Author
Listed:
- Jiayi Dou
(University of Washington
University of Washington)
- Anastassia A. Vorobieva
(University of Washington
University of Washington)
- William Sheffler
(University of Washington
University of Washington)
- Lindsey A. Doyle
(Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center)
- Hahnbeom Park
(University of Washington
University of Washington)
- Matthew J. Bick
(University of Washington
University of Washington)
- Binchen Mao
(University of Washington
Crown Bioscience)
- Glenna W. Foight
(University of Washington)
- Min Yen Lee
(University of Washington)
- Lauren A. Gagnon
(University of Washington)
- Lauren Carter
(University of Washington
University of Washington)
- Banumathi Sankaran
(Berkeley Center for Structural Biology, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
- Sergey Ovchinnikov
(University of Washington
University of Washington
Harvard University)
- Enrique Marcos
(University of Washington
University of Washington
The Barcelona Institute of Science and Technology)
- Po-Ssu Huang
(University of Washington
University of Washington
Stanford University)
- Joshua C. Vaughan
(University of Washington)
- Barry L. Stoddard
(Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center)
- David Baker
(University of Washington
University of Washington
University of Washington)
Abstract
The regular arrangements of β-strands around a central axis in β-barrels and of α-helices in coiled coils contrast with the irregular tertiary structures of most globular proteins, and have fascinated structural biologists since they were first discovered. Simple parametric models have been used to design a wide range of α-helical coiled-coil structures, but to date there has been no success with β-barrels. Here we show that accurate de novo design of β-barrels requires considerable symmetry-breaking to achieve continuous hydrogen-bond connectivity and eliminate backbone strain. We then build ensembles of β-barrel backbone models with cavity shapes that match the fluorogenic compound DFHBI, and use a hierarchical grid-based search method to simultaneously optimize the rigid-body placement of DFHBI in these cavities and the identities of the surrounding amino acids to achieve high shape and chemical complementarity. The designs have high structural accuracy and bind and fluorescently activate DFHBI in vitro and in Escherichia coli, yeast and mammalian cells. This de novo design of small-molecule binding activity, using backbones custom-built to bind the ligand, should enable the design of increasingly sophisticated ligand-binding proteins, sensors and catalysts that are not limited by the backbone geometries available in known protein structures.
Suggested Citation
Jiayi Dou & Anastassia A. Vorobieva & William Sheffler & Lindsey A. Doyle & Hahnbeom Park & Matthew J. Bick & Binchen Mao & Glenna W. Foight & Min Yen Lee & Lauren A. Gagnon & Lauren Carter & Banumath, 2018.
"De novo design of a fluorescence-activating β-barrel,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 561(7724), pages 485-491, September.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:561:y:2018:i:7724:d:10.1038_s41586-018-0509-0
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0509-0
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