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Monobody-mediated alteration of enzyme specificity
Tanaka, Shun-Ichi; Takahashi, Tetsuya; Koide, Akiko; Ishihara, Satoru; Koikeda, Satoshi; Koide, Shohei
Current methods for engineering enzymes modify enzymes themselves and require a detailed mechanistic understanding or a high-throughput assay. Here, we describe a new approach where catalytic properties are modulated with synthetic binding proteins, termed monobodies, directed to an unmodified enzyme. Using the example of a beta-galactosidase from Bacillus circulans, we efficiently identified monobodies that restricted its substrates for its transgalactosylation reaction and selectively enhanced the production of small oligosaccharide prebiotics.
PMCID:4989918
PMID: 26322825
ISSN: 1552-4469
CID: 2004732
A High Through-put Platform for Recombinant Antibodies to Folded Proteins
Hornsby, Michael; Paduch, Marcin; Miersch, Shane; Saaf, Annika; Matsuguchi, Tet; Lee, Brian; Wypisniak, Karolina; Doak, Allison; King, Daniel; Usatyuk, Svitlana; Perry, Kimberly; Lu, Vince; Thomas, William; Luke, Judy; Goodman, Jay; Hoey, Robert J; Lai, Darson; Griffin, Carly; Li, Zhijian; Vizeacoumar, Franco J; Dong, Debbie; Campbell, Elliot; Anderson, Stephen; Zhong, Nan; Graslund, Susanne; Koide, Shohei; Moffat, Jason; Sidhu, Sachdev; Kossiakoff, Anthony; Wells, James
Antibodies are key reagents in biology and medicine, but commercial sources are rarely recombinant and thus do not provide a permanent and renewable resource. Here, we describe an industrialized platform to generate antigens and validated recombinant antibodies for 346 transcription factors (TFs) and 211 epigenetic antigens. We describe an optimized automated phage display and antigen expression pipeline that in aggregate produced about 3000 sequenced Fragment antigen-binding domain that had high affinity (typically EC50<20 nm), high stability (Tm approximately 80 degrees C), good expression in E. coli ( approximately 5 mg/L), and ability to bind antigen in complex cell lysates. We evaluated a subset of Fabs generated to homologous SCAN domains for binding specificities. These Fragment antigen-binding domains were monospecific to their target SCAN antigen except in rare cases where they cross-reacted with a few highly related antigens. Remarkably, immunofluorescence experiments in six cell lines for 270 of the TF antigens, each having multiple antibodies, show that approximately 70% stain predominantly in the cytosol and approximately 20% stain in the nucleus which reinforces the dominant role that translocation plays in TF biology. These cloned antibody reagents are being made available to the academic community through our web site recombinant-antibodies.org to allow a more system-wide analysis of TF and chromatin biology. We believe these platforms, infrastructure, and automated approaches will facilitate the next generation of renewable antibody reagents to the human proteome in the coming decade.
PMCID:4597156
PMID: 26290498
ISSN: 1535-9484
CID: 2004752
Crystal structures of a double-barrelled fluoride ion channel
Stockbridge, Randy B; Kolmakova-Partensky, Ludmila; Shane, Tania; Koide, Akiko; Koide, Shohei; Miller, Christopher; Newstead, Simon
To contend with hazards posed by environmental fluoride, microorganisms export this anion through F(-)-specific ion channels of the Fluc family. Since the recent discovery of Fluc channels, numerous idiosyncratic features of these proteins have been unearthed, including strong selectivity for F(-) over Cl(-) and dual-topology dimeric assembly. To understand the chemical basis for F(-) permeation and how the antiparallel subunits convene to form a F(-)-selective pore, here we solve the crystal structures of two bacterial Fluc homologues in complex with three different monobody inhibitors, with and without F(-) present, to a maximum resolution of 2.1 A. The structures reveal a surprising 'double-barrelled' channel architecture in which two F(-) ion pathways span the membrane, and the dual-topology arrangement includes a centrally coordinated cation, most likely Na(+). F(-) selectivity is proposed to arise from the very narrow pores and an unusual anion coordination that exploits the quadrupolar edges of conserved phenylalanine rings.
