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<h2>Motivation</h2> | <h2>Motivation</h2> | ||
− | A special type of a protein-protein interaction are split enzymes that allow an auto-reassembly. They usually consist of two enzyme fragments (an N‑terminal and C‑terminal fragment) that are expressed separately, and fuse post translation. This protein fragment complementation is advantageous for any kind of application where the size of an expression cassette is a limiting factor, for instance for the packaging of DNA into virus capsids.For many enzymes auto-reassembly split sites are known, however the efficiency of the joined fragments usually does not reach wildtype efficiency, as it was shown for Cas9 enzymes (Zetsche et al, Nature Biotechnology, 2015; Kaya et al, Plant Cell Physiol, 2017) Consequently, a directed evolution of split enzymes that enhance auto-reassembly is of great interest for the synthetic biology community. To demonstrate that an improved protein-protein interaction is not only possible for the Bt toxin, we used a split T7-polymerase as another example (Tiun Han et al, ACS Synthetic Biolog, 2017). We aimed at enhancing the auto-reassembly efficiency of different split sites using two in our lab established methods, PACE and PREDCEL (phage-related discontinuous evolution), which allow a fast and relatively easy directed evolution. | + | A special type of a protein-protein interaction are split enzymes that allow an auto-reassembly. They usually consist of two enzyme fragments (an N‑terminal and C‑terminal fragment) that are expressed separately, and fuse post translation. This protein fragment complementation is advantageous for any kind of application where the size of an expression cassette is a limiting factor, for instance for the packaging of DNA into virus capsids. For many enzymes auto-reassembly split sites are known, however the efficiency of the joined fragments usually does not reach wildtype efficiency, as it was shown for Cas9 enzymes (Zetsche et al, Nature Biotechnology, 2015; Kaya et al, Plant Cell Physiol, 2017) Consequently, a directed evolution of split enzymes that enhance auto-reassembly is of great interest for the synthetic biology community. To demonstrate that an improved protein-protein interaction is not only possible for the Bt toxin, we used a split T7-polymerase as another example (Tiun Han et al, ACS Synthetic Biolog, 2017). We aimed at enhancing the auto-reassembly efficiency of different split sites using two in our lab established methods, PACE and PREDCEL (phage-related discontinuous evolution), which allow a fast and relatively easy directed evolution. |
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Revision as of 17:45, 1 November 2017
Protein Interaction
Improving Split Protein Auto-Reassembly