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1.
Biotechnol Bioeng ; 118(7): 2482-2492, 2021 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33748952

ABSTRACT

Clostridioides difficile is the single most deadly bacterial pathogen in the United States, and its global prevalence and outsized health impacts underscore the need for more effective therapeutic options. Towards this goal, a novel group of modified peptidoglycan hydrolases with significant in vitro bactericidal activity have emerged as potential candidates for treating C. difficile infections (CDI). To date, discovery and development efforts directed at these CDI-specific lysins have been limited, and in particular there has been no systematic comparison of known or newly discovered lysin candidates. Here, we detail bioinformatics-driven discovery of six new anti-C. difficile lysins belonging to the amidase-3 family of enzymes, and we describe experimental comparison of their respective catalytic domains (CATs) with highly active CATs from the literature. Our quantitative analyses include metrics for expression level, inherent antibacterial activity, breadth of strain selectivity, killing of germinating spores, and structural and functional measures of thermal stability. Importantly, prior studies have not examined stability as a performance metric, and our results show that the panel of eight enzymes possess widely variable thermal denaturation temperatures and resistance to heat inactivation, including some enzymes that exhibit marginal stability at body temperature. Ultimately, no single enzyme dominated with respect to all performance measures, suggesting the need for a balanced assessment of lysin properties during efforts to find, engineer, and develop candidates with true clinical potential.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins , Clostridioides difficile , Computational Biology , N-Acetylmuramoyl-L-alanine Amidase , Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Clostridioides difficile/enzymology , Clostridioides difficile/genetics , Humans , N-Acetylmuramoyl-L-alanine Amidase/chemistry , N-Acetylmuramoyl-L-alanine Amidase/genetics , Protein Domains
2.
Bioinformatics ; 34(13): i245-i253, 2018 07 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29949961

ABSTRACT

Motivation: Disruption of protein-protein interactions can mitigate antibody recognition of therapeutic proteins, yield monomeric forms of oligomeric proteins, and elucidate signaling mechanisms, among other applications. While designing affinity-enhancing mutations remains generally quite challenging, both statistically and physically based computational methods can precisely identify affinity-reducing mutations. In order to leverage this ability to design variants of a target protein with disrupted interactions, we developed the DisruPPI protein design method (DISRUpting Protein-Protein Interactions) to optimize combinations of mutations simultaneously for both disruption and stability, so that incorporated disruptive mutations do not inadvertently affect the target protein adversely. Results: Two existing methods for predicting mutational effects on binding, FoldX and INT5, were demonstrated to be quite precise in selecting disruptive mutations from the SKEMPI and AB-Bind databases of experimentally determined changes in binding free energy. DisruPPI was implemented to use an INT5-based disruption score integrated with an AMBER-based stability assessment and was applied to disrupt protein interactions in a set of different targets representing diverse applications. In retrospective evaluation with three different case studies, comparison of DisruPPI-designed variants to published experimental data showed that DisruPPI was able to identify more diverse interaction-disrupting and stability-preserving variants more efficiently and effectively than previous approaches. In prospective application to an interaction between enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) and a nanobody, DisruPPI was used to design five EGFP variants, all of which were shown to have significantly reduced nanobody binding while maintaining function and thermostability. This demonstrates that DisruPPI may be readily utilized for effective removal of known epitopes of therapeutically relevant proteins. Availability and implementation: DisruPPI is implemented in the EpiSweep package, freely available under an academic use license. Supplementary information: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


Subject(s)
Computational Biology/methods , Mutation , Protein Binding , Proteins/metabolism , Software , Algorithms , Antibodies , Green Fluorescent Proteins , Proteins/genetics
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