2 research outputs found

    Designing Protease-Triggered Protein Cages

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    Proteins that self-assemble into enclosed polyhedral cages, both naturally and by design, are garnering attention for their prospective utility in the fields of medicine and biotechnology. Notably, their potential for encapsulation and surface display are attractive for experiments that require protection and targeted delivery of cargo. The ability to control their opening or disassembly would greatly advance the development of protein nanocages into widespread molecular tools. Toward the development of protein cages that disassemble in a systematic manner and in response to biologically relevant stimuli, here we demonstrate a modular protein cage system that is opened by highly sequence-specific proteases, based on sequence insertions at strategically chosen loop positions in the protein cage subunits. We probed the generality of the approach in the context of protein cages built using the two prevailing methods of construction: genetic fusion between oligomeric components and (non-covalent) computational interface design between oligomeric components. Our results suggest that the former type of cage may be more amenable than the latter for endowing proteolytically controlled disassembly. We show that a successfully designed cage system, based on oligomeric fusion, is modular with regard to its triggering protease. One version of the cage is targeted by an asparagine protease implicated in cancer and Alzheimer’s disease, whereas the second version is responsive to the blood-clotting protease, thrombin. The approach demonstrated here should guide future efforts to develop therapeutic vectors to treat disease states where protease induction or mis-regulation occurs

    Apolipoprotein Mimetic Peptide Inhibits Neutrophil-Driven Inflammatory Damage via Membrane Remodeling and Suppression of Cell Lysis

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    Neutrophils are crucial for host defense but are notorious for causing sterile inflammatory damage. Activated neutrophils in inflamed tissue can liberate histone H4, which was recently shown to perpetuate inflammation by permeating membranes via the generation of negative Gaussian curvature (NGC), leading to lytic cell death. Here, we show that it is possible to build peptides or proteins that cancel NGC in membranes and thereby suppress pore formation, and demonstrate that they can inhibit H4 membrane remodeling and thereby reduce histone H4-driven lytic cell death and resultant inflammation. As a demonstration of principle, we use apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) mimetic peptide apoMP1. X-ray structural studies and theoretical calculations show that apoMP1 induces nanoscopic positive Gaussian curvature (PGC), which interacts with the NGC induced by the N-terminus of histone H4 (H4n) to inhibit membrane permeation. Interestingly, we show that induction of PGC can inhibit membrane-permeating activity in general and “turn off” diverse membrane-permeating molecules besides H4n. In vitro experiments show an apoMP1 dose-dependent rescue of H4 cytotoxicity. Using a mouse model, we show that tissue accumulation of neutrophils, release of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs), and extracellular H4 all strongly correlate independently with local tissue cell death in multiple organs, but administration of apoMP1 inhibits histone H4-mediated cytotoxicity and strongly prevents organ tissue damage
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