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Substrate interactions guide cyclase engineering and lasso peptide diversification.

Susanna E BarrettSong YinPeter JordanJohn K BrunsonJessica Gordon-NunezGabriella Costa Machado da CruzChristopher RosarioBethany K OkadaKelsey AndersonThomas A PiresRuoyang WangDiwakar ShuklaMark J BurkDouglas A Mitchell
Published in: Nature chemical biology (2024)
Lasso peptides are a diverse class of naturally occurring, highly stable molecules kinetically trapped in a distinctive [1]rotaxane conformation. How the ATP-dependent lasso cyclase constrains a relatively unstructured substrate peptide into a low entropy product has remained a mystery owing to poor enzyme stability and activity in vitro. In this study, we combined substrate tolerance data with structural predictions, bioinformatic analysis, molecular dynamics simulations and mutational scanning to construct a model for the three-dimensional orientation of the substrate peptide in the lasso cyclase active site. Predicted peptide cyclase molecular contacts were validated by rationally engineering multiple, phylogenetically diverse lasso cyclases to accept substrates rejected by the wild-type enzymes. Finally, we demonstrate the utility of lasso cyclase engineering by robustly producing previously inaccessible variants that tightly bind to integrin αvβ8, which is a primary activator of transforming growth factor β and, thus, an important anti-cancer target.
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