Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 8 de 8
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(11): e2219648120, 2023 03 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36881618

ABSTRACT

Several methods have been developed to explore interactions among water-soluble proteins or regions of proteins. However, techniques to target transmembrane domains (TMDs) have not been examined thoroughly despite their importance. Here, we developed a computational approach to design sequences that specifically modulate protein-protein interactions in the membrane. To illustrate this method, we demonstrated that BclxL can interact with other members of the B cell lymphoma 2 (Bcl2) family through the TMD and that these interactions are required for BclxL control of cell death. Next, we designed sequences that specifically recognize and sequester the TMD of BclxL. Hence, we were able to prevent BclxL intramembrane interactions and cancel its antiapoptotic effect. These results advance our understanding of protein-protein interactions in membranes and provide a means to modulate them. Moreover, the success of our approach may trigger the development of a generation of inhibitors targeting interactions between TMDs.


Subject(s)
Water , Cell Death , Protein Domains
2.
Elife ; 112022 05 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35506657

ABSTRACT

De novo-designed receptor transmembrane domains (TMDs) present opportunities for precise control of cellular receptor functions. We developed a de novo design strategy for generating programmed membrane proteins (proMPs): single-pass α-helical TMDs that self-assemble through computationally defined and crystallographically validated interfaces. We used these proMPs to program specific oligomeric interactions into a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) that we expressed in mouse primary T cells and found that both in vitro CAR T cell cytokine release and in vivo antitumor activity scaled linearly with the oligomeric state encoded by the receptor TMD, from monomers up to tetramers. All programmed CARs stimulated substantially lower T cell cytokine release relative to the commonly used CD28 TMD, which we show elevated cytokine release through lateral recruitment of the endogenous T cell costimulatory receptor CD28. Precise design using orthogonal and modular TMDs thus provides a new way to program receptor structure and predictably tune activity for basic or applied synthetic biology.


Subject(s)
CD28 Antigens , Receptors, Chimeric Antigen , Animals , CD28 Antigens/metabolism , Cytokines/metabolism , Mice , Protein Domains , Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell/metabolism , Receptors, Chimeric Antigen/metabolism , T-Lymphocytes , Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays
3.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 15(8): e1007318, 2019 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31461441

ABSTRACT

Membrane-protein design is an exciting and increasingly successful research area which has led to landmarks including the design of stable and accurate membrane-integral proteins based on coiled-coil motifs. Design of topologically more complex proteins, such as most receptors, channels, and transporters, however, demands an energy function that balances contributions from intra-protein contacts and protein-membrane interactions. Recent advances in water-soluble all-atom energy functions have increased the accuracy in structure-prediction benchmarks. The plasma membrane, however, imposes different physical constraints on protein solvation. To understand these constraints, we recently developed a high-throughput experimental screen, called dsTßL, and inferred apparent insertion energies for each amino acid at dozens of positions across the bacterial plasma membrane. Here, we express these profiles as lipophilicity energy terms in Rosetta and demonstrate that the new energy function outperforms previous ones in modelling and design benchmarks. Rosetta ab initio simulations starting from an extended chain recapitulate two-thirds of the experimentally determined structures of membrane-spanning homo-oligomers with <2.5Å root-mean-square deviation within the top-predicted five models (available online: http://tmhop.weizmann.ac.il). Furthermore, in two sequence-design benchmarks, the energy function improves discrimination of stabilizing point mutations and recapitulates natural membrane-protein sequences of known structure, thereby recommending this new energy function for membrane-protein modelling and design.


