4.6 Article

Ultrahigh-throughput screening system for directed polymer binding peptide evolution

Journal

BIOTECHNOLOGY AND BIOENGINEERING
Volume 116, Issue 8, Pages 1856-1867

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/bit.26990

Keywords

anchor peptides; and polypropylene; directed evolution; E; coli cell surface display; ultrahigh throughput

Funding

  1. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) [FKZ: 031A227F]
  2. Arbeitsgemeinschaft industrieller Forschungsvereinigungen (AiF) [IGF-Vorhaben 18180 N]
  3. Center for Chemical Polymer Technology (CPT) [EFRE 30 00 883 02]

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Accumulation of plastics in the environment became a geological indicator of the Anthropocene era. An effective reduction of long-lasting plastics requires a treatment with micro-organisms that release polymer-degrading enzymes. Polymer binding peptides function as adhesion promoters and enable a targeted binding of whole cells to polymer surfaces. An esterase A-based Escherichia coli cell surface display screening system was developed, that enabled directed evolution of polymer binding peptides for improved binding strength to polymers. The E. coli cell surface screening system facilitates an enrichment of improved binding peptides from a culture broth through immobilization of whole cells on polymer beads. The polypropylene (PP)-binding peptide liquid chromatography peak I (LCI) was simultaneously saturated at five positions (Y29, D31, G35, E42, and D45; 3.2 million variants) and screened for improved PP-binding in the presence of the anionic surfactant sodium dodecylbenzenesulfonate (LAS; 0.25mM). The cell surface system enabled efficient screening of the generated LCI diversity (in total similar to 10 million clones were screened). Characterization of identified LCI binders revealed an up to 12-fold improvement (eGFP-LCI-CSD-3: E42V/D45H) in PP-binding strength in the presence of the surfactant LAS (0.125mM). The latter represents a first whole cell display screening system to improve adhesion peptides which can be used to direct and to immobilize organisms specifically to polymer surfaces (e.g., PP) and novel applications (e.g., in targeted plastic degradation).

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