Co-reporter:Matthew R. Dunn; Andrew C. Larsen; Walter J. Zahurancik; Nour Eddine Fahmi; Madeline Meyers; Zucai Suo
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2015 Volume 137(Issue 12) pp:4014-4017
Publication Date(Web):March 18, 2015
DOI:10.1021/ja511481n
Threose nucleic acid (TNA) is an unnatural genetic polymer capable of undergoing Darwinian evolution to generate folded molecules with ligand-binding activity. This property, coupled with a nuclease-resistant backbone, makes TNA an attractive candidate for future applications in biotechnology. Previously, we have shown that an engineered form of the Archaean replicative DNA polymerase 9°N, known commercially as Therminator DNA polymerase, can copy a three-letter genetic alphabet (A,T,C) from DNA into TNA. However, our ability to transcribe four-nucleotide libraries has been limited by chain termination events that prevent the synthesis of full-length TNA products. Here, we show that chain termination is caused by tG:dG mispairing in the enzyme active site. We demonstrate that the unnatural base analogue 7-deazaguanine (7dG) will suppress tGTP misincorporation by inhibiting the formation of Hoogsteen tG:dG base pairs. DNA templates that contain 7dG in place of natural dG residues replicate with high efficiency and >99% overall fidelity. Pre-steady-state kinetic measurements indicate that the rate of tCTP incorporation is 5-fold higher opposite 7dG than dG and only slightly lower than dCTP incorporation opposite either 7dG or dG. These results provide a chemical solution to the problem of how to synthesize large, unbiased pools of TNA molecules by polymerase-mediated synthesis.
Co-reporter:Andrew C. Larsen, Annabelle Gillig, Pankti Shah, Sujay P. Sau, Kathryn E. Fenton, and John C. Chaput
Analytical Chemistry 2014 Volume 86(Issue 15) pp:7219
Publication Date(Web):June 26, 2014
DOI:10.1021/ac501614d
In vitro selection technologies are important tools for identifying high affinity peptides to proteins of broad medical and biological interest. However, the technological advances that have made it possible to generate long lists of candidate peptides have far outpaced our ability to characterize the binding properties of individual peptides. Here, we describe a low cost strategy to rapidly synthesize, purify, screen, and characterize peptides for high binding affinity. Peptides are assayed in a 96-well dot blot apparatus using membranes that enable partitioning of bound and unbound peptide–protein complexes. We have validated the binding affinity constants produced by this method using known peptide ligands and applied this process to discover five new peptides with nanomolar affinity to human α-thrombin. Given the need for new analytical tools that can accelerate peptide discovery and characterization, we feel that this approach would be useful to a wide range of technologies that utilize high affinity peptides.
Co-reporter: Dr. John C. Chaput
ChemBioChem 2014 Volume 15( Issue 13) pp:1869-1871
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cbic.201402289
Co-reporter:Hanyang Yu ; Su Zhang ; Matthew R. Dunn
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2013 Volume 135(Issue 9) pp:3583-3591
Publication Date(Web):February 25, 2013
DOI:10.1021/ja3118703
The emerging field of synthetic genetics provides an opportunity to explore the structural and functional properties of synthetic genetic polymers by in vitro selection. Limiting this process, however, is the availability of enzymes that allow for the synthesis and propagation of genetic information present in unnatural nucleic acid sequences. Here, we report the development of a transcription and reverse-transcription system that can replicate unnatural genetic polymers composed of threose nucleic acids (TNA). TNA is a potential progenitor of RNA in which the natural ribose sugar found in RNA has been replaced with an unnatural threose sugar. Using commercial polymerases that recognize TNA, we demonstrate that an unbiased three-letter and two different biased four-letter genetic alphabets replicate in vitro with high efficiency and high overall fidelity. We validated the replication system by performing one cycle of transcription, selection, reverse transcription, and amplification on a library of 1014 DNA templates and observed ∼380-fold enrichment after one round of selection for a biotinylated template. We further show that TNA polymers are stable to enzymes that degrade DNA and RNA. These results provide the methodology needed to evolve biologically stable aptamers and enzymes for exobiology and molecular medicine.
