Computationally-guided design and selection of high performing ribosomal active site mutants

Author:

Kofman Camila123ORCID,Watkins Andrew M45,Kim Do Soon1236,Willi Jessica A23,Wooldredge Alexandra C23,Karim Ashty S123,Das Rhiju47,Jewett Michael C1238

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Northwestern University , Evanston , IL 60208 , USA

2. Chemistry of Life Processes Institute, Northwestern University , Evanston , IL 60208 , USA

3. Center for Synthetic Biology, Northwestern University , Evanston , IL 60208 , USA

4. Department of Biochemistry, Stanford University , Stanford , CA 94305 , USA

5. Prescient Design, Genentech , South San Francisco , CA 94080 , USA

6. Inceptive Nucleics, Inc., Palo Alto , CA 94304 , USA

7. Department of Physics, Stanford University , Stanford , CA 94305 , USA

8. Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center and Simpson Querrey Institute, Northwestern University , Chicago , IL 60611 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Understanding how modifications to the ribosome affect function has implications for studying ribosome biogenesis, building minimal cells, and repurposing ribosomes for synthetic biology. However, efforts to design sequence-modified ribosomes have been limited because point mutations in the ribosomal RNA (rRNA), especially in the catalytic active site (peptidyl transferase center; PTC), are often functionally detrimental. Moreover, methods for directed evolution of rRNA are constrained by practical considerations (e.g. library size). Here, to address these limitations, we developed a computational rRNA design approach for screening guided libraries of mutant ribosomes. Our method includes in silico library design and selection using a Rosetta stepwise Monte Carlo method (SWM), library construction and in vitro testing of combined ribosomal assembly and translation activity, and functional characterization in vivo. As a model, we apply our method to making modified ribosomes with mutant PTCs. We engineer ribosomes with as many as 30 mutations in their PTCs, highlighting previously unidentified epistatic interactions, and show that SWM helps identify sequences with beneficial phenotypes as compared to random library sequences. We further demonstrate that some variants improve cell growth in vivo, relative to wild type ribosomes. We anticipate that SWM design and selection may serve as a powerful tool for rRNA engineering.

Funder

Army Research Office

Army Contracting Command

National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program

National Institutes of Health

Stanford University School of Medicine

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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