De novo design of protein homo-oligomers with modular hydrogen-bond network–mediated specificity
Author(s) -
Scott E. Boyken,
Zibo Chen,
Benjamin Groves,
Robert A. Langan,
Gustav Oberdorfer,
Alex Ford,
Jason M. Gilmore,
Chunfu Xu,
Frank DiMaio,
J.H. Pereira,
Banumathi Sankaran,
Georg Seelig,
Peter H. Zwart,
David Baker
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 12.556
H-Index - 1186
eISSN - 1095-9203
pISSN - 0036-8075
DOI - 10.1126/science.aad8865
Subject(s) - modular design , hydrogen bond , pairing , base pair , computational biology , protein engineering , dna , computer science , protein design , nanotechnology , chemistry , protein structure , molecule , biology , materials science , physics , biochemistry , enzyme , programming language , organic chemistry , superconductivity , quantum mechanics
In nature, structural specificity in DNA and proteins is encoded differently: In DNA, specificity arises from modular hydrogen bonds in the core of the double helix, whereas in proteins, specificity arises largely from buried hydrophobic packing complemented by irregular peripheral polar interactions. Here, we describe a general approach for designing a wide range of protein homo-oligomers with specificity determined by modular arrays of central hydrogen-bond networks. We use the approach to design dimers, trimers, and tetramers consisting of two concentric rings of helices, including previously not seen triangular, square, and supercoiled topologies. X-ray crystallography confirms that the structures overall, and the hydrogen-bond networks in particular, are nearly identical to the design models, and the networks confer interaction specificity in vivo. The ability to design extensive hydrogen-bond networks with atomic accuracy enables the programming of protein interaction specificity for a broad range of synthetic biology applications; more generally, our results demonstrate that, even with the tremendous diversity observed in nature, there are fundamentally new modes of interaction to be discovered in proteins.
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