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Building a Better Protein
Rensselaer researchers use computers to find keys to
stabilizing proteins
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Researchers were able to greatly
increase the stability of these two proteins (AcPh and
Cdc42). The findings have implications for stabilizing
many other types of proteins.
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Proteins are widely viewed as a promising alternative to
synthetic chemicals in everything from medications to hand
lotion. The naturally occurring molecules have been shown to be
more efficient and effective than many of the most
sophisticated chemical compounds on the market. But outside the
controlled confines of the lab bench, proteins quickly change
structure, causing irreversible damage to their functionality
and often safety.
Scientists are now searching for ways to increase the
stability of proteins. In new research published Feb. 5 in the
online Early Edition of the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences (PNAS), Rensselaer Senior
Constellation Professor George Makhatadze and his colleagues
detail a targeted strategy to substantially increase the
thermodynamic stability of nearly any protein, while preserving
its unique function. Their redesign technique creates proteins
that remain stable at temperatures 10 degrees Celsius higher
than normal.
To achieve these results, the researchers used high-powered
computers to create new and improved versions of two human
enzymes. The enzymes are specific types of protein. The
two enzymes in the study vary widely in size and functionality,
yet both showed substantial increases in stability without loss
of function in the body. This supports the idea that the
stability of many other proteins could also be greatly
stabilized, according to Makhatadze. The researchers are now
looking to use the technique to improve that stability of
specific proteins with strong industrial and drug development
applications.
They developed a computational approach that altered the
proteins’ structure and tested it for increased stability. “Our
experimental validation of computational results is actually
motivated by Thomas Edison, who wrote, ‘Until man duplicates a
blade of grass, nature will laugh at his so-called scientific
knowledge,’” Makhatadze said.
“There are several viable approaches to optimize proteins,”
Makhatadze added. “Many researchers seek to optimize the
protein by changing all types of physical interactions within
the computer model at once. Instead, we felt that if we could
understand one interaction, we could then use it to our
advantage to build on the algorithm and then experimentally
prove that that property really exists in the real protein
system.”
The interaction the researchers focused on was the surface
charge of the protein. The investigation of the importance of
protein surface structure is a growing area of research within
the field. In fact, a 2006 paper in the journal
Biochemistry, published by Makhatadze supporting the
importance of protein surface structure on stability, was the
one of the top five most cited and downloaded papers from the
journal that year.
In addition to important potential industrial applications,
Makhatadze also believes the research sheds some light on the
evolution of proteins. The researchers compared the mutations
that they made within the proteins in order to optimize the
protein’s performance with the mutations naturally occurring in
the proteins from the evolutionary distant organisms.
Instead of seeing more mutations along with increased
performance as with most evolutionary adaptations, the
researchers saw that less frequent mutations resulted in a more
stable protein. “This suggests that the stability of proteins
might not be evolutionarily important,” he said. “It
appears that as soon as the protein is able to function in
given conditions and is stable at a given temperature, anything
above that is not really necessary.”
The research was fully funded by the National Science
Foundation (NSF). Makhatadze was assisted in his research by
post-doctoral researcher Mayank Patel, graduate student Jiajing
Liu, NMR Core Director Scott McCallum, and Assistant Professor
of Biology Chunyu Wang, all of Rensselaer, as well as former
graduate student Alexey Gribenko, who is currently a member of
the faculty at the University of Texas Medical Branch. In
addition, the structure of one the proteins used in the study,
acylphosphatase (AcPh), was actually solved at Rensselaer using
the sophisticated nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) core within
the Center for Biotechnology and Interdisciplinary Studies
(CBIS).
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Published
February 23,
2009 |
Contact: Gabrielle DeMarco
Phone: (518) 276-6542
E-mail: demarg@rpi.edu |
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