4.7 Article

Combining Random Gene Fission and Rational Gene Fusion To Discover Near-Infrared Fluorescent Protein Fragments That Report on Protein-Protein Interactions

Journal

ACS SYNTHETIC BIOLOGY
Volume 4, Issue 5, Pages 615-624

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/sb5002938

Keywords

gene fission; gene fusion; mutagenesis; near-infrared fluorescent protein; protein fragment complementation; protein-protein interaction

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [1150138]
  2. Robert A. Welch Foundation [C-1614]
  3. John S. Dunn Collaborative Research Award
  4. National Institutes of Health [R01 AI054830]
  5. Div Of Molecular and Cellular Bioscience
  6. Direct For Biological Sciences [1150138] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Gene fission can convert monomeric proteins into two-piece catalysts, reporters, and transcription factors for systems and synthetic biology. However, some proteins can be challenging to fragment without disrupting function, such as near-infrared fluorescent protein (IFP). We describe a directed evolution strategy that can overcome this challenge by randomly fragmenting proteins and concomitantly fusing the protein fragments to pairs of proteins or peptides that associate. We used this method to create libraries that express fragmented IFP as fusions to a pair of associating peptides (IAAL-E3 and IAAL-K3) and proteins (CheA and CheY) and screened for fragmented IFP with detectable near-infrared fluorescence. Thirteen novel fragmented IFPs were identified, all of which arose from backbone fission proximal to the interdomain linker. Either the IAAL-E3 and IAAL-K3 peptides or CheA and CheY proteins could assist with IFP fragment complementation, although the IAAL-E3 and IAAL-K3 peptides consistently yielded higher fluorescence. These results demonstrate how random gene fission can be coupled to rational gene fusion to create libraries enriched in fragmented proteins with AND gate logic that is dependent upon a protein protein interaction, and they suggest that these near-infrared fluorescent protein fragments will be suitable as reporters for pairs of promoters and protein- protein interactions within whole animals.

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