Co-reporter:Shaleen B. Korch, Joshua M. Stomel, Megan A. León, Matt A. Hamada, Christine R. Stevenson, Brent W. Simpson, Sunil K. Gujulla, and John C. Chaput
ACS Chemical Biology 2013 Volume 8(Issue 2) pp:451
Publication Date(Web):November 26, 2012
DOI:10.1021/cb3004786
Artificial proteins that bind key metabolites with high affinity and specificity hold great promise as new tools in synthetic biology, but little has been done to create such molecules and examine their effects on living cells. Experiments of this kind have the potential to expand our understanding of cellular systems, as certain phenotypes may be physically realistic but not yet observed in nature. Here, we examine the physiology and morphology of a population of Escherichia coli as they respond to a genetically encoded, non-biological ATP-binding protein. Unlike natural ATP-dependent proteins, which transiently bind ATP during metabolic transformations, the synthetic protein DX depletes the concentration of intracellular ATP and ADP by a mechanism of protein-mediated ligand sequestration. The resulting ATP/ADP imbalance leads to an adaptive response in which a large population of bacilli cells transition to a filamentous state with dense lipid structures that segregate the cells into compartmentalized units. A wide range of biochemical and microscopy techniques extensively characterized these novel lipid structures, which we have termed endoliposomes. We show that endoliposomes adopt well-defined box-like structures that span the full width of the cell but exclude the synthetic protein DX. We further show that prolonged DX exposure causes a large fraction of the population to enter a viable-but-non-culturable state that is not easily reversed. Both phenotypes correlate with strong intracellular changes in ATP and ADP concentration. We suggest that artificial proteins, such as DX, could be used to control and regulate specific targets in metabolic pathways.
Co-reporter:Su Zhang, John C. Chaput
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters 2013 Volume 23(Issue 5) pp:1447-1449
Publication Date(Web):1 March 2013
DOI:10.1016/j.bmcl.2012.12.080
Threose nucleic acid (TNA) is an artificial genetic polymer in which the natural ribose sugar found in RNA has been replaced with an unnatural threose sugar. TNA can be synthesized enzymatically using Therminator DNA polymerase to copy DNA templates into TNA. Here, we expand the substrate repertoire of Therminator DNA polymerase to include threofuranosyl adenine 3′-triphsophate (tATP). We chemically synthesized tATP by two different methods from the 2′-O-acetyl derivative. Enzyme-mediated polymerization reveals that tATP functions as an efficient substrate for Therminator DNA polymerase, indicating that tATP can replace the diaminopurine analogue (tDTP) in TNA transcription reactions.
Co-reporter:John C. Chaput, Hanyang Yu, Su Zhang
Chemistry & Biology 2012 Volume 19(Issue 11) pp:1360-1371
Publication Date(Web):21 November 2012
DOI:10.1016/j.chembiol.2012.10.011
For over 20 years, laboratories around the world have been applying the principles of Darwinian evolution to isolate DNA and RNA molecules with specific ligand-binding or catalytic activities. This area of synthetic biology, commonly referred to as in vitro genetics, is made possible by the availability of natural polymerases that can replicate genetic information in the laboratory. Moving beyond natural nucleic acids requires organic chemistry to synthesize unnatural analogues and polymerase engineering to create enzymes that recognize artificial substrates. Progress in both of these areas has led to the emerging field of synthetic genetics, which explores the structural and functional properties of synthetic genetic polymers by in vitro evolution. This review examines recent advances in the Darwinian evolution of artificial genetic polymers and their potential downstream applications in exobiology, molecular medicine, and synthetic biology.
Co-reporter:Hanyang Yu;Bing Jiang ; John C. Chaput
ChemBioChem 2011 Volume 12( Issue 17) pp:2659-2666
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cbic.201100252
Abstract
Aptamers are single-stranded nucleic acids that fold into stable three-dimensional structures with ligand binding sites that are complementary in shape and charge to a desired target. Aptamers are generated by an iterative process known as in vitro selection, which permits their isolation from pools of random sequences. While aptamers have been selected to bind a wide range of targets, it is generally thought that these molecules are incapable of discriminating strongly alkaline proteins due to the attractive forces that govern oppositely charged polymers (e.g., polyelectrolyte effect). Histones, eukaryotic proteins that make up the core structure of nucleosomes are attractive targets for exploring the binding properties of aptamers because these proteins have positively charged surfaces that bind DNA through noncovalent sequence-independent interactions. Previous selections by our lab and others have yielded DNA aptamers with high affinity but low specificity to individual histone proteins. Whether this is a general limitation of aptamers is an interesting question with important practical implications in the future development of protein affinity reagents. Here we report the in vitro selection of a DNA aptamer that binds to histone H4 with a Kd of 13 nM and distinguishes other core histone proteins with 100 to 480-fold selectivity, which corresponds to a ΔΔG of up to 3.4 kcal mol−1. This result extends our fundamental understanding of aptamers and their ability to fold into shapes that selectively bind alkaline proteins.
Co-reporter:Rui Liu;Bing Jiang;Hanyang Yu ; John C. Chaput
ChemBioChem 2011 Volume 12( Issue 12) pp:1813-1817
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cbic.201100284
Co-reporter:Jinglei Zhang, Berea A. R. Williams, Mikael T. Nilsson and John C. Chaput
Chemical Communications 2010 vol. 46(Issue 41) pp:7778-7780
Publication Date(Web):09 Sep 2010
DOI:10.1039/C0CC01475C
Very little is known about the evolvability of lead peptides that are isolated from small library screens. Here we begin to explore this question by comparing the directed evolution of two peptides previously isolated from a small library screen to new ligands generated de novo by in vitro selection.
