Ribosome Stalling of N-Linked Glycoproteins in Cell-Free Extracts

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Abstract

Ribosome display is a powerful in vitro method for selection and directed evolution of proteins expressed from combinatorial libraries. However, the ability to display proteins with complex post-translational modifications such as glycosylation is limited. To address this gap, we developed a set of complementary methods for producing stalled ribosome complexes that displayed asparagine-linked (N-linked) glycoproteins in conformations amenable to downstream functional and glycostructural interrogation. The ability to generate glycosylated ribosome-nascent chain (glycoRNC) complexes was enabled by integrating SecM-mediated translation arrest with methods for cell-free N-glycoprotein synthesis. This integration enabled a first-in-kind method for ribosome stalling of target proteins modified efficiently and site-specifically with different N-glycan structures. Moreover, the observation that encoding mRNAs remained stably attached to ribosomes provides evidence of a genotype-glycophenotype link between an arrested glycoprotein and its RNA message. We anticipate that our method will enable selection and evolution of N-glycoproteins with advantageous biological and biophysical properties.

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Chung, S. S., Bidstrup, E. J., Hershewe, J. M., Warfel, K. F., Jewett, M. C., & Delisa, M. P. (2022). Ribosome Stalling of N-Linked Glycoproteins in Cell-Free Extracts. ACS Synthetic Biology, 11(12), 3892–3899. https://doi.org/10.1021/acssynbio.2c00311

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