Dissecting Protein-Protein Interactions Using Directed Evolution

被引:27
|
作者
Bonsor, Daniel A. [1 ]
Sundberg, Eric J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Boston Biomed Res Inst, Watertown, MA 02472 USA
关键词
SHOTGUN SCANNING MUTAGENESIS; YEAST SURFACE DISPLAY; HIGH-AFFINITY VARIANT; TOXIC-SHOCK-SYNDROME; HUMAN GROWTH-HORMONE; T-CELL ACTIVATION; BINDING-SITE; HOT-SPOTS; INTRAMOLECULAR COOPERATIVITY; BACTERIAL SUPERANTIGENS;
D O I
10.1021/bi102019c
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Protein protein interactions are essential for life. They are responsible for most cellular functions and when they go awry often lead to disease. Proteins are inherently complex. They are flexible macromolecules whose constituent amino acid components act in combinatorial and networked ways when they engage one another in binding interactions. It is just this complexity that allows them to conduct such a broad array of biological functions. Despite decades of intense study of the molecular basis of protein-protein interactions, key gaps in our understanding remain, hindering our ability to accurately predict the specificities and affinities of their interactions. Until recently, most protein-protein investigations have been probed experimentally at the single-amino acid level, making them, by definition, incapable of capturing the combinatorial nature of, and networked communications between, the numerous residues within and outside of the protein-protein interface. This aspect of protein protein interactions, however, is emerging as a major driving force for protein affinity and specificity. Understanding a combinatorial process necessarily requires a combinatorial experimental tool. Much like the organisms in which they reside, proteins naturally evolve over time, through a combinatorial process of mutagenesis and selection, to functionally associate. Elucidating the process by which proteins have evolved may be one of the keys to deciphering the molecular rules that govern their interactions with one another. Directed evolution is a technique performed in the laboratory that mimics natural evolution on a tractable time scale that has been utilized widely to engineer proteins with novel capabilities, including altered binding properties. In this review, we discuss directed evolution as an emerging tool for dissecting protein protein interactions.
引用
收藏
页码:2394 / 2402
页数:9
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