11 research outputs found
DNA-Templated Polymerization of Side-Chain-Functionalized Peptide Nucleic Acid Aldehydes
The DNA-templated polymerization of synthetic building blocks provides a potential route to the
laboratory evolution of sequence-defined polymers with structures and properties not necessarily limited
to those of natural biopolymers. We previously reported the efficient and sequence-specific DNA-templated
polymerization of peptide nucleic acid (PNA) aldehydes. Here, we report the enzyme-free, DNA-templated
polymerization of side-chain-functionalized PNA tetramer and pentamer aldehydes. We observed that
polymerization of tetramer and pentamer PNA building blocks with a single lysine-based side chain at
various positions in the building block could proceed efficiently and sequence specifically. In addition, DNA-templated polymerization also proceeded efficiently and in a sequence-specific manner with pentamer PNA
aldehydes containing two or three lysine side chains in a single building block to generate more densely
functionalized polymers. To further our understanding of side-chain compatibility and expand the capabilities
of this system, we also examined the polymerization efficiencies of 20 pentamer building blocks each
containing one of five different side-chain groups and four different side-chain regio- and stereochemistries.
Polymerization reactions were efficient for all five different side-chain groups and for three of the four
combinations of side-chain regio- and stereochemistries. Differences in the efficiency and initial rate of
polymerization correlate with the apparent melting temperature of each building block, which is dependent
on side-chain regio- and stereochemistry but relatively insensitive to side-chain structure among the
substrates tested. Our findings represent a significant step toward the evolution of sequence-defined
synthetic polymers and also demonstrate that enzyme-free nucleic acid-templated polymerization can occur
efficiently using substrates with a wide range of side-chain structures, functionalization positions within
each building block, and functionalization densities
Proteome-Scale Screening to Identify High-Expression Signal Peptides with Minimal N‑Terminus Biases via Yeast Display
Signal
peptides are critical for the efficient expression and routing
of extracellular and secreted proteins. Most protein production and
screening technologies rely upon a relatively small set of signal
peptides. Despite their central role in biotechnology, there are limited
studies comprehensively examining the interplay between signal peptides
and expressed protein sequences. Here, we describe a high-throughput
method to screen novel signal peptides that maintain a high degree
of surface expression across a range of protein scaffolds with highly
variable N-termini. We find that the canonical signal peptide used
in yeast surface display, derived from Aga2p, fails to achieve high
surface expression for 42.5% of constructs containing diverse N-termini.
To circumvent this, we have identified two novel signal peptides derived
from endogenous yeast proteins, SRL1 and KISH, which are highly tolerant
to diverse N-terminal sequences. This pipeline can be used to expand
our understanding of signal peptide function, identify improved signal
peptides for protein expression, and refine the computational tools
used for signal peptide prediction
Proteome-Scale Screening to Identify High-Expression Signal Peptides with Minimal N‑Terminus Biases via Yeast Display
Signal
peptides are critical for the efficient expression and routing
of extracellular and secreted proteins. Most protein production and
screening technologies rely upon a relatively small set of signal
peptides. Despite their central role in biotechnology, there are limited
studies comprehensively examining the interplay between signal peptides
and expressed protein sequences. Here, we describe a high-throughput
method to screen novel signal peptides that maintain a high degree
of surface expression across a range of protein scaffolds with highly
variable N-termini. We find that the canonical signal peptide used
in yeast surface display, derived from Aga2p, fails to achieve high
surface expression for 42.5% of constructs containing diverse N-termini.
To circumvent this, we have identified two novel signal peptides derived
from endogenous yeast proteins, SRL1 and KISH, which are highly tolerant
to diverse N-terminal sequences. This pipeline can be used to expand
our understanding of signal peptide function, identify improved signal
peptides for protein expression, and refine the computational tools
used for signal peptide prediction
Proteome-Scale Screening to Identify High-Expression Signal Peptides with Minimal N‑Terminus Biases via Yeast Display
Signal
peptides are critical for the efficient expression and routing
of extracellular and secreted proteins. Most protein production and
screening technologies rely upon a relatively small set of signal
peptides. Despite their central role in biotechnology, there are limited
studies comprehensively examining the interplay between signal peptides
and expressed protein sequences. Here, we describe a high-throughput
method to screen novel signal peptides that maintain a high degree
of surface expression across a range of protein scaffolds with highly
variable N-termini. We find that the canonical signal peptide used
in yeast surface display, derived from Aga2p, fails to achieve high
surface expression for 42.5% of constructs containing diverse N-termini.
