蛋白质片段互补分析
荧光素酶
互补
蛋白质-蛋白质相互作用
靶蛋白
计算生物学
蛋白质工程
免疫分析
化学
费斯特共振能量转移
生物化学
酶
生物物理学
生物
抗体
转染
荧光
突变体
基因
遗传学
物理
量子力学
作者
Jong Hun Kim,Andrew S. Dixon,Shawn C. Owen
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.actbio.2021.08.055
摘要
Over 30,000 protein-protein interactions with pathological implications have been identified; yet, discovering and investigating drugs that target these specific interactions is greatly limited by the inability to monitor native protein-protein interactions (PPIs) efficiently. The two most frequently used tools to monitor PPIs, resonance-energy transfer (RET) assays and protein complementation assays (PCA), face significant limitations. RET assays have a narrow working range of 10 to 50 Å, while PCA require permanent attachment of a reporter probe to a protein of interest by chemical conjugation or genetic engineering. We developed a non-invasive assay platform to measure PPIs without modifications to the proteins of interest and is functional at a greater working range than RET assays. We demonstrate our approach by monitoring the EGFR-HER2 heterodimerization on relevant cell surfaces, utilizing various EGFR- and HER2-specific binders (e.g., Fab, DARPin, and VHH) fused with small fragments of a tri-part split-luciferase derived from NanoLuc®. Following independent binding of the binder fusions to their respective targets, the dimerization of EGFR and HER2 induces complementation of the luciferase fragments into a functional native structure, producing glow-type luminescence. We have confirmed the functionality of the platform to monitor EGFR-HER2 dimerization induction and inhibition. We describe a platform technology for rapid monitoring of protein-protein interactions (PPIs). Our approach is uses a luciferase split into three parts – two short peptide “tags” and a large third fragment. Each of the short peptides can be fused to antibodies which bind to domains of a target antigens which orients the two tags and facilitates refolding of an active enzyme. To our knowledge this is the first example of a split-enzyme used to monitor PPIs without requiring any modification of the target proteins. We demonstrate our approach on the important PPI of HER2 and EGFR. Significantly, we quantify stimulation and inhibition of these partners, opening the possibility of using our approach to assess potential drugs without engineering cells.
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