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The Corona pandemic has painfully taught us the threat of new pathogens in a globalized world and how vital modern vaccines are. Platform technologies play an important role in the discovery of new vaccines as reducing the time for the development dramatically — time that saves lives. Here, we present the protein Dodecin and how it may be utilized as a versatile platform technology to produce cheap and robust new vaccines for everyone in all parts of the world.
Natural products are valuable sources for biologically active compounds, which can be utilized as pharmaceuticals. Thereby, the synthesis is based purely on biosynthetic grounds often conducted by so-called megaenzymes. One major biosynthetic pathway is the acetate pathway including polyketide and fatty acid synthesis, which encompass one of the largest classes of chemically diverse natural products. These have medicinal relevance due to their antibacterial, antifungal, anthelmintic, immunosuppressive and antitumor properties.
Due to the high structural and functional similarity between polyketide synthases and type I animal fatty acid synthases (FASs), FAS can serve as a paradigm for the whole class of multifunctional enzymes. To fully exploit the biosynthetic potential of FASs, a good access to the enzyme is of essential importance. In this regard, Escherichia coli remains an unchallenged heterologous host due to low culturing costs, particularly fast mutagenesis cycles and relatively easy handling. Surprisingly, no sufficient expression strategy for an animal FAS in E. coli has yet been reported, as it turned out that the only approach was not reproducible.
We commenced our analysis with searching for an appropriate FAS homolog that fulfills our requirements of high protein quality, sufficient yield and ensured functionality. After extensive screening of different variants, culturing conditions and co-expression strategies, we identified the murine FAS (mFAS) as our protein of choice. The established purification strategy using tags at both termini led to a reproducible and sufficient access to the protein in excellent quality. The enzyme was further biochemically characterized including an enzyme kinetic investigation of fatty acid synthesis and an examination whether different acyl-CoA substrates can serve as priming units. This adds mFAS to our repertoire of manageable megaenzymes paving the way to exploit the catalytic efficiency in regards of microbial custom-compound synthesis.
With a strong focus on deepening our understanding of the working mode of such megaenzymes, rather than analyzing respective biosynthetic products, we have addressed the question whether mFAS itself can be engineered towards PKSs or whether properties of mFAS can be exploited to engineer PKSs. This approach was conducted on three levels of complexity from function of individual domains via organization of domains to form modules to the interplay of two modules in bimodular constructs.
Fatty acid synthesis begins with the loading of acyl moieties onto the FAS, which is conducted by a domain called malonyl-/acetyltransferase (MAT). This domain was in-depth characterized due to its important role of choosing the substrates that are built in the final compound. Our analysis comprised structural and functional aspects providing crystal structures of two different acyl-bound states and kinetic parameters for the hydrolysis and transacylation reaction using twelve exemplary CoA-esters. For this purpose, we have successfully established a continuous fluorometric assay using the α-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase as a coupled enzyme, which converts the liberated coenzyme A into Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide. These data revealed an extensive substrate ambiguity of the MAT domain, which had not been reported to that extent before. Further, we could demonstrate that the fold fulfills both criteria for the evolvability of an enzyme by expressing MAT in different structural arrangements (robustness) and by altering the substrate ambiguity within a mutagenesis study (plasticity). Taken these aspects together, we are persuaded that the MAT domain can serve as a versatile tool for PKSs engineering in potential FAS/PKS hybrid systems.
On the higher level of complexity, we investigated the architectural variability of the mFAS fold, which constitutes a fundamental basis for a broader biosynthetic application. We could rebuild all four module types occurring in typical modular PKSs confirming a high degree of modularity within the fold. Not only structural, but also functional integrity of these modules was validated by using triacetic acid lactone formation and ketoreductase activity. Especially the latter analysis, made it possible to quantify effects of the engineering within the processing part by respective enzyme kinetic parameters. Expanding our focus beyond a singular module, we have utilized the mFAS fold for designing up to 380 kDa large bimodular constructs. In this approach, a loading didomain was attached N-terminally containing an additional MAT and acyl carrier protein (ACP) domain. Two constructs could be expressed and purified in excellent quality to investigate the influence of an altered overall architecture on fatty acid synthesis. By comparison with appropriate controls, a functional effect of the additional loading module could indeed be proven in the bimodular systems. Those constructs allow a comprehensive analysis of the underlying molecular mechanism in the future and serve as a potential model system to study the transition from iterative to vectorial polyketide synthesis in vitro.
