Isolating Substrates for an Engineered α-Lytic Protease by Phage Display

被引:0
|
作者
Samantha Lien
Geoffrey L. Francis
Lloyd D. Graham
John C. Wallace
机构
[1] University of Adelaide,Department of Biochemistry
[2] Genentech Inc.,Department of Protein Engineering
[3] GroPep Pty. Ltd.,CSIRO Division of Molecular Science
[4] Sydney Laboratory,Department of Molecular Biosciences
[5] University of Adelaide,undefined
来源
Journal of Protein Chemistry | 2003年 / 22卷
关键词
α-Lytic protease; substrate phage display; enzyme specificity;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Panning of a substrate phage library with an α-lytic protease mutant showed that substrate phage display can be used to isolate sequences with improved protease sensitivity even for proteases of relatively broad specificity. Two panning experiments were performed with an engineered α-lytic protease mutant known to have a preference for cleavage after His or Met residues. Both experiments led to the isolation of protease-sensitive phage containing linker sequences in which His and Met residues were enriched compared with the initial library. Despite the relatively hydrophobic substrate binding site of the enzyme, the predominant protease-sensitive sequence isolated from the second library panning had the sequence Asp-Ser-Thr-Met. Kinetic studies showed that this sequence was cleaved up to 4.5-fold faster than rationally designed positive controls. Protease-resistant phage particles were also selected and characterized, with the finding that Gly and Pro appeared frequently at the putative P4 positions, whereas Asp dominated the putative P1 position.
引用
收藏
页码:155 / 166
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Phage on display
    Wittrup, KD
    TRENDS IN BIOTECHNOLOGY, 1999, 17 (11) : 423 - 424
  • [32] Phage display
    Smith, GP
    Petrenko, VA
    CHEMICAL REVIEWS, 1997, 97 (02) : 391 - 410
  • [33] Screening E3 Substrates Using a Live Phage Display Library
    Guo, Zhengguang
    Wang, Xiaorong
    Li, Huihua
    Gao, Youhe
    PLOS ONE, 2013, 8 (10):
  • [34] Blood Circulation-Prolonging Peptides for Engineered Nanoparticles Identified via Phage Display
    Jin, Peipei
    Sha, Rui
    Zhang, Yunjiao
    Liu, Liu
    Bian, Yunpeng
    Qian, Jing
    Qian, Jieying
    Lin, Jun
    Ishimwe, Nestor
    Hu, Yi
    Zhang, Wenbin
    Liu, Yanchun
    Yin, Shiheng
    Ren, Li
    Wen, Long-ping
    NANO LETTERS, 2019, 19 (03) : 1467 - 1478
  • [35] Isolating recombinant antibodies against specific protein morphologies using atomic force microscopy and phage display technologies
    Barkhordarian, Hedieh
    Emadi, Sharareh
    Schulz, Philip
    Sierks, Michael R.
    PROTEIN ENGINEERING DESIGN & SELECTION, 2006, 19 (11): : 497 - 502
  • [36] The identification of cellular targets of 17β estradiol using a lytic (T7) cDNA phage display approach
    Van Dorst, Bieke
    Mehta, Jaytry
    Rouah-Martin, Elsa
    De Coen, Wim
    Blust, Ronny
    Robbens, Johan
    TOXICOLOGY IN VITRO, 2011, 25 (01) : 388 - 393
  • [37] FILAMENTOUS PHAGE DISPLAY
    BARBAS, SM
    BARBAS, CF
    FIBRINOLYSIS, 1994, 8 : 245 - 252
  • [38] Phage display of proteins
    Koscielska, K
    Kiczak, L
    Kasztura, M
    Wesolowska, O
    Otlewski, J
    ACTA BIOCHIMICA POLONICA, 1998, 45 (03) : 705 - 720
  • [39] Antibody Phage Display
    Shim, Hyunbo
    RECOMBINANT ANTIBODIES FOR INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2017, 1053 : 21 - 34
  • [40] Phage and Yeast Display
    Sheehan, Jared
    Marasco, Wayne A.
    MICROBIOLOGY SPECTRUM, 2015, 3 (01):