Subject(s)
Membrane Proteins/chemistry , Computational Biology , Computer Simulation , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Escherichia coli Proteins/chemistry , Escherichia coli Proteins/metabolism , High-Throughput Screening Assays/methods , Lipids/chemistry , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Models, Molecular , Molecular Dynamics Simulation , Protein Conformation , Protein Engineering , Software , Solubility , Thermodynamics
4.
Nat Microbiol ; 4(7): 1221-1230, 2019 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30936490

ABSTRACT

How does environmental complexity affect the evolution of single genes? Here, we measured the effects of a set of Bacillus subtilis glutamate dehydrogenase mutants across 19 different environments-from phenotypically homogeneous single-cell populations in liquid media to heterogeneous biofilms, plant roots and soil populations. The effects of individual gene mutations on organismal fitness were highly reproducible in liquid cultures. However, 84% of the tested alleles showed opposing fitness effects under different growth conditions (sign environmental pleiotropy). In colony biofilms and soil samples, different alleles dominated in parallel replica experiments. Accordingly, we found that in these heterogeneous cell populations the fate of mutations was dictated by a combination of selection and drift. The latter relates to programmed prophage excisions that occurred during biofilm development. Overall, for each condition, a wide range of glutamate dehydrogenase mutations persisted and sometimes fixated as a result of the combined action of selection, pleiotropy and chance. However, over longer periods and in multiple environments, nearly all of this diversity would be lost-across all the environments and conditions that we tested, the wild type was the fittest allele.


Subject(s)
Environment , Genetic Pleiotropy , Genetic Variation/genetics , Bacillus subtilis/genetics , Bacillus subtilis/growth & development , Biofilms/growth & development , Evolution, Molecular , Genetic Drift , Genetic Fitness , Glutamate Dehydrogenase/genetics , Mutation , Selection, Genetic , Virus Activation
5.
EMBO J ; 36(6): 797-815, 2017 03 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28219928

ABSTRACT

Mitochondria exert important control over plasma membrane (PM) Orai1 channels mediating store-operated Ca2+ entry (SOCE). Although the sensing of endoplasmic reticulum (ER) Ca2+ stores by STIM proteins and coupling to Orai1 channels is well understood, how mitochondria communicate with Orai1 channels to regulate SOCE activation remains elusive. Here, we reveal that SOCE is accompanied by a rise in cytosolic Na+ that is critical in activating the mitochondrial Na+/Ca2+ exchanger (NCLX) causing enhanced mitochondrial Na+ uptake and Ca2+ efflux. Omission of extracellular Na+ prevents the cytosolic Na+ rise, inhibits NCLX activity, and impairs SOCE and Orai1 channel current. We show further that SOCE activates a mitochondrial redox transient which is dependent on NCLX and is required for preventing Orai1 inactivation through oxidation of a critical cysteine (Cys195) in the third transmembrane helix of Orai1. We show that mitochondrial targeting of catalase is sufficient to rescue redox transients, SOCE, and Orai1 currents in NCLX-deficient cells. Our findings identify a hitherto unknown NCLX-mediated pathway that coordinates Na+ and Ca2+ signals to effect mitochondrial redox control over SOCE.


Subject(s)
Calcium/metabolism , Mitochondria/metabolism , ORAI1 Protein/metabolism , Sodium-Calcium Exchanger/metabolism , Sodium/metabolism , Cell Line , Humans , Mitochondrial Proteins , Oxidation-Reduction
6.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 113(37): 10340-5, 2016 09 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27562165

ABSTRACT

The energetics of membrane-protein interactions determine protein topology and structure: hydrophobicity drives the insertion of helical segments into the membrane, and positive charges orient the protein with respect to the membrane plane according to the positive-inside rule. Until recently, however, quantifying these contributions met with difficulty, precluding systematic analysis of the energetic basis for membrane-protein topology. We recently developed the dsTßL method, which uses deep sequencing and in vitro selection of segments inserted into the bacterial plasma membrane to infer insertion-energy profiles for each amino acid residue across the membrane, and quantified the insertion contribution from hydrophobicity and the positive-inside rule. Here, we present a topology-prediction algorithm called TopGraph, which is based on a sequence search for minimum dsTßL insertion energy. Whereas the average insertion energy assigned by previous experimental scales was positive (unfavorable), the average assigned by TopGraph in a nonredundant set is -6.9 kcal/mol. By quantifying contributions from both hydrophobicity and the positive-inside rule we further find that in about half of large membrane proteins polar segments are inserted into the membrane to position more positive charges in the cytoplasm, suggesting an interplay between these two energy contributions. Because membrane-embedded polar residues are crucial for substrate binding and conformational change, the results implicate the positive-inside rule in determining the architectures of membrane-protein functional sites. This insight may aid structure prediction, engineering, and design of membrane proteins. TopGraph is available online (topgraph.weizmann.ac.il).


