학술논문

Engineering protein assemblies with allosteric control via monomer fold-switching.
Document Type
article
Source
Nature Communications. 10(1)
Subject
Allosteric Regulation
Cloning
Molecular
Molecular Docking Simulation
Molecular Dynamics Simulation
Mutation
Protein Engineering
Protein Folding
Protein Multimerization
Protein Structure
Secondary
Proteins
Recombinant Proteins
Serine Proteases
Serine Proteinase Inhibitors
Language
Abstract
The macromolecular machines of life use allosteric control to self-assemble, dissociate and change shape in response to signals. Despite enormous interest, the design of nanoscale allosteric assemblies has proven tremendously challenging. Here we present a proof of concept of allosteric assembly in which an engineered fold switch on the protein monomer triggers or blocks assembly. Our design is based on the hyper-stable, naturally monomeric protein CI2, a paradigm of simple two-state folding, and the toroidal arrangement with 6-fold symmetry that it only adopts in crystalline form. We engineer CI2 to enable a switch between the native and an alternate, latent fold that self-assembles onto hexagonal toroidal particles by exposing a favorable inter-monomer interface. The assembly is controlled on demand via the competing effects of temperature and a designed short peptide. These findings unveil a remarkable potential for structural metamorphosis in proteins and demonstrate key principles for engineering protein-based nanomachinery.