Reconfigurable asymmetric protein assemblies through implicit negative design

Danny D. Sahtoe(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Florian Praetorius(University of Washington), Alexis Courbet(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Yang Hsia(University of Washington), Basile I. M. Wicky(University of Washington), Natasha I. Edman(University of Washington), L. M. Miller(University of Washington), Bart Timmermans(University of Washington), Justin Decarreau(University of Washington), Hana M. Morris(University of Washington), Alex Kang(University of Washington), Asim K. Bera(University of Washington), David Baker(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Science
January 20, 2022
Cited by 79Open Access
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Abstract

Asymmetric multiprotein complexes that undergo subunit exchange play central roles in biology but present a challenge for design because the components must not only contain interfaces that enable reversible association but also be stable and well behaved in isolation. We use implicit negative design to generate β sheet-mediated heterodimers that can be assembled into a wide variety of complexes. The designs are stable, folded, and soluble in isolation and rapidly assemble upon mixing, and crystal structures are close to the computational models. We construct linearly arranged hetero-oligomers with up to six different components, branched hetero-oligomers, closed C4-symmetric two-component rings, and hetero-oligomers assembled on a cyclic homo-oligomeric central hub and demonstrate that such complexes can readily reconfigure through subunit exchange. Our approach provides a general route to designing asymmetric reconfigurable protein systems.


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