The access to information on the dynamic behaviour of large proteins is usually hindered as spectroscopic methods require the site-specific attachment of biophysical probes. A powerful emerging tool to tackle this issue is amber codon suppression. Till date, its application on large and complex multidomain proteins of MDa size has not been reported. Herein, we systematically investigate the feasibility to introduce different non-canonical amino acids into a 540 kDa homodimeric fatty acid synthase type I by genetic code expansion with subsequent fluorescent labelling. Our approach relies on a microplate-based reporter assay of low complexity using a GFP fusion protein to quickly screen for sufficient suppression conditions. Once identified, these findings were successfully utilized to upscale both the expression scale and the protein size to full-length constructs. These fluorescently labelled samples of fatty acid synthase were subjected to initial biophysical experiments, including HPLC analysis, activity assays and fluorescence spectroscopy. Successful introduction of such probes into a molecular machine such as fatty acid synthases may pave the way to understand the conformational variability, which is a primary intrinsic property required for efficient interplay of all catalytic functionalities, and to engineer them.
De novo fatty acid biosynthesis in humans is accomplished by a multidomain protein, the type I fatty acid synthase (FAS). Although ubiquitously expressed in all tissues, fatty acid synthesis is not essential in normal healthy cells due to sufficient supply with fatty acids by the diet. However, FAS is overexpressed in cancer cells and correlates with tumor malignancy, which makes FAS an attractive selective therapeutic target in tumorigenesis. Herein, we present a crystal structure of the condensing part of murine FAS, highly homologous to human FAS, with octanoyl moieties covalently bound to the transferase (MAT) and the condensation (KS) domain. The MAT domain binds the octanoyl moiety in a novel (unique) conformation, which reflects the pronounced conformational dynamics of the substrate binding site responsible for the MAT substrate promiscuity. In contrast, the KS binding pocket just subtly adapts to the octanoyl moiety upon substrate binding. Besides the rigid domain structure, we found a positive cooperative effect in the substrate binding of the KS domain by a comprehensive enzyme kinetic study. These structural and mechanistic findings contribute significantly to our understanding of the mode of action of FAS and may guide future rational inhibitor designs.
Modularity is an aspect of a decomposable system with a coordinating authority that acts as a glue which holds the loosely held components. These multi-component entities (“modules”) facilitate rewiring into different designs allowing for change. Such modular character is a fundamental property of many biological entities, especially the family of megasynthases such as polyketide synthases (PKSs). The ability of these PKSs to produce diverse product spectra is strongly coupled to their broad architectural modularity. Decoding the molecular basis of modularity, i.e. identifying the folds and domains that comprise the modules as well as understanding constrains of the assembly of modules, is of utmost importance for harnessing megasynthases for the synthesis of designer compounds. In this study, we exploit the close semblance between PKSs and animal FAS to re-engineer animal FAS to probe the modularity of the FAS/PKS family. Guided by structural and sequence information, we truncate and dissect animal FAS into its components, and reassemble them to generate new PKS-like modules as well as bimodular constructs. The novel engineered modules resemble all four common module types of PKSs and demonstrate that this approach can be a powerful tool to create higher catalytic efficiency. Our data exemplify the inherent plasticity and robustness of the overall FAS/PKS fold, and open new avenues to explore FAS-based biosynthetic pathways for custom compound design.
Archaea are motile by the rotation of the archaellum. The archaellum switches between clockwise and counterclockwise rotation, and movement along a chemical gradient is possible by modulation of the switching frequency. This modulation involves the response regulator CheY and the archaellum adaptor protein CheF. In this study, two new crystal forms and protein structures of CheY are reported. In both crystal forms, CheY is arranged in a domain-swapped conformation. CheF, the protein bridging the chemotaxis signal transduction system and the motility apparatus, was recombinantly expressed, purified and subjected to X-ray data collection.
De novo fatty acid biosynthesis in humans is accomplished by a multidomain protein, the Type I fatty acid synthase (FAS). Although ubiquitously expressed in all tissues, fatty acid synthesis is not essential in normal healthy cells due to sufficient supply with fatty acids by the diet. However, FAS is overexpressed in cancer cells and correlates with tumor malignancy, which makes FAS an attractive selective therapeutic target in tumorigenesis. Herein, we present a crystal structure of the condensing part of murine FAS, highly homologous to human FAS, with octanoyl moieties covalently bound to the transferase (MAT—malonyl‐/acetyltransferase) and the condensation (KS—β‐ketoacyl synthase) domain. The MAT domain binds the octanoyl moiety in a novel (unique) conformation, which reflects the pronounced conformational dynamics of the substrate‐binding site responsible for the MAT substrate promiscuity. In contrast, the KS binding pocket just subtly adapts to the octanoyl moiety upon substrate binding. Besides the rigid domain structure, we found a positive cooperative effect in the substrate binding of the KS domain by a comprehensive enzyme kinetic study. These structural and mechanistic findings contribute significantly to our understanding of the mode of action of FAS and may guide future rational inhibitor designs.