posted on 2012-04-20, 00:00authored byIzhack Cherny, Maria Korolev, Angela
N. Koehler, Michael H. Hecht
The availability of large collections of de novo designed proteins presents new opportunities to harness novel macromolecules
for synthetic biological functions. Many of these new functions will
require binding to small molecules. Is the ability to bind small molecules
a property that arises only in response to biological selection or
computational design? Or alternatively, is small molecule binding
a property of folded proteins that occurs readily amidst collections
of unevolved sequences? These questions can be addressed by assessing
the binding potential of de novo proteins that are
designed to fold into stable structures, but are “naïve”
in the sense that they (i) share no significant sequence similarity
with natural proteins and (ii) were neither selected nor designed
to bind small molecules. We chose three naïve proteins from
a library of sequences designed to fold into 4-helix bundles and screened
for binding to 10,000 compounds displayed on small molecule microarrays.
Several binders were identified, and binding was characterized by
a series of biophysical assays. Surprisingly, despite the similarity
of the three de novo proteins to one another, they
exhibit selective ligand binding. These findings demonstrate the potential
of novel proteins for molecular recognition and have significant implications
for a range of applications in synthetic biology.