2 research outputs found
Switchavidin: Reversible Biotin–Avidin–Biotin Bridges with High Affinity and Specificity
Switchavidin is a chicken avidin
mutant displaying reversible binding
to biotin, an improved binding affinity toward conjugated biotin,
and low nonspecific binding due to reduced surface charge. These properties
make switchavidin an optimal tool in biosensor applications for the
reversible immobilization of biotinylated proteins on biotinylated
sensor surfaces. Furthermore, switchavidin opens novel possibilities
for patterning, purification, and labeling
Artificial Avidin-Based Receptors for a Panel of Small Molecules
Proteins with high specificity, affinity,
and stability are needed
for biomolecular recognition in a plethora of applications. Antibodies
are powerful affinity tools, but they may also suffer from limitations
such as low stability and high production costs. Avidin and streptavidin
provide a promising scaffold for protein engineering, and due to their
ultratight binding to D-biotin they are widely used in various biotechnological
and biomedical applications. In this study, we demonstrate that the
avidin scaffold is suitable for use as a novel receptor for several
biologically active small molecules: Artificial, chicken avidin-based
proteins, antidins, were generated using a directed evolution method
for progesterone, hydrocortisone, testosterone, cholic acid, ketoprofen,
and folic acid, all with micromolar to nanomolar affinity and significantly
reduced biotin-binding affinity. We also describe the crystal structure
of an antidin, sbAvd-2(I117Y), a steroid-binding avidin, which proves
that the avidin scaffold can tolerate significant modifications without
losing its characteristic tetrameric beta-barrel structure, helping
us to further design avidin-based small molecule receptors