Subject(s)
Cell Membrane/chemistry , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Membrane Proteins/chemistry , Protein Conformation , Amino Acid Sequence/genetics , Amino Acids/chemistry , Cell Membrane/genetics , Cytoplasm/chemistry , Cytoplasm/genetics , Energy Metabolism/genetics , Membrane Proteins/genetics
7.
Elife ; 52016 Jan 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26824389

ABSTRACT

Insertion of helix-forming segments into the membrane and their association determines the structure, function, and expression levels of all plasma membrane proteins. However, systematic and reliable quantification of membrane-protein energetics has been challenging. We developed a deep mutational scanning method to monitor the effects of hundreds of point mutations on helix insertion and self-association within the bacterial inner membrane. The assay quantifies insertion energetics for all natural amino acids at 27 positions across the membrane, revealing that the hydrophobicity of biological membranes is significantly higher than appreciated. We further quantitate the contributions to membrane-protein insertion from positively charged residues at the cytoplasm-membrane interface and reveal large and unanticipated differences among these residues. Finally, we derive comprehensive mutational landscapes in the membrane domains of Glycophorin A and the ErbB2 oncogene, and find that insertion and self-association are strongly coupled in receptor homodimers.


Subject(s)
Cell Membrane/metabolism , Membrane Proteins/genetics , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Cell Membrane/chemistry , DNA Mutational Analysis , Glycophorins/chemistry , Glycophorins/genetics , Glycophorins/metabolism , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Membrane Proteins/chemistry , Mutant Proteins/chemistry , Mutant Proteins/genetics , Mutant Proteins/metabolism , Point Mutation , Protein Binding , Receptor, ErbB-2/chemistry , Receptor, ErbB-2/genetics , Receptor, ErbB-2/metabolism , beta-Lactamases/chemistry , beta-Lactamases/genetics , beta-Lactamases/metabolism
8.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 11(9): e1004398, 2015 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26325167

ABSTRACT

Membrane proteins are critical functional molecules in the human body, constituting more than 30% of open reading frames in the human genome. Unfortunately, a myriad of difficulties in overexpression and reconstitution into membrane mimetics severely limit our ability to determine their structures. Computational tools are therefore instrumental to membrane protein structure prediction, consequently increasing our understanding of membrane protein function and their role in disease. Here, we describe a general framework facilitating membrane protein modeling and design that combines the scientific principles for membrane protein modeling with the flexible software architecture of Rosetta3. This new framework, called RosettaMP, provides a general membrane representation that interfaces with scoring, conformational sampling, and mutation routines that can be easily combined to create new protocols. To demonstrate the capabilities of this implementation, we developed four proof-of-concept applications for (1) prediction of free energy changes upon mutation; (2) high-resolution structural refinement; (3) protein-protein docking; and (4) assembly of symmetric protein complexes, all in the membrane environment. Preliminary data show that these algorithms can produce meaningful scores and structures. The data also suggest needed improvements to both sampling routines and score functions. Importantly, the applications collectively demonstrate the potential of combining the flexible nature of RosettaMP with the power of Rosetta algorithms to facilitate membrane protein modeling and design.


Subject(s)
Computational Biology/methods , Membrane Proteins/chemistry , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Models, Molecular , Protein Engineering/methods , Membrane Proteins/genetics , Protein Conformation
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...