Co-reporter:Berea A. R. Williams ; Liyun Lin ; Stuart M. Lindsay
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2009 Volume 131(Issue 18) pp:6330-6331
Publication Date(Web):April 22, 2009
DOI:10.1021/ja900916p
We report the in vitro selection of DNA aptamers that bind to histone H4 proteins acetylated at lysine 16. The best aptamer identified in this selection binds to the target protein with a Kd of 21 nM and discriminates against both the nonacetylated protein and histone H4 proteins acetylated at lysine 8. Comparative binding assays performed with a chip-quality antibody reveal that this aptamer binds to the acetylated histone target with similar affinity to a commercial antibody but shows significantly greater specificity (15-fold versus 2400-fold) for the target molecule. This result demonstrates that aptamers that are both modification and location specific can be generated to bind specific protein post-translational modifications.
Co-reporter:Berea A. R. Williams ; Chris W. Diehnelt ; Paul Belcher ; Matthew Greving ; Neal W. Woodbury ; Stephen A. Johnston
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2009 Volume 131(Issue 47) pp:17233-17241
Publication Date(Web):November 6, 2009
DOI:10.1021/ja9051735
A full understanding of the proteome will require ligands to all of the proteins encoded by genomes. While antibodies represent the principle affinity reagents used to bind proteins, their limitations have created a need for new ligands to large numbers of proteins. Here we propose a general concept to obtain protein affinity reagents that avoids animal immunization and iterative selection steps. Central to this process is the idea that small peptide libraries contain sequences that will bind to independent regions on a protein surface and that these ligands can be combined on synthetic scaffolds to create high affinity bivalent reagents. To demonstrate the feasibility of this approach, an array of 4000 unique 12-mer peptides was screened to identify sequences that bind to nonoverlapping sites on the yeast regulatory protein Gal80. Individual peptide ligands were screened at different distances using a novel DNA linking strategy to identify the optimal peptide pair and peptide pair separation distance required to transform two weaker ligands into a single high affinity protein capture reagent. A synthetic antibody or synbody was created with 5 nM affinity to Gal80 that functions in conventional ELISA and pull-down assays. We validated our synthetic antibody approach by creating a second synbody to human transferrin. In both cases, we observed an increase in binding affinity of ∼1000-fold (ΔΔG = ∼4.1 kcal/mol) between the individual peptides and final bivalent synbody construct.
Co-reporter:Elizabeth O. McCullum and John C. Chaput
Chemical Communications 2009 (Issue 20) pp:2938-2940
Publication Date(Web):06 Apr 2009
DOI:10.1039/B820678C
Therminator DNA polymerase, a variant of the 9°N DNA polymerase, is shown to synthesize a functional RNA aptamer; thus providing a simple route for making DNA-tagged RNA aptamers for use in DNA nanotechnology.
Co-reporter:Chad R. Simmons, Joshua M. Stomel, Michael D. McConnell, Daniel A. Smith, Jennifer L. Watkins, James P. Allen and John C. Chaput
ACS Chemical Biology 2009 Volume 4(Issue 8) pp:649
Publication Date(Web):June 12, 2009
DOI:10.1021/cb900109w
How primitive enzymes emerged from a primordial pool remains a fundamental unanswered question with important practical implications in synthetic biology. Here we show that a de novo evolved ATP binding protein, selected solely on the basis of its ability to bind ATP, mediates the regiospecific hydrolysis of ATP to ADP when crystallized with 1 equiv of ATP. Structural insights into this reaction were obtained by growing protein crystals under saturating ATP conditions. The resulting crystal structure refined to 1.8 Å resolution reveals that this man-made protein binds ATP in an unusual bent conformation that is metal-independent and held in place by a key bridging water molecule. Removal of this interaction using a null mutant results in a variant that binds ATP in a normal linear geometry and is incapable of ATP hydrolysis. Biochemical analysis, including high-resolution mass spectrometry performed on dissolved protein crystals, confirms that the reaction is accelerated in the crystalline environment. This observation suggests that proteins with weak chemical reactivity can emerge from high affinity ligand binding sites and that constrained ligand-binding geometries could have helped to facilitate the emergence of early protein enzymes.
Co-reporter:LindaA. Stearns;Rahul Chhabra;Jaswinder Sharma;Yan Liu ;WilliamT. Petuskey ;Hao Yan ;JohnC. Chaput
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2009 Volume 48( Issue 45) pp:8494-8496
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.200903319
Co-reporter:Jennifer L. Watkins
ChemBioChem 2008 Volume 9( Issue 9) pp:1361-1363
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cbic.200800147
Co-reporter:Berea A. R. Williams;Kyle Lund;Yan Liu Dr.;Hao Yan Dr.;John C. Chaput Dr.
