4.4 Article

SNAP Dendrimers: Multivalent Protein Display on Dendrimer-Like DNA for Directed Evolution

Journal

CHEMBIOCHEM
Volume 12, Issue 14, Pages 2208-2216

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/cbic.201100240

Keywords

directed evolution; DNA structures; DNA; DNA-protein conjugates; SNAP-tag

Funding

  1. EU Marie Curie Networks ProSA and ENEFP
  2. BBSRC
  3. Trinity College, Cambridge

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Display systems connect a protein with the DNA encoding it. Such systems (e.g., phage or ribosome display) have found widespread application in the directed evolution of protein binders and constitute a key element of the biotechnological toolkit. In this proof-of-concept study we describe the construction of a system that allows the display of multiple copies of a protein of interest in order to take advantage of avidity effects during affinity panning. To this end, dendrimer-like DNA is used as a scaffold with docking points that can join the coding DNA with multiple protein copies. Each DNA construct is compartmentalised in water-in-oil emulsion droplets. The corresponding protein is expressed, in vitro, inside the droplets as a SNAP-tag fusion. The covalent bond between DNA and the SNAP-tag is created by reaction with dendrimer-bound benzylguanine (BG). The ability to form dendrimer-like DNA straightforwardly from oligonucleotides bearing BG allowed the comparison of a series of templates differing in size, valency and position of BG. In model selections the most efficient constructs show recoveries of up to 0.86% and up to 400-fold enrichments. The comparison of mono-and multivalent constructs suggests that the avidity effect enhances enrichment by up to fivefold and recovery by up to 25-fold. Our data establish a multivalent format for SNAP-display based on dendrimer-like DNA as the first in vitro display system with defined tailor-made valencies and explore a new application for DNA nanostructures. These data suggest that multivalent SNAP dendrimers have the potential to facilitate the selection of protein binders especially during early rounds of directed evolution, allowing a larger diversity of candidate binders to be recovered.

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