PMCID:4876929
PMID: 26344196
ISSN: 1476-4687
CID: 2004722
Assessment of a method to characterize antibody selectivity and specificity for use in immunoprecipitation
Marcon, Edyta; Jain, Harshika; Bhattacharya, Anandi; Guo, Hongbo; Phanse, Sadhna; Pu, Shuye; Byram, Gregory; Collins, Ben C; Dowdell, Evan; Fenner, Maria; Guo, Xinghua; Hutchinson, Ashley; Kennedy, Jacob J; Krastins, Bryan; Larsen, Brett; Lin, Zhen-Yuan; Lopez, Mary F; Loppnau, Peter; Miersch, Shane; Nguyen, Tin; Olsen, Jonathan B; Paduch, Marcin; Ravichandran, Mani; Seitova, Alma; Vadali, Gouri; Vogelsang, Maryann S; Whiteaker, Jeffrey R; Zhong, Guoqing; Zhong, Nan; Zhao, Lei; Aebersold, Ruedi; Arrowsmith, Cheryl H; Emili, Andrew; Frappier, Lori; Gingras, Anne-Claude; Gstaiger, Matthias; Paulovich, Amanda G; Koide, Shohei; Kossiakoff, Anthony A; Sidhu, Sachdev S; Wodak, Shoshana J; Graslund, Susanne; Greenblatt, Jack F; Edwards, Aled M
Antibodies are used in multiple cell biology applications, but there are no standardized methods to assess antibody quality-an absence that risks data integrity and reproducibility. We describe a mass spectrometry-based standard operating procedure for scoring immunoprecipitation antibody quality. We quantified the abundance of all the proteins in immunoprecipitates of 1,124 new recombinant antibodies for 152 chromatin-related human proteins by comparing normalized spectral abundance factors from the target antigen with those of all other proteins. We validated the performance of the standard operating procedure in blinded studies in five independent laboratories. Antibodies for which the target antigen or a member of its known protein complex was the most abundant protein were classified as 'IP gold standard'. This method generates quantitative outputs that can be stored and archived in public databases, and it represents a step toward a platform for community benchmarking of antibody quality.
PMID: 26121405
ISSN: 1548-7105
CID: 2004762
Aromatic cluster mutations produce focal modulations of beta-sheet structure
Biancalana, Matthew; Makabe, Koki; Yan, Shude; Koide, Shohei
Site-directed mutagenesis is a powerful tool for altering the structure and function of proteins in a focused manner. Here, we examined how a model beta-sheet protein could be tuned by mutation of numerous surface-exposed residues to aromatic amino acids. We designed these aromatic side chain "clusters" at highly solvent-exposed positions in the flat, single-layer beta-sheet of Borrelia outer surface protein A (OspA). This unusual beta-sheet scaffold allows us to interrogate the effects of these mutations in the context of well-defined structure but in the absence of the strong scaffolding effects of globular protein architecture. We anticipated that the introduction of a cluster of aromatic amino acid residues on the beta-sheet surface would result in large conformational changes and/or stabilization and thereby provide new means of controlling the properties of beta-sheets. Surprisingly, X-ray crystal structures revealed that the introduction of aromatic clusters produced only subtle conformational changes in the OspA beta-sheet. Additionally, despite burying a large degree of hydrophobic surface area, the aromatic cluster mutants were slightly less stable than the wild-type scaffold. These results thereby demonstrate that the introduction of aromatic cluster mutations can serve as a means for subtly modulating beta-sheet conformation in protein design.
PMCID:4420532
PMID: 25645104
ISSN: 1469-896x
CID: 2004782
Crystal Structure of Fluc, a Microbial Fluoride Channel [Meeting Abstract]
Stockbridge, Randy; Kolmakova-Partensky, Ludmila; Koide, Akiko; Koide, Shohei; Newstead, Simon; Miller, Christopher
ISI:000362849400629
ISSN: 1542-0086
CID: 2410542
Scalable high throughput selection from phage-displayed synthetic antibody libraries
Miersch, Shane; Li, Zhijian; Hanna, Rachel; McLaughlin, Megan E; Hornsby, Michael; Matsuguchi, Tet; Paduch, Marcin; Saaf, Annika; Wells, Jim; Koide, Shohei; Kossiakoff, Anthony; Sidhu, Sachdev S
The demand for antibodies that fulfill the needs of both basic and clinical research applications is high and will dramatically increase in the future. However, it is apparent that traditional monoclonal technologies are not alone up to this task. This has led to the development of alternate methods to satisfy the demand for high quality and renewable affinity reagents to all accessible elements of the proteome. Toward this end, high throughput methods for conducting selections from phage-displayed synthetic antibody libraries have been devised for applications involving diverse antigens and optimized for rapid throughput and success. Herein, a protocol is described in detail that illustrates with video demonstration the parallel selection of Fab-phage clones from high diversity libraries against hundreds of targets using either a manual 96 channel liquid handler or automated robotics system. Using this protocol, a single user can generate hundreds of antigens, select antibodies to them in parallel and validate antibody binding within 6-8 weeks. Highlighted are: i) a viable antigen format, ii) pre-selection antigen characterization, iii) critical steps that influence the selection of specific and high affinity clones, and iv) ways of monitoring selection effectiveness and early stage antibody clone characterization. With this approach, we have obtained synthetic antibody fragments (Fabs) to many target classes including single-pass membrane receptors, secreted protein hormones, and multi-domain intracellular proteins. These fragments are readily converted to full-length antibodies and have been validated to exhibit high affinity and specificity. Further, they have been demonstrated to be functional in a variety of standard immunoassays including Western blotting, ELISA, cellular immunofluorescence, immunoprecipitation and related assays. This methodology will accelerate antibody discovery and ultimately bring us closer to realizing the goal of generating renewable, high quality antibodies to the proteome.
