DNA-Directed Control of Enzyme–Inhibitor Complex
Formation: A Modular Approach to Reversibly Switch Enzyme Activity
Posted on 2015-05-15 - 00:00
DNA-templated
reversible assembly of an enzyme–inhibitor
complex is presented as a new and highly modular approach to control
enzyme activity. TEM1-β-lactamase and its inhibitor protein
BLIP were conjugated to different oligonucleotides, resulting in enzyme
inhibition in the presence of template strand. Formation of a rigid
dsDNA linker upon addition of a complementary target strand disrupts
the enzyme–inhibitor complex and results in the restoration
of enzyme activity, enabling detection of as little as 2 fmol DNA.
The noncovalent assembly of the complex allows easy tuning of target
and template strands without changing the oligonucleotide-functionalized
enzyme and inhibitor domains. Using a panel of eight different template
sequences, restoration of enzyme activity was only observed in the
presence of the target viral DNA sequence. The use of stable, well-characterized
protein domains and the intrinsic modularity of our system should
allow easy integration with DNA/RNA-based logic circuits for applications
in biomedicine and molecular diagnostics.
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Janssen, Brian
M. G.; Engelen, Wouter; Merkx, Maarten (2016). DNA-Directed Control of Enzyme–Inhibitor Complex
Formation: A Modular Approach to Reversibly Switch Enzyme Activity. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/sb500278z