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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 121(11): e2313809121, 2024 Mar 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38437538

RESUMO

The potential of engineered enzymes in industrial applications is often limited by their expression levels, thermal stability, and catalytic diversity. De novo enzyme design faces challenges due to the complexity of enzymatic catalysis. An alternative approach involves expanding natural enzyme capabilities for new substrates and parameters. Here, we introduce CoSaNN (Conformation Sampling using Neural Network), an enzyme design strategy using deep learning for structure prediction and sequence optimization. CoSaNN controls enzyme conformations to expand chemical space beyond simple mutagenesis. It employs a context-dependent approach for generating enzyme designs, considering non-linear relationships in sequence and structure space. We also developed SolvIT, a graph NN predicting protein solubility in Escherichia coli, optimizing enzyme expression selection from larger design sets. Using this method, we engineered enzymes with superior expression levels, with 54% expressed in E. coli, and increased thermal stability, with over 30% having higher Tm than the template, with no high-throughput screening. Our research underscores AI's transformative role in protein design, capturing high-order interactions and preserving allosteric mechanisms in extensively modified enzymes, and notably enhancing expression success rates. This method's ease of use and efficiency streamlines enzyme design, opening broad avenues for biotechnological applications and broadening field accessibility.


Assuntos
Aprendizado Profundo , Escherichia coli/genética , Biotecnologia , Catálise , Ensaios de Triagem em Larga Escala
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 114(41): 10900-10905, 2017 10 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28973872

RESUMO

Natural proteins must both fold into a stable conformation and exert their molecular function. To date, computational design has successfully produced stable and atomically accurate proteins by using so-called "ideal" folds rich in regular secondary structures and almost devoid of loops and destabilizing elements, such as cavities. Molecular function, such as binding and catalysis, however, often demands nonideal features, including large and irregular loops and buried polar interaction networks, which have remained challenging for fold design. Through five design/experiment cycles, we learned principles for designing stable and functional antibody variable fragments (Fvs). Specifically, we (i) used sequence-design constraints derived from antibody multiple-sequence alignments, and (ii) during backbone design, maintained stabilizing interactions observed in natural antibodies between the framework and loops of complementarity-determining regions (CDRs) 1 and 2. Designed Fvs bound their ligands with midnanomolar affinities and were as stable as natural antibodies, despite having >30 mutations from mammalian antibody germlines. Furthermore, crystallographic analysis demonstrated atomic accuracy throughout the framework and in four of six CDRs in one design and atomic accuracy in the entire Fv in another. The principles we learned are general, and can be implemented to design other nonideal folds, generating stable, specific, and precise antibodies and enzymes.


Assuntos
Proteína de Transporte de Acila S-Acetiltransferase/metabolismo , Anticorpos/química , Anticorpos/metabolismo , Fragmentos de Imunoglobulinas/metabolismo , Insulina/metabolismo , Proteína de Transporte de Acila S-Acetiltransferase/imunologia , Anticorpos/imunologia , Sítios de Ligação de Anticorpos , Regiões Determinantes de Complementaridade/química , Regiões Determinantes de Complementaridade/imunologia , Regiões Determinantes de Complementaridade/metabolismo , Cristalografia por Raios X , Humanos , Fragmentos de Imunoglobulinas/química , Fragmentos de Imunoglobulinas/imunologia , Insulina/imunologia , Ligantes , Modelos Moleculares , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/enzimologia , Conformação Proteica
3.
Proteins ; 83(8): 1385-406, 2015 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25670500

RESUMO

Computational design of protein function has made substantial progress, generating new enzymes, binders, inhibitors, and nanomaterials not previously seen in nature. However, the ability to design new protein backbones for function--essential to exert control over all polypeptide degrees of freedom--remains a critical challenge. Most previous attempts to design new backbones computed the mainchain from scratch. Here, instead, we describe a combinatorial backbone and sequence optimization algorithm called AbDesign, which leverages the large number of sequences and experimentally determined molecular structures of antibodies to construct new antibody models, dock them against target surfaces and optimize their sequence and backbone conformation for high stability and binding affinity. We used the algorithm to produce antibody designs that target the same molecular surfaces as nine natural, high-affinity antibodies; in five cases interface sequence identity is above 30%, and in four of those the backbone conformation at the core of the antibody binding surface is within 1 Å root-mean square deviation from the natural antibodies. Designs recapitulate polar interaction networks observed in natural complexes, and amino acid sidechain rigidity at the designed binding surface, which is likely important for affinity and specificity, is high compared to previous design studies. In designed anti-lysozyme antibodies, complementarity-determining regions (CDRs) at the periphery of the interface, such as L1 and H2, show greater backbone conformation diversity than the CDRs at the core of the interface, and increase the binding surface area compared to the natural antibody, potentially enhancing affinity and specificity.


Assuntos
Regiões Determinantes de Complementaridade/química , Biologia Computacional/métodos , Conformação Proteica , Engenharia de Proteínas/métodos , Análise de Sequência de Proteína/métodos , Algoritmos , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Lógica Fuzzy , Humanos , Dados de Sequência Molecular
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