4.8 Article

An ultra-stable gold-coordinated protein cage displaying reversible assembly

期刊

NATURE
卷 569, 期 7756, 页码 438-+

出版社

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-1185-4

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资金

  1. International Cooperative Research Program of the Institute for Protein Research, Osaka University [CEMCR-17-05]
  2. RIKEN Initiative Research Funding
  3. JSPS [2556023]
  4. National Science Centre (NCN, Poland) [2016/20/W/NZ1/00095]
  5. Malopolska Regional Operational Program Measure 5.1 Krakow Metropolitan Area [MRPO.05.01.00-12-013/15]
  6. EPSRC [EP/J01835X/1]
  7. ERC [337757]
  8. Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development (AMED)
  9. Slovenian research agency [P1-0112, I0-0005, J7-9398]
  10. EU [227012, 824096]
  11. [POIG.02.02.00-12-023/08]
  12. [Homing/2016-2/20]
  13. European Research Council (ERC) [337757] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Symmetrical protein cages have evolved to fulfil diverse roles in nature, including compartmentalization and cargo delivery(1), and have inspired synthetic biologists to create novel protein assemblies via the precise manipulation of protein-protein interfaces. Despite the impressive array of protein cages produced in the laboratory, the design of inducible assemblies remains challenging(2,3). Here we demonstrate an ultra-stable artificial protein cage, the assembly and disassembly of which can be controlled by metal coordination at the protein-protein interfaces. The addition of a gold (i)-triphenylphosphine compound to a cysteine-substituted, 11-mer protein ring triggers supramolecular self-assembly, which generates monodisperse cage structures with masses greater than 2 MDa. The geometry of these structures is based on the Archimedean snub cube and is, to our knowledge, unprecedented. Cryo-electron microscopy confirms that the assemblies are held together by 120 S-Aui-S staples between the protein oligomers, and exist in two chiral forms. The cage shows extreme chemical and thermal stability, yet it readily disassembles upon exposure to reducing agents. As well as gold, mercury(ii) is also found to enable formation of the protein cage. This work establishes an approach for linking protein components into robust, higher-order structures, and expands the design space available for supramolecular assemblies to include previously unexplored geometries.

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