4.5 Article

How the biotin-streptavidin interaction was made even stronger: investigation via crystallography and a chimaeric tetramer

Journal

BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 435, Issue -, Pages 55-63

Publisher

PORTLAND PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.1042/BJ20101593

Keywords

avidin; biotin; protein engineering; protein-ligand interaction; streptavidin; traptavidin

Funding

  1. Welcome Trust [085457/Z/OB/Z]
  2. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council
  3. Oxford University
  4. Worcester College Oxford

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The interaction between SA (streptavidin) and biotin is one of the strongest non-covalent interactions in Nature. SA is a widely used tool and a paradigm for protein ligand interactions. We previously developed a SA mutant, termed Tr (traptavidin), possessing a 10-fold lower off-rate for biotin, with increased mechanical and thermal stability. In the present study, we determined the crystal structures of apo-Tr and biotin Tr at 1.5 angstrom resolution. In apo-SA the loop (L3/4), near biotin's valeryl tail, is typically disordered and open, but closes upon biotin binding. In contrast, L3/4 was shut in both apo-Tr and biotin Tr. The reduced flexibility of L3/4 and decreased conformational change on biotin binding provide an explanation for Tr's reduced biotin off- and on-rates. L3/4 includes Ser(45), which forms a hydrogen bond to biotin consistently in Tr, but erratically in SA. Reduced breakage of the biotin-Ser(45) hydrogen bond in Tr is likely to inhibit the initiating event in biotin's dissociation pathway. We generated a Tr with a single biotin-binding site rather than four, which showed a similarly low off-rate, demonstrating that Tr's low off-rate was governed by intrasubunit effects. Understanding the structural features of this tenacious interaction may assist the design of even stronger affinity tags and inhibitors.

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