posted on 2020-09-21, 16:41authored byWeiqiang Wang, Rafayel A. Azizyan, Adriana Garro, Andrey V. Kajava, Salvador Ventura
Natural
selection has endorsed proteins with amazing structures
and functionalities that cannot be matched by synthetic means, explaining
the exponential interest in developing protein-based materials. Protein
self-assembly allows fabricating complex supramolecular structures
from relatively simple building blocks, a bottom-up strategy naturally
employed by amyloid fibrils. However, the design of amyloid-inspired
materials with biological activity is inherently difficult. Here,
we exploit a modular procedure to generate functional amyloid nanostructures
with tight control of their mesoscopic properties. The soft amyloid
core of a yeast prion was fused to dihydrofolate reductase through
flexible linkers of different sizes. This enabled us to produce, for
the first time, biocompatible protein-only amyloid-like oligomeric
nanoparticles with defined dimensions in which the embedded enzyme
remained highly active, as assessed by biophysical and enzymatic assays.
The modular design allowed one to obtain multifunctional nanoparticles
by incorporating the antibody-binding Z-domain to the protein fusion.
We show how these assemblies can be exploited for antibody-directed
targeting of specific cell types and the localized delivery of methotrexate,
resulting in the intracellular uptake of the drug by cancer cells
and their death. Overall, the novel protein particles we describe
in this work might find applications in areas as diverse as biocatalysis,
bioimaging, or targeted therapies.