Attaining molecular-level control over solidification processes is a crucial aspect of materials science. To control ice formation, organisms have evolved bewildering arrays of ice-binding proteins (IBPs), but these have poorly understood structure–activity relationships. We propose that reverse engineering using de novo computational protein design can shed light on structure–activity relationships of IBPs. We hypothesized that the model alpha-helical winter flounder antifreeze protein uses an unusual undertwisting of its alpha-helix to align its putative ice-binding threonine residues in exactly the same direction. We test this hypothesis by designing a series of straight three-helix bundles with an ice-binding helix projecting threonines and two supporting helices constraining the twist of the ice-binding helix. Our findings show that ice-recrystallization inhibition by the designed proteins increases with the degree of designed undertwisting, thus validating our hypothesis, and opening up avenues for the computational design of IBPs.
CITATION STYLE
de Haas, R. J., Tas, R. P., van den Broek, D., Zheng, C., Nguyen, H., Kang, A., … de Vries, R. (2023). De novo designed ice-binding proteins from twist-constrained helices. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 120(27). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2220380120
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