Limitations of yeast surface display in engineering proteins of high thermostability

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Abstract

Engineering proteins that can fold to unique structures remains a challenge. Protein stability has previously been engineered via the observed correlation between thermal stability and eukaryotic secretion level. To explore the limits of an expression-based approach, variants of the highly thermostable three-helix bundle protein α3D were studied using yeast surface display. A library of α3D mutants was created to explore the possible correlation of protein stability and fold with expression level. Five efficiently expressed mutants were then purified and further studied biochemically. Despite their differences in stability, most mutants expressed at levels comparable with that of wild-type α3D. Two other related sequences (α3A and α3B) that form collapsed, stable molten globules but lack a uniquely folded structure were similarly expressed at high levels by yeast display. Together these observations suggest that the quality control system in yeast is unable to discriminate between well-folded proteins of high stability and molten globules. The present study, therefore, suggests that an optimization of the surface display efficiency on yeast may yield proteins that are thermally and chemically stable yet are poorly folded. © The Author 2006. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.

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Park, S., Xu, Y., Stowell, X. F., Gai, F., Saven, J. G., & Boder, E. T. (2006). Limitations of yeast surface display in engineering proteins of high thermostability. Protein Engineering, Design and Selection, 19(5), 211–217. https://doi.org/10.1093/protein/gzl003

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