PMCID:4354533
PMID: 25651360
ISSN: 1940-087x
CID: 2004772
Optimizing Production of Antigens and Fabs in the Context of Generating Recombinant Antibodies to Human Proteins
Zhong, Nan; Loppnau, Peter; Seitova, Alma; Ravichandran, Mani; Fenner, Maria; Jain, Harshika; Bhattacharya, Anandi; Hutchinson, Ashley; Paduch, Marcin; Lu, Vincent; Olszewski, Michal; Kossiakoff, Anthony A; Dowdell, Evan; Koide, Akiko; Koide, Shohei; Huang, Haiming; Nadeem, Vincent; Sidhu, Sachdev S; Greenblatt, Jack F; Marcon, Edyta; Arrowsmith, Cheryl H; Edwards, Aled M; Graslund, Susanne
We developed and optimized a high-throughput project workflow to generate renewable recombinant antibodies to human proteins involved in epigenetic signalling. Three different strategies to produce phage display compatible protein antigens in bacterial systems were compared, and we found that in vivo biotinylation through the use of an Avi tag was the most productive method. Phage display selections were performed on 265 in vivo biotinylated antigen domains. High-affinity Fabs (<20nM) were obtained for 196. We constructed and optimized a new expression vector to produce in vivo biotinylated Fabs in E. coli. This increased average yields up to 10-fold, with an average yield of 4 mg/L. For 118 antigens, we identified Fabs that could immunoprecipitate their full-length endogenous targets from mammalian cell lysates. One Fab for each antigen was converted to a recombinant IgG and produced in mammalian cells, with an average yield of 15 mg/L. In summary, we have optimized each step of the pipeline to produce recombinant antibodies, significantly increasing both efficiency and yield, and also showed that these Fabs and IgGs can be generally useful for chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) protocols.
PMCID:4593582
PMID: 26437229
ISSN: 1932-6203
CID: 2004712
A synthetic antibody fragment targeting nicastrin affects assembly and trafficking of gamma-secretase
Zhang, Xulun; Hoey, Robert; Koide, Akiko; Dolios, Georgia; Paduch, Marcin; Nguyen, Phuong; Wu, Xianzhong; Li, Yueming; Wagner, Steven L; Wang, Rong; Koide, Shohei; Sisodia, Sangram S
The gamma-secretase complex, composed of presenilin, nicastrin (NCT), anterior pharynx-defective 1 (APH-1), and presenilin enhancer 2 (PEN-2), is assembled in a highly regulated manner and catalyzes the intramembranous proteolysis of many type I membrane proteins, including Notch and amyloid precursor protein. The Notch family of receptors plays important roles in cell fate specification during development and in adult tissues, and aberrant hyperactive Notch signaling causes some forms of cancer. gamma-Secretase-mediated processing of Notch at the cell surface results in the generation of the Notch intracellular domain, which associates with several transcriptional coactivators involved in nuclear signaling events. On the other hand, gamma-secretase-mediated processing of amyloid precursor protein leads to the production of amyloid beta (Abeta) peptides that play an important role in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer disease. We used a phage display approach to identify synthetic antibodies that specifically target NCT and expressed them in the single-chain variable fragment (scFv) format in mammalian cells. We show that expression of a NCT-specific scFv clone, G9, in HEK293 cells decreased the production of the Notch intracellular domain but not the production of amyloid beta peptides that occurs in endosomal and recycling compartments. Biochemical studies revealed that scFvG9 impairs the maturation of NCT by associating with immature forms of NCT and, consequently, prevents its association with the other components of the gamma-secretase complex, leading to degradation of these molecules. The reduced cell surface levels of mature gamma-secretase complexes, in turn, compromise the intramembranous processing of Notch.
PMCID:4263884
PMID: 25352592
ISSN: 1083-351x
CID: 2004792
Epigenetic dysregulation by nickel through repressive chromatin domain disruption
Jose, Cynthia C; Xu, Beisi; Jagannathan, Lakshmanan; Trac, Candi; Mallela, Ramya K; Hattori, Takamitsu; Lai, Darson; Koide, Shohei; Schones, Dustin E; Cuddapah, Suresh
Investigations into the genomic landscape of histone modifications in heterochromatic regions have revealed histone H3 lysine 9 dimethylation (H3K9me2) to be important for differentiation and maintaining cell identity. H3K9me2 is associated with gene silencing and is organized into large repressive domains that exist in close proximity to active genes, indicating the importance of maintenance of proper domain structure. Here we show that nickel, a nonmutagenic environmental carcinogen, disrupted H3K9me2 domains, resulting in the spreading of H3K9me2 into active regions, which was associated with gene silencing. We found weak CCCTC-binding factor (CTCF)-binding sites and reduced CTCF binding at the Ni-disrupted H3K9me2 domain boundaries, suggesting a loss of CTCF-mediated insulation function as a potential reason for domain disruption and spreading. We furthermore show that euchromatin islands, local regions of active chromatin within large H3K9me2 domains, can protect genes from H3K9me2-spreading-associated gene silencing. These results have major implications in understanding H3K9me2 dynamics and the consequences of chromatin domain disruption during pathogenesis.
PMCID:4210008
PMID: 25246589
ISSN: 0027-8424
CID: 1259292