An In Silico Methodology That Facilitates Decision Making in the Engineering of Nanoscale Protein Materials

Author:

Parladé Eloi,Voltà-Durán EricORCID,Cano-Garrido Olivia,Sánchez Julieta M.,Unzueta UgutzORCID,López-Laguna Hèctor,Serna Naroa,Cano Montserrat,Rodríguez-Mariscal Manuel,Vazquez EstherORCID,Villaverde AntonioORCID

Abstract

Under the need for new functional and biocompatible materials for biomedical applications, protein engineering allows the design of assemblable polypeptides, which, as convenient building blocks of supramolecular complexes, can be produced in recombinant cells by simple and scalable methodologies. However, the stability of such materials is often overlooked or disregarded, becoming a potential bottleneck in the development and viability of novel products. In this context, we propose a design strategy based on in silico tools to detect instability areas in protein materials and to facilitate the decision making in the rational mutagenesis aimed to increase their stability and solubility. As a case study, we demonstrate the potential of this methodology to improve the stability of a humanized scaffold protein (a domain of the human nidogen), with the ability to oligomerize into regular nanoparticles usable to deliver payload drugs to tumor cells. Several nidogen mutants suggested by the method showed important and measurable improvements in their structural stability while retaining the functionalities and production yields of the original protein. Then, we propose the procedure developed here as a cost-effective routine tool in the design and optimization of multimeric protein materials prior to any experimental testing.

Funder

Government of Spain

Agency for Administration of University and Research

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Inorganic Chemistry,Organic Chemistry,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,Computer Science Applications,Spectroscopy,Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Catalysis

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