Team:Potsdam Bioware/Project/Summary

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Summary

Modification, Selection and Production of Cyclic Peptides for Therapy

One key task of biopharmaceuticals is the binding and blocking of deregulated proteins. Towards this goal, we mutate and select microviridins, which are tricyclic depsipeptides from cyanobacteria. They are small but stable due to their post-translational side-chain crosslinking. Microviridins have a high potential for therapy as they can block disease-relevant proteases. Yet, the possibilities of cyclic peptides are largely untapped since genetic systems for optimization are not well established. Thus, we developed synthetic systems for the mutation, selection and production of such peptides. We use the 6.5 kb microviridin (mdn) gene cluster cloned in E. coli plasmids, established random mutagenesis and generated focused libraries of microviridins. For selection against a panel of proteases, we are applying and testing phage display, and we are constructing a novel in-vivo selection device, which links protease blocking to antibiotic resistance. Our systems, including the 6.5 kb cluster, adhere to the BioBrick standards.


Highlights

Microviridin

The major aim of the microviridin group was to modify the mdnA such that the protease inhibiting activity is enhanced. Therefore we used random mutagenesis as well as focused oligonucleotids for creating a library, which is ready for being screened for mdnA with a therapeutically promising set of mutations. For further experiments we also fused the mdnA to a myc-tag. So in the future we will be able to purify and isolate the mdnA.
Due to the applicability of the whole mdn-cluster the creation of several biobricks was possible. The construction was done using a given template vector containing the mdn-genes and sophisticated design of primers. Characterization of the biobricks was done via HPLC analysis, mass spectrometry and western blot.
In a subproject we also tried to build auxiliary expression backbones with inducible promoters for easy cloning via the iGEM restriction enzyme sites. We already have the construct but the process of induction needs to be improved.[more]

Phage Display

Phage Display is an efficient tool for selecting protein or peptides with specific binding properties from a large recombinant library. This proteins are represented on the surface of bacteriophages. This enables the coupling of phenotype and stable packaged genotype because the proteins which form the phage including the proteins of interest are coded in its genome. To identify MdnA-varieties which act as protease inhibitors, a mdnA-library containing randomly mutated MdnA was created. For this purpose the phagemid vector pPARW089 was produced. This vector contains a plasmid origin of replication, so they can be amplified like plasmids additionally it contains a f1 ori which enables the packaging of single strand DNA into phages. The vector also contains the whole mdn-cluster which is needed to produce the MdnA peptide. Cloning of the mutated mdnA genes into the phagemid generates a mdnA-gene III-fusion gene. Between mdnA and gene III a myc-tag for detection is located. The successful expression of the mdnA-myc-geneIII fusion protein on the surface of the phage was determined by ELISA test using anti-myc-antibodies after transforming E. coli cells and purifying the produced phages. The next step was the performance of a phage display. To test the fundamental suitability of this screening method, phages representing mdnA on their surface and phages not representing mdnA in a ratio of one to one were incubated with immobilised trypsin which is known as a target of mdnA. After one panning round a marked concentrating of phages carrying mdnA was recognized. [more]

In Vivo Selection

Based on the work of DeLisa et al. we constructed a recombinant in vivo selection system to the BioBrick standard linking protease degradation to antibiotic resistance. The designed plasmid is divided into two devices: first, an IPTG inducible TorA export sequence fused to a β-lactamse via a linker peptide and second, an Arabinose inducible (and replaceable/exchangeable) protease. The linker peptide contains the appropriate protease cleavage site. This time-independent system allows the investigator an individual in vivo selection of protease inhibitors.[more]

Modelling

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