Systematic conformation-to-phenotype mapping via limited deep-sequencing of proteins
Non-native conformations drive protein misfolding diseases, complicate bioengineering efforts, and fuel molecular evolution. No current experimental technique is well-suited for elucidating them and their phenotypic effects. Especially intractable are the transient conformations populated by intrins...
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Zusammenfassung: | Non-native conformations drive protein misfolding diseases, complicate
bioengineering efforts, and fuel molecular evolution. No current experimental
technique is well-suited for elucidating them and their phenotypic effects.
Especially intractable are the transient conformations populated by
intrinsically disordered proteins. We describe an approach to systematically
discover, stabilize, and purify native and non-native conformations, generated
in vitro or in vivo, and directly link conformations to molecular, organismal,
or evolutionary phenotypes. This approach involves high-throughput disulfide
scanning (HTDS) of the entire protein. To reveal which disulfides trap which
chromatographically resolvable conformers, we devised a deep-sequencing method
for double-Cys variant libraries of proteins that precisely and simultaneously
locates both Cys residues within each polypeptide. HTDS of the abundant E. coli
periplasmic chaperone HdeA revealed distinct classes of disordered hydrophobic
conformers with variable cytotoxicity depending on where the backbone was
cross-linked. HTDS can bridge conformational and phenotypic landscapes for many
proteins that function in disulfide-permissive environments. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2204.06159 |