Litcius/Paper detail

DogCatcher allows loop-friendly protein-protein ligation

Anthony H. Keeble, Vikash Kumar Yadav, Matteo P. Ferla, Claudia Bauer, Eulashini Chuntharpursat‐Bon, Jin Huang, Robin S. Bon, Mark Howarth

2021Cell chemical biology108 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

There are many efficient ways to connect proteins at termini. However, connecting at a loop is difficult because of lower flexibility and variable environment. Here, we have developed DogCatcher, a protein that forms a spontaneous isopeptide bond with DogTag peptide. DogTag/DogCatcher was generated initially by splitting a Streptococcus pneumoniae adhesin. We optimized DogTag/DogCatcher through rational design and evolution, increasing reaction rate by 250-fold and establishing millimolar solubility of DogCatcher. When fused to a protein terminus, DogTag/DogCatcher reacts slower than SpyTag003/SpyCatcher003. However, inserted in loops of a fluorescent protein or enzyme, DogTag reacts much faster than SpyTag003. Like many membrane proteins, the ion channel TRPC5 has no surface-exposed termini. DogTag in a TRPC5 extracellular loop allowed normal calcium flux and specific covalent labeling on cells in 1 min. DogTag/DogCatcher reacts under diverse conditions, at nanomolar concentrations, and to 98% conversion. Loop-friendly ligation should expand the toolbox for creating protein architectures.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryProtein tagBiophysicsLoop (graph theory)BiochemistryCombinatorial chemistryFusion proteinBiologyGeneRecombinant DNACombinatoricsMathematicsBiochemical and Structural CharacterizationTransgenic Plants and ApplicationsToxin Mechanisms and Immunotoxins