be a part of the mechanism that determines motor velocity and processivity in several different types of nucleic acid translocases.


DNA, Viral/genetics , DNA/genetics , Mutation , Amino Acid Motifs , Amino Acid Sequence , Bacteriophage T4/metabolism , Catalysis , DNA Helicases/metabolism , Microspheres , Molecular Sequence Data , Optical Tweezers , Protein Structure, Secondary , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Viral Proteins/metabolism
9.
J Mol Biol ; 392(1): 218-27, 2009 Sep 11.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19577576

Green fluorescent protein (GFP) possesses a unique folding landscape with a dual basin leading to the hysteretic folding behavior observed in experiment. While theoretical data do not have the resolution necessary to observe details of the chromophore during refolding, experimental results point to the chromophore as the cause of the observed hysteresis. With the use of NMR spectroscopy, which probes at the level of the individual residue, the hysteretic intermediate state is further characterized in the context of the loosely folded isomerized native-like state {N(iso)} predicted in simulation. In the present study, several residues located in the lid of GFP indicate heterogeneity of the native states. Some of these residues show chemical shifts when the native-like intermediate {N(iso)} responsible for GFP's hysteretic folding behavior is trapped. Observed changes in the chromophore are consistent with increased flexibility or isomerization in {N(iso)} as predicted in recent theoretical work. Here, we observed that multiple chromophore environments within the native state are averaged in the trapped intermediate, linking chromophore flexibility to mispacking in the trapped intermediate. The present work is experimental evidence for the proposed final "locking" mechanism in GFP folding forming an incorrectly or loosely packed barrel under intermediate (hysteretic) folding conditions.


Green Fluorescent Proteins/chemistry , Green Fluorescent Proteins/metabolism , Kinetics , Models, Molecular , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular , Protein Conformation , Protein Folding , Protein Structure, Tertiary
10.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 105(34): 12283-8, 2008 Aug 26.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18713871

Recent experimental studies suggest that the mature GFP has an unconventional landscape composed of an early folding event with a typical funneled landscape, followed by a very slow search and rearrangement step into the locked, active chromophore-containing structure. As we have shown previously, the substantial difference in time scales is what generates the observed hysteresis in thermodynamic folding. The interconversion between locked and the soft folding structures at intermediate denaturant concentrations is so slow that it is not observed under the typical experimental observation time. Simulations of a coarse-grained model were used to describe the fast folding event as well as identify native-like intermediates on energy landscapes enroute to the fluorescent native fold. Interestingly, these simulations reveal structural features of the slow dynamic transition to chromophore activation. Experimental evidence presented here shows that the trapped, native-like intermediate has structural heterogeneity in residues previously linked to chromophore formation. We propose that the final step of GFP folding is a "locking" mechanism leading to chromophore formation and high stability. The combination of previous experimental work and current simulation work is explained in the context of a dual-basin folding mechanism described above.


Green Fluorescent Proteins/chemistry , Protein Folding , Computer Simulation , Thermodynamics
11.
J Mol Biol ; 373(2): 476-90, 2007 Oct 19.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17822714

Many green fluorescent protein (GFP) variants have been developed for use as fluorescent tags, and recently a superfolder GFP (sfGFP) has been developed as a robust folding reporter. This new variant shows increased stability and improved folding kinetics, as well as 100% recovery of native protein after denaturation. Here, we characterize sfGFP, and find that this variant exhibits hysteresis as unfolding and refolding equilibrium titration curves are non-coincident even after equilibration for more than eight half-lives as estimated from kinetic unfolding and refolding studies. This hysteresis is attributed to trapping in a native-like intermediate state. Mutational studies directed towards inhibiting chromophore formation indicate that the novel backbone cyclization is responsible for the hysteresis observed in equilibrium titrations of sfGFP. Slow equilibration and the presence of intermediates imply a rough landscape. However, de novo folding in the absence of the chromophore is dominated by a smoother energy landscape than that sampled during unfolding and refolding of the post-translationally modified polypeptide.


Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Green Fluorescent Proteins/chemistry , Thermodynamics , Circular Dichroism , Cyclophilin A/chemistry , Cyclophilin A/metabolism , Green Fluorescent Proteins/genetics , Green Fluorescent Proteins/metabolism , Guanidine/chemistry , Kinetics , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular , Protein Conformation , Protein Denaturation , Protein Folding , Spectrometry, Fluorescence
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