5 research outputs found

    Same Day Access to Proteins Enabled by Folding Selections

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    From laundry detergent to biomedicines, proteins are core components of modern technology. However, despite significant progress, modern recombinant protein expression still requires days to months to deliver pure, functional material. Chemical protein synthesis can also afford proteins for study with similar timeframes at the chemistry stage, with additional time dedicated post-synthesis for handling as separation of the numerous closely related side-products requires weeks to months. To overcome these rate-limiting barriers, we propose folding selection as a new framework to understand synthetic side products and enable rapid purification. We demonstrate that the minor chemical modifications present on synthetic side products result in substantially altered physical-chemical properties and that simple bio-purification techniques can separate them from the native protein in hours. With this strategy, we demonstrate the production of nine functional synthetic proteins in under ten hours each, including disulfide-containing enzymes and transcription factor domains with non-natural amino acids. Furthermore, only possible with this technology, we access homogeneous, post-translationally modified (e.g., by phosphorylation or acetylation) proteins in milligram amounts in hours. Understanding protein function is a cornerstone of modern biology, and the same-day protein production described here is uniquely suited to accelerate these efforts

    Single-Shot Flow Synthesis of D-Proteins for Mirror-Image Phage Display

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    Mirror-image biological systems have the potential for broad-reaching impact in health and diagnostics, but their study has been greatly limited by the lack of routine access to synthetic D-proteins. We demonstrate that automated fast flow peptide synthesis (AFPS) can reliably produce novel mirror-image protein targets without prior sequence engineering. We synthesized 12 D-proteins, along with their L-counterparts. All 24 synthetic proteins were folded into active structures in vitro, and characterized using biochemical and biophysical techniques. From these chiral protein pairs, we chose MDM2 and CHIP to carry forward into mirror-image phage display screens, and identified macrocyclic D-peptides that bind the recombinant targets. We report 6 mirror-image peptide ligands with unique binding modes: three to MDM2, and three to CHIP, each confirmed with X-ray co-crystal structures. Reliable production of mirror-image proteins with AFPS stands to enable not only the discovery of D-peptide drug leads, but to the study of mirror-image biological systems more broadly

    Mirror-image ligand discovery enabled by single-shot fast-flow synthesis of D-proteins

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    Abstract Widespread adoption of mirror-image biological systems presents difficulties in accessing the requisite D-protein substrates. In particular, mirror-image phage display has the potential for high-throughput generation of biologically stable macrocyclic D-peptide binders with potentially unique recognition modes but is hindered by the individualized optimization required for D-protein chemical synthesis. We demonstrate a general mirror-image phage display pipeline that utilizes automated flow peptide synthesis to prepare D-proteins in a single run. With this approach, we prepare and characterize 12 D-proteins – almost one third of all reported D-proteins to date. With access to mirror-image protein targets, we describe the successful discovery of six macrocyclic D-peptide binders: three to the oncoprotein MDM2, and three to the E3 ubiquitin ligase CHIP. Reliable production of mirror-image proteins can unlock the full potential of D-peptide drug discovery and streamline the study of mirror-image biology more broadly
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