DNA-Regulated Multi-Protein Complement Control

In nature, the interactions between proteins and their complements/substrates can dictate complex functions. Herein, we explore how DNA on nucleic acid modified proteins can be used as scaffolds to deliberately control interactions with a peptide complement (by adjusting length, sequence, and rigidi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Chemical Society 2024-12, Vol.146 (48), p.32912-32918
Hauptverfasser: Ma, Yinglun, Winegar, Peter H., Figg, C. Adrian, Ramani, Namrata, Anderson, Alex J., Ngo, Kathleen, Ahrens, John F., Chellam, Nikhil S., Kim, Young Jun, Mirkin, Chad A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In nature, the interactions between proteins and their complements/substrates can dictate complex functions. Herein, we explore how DNA on nucleic acid modified proteins can be used as scaffolds to deliberately control interactions with a peptide complement (by adjusting length, sequence, and rigidity). As model systems, split GFPs were covalently connected through DNA scaffolds (36–58 bp). Increasing the length or decreasing the rigidity of the DNA scaffold (through removal of the duplex) increases the extent of intramolecular protein binding (up to 7.5-fold) between these GFP fragments. Independent and dynamic control over functional outputs can also be regulated by DNA hybridization; a multi-protein (split CFP and YFP) architecture was synthesized and characterized by fluorescence. This ternary construct shows that DNA displacement strands in different stoichiometric ratios can be used deliberately to regulate competitive binding between two unique sets of proteins. These studies establish a foundation for creating new classes of biological machinery based upon the concept of DNA-regulated multi-protein complement control.
ISSN:0002-7863
1520-5126
1520-5126
DOI:10.1021/jacs.4c11315