Expansion of the genetic code with nonstandard amino acids (nsAAs) has enabled biosynthesis of proteins with diverse new chemistries. However, this technology has been largely restricted to proteins containing a single or few nsAA instances. Here we describe an in vivo evolution approach in a genomically recoded Escherichia coli strain for the selection of orthogonal translation systems capable of multi-site nsAA incorporation. We evolved chromosomal aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (aaRSs) with up to 25-fold increased protein production for p-acetyl-L-phenylalanine and p-azido-L-phenylalanine (pAzF). We also evolved aaRSs with tunable specificities for 14 nsAAs, including an enzyme that efficiently charges pAzF while excluding 237 other nsAAs. These variants enabled production of elastin-like-polypeptides with 30 nsAA residues at high yields (~50 mg/L) and high accuracy of incorporation (>95%). This approach to aaRS evolution should accelerate and expand our ability to produce functionalized proteins and sequence-defined polymers with diverse chemistries.
Genetic code expansion for synthesis of proteins containing noncanonical amino acids is a rapidly growing field in synthetic biology. Creating optimal orthogonal translation systems will require re-engineering central components of the protein synthesis machinery on the basis of a solid mechanistic biochemical understanding of the synthetic process.
Together with tRNACUAPyl, a rationally designed pyrrolysyl-tRNA synthetase mutant N346A/C348A has been successfully used for the genetic incorporation of a variety of phenylalanine derivatives with large para substitutes into superfolder green fluorescent protein at an amber mutation site in Escherichia coli. This discovery greatly expands the genetically encoded noncanonical amino acid inventory and opens the gate for the genetic incorporation of other phenylalanine derivatives using engineered pyrrolysyl-tRNA synthetase−tRNACUAPyl pairs.
Pyrrolysyl-tRNA synthetase (PylRS) and its cognate tRNA Pyl have emerged as ideal translation components for genetic code innovation. Variants of the enzyme facilitate the incorporation >100 noncanonical amino acids (ncAAs) into proteins. PylRS variants were previously selected to acylate N e -acetyl-Lys (AcK) onto tRNA Pyl . Here, we examine an N e -acetyl-lysyl-tRNA synthetase (AcKRS), which is polyspecific (i.e., active with a broad range of ncAAs) and 30-fold more efficient with Phe derivatives than it is with AcK. Structural and biochemical data reveal the molecular basis of polyspecificity in AcKRS and in a PylRS variant [iodo-phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase (IFRS)] that displays both enhanced activity and substrate promiscuity over a chemical library of 313 ncAAs. IFRS, a product of directed evolution, has distinct binding modes for different ncAAs. These data indicate that in vivo selections do not produce optimally specific tRNA synthetases and suggest that translation fidelity will become an increasingly dominant factor in expanding the genetic code far beyond 20 amino acids.aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase | genetic code | genetic selection | posttranslational modification | synthetic biology T he standard genetic code table relates the 64 nucleotide triplets to three stop signals and 20 canonical amino acids. Some organisms, including humans, naturally evolved expanded genetic codes that accommodate 21 amino acids (1), or possibly 22 amino acids in rare cases (2). Engineering translation system components, including tRNAs (3, 4), aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (AARSs) (5, 6), elongation factors (7), and the ribosome itself (8), have produced organisms with artificially expanded genetic codes. Products of genetic code engineering include bacterial, yeast, and mammalian cells and animals that are able to synthesize proteins with sitespecifically inserted noncanonical amino acids (ncAAs) (9).Genetic code expansion systems rely on an orthogonal AARS/ tRNA pair (o-AARS, o-tRNA) (5, 6). The o-AARS should be specific in ligating a desired ncAA to a stop codon decoding tRNA, and both the o-tRNA and o-AARS are assumed not to cross-react with endogenous AARSs or tRNAs. Although some AARSs evolved in nature to recognize certain ncAAs (10-12), many genetic code expansion systems require a mutated AARS active site. The active site of the o-AARS is usually redesigned via directed evolution (6), including positive and negative selective rounds, to produce an enzyme that is assumed to be specific for an ncAA and not active with the 20 canonical amino acids. Genetic code expansion technology is rapidly evolving (13), and the ability to incorporate multiple ncAAs into a protein using quadruplet-codon decoding (14) or sense-codon recoding (15-19) is now becoming feasible. Protein synthesis with multiple ncAAs will require o-AARSs that are able to discriminate their ncAA substrate not only from canonical amino acids in the cell but from other ncAAs that are added to the cell.Probing the effects of amino acid analogs on bacterial cell...
