posted on 2017-08-14, 12:52authored byCarlos
A. Cruz-Teran, Karthik Tiruthani, Adam Mischler, Balaji M. Rao
The need for recombinant
expression of soluble protein slows the
validation of engineered proteins isolated from combinatorial libraries
and limits the number of protein variants evaluated. To overcome this
bottleneck, we describe a system for simultaneous cell surface display
and soluble secretion of proteins in Saccharomyces
cerevisiae based on inefficient ribosomal skipping.
Ribosomal skipping mediated by “self-cleaving” 2A peptides
produces two proteins from a single open reading frame. Incorporation
of the F2A peptide sequencewith ∼50% efficiency of
ribosomal skippingbetween the protein of interest and the
yeast cell wall protein Aga2 results in simultaneous expression of
both the solubly secreted protein and the protein–Aga2 fusion
that is tethered to the yeast cell surface. We show that binding proteins
derived from the Sso7d scaffold and the homodimeric enzyme glucose
oxidase can be simultaneously secreted solubly and expressed as yeast
cell surface fusions using the F2A-based system. Furthermore, a combinatorial
library of Sso7d mutants can be screened to isolate binders with higher
affinity for a model target (lysozyme), and the pool of higher affinity
binders can be characterized in soluble form. Significantly, we show
that both N- and C-terminal fusions to Aga2 can be simultaneously
secreted solubly and displayed on the cell surface; this is particularly
advantageous because protein functionality can be affected by the
specific position of Aga2 in the protein fusion. We expect that the
F2A-based yeast surface display and secretion system will be a useful
tool for protein engineering and enable efficient characterization
of individual clones isolated from combinatorial libraries.