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Stabilizing and Understanding a Miniprotein by Rational Redesign.

Kathryn L Porter GoffDebbie NicolChristopher WilliamsMatthew P CrumpFrancis ZieleniewskiJennifer L SamphireEmily G BakerDerek N Woolfson
Published in: Biochemistry (2019)
Miniproteins reduce the complexity of the protein-folding problem allowing systematic studies of contributions to protein folding and stabilization. Here, we describe the rational redesign of a miniprotein, PPα, comprising a polyproline II helix, a loop, and an α helix. The redesign provides a de novo framework for interrogating noncovalent interactions. Optimized PPα has significantly improved thermal stability with a midpoint unfolding temperature (TM) of 51 °C. Its nuclear magnetic resonance structure indicates a density of stabilizing noncovalent interactions that is higher than that of the parent peptide, specifically an increased number of CH-π interactions. In part, we attribute this to improved long-range electrostatic interactions between the two helical elements. We probe further sequence-stability relationships in the miniprotein through a series of rational mutations.
Keyphrases
  • magnetic resonance
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • single molecule
  • amino acid
  • protein protein
  • dna binding
  • binding protein
  • living cells
  • computed tomography
  • room temperature