In order to obtain particulate methane monooxygenase (pMMO)-enriched membranes from Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath) with high activity and in high yields, we devised a method to process cell growth in a fermentor adapted with a hollow-fiber bioreactor that allows easy control and quantitative adjustment of the copper ion concentration in NMS medium over the time course of cell culture. This technical improvement in the method for culturing bacterial cells allowed us to study the effects of copper ion concentration in the growth medium on the copper content in the membranes, as well as the specific activity of the enzyme. The optimal copper concentration in the growth medium was found to be 30 to 35 M. Under these conditions, the pMMO is highly expressed, accounting for 80% of the total cytoplasmic membrane proteins and having a specific activity as high as 88.9 nmol of propylene oxide/min/mg of protein with NADH as the reductant. The copper stoichiometry is ϳ13 atoms per pMMO molecule. Analysis of other metal contents provided no evidence of zinc, and only traces of iron were present in the pMMO-enriched membranes. Further purification by membrane solubilization in dodecyl -D-maltoside followed by fractionation of the protein-detergent complexes according to molecular size by gel filtration chromatography resulted in a good yield of the pMMO-detergent complex and a high level of homogeneity. The pMMO-detergent complex isolated in this way had a molecular mass of 220 kDa and consisted of an ␣␥ protein monomer encapsulated in a micelle consisting of ca. 240 detergent molecules. The enzyme is a copper protein containing 13.6 mol of copper/mol of pMMO and essentially no iron (ratio of copper to iron, 80:1). Both the detergent-solubilized membranes and the purified pMMO-detergent complex exhibited reasonable, if not excellent, specific activity. Finally, our ability to control the level of expression of the pMMO allowed us to clarify the sensitivity of the enzyme to NADH and duroquinol, the two common reductants used to assay the enzyme.
Pyrrolysyl-tRNA synthetase (PylRS) is a major tool in genetic code expansion with non-canonical amino acids, yet understanding of its structure and activity is incomplete. Here we describe the crystal structure of the previously uncharacterized essential N-terminal domain of this unique enzyme in complex with tRNAPyl. This structure explains why PylRS remains orthogonal in a broad range of organisms, from bacteria to humans. The structure also illustrates why tRNAPyl recognition by PylRS is anticodon-independent; the anticodon does not contact the enzyme. Using standard microbiological culture equipment, we then established a new method for laboratory evolution – a non-continuous counterpart of the previously developed phage-assisted continuous evolution. With this method, we evolved novel PylRS variants with enhanced activity and amino acid specificity. We finally employed an evolved PylRS variant to determine its N-terminal domain structure and show how its mutations improve PylRS activity in the genetic encoding of a non-canonical amino acid.
Using evolved pyrrolysyl-tRNA synthetase-tRNA(CUA)(Pyl) pairs, L-phenylalanine, p-iodo-L-phenylalanine and p-bromo-L-phenylalanine have been genetically incorporated into proteins at amber mutation sites in E. coli.
When coexpressed with its cognate amber suppressing tRNACUAPyl, a pyrrolysyl-tRNA synthetase mutant N346A/C348A is able to genetically incorporate twelve meta-substituted phenylalanine derivatives into proteins site-specifically at amber mutation sites in Escherichia coli. These genetically encoded noncanonical amino acids resemble phenylalanine in size and contain diverse bioorthogonal functional groups such as halide, trifluoromethyl, nitrile, nitro, ketone, alkyne, and azide moieties. The genetic installation of these functional groups in proteins provides multiple ways to site-selectively label proteins with biophysical and biochemical probes for their functional investigations. We demonstrate that a genetically incorporated trifluoromethyl group can be used as a sensitive 19F NMR probe to study protein folding/unfolding, and that genetically incorporated reactive functional groups such as ketone, alkyne, and azide moieties can be applied to site-specifically label proteins with florescent probes. This critical discovery allows the synthesis of proteins with diverse bioorthogonal functional groups for a variety of basic studies and biotechnology development using a single recombinant expression system.
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