Engineering and functionalization of large circular tandem repeat protein nanoparticles.
Colin E CorrentiJazmine P HallinanLindsey A DoyleRaymond O RuffCarla A Jaeger-RuckstuhlYuexin XuBetty W ShenAmanda QuCaley PolkinghornDella J FriendAshok D BandaranayakeStanley R RiddellBrett K KaiserBarry L StoddardPhilip G BradleyPublished in: Nature structural & molecular biology (2020)
Protein engineering has enabled the design of molecular scaffolds that display a wide variety of sizes, shapes, symmetries and subunit compositions. Symmetric protein-based nanoparticles that display multiple protein domains can exhibit enhanced functional properties due to increased avidity and improved solution behavior and stability. Here we describe the creation and characterization of a computationally designed circular tandem repeat protein (cTRP) composed of 24 identical repeated motifs, which can display a variety of functional protein domains (cargo) at defined positions around its periphery. We demonstrate that cTRP nanoparticles can self-assemble from smaller individual subunits, can be produced from prokaryotic and human expression platforms, can employ a variety of cargo attachment strategies and can be used for applications (such as T-cell culture and expansion) requiring high-avidity molecular interactions on the cell surface.