To circumvent this, we have identified two novel signal peptides derived
from endogenous yeast proteins, SRL1 and KISH, which are highly tolerant
to diverse N-terminal sequences. This pipeline can be used to expand
our understanding of signal peptide function, identify improved signal
peptides for protein expression, and refine the computational tools
used for signal peptide prediction
Proteome-Scale Screening to Identify High-Expression Signal Peptides with Minimal N‑Terminus Biases via Yeast Display
Signal
peptides are critical for the efficient expression and routing
of extracellular and secreted proteins. Most protein production and
screening technologies rely upon a relatively small set of signal
peptides. Despite their central role in biotechnology, there are limited
studies comprehensively examining the interplay between signal peptides
and expressed protein sequences. Here, we describe a high-throughput
method to screen novel signal peptides that maintain a high degree
of surface expression across a range of protein scaffolds with highly
variable N-termini. We find that the canonical signal peptide used
in yeast surface display, derived from Aga2p, fails to achieve high
surface expression for 42.5% of constructs containing diverse N-termini.
To circumvent this, we have identified two novel signal peptides derived
from endogenous yeast proteins, SRL1 and KISH, which are highly tolerant
to diverse N-terminal sequences. This pipeline can be used to expand
our understanding of signal peptide function, identify improved signal
peptides for protein expression, and refine the computational tools
used for signal peptide prediction
Supplemental Data from Altered Binding of Tumor Antigenic Peptides to MHC Class I Affects CD8<sup>+</sup> T Cell–Effector Responses
Supplemental Table and Figures S1 and S2</p
Supplemental Methods from Altered Binding of Tumor Antigenic Peptides to MHC Class I Affects CD8<sup>+</sup> T Cell–Effector Responses
Supplemental Methods</p
DataSheet_1_Identification of Highly Cross-Reactive Mimotopes for a Public T Cell Response in Murine Melanoma.pdf
While immune checkpoint blockade results in durable responses for some patients, many others have not experienced such benefits. These treatments rely upon reinvigorating specific T cell-antigen interactions. However, it is often unknown what antigens are being recognized by T cells or how to potently induce antigen-specific responses in a broadly applicable manner. Here, we characterized the CD8+ T cell response to a murine model of melanoma following combination immunotherapy to determine the basis of tumor recognition. Sequencing of tumor-infiltrating T cells revealed a repertoire of highly homologous TCR sequences that were particularly expanded in treated mice and which recognized an antigen from an endogenous retrovirus. While vaccination against this peptide failed to raise a protective T cell response in vivo, engineered antigen mimotopes induced a significant expansion of CD8+ T cells cross-reactive to the original antigen. Vaccination with mimotopes resulted in killing of antigen-loaded cells in vivo yet showed modest survival benefit in a prophylactic vaccine paradigm. Together, this work demonstrates the identification of a dominant tumor-associated antigen and generation of mimotopes which can induce robust functional T cell responses that are cross-reactive to the endogenous antigen across multiple individuals.</p
The MHC fold has evolved to present repertoires of chemically diverse antigens.
Representative structures of the platform domains of classical MHC presentation of peptide antigens (H2-Kb with DEV8 peptide, PDB ID: 2CKB, on left [67]); CD1 presentation of lipid antigens (CD1d with α-Galactosylceramide, PDB ID: 1ZT4, in middle [68]); and MR1 presentation of small molecule metabolites (MR1 with 5-OP-RU, which forms a Schiff base with MR1 residue Lys43, PDB ID, on right). Figure provided by Drs. Erin Adams and Sidonia Eckle. 5-OP-RU, 5-(2-oxopropylideneamino)-6-D-ribitylaminouracil.</p
