4.3 Article

Highly Avid Magnetic Bead Capture: An Efficient Selection Method for de novo Protein Engineering Utilizing Yeast Surface Display

Journal

BIOTECHNOLOGY PROGRESS
Volume 25, Issue 3, Pages 774-783

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/btpr.174

Keywords

yeast surface display; combinatorial library screening

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [R01 CA101830-04, R01 CA096504-07, R01 CA101830, R01 CA096504] Funding Source: Medline

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Protein engineering relies on the selective capture of members of a protein library with desired properties. Yeast surface display technology routinely enables as much as million-fold improvements in binding affinity by alternating rounds of diversification and flow cytometry-based selection. However, flow cytometry is not well suited for isolating de novo binding clones from naive libraries due to limitations in the size of the population that call be analyzed, the minimum binding affinity of clones that call be reliably captured, the amount of target antigen required, and the likelihood of capturing artifactual binders to the reagents. Here, we demonstrate a method for capturing rare clones that maintains the advantages of yeast as the expression host, while avoiding the disadvantages of FACS in isolating de novo binders from naive libraries. The multivalency of yeast surface display is intentionally coupled with multivalent target presentation oil magnetic beads-allowing isolation of extremely weak binders from billions of non-binding clones, and requiring far less target antigen for each selection, while minimizing the likelihood of isolating undesirable alternative solutions to the selective pressure. Multivalent surface selection allows 30,000-fold enrichment and almost quantitative capture of micromolar binders in a single pass using less than one microgram of target antigen. We further validate the robust nature of this selection method by isolation of de novo binders against lysozyme as well as its utility in negative selections by isolating binders to streptavidin-biotin that do not cross-react to streptavidin alone. (C) 2009 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Biotechnol. Prog., 25: 774-783, 2009

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