posted on 2015-11-25, 00:00authored byKevin
A. Vasquez, Taylor A. Hatridge, Nicholas C. Curtis, Lydia M. Contreras
Recent
studies have demonstrated that effective protein production
requires coordination of multiple cotranslational cellular processes,
which are heavily affected by translation timing. Until recently,
protein engineering has focused on codon optimization to maximize
protein production rates, mostly considering the effect of tRNA abundance.
However, as it relates to complex multidomain proteins, it has been
hypothesized that strategic translational pauses between domains and
between distinct individual structural motifs can prevent interactions
between nascent chain fragments that generate kinetically trapped
misfolded peptides and thereby enhance protein yields. In this study,
we introduce synthetic transient pauses between structural domains
in a heterologous model protein based on designed patterns of affinity
between the mRNA and the anti-Shine–Dalgarno (aSD) sequence
on the ribosome. We demonstrate that optimizing translation attenuation
at domain boundaries can predictably affect solubility patterns in
bacteria. Exploration of the affinity space showed that modifying
less than 1% of the nucleotides (on a small 12 amino acid linker)
can vary soluble protein yields up to ∼7-fold without altering
the primary sequence of the protein. In the context of longer linkers,
where a larger number of distinct structural motifs can fold outside
the ribosome, optimal synonymous codon variations resulted in an additional
2.1-fold increase in solubility, relative to that of nonoptimized
linkers of the same length. While rational construction of 54 linkers
of various affinities showed a significant correlation between protein
solubility and predicted affinity, only weaker correlations were observed
between tRNA abundance and protein solubility. We also demonstrate
that naturally occurring high-affinity clusters are present between
structural domains of β-galactosidase, one of Escherichia coli’s largest native proteins.
Interdomain ribosomal affinity is an important factor that has not
previously been explored in the context of protein engineering.