Abstract
A single-domain protein catenane refers to two mechanically interlocked polypeptide rings that fold synergistically into a compact and integrated structure, which is extremely rare in nature. Herein, we report a single-domain protein catenane of dihydrofolate reductase (cat-DHFR). The design was achieved by rewiring the connectivity between secondary motifs to introduce artificial entanglement and the synthesis was accomplished by a series of programmed streamlined post-translational processing events in cells. The target molecule contains few exogenous motifs and has been thoroughly characterized by combined techniques of LC-MS, SDS-PAGE, protease cleavage experiment, and ion mobility mass spectrometry. Compared to the linear control, cat-DHFR retains the catalytic capability and exhibits enhanced stability against thermal or chemical denaturation due to conformational restriction. The results suggest that linear proteins may be converted into concatenated single-domain counterparts with almost identical chemical composition, well-preserved function, and elevated stability, which represents an entirely new horizon in protein science.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supporting Information for A Single-domain Protein Catenane of Dihydrofolate Reductase
Description
Complete experimental sections, full amino acid sequences of l-DHFR and different constructions of cat-DHFR, topological diagram and SDS-PAGE of cat-DHFR with different ring-closure positions, SDS-PAGE of cat-DHFR with different lengths of flexible linkers, GLN matrix, near-UV CD, Michaelis curve and Hanes-Woolf plot, ITC spectra, catalytic activities with/without DMSO of l-DHFR and cat-DHFR.
Actions
Title
cat-DHFR simulation
Description
Simulated unfolding process of cat-DHFR
Actions
Title
l-DHFR simulation
Description
Simulated unfolding process of l-DHFR
Actions