Angewandte Chemie 2007 Volume 119(Issue 17) pp:
Publication Date(Web):16 MAR 2007
DOI:10.1002/ange.200603919
Hochdichte Peptidanordnungen, die eine Vielzahl unterschiedlicher Aminosäuresequenzen an genau definierten und addressierbaren Stellen derselben DNA-Nanostruktur präsentieren können, wurden erzeugt. Dabei wurde die genetische Information genutzt, die im Nucleinsäureteil eines DNA-markierten Peptids verschlüsselt ist, um die Aminosäuresequenz an der vorbestimmten Stelle zu positionieren.
Co-reporter:Berea A. R. Williams;Kyle Lund;Yan Liu Dr.;Hao Yan Dr.;John C. Chaput Dr.
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2007 Volume 46(Issue 17) pp:
Publication Date(Web):16 MAR 2007
DOI:10.1002/anie.200603919
On show: High-density peptide arrays capable of displaying many different amino acid sequences at well-defined and addressable locations on the same DNA nanostructure have been produced. The strategy used relies on the genetic information encoded in the nucleic acid portion of a DNA-tagged peptide to position the amino acid sequence at a predetermined location on the array.
Co-reporter:Ying-Wei Yang;Su Zhang;Elizabeth O. McCullum
Journal of Molecular Evolution 2007 Volume 65( Issue 3) pp:289-295
Publication Date(Web):2007 September
DOI:10.1007/s00239-007-9017-9
Systematic investigation into the chemical etiology of ribose has led to the discovery of glycerol nucleic acid (GNA) and threose nucleic acid (TNA) as possible progenitor candidates of RNA in the origins of life. Coupled with their chemical simplicity, polymers for both systems are capable of forming stable Watson-Crick antiparallel duplex structures with themselves and RNA, thereby providing a mechanism for the transfer of genetic information between successive genetic systems. Investigation into whether both polymers arose independently or descended from a common evolutionary pathway would provide additional constraints on models that describe the emergence of a hypothetical RNA world. Here we show by thermal denaturation that complementary GNA and TNA mixed sequence polymers are unable, even after prolonged incubation times, to adopt stable helical structures by intersystem cross-pairing. This experimental observation suggests that GNA and TNA, whose structures derive from one another, were not consecutive polymers in the same evolutionary pathway to RNA.
Co-reporter:Sheref S. Mansy, Jinglei Zhang, Rainer Kümmerle, Mikael Nilsson, ... John C. Chaput
Journal of Molecular Biology (10 August 2007) Volume 371(Issue 2) pp:501-513
Publication Date(Web):10 August 2007
DOI:10.1016/j.jmb.2007.05.062
We present a structural and functional analysis of the evolutionary optimization of a non-biological protein derived from a library of random amino acid sequences. A series of previously described in vitro selection experiments transformed a low-affinity ancestral sequence into a stably folded, high affinity ATP binding protein structure. While the evolutionarily optimized protein differs from its ancestral sequence through the accumulation of 12 amino acid mutations, the means by which those mutations enhance the stability and functionality of the protein were not well understood. We used a combination of mutagenesis, biochemistry, and NMR spectroscopy to investigate the structural and functional significance of each mutation. We solved the three-dimensional structure of the folding optimized protein by solution NMR, which revealed a fourth strand of the β-sheet of the α/β-fold that was not observed in an earlier crystallographic analysis of a less stable version of the protein. The structural rigidity of the newly identified β-strand was confirmed by T1, T2, and heteronuclear nuclear Overhauser enhancement (NOE) measurements. Biochemical experiments were used to examine point mutations that revert the optimized protein back to the ancestral residue at each of the 12 sites. A combination of structural and functional data was then used to interpret the significance of each amino acid mutation. The enhanced ATP affinity was largely due to the emergence of a patch of positive charge density on the protein surface, while the increased solubility resulted from several mutations that increased the hydrophilicity of the protein surface, thereby decreasing protein aggregation. One mutation may stabilize the hydrophobic face of the β-sheet.
Co-reporter:Jinglei Zhang, Berea A. R. Williams, Mikael T. Nilsson and John C. Chaput
Chemical Communications 2010 - vol. 46(Issue 41) pp:NaN7780-7780
Publication Date(Web):2010/09/09
DOI:10.1039/C0CC01475C
Very little is known about the evolvability of lead peptides that are isolated from small library screens. Here we begin to explore this question by comparing the directed evolution of two peptides previously isolated from a small library screen to new ligands generated de novo by in vitro selection.
Co-reporter:Elizabeth O. McCullum and John C. Chaput
Chemical Communications 2009(Issue 20) pp:
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1039/B820678C