1 research outputs found
Multivalent Display of Antifreeze Proteins by Fusion to Self-Assembling Protein Cages Enhances Ice-Binding Activities
Antifreeze proteins
(AFPs) are small monomeric proteins that adsorb
to the surface of ice to inhibit ice crystal growth and impart freeze
resistance to the organisms producing them. Previously, monomeric
AFPs have been conjugated to the termini of branched polymers to increase
their activity through the simultaneous binding of more than one AFP
to ice. Here, we describe a superior approach to increasing AFP activity
through oligomerization that eliminates the need for conjugation reactions
with varying levels of efficiency. A moderately active AFP from a
fish and a hyperactive AFP from an Antarctic bacterium were genetically
fused to the C-termini of one component of the 24-subunit protein
cage T33-21, resulting in protein nanoparticles that multivalently
display exactly 12 AFPs. The resulting nanoparticles exhibited freezing
point depression >50-fold greater than that seen with the same
concentration
of monomeric AFP and a similar increase in the level of ice-recrystallization
inhibition. These results support the anchored clathrate mechanism
of binding of AFP to ice. The enhanced freezing point depression could
be due to the difficulty of overgrowing a larger AFP on the ice surface
and the improved ice-recrystallization inhibition to the ability of
the nanoparticle to simultaneously bind multiple ice grains. Oligomerization
of these proteins using self-assembling protein cages will be useful
in a variety of biotechnology and cryobiology applications