Designed Protein Cages as Scaffolds for Building Multienzyme Materials

Scott A. McConnell(University of California, Los Angeles), Kevin A. Cannon(University of California, Los Angeles), Christian Morgan(University of California, Los Angeles), Rachel McAllister(University of California, Los Angeles), Brendan R. Amer(University of California, Los Angeles), Robert Clubb(University of California, Los Angeles), Todd O. Yeates(University of California, Los Angeles)
ACS Synthetic Biology
January 10, 2020
Cited by 68

Abstract

The functions of enzymes can be strongly affected by their higher-order spatial arrangements. In this study we combine multiple new technologies-designer protein cages and sortase-based enzymatic attachments between proteins-as a novel platform for organizing multiple enzymes (of one or more types) in specified configurations. As a scaffold we employ a previously characterized 24-subunit designed protein cage whose termini are outwardly exposed for attachment. As a first-use case, we test the attachment of two cellulase enzymes known to act synergistically in cellulose degradation. We show that, after endowing the termini of the cage subunits with a short "sort-tag" sequence (LPXTG) and the opposing termini of the cellulase enzymes with a short polyglycine sequence tag, addition of sortase covalently attaches the enzymes to the cage with good reactivity and high copy number. The doubly modified cages show enhanced activity in a cellulose degradation assay compared to enzymes in solution, and compared to a combination of singly modified cages. These new engineering strategies could be broadly useful in the development of enzymatic material and synthetic biology applications.


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