Heat‐induced structural and chemical changes to a computationally designed miniprotein

Author:

Dudley Joshua A.1,Park Sojeong1,Cho Oliver1,Wells Nicholas G. M.1,MacDonald Meagan E.1,Blejec Katerina M.1,Fetene Emmanuel1,Zanderigo Eric1,Houliston Scott2,Liddle Jennifer C.3,Dashnaw Chad M.4,Sabo T. Michael5,Shaw Bryan F.4ORCID,Balsbaugh Jeremy L.3,Rocklin Gabriel J.6,Smith Colin A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemistry Wesleyan University Middletown Connecticut USA

2. Structural Genomics Consortium University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

3. Proteomics and Metabolomics Facility University of Connecticut Storrs Connecticut USA

4. Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry Baylor University Waco Texas USA

5. Department of Medicine and Brown Cancer Center University of Louisville Louisville Kentucky USA

6. Department of Pharmacology and Center for Synthetic Biology Northwestern University Evanston Illinois USA

Abstract

AbstractThe de novo design of miniprotein inhibitors has recently emerged as a new technology to create proteins that bind with high affinity to specific therapeutic targets. Their size, ease of expression, and apparent high stability makes them excellent candidates for a new class of protein drugs. However, beyond circular dichroism melts and hydrogen/deuterium exchange experiments, little is known about their dynamics, especially at the elevated temperatures they seemingly tolerate quite well. To address that and gain insight for future designs, we have focused on identifying unintended and previously overlooked heat‐induced structural and chemical changes in a particularly stable model miniprotein, EHEE_rd2_0005. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies suggest the presence of dynamics on multiple time and temperature scales. Transiently elevating the temperature results in spontaneous chemical deamidation visible in the NMR spectra, which we validate using both capillary electrophoresis and mass spectrometry (MS) experiments. High temperatures also result in greatly accelerated intrinsic rates of hydrogen exchange and signal loss in NMR heteronuclear single quantum coherence spectra from local unfolding. These losses are in excellent agreement with both room temperature hydrogen exchange experiments and hydrogen bond disruption in replica exchange molecular dynamics simulations. Our analysis reveals important principles for future miniprotein designs and the potential for high stability to result in long‐lived alternate conformational states.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

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