4.7 Article

Design of DNA-Conjugated Polypeptide-Based Capture Probes for the Anchoring of Proteins to DNA Matrices

Journal

BIOCONJUGATE CHEMISTRY
Volume 19, Issue 12, Pages 2304-2307

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/bc8003606

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSF [MCB-0645832]
  2. Welch Foundation [C-1625]
  3. NIH [T90 DK70121-03, 5R90DK715043]

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A new method for protein surface functionalization was developed that utilizes DNA-conjugated artificial polypeptides to capture recombinant target proteins from the solution phase and direct their deposition onto DNA-functionalized matrices. Protein capture is accomplished through the coiled-coil association of an engineered pair of heterodimeric leucine zippers. Incorporating half of the zipper complex directly into the polypeptides and labeling these polymers with ssDNA enables the polypeptide conjugates to form intermediate linkages that connect the target proteins securely to DNA-functionalized supports. This synthetic route provides an important alternative to conventional DNA-conjugation techniques by allowing proteins to be outfitted site-specifically with ssDNA while minimizing the need for postexpression processing. We demonstrate these attributes by (i) using the capture probes to prepare protein microarrays, (ii) demonstrating control over enzyme activity via deposition of DNA, and, (iii) synthesizing finite-sized, multiprotein complexes that are templated on designed DNA scaffolds in near quantitative yield.

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