| September
18, 2005
UCSD Discovery May Provide Novel
Method To Generate Medically Useful Proteins
By Sherry Seethaler
A team led by
UCSD biochemists has discovered the mechanism by which a simple
organism can produce 10 trillion varieties of a single protein,
a finding that provides a new tool to develop novel drugs.
In the September 18
advance on-line publication of the journal Nature Structural
and Molecular Biology, the researchers describe the mechanism
by which a virus that infects bacteria—called a bacteriophage,
or phage—can generate a kaleidoscope of variants of a
particular protein. The paper will appear in print in Nature
Structural and Molecular Biology in October.
 |
| Graphic
shows molecular structure of predator protein variants (colors
reveal different amino acids) Credit: Jason Miller, UCSD |
Since this degree of
protein diversity is extremely rare, recreating the process
in a test tube could give researchers a new way to generate
therapeutic enzymes, vaccines and other medically important
proteins.
“This is only
the second type of massively variable protein ever discovered,”
explained Partho Ghosh, a professor of chemistry and biochemistry
at UCSD who headed the research team. “Only antibodies
have more variation than this protein in phage. However, the
genetic mechanism used by the phage to generate this diversity
is completely different from that used by animals to produce
antibodies, and has the advantage of giving the protein greater
stability.”
“If we can learn from these organisms how to set up a
system that churns out proteins with enormous variability, it
may be possible to target these new proteins to specific cells
to treat disease,” said Stephen McMahon, a former postdoctoral
fellow in Ghosh’s lab who conducted much of the research.
“This idea has already been picked up by the biotech industry.”
The function of the
massively variable phage protein is to tether the phage to the
bacteria they infect. The phage “predator” protein
fits into a “prey” protein on the bacteria like
a three-dimensional puzzle piece. However, the bacteria are
constantly changing the proteins on their surface. To keep up
with the unpredictable changes in the prey protein, the phage
must generate many different predator proteins for at least
one to have an acceptable fit.
In their paper, the
researchers describe how by altering the amino acids at one
or more of just 12 sites on the predator protein, the phage
are able to generate 10 trillion proteins, each with the potential
to bind to a different prey protein. This variability arises
as DNA is being copied into the RNA blueprint for the protein.
The sequence of DNA bases at the 12 sites has unique characteristics
that cause frequent mistakes to be made in the copying process.
As a result, the RNA ends up specifying a different amino acid,
and a protein with different structural and chemical properties
is created.
Antibodies are another
type predator protein that must respond to rapidly evolving
prey proteins, because microorganisms are constantly altering
proteins on their surfaces to evade the immune system. Unlike
the phage protein, antibodies have a complicated loop structure.
The size of the loops varies in addition to the amino acid building
blocks that constitute the antibody protein. Although this mechanism
can generate more than 100 trillion different antibodies, the
researchers say replicating it in a test tube would be very
challenging because the loops would have the tendency to fold
incorrectly.
“Because of its
stability, the phage protein makes a better model to create
protein diversity in a test tube,” explained Jason Miller,
a graduate student in Ghosh’s lab who conducted much of
the research. “Our discovery shows that nature has provided
at least two completely different methods to generate a huge
amount of protein variability, and it opens up a whole new platform
for protein development.”
Other contributors
to the paper were Jeffrey Lawton, Department of Chemistry, Eastern
University; Donald Kerkow, The Scripps Research Institute; Marc
Marti-Renom, Eswar Narayanan, and Andrej Sali, Departments of
Biopharmaceutical Sciences and Pharmaceutical Chemistry, University
of California, San Francisco; Asher Hodes, and Jeffrey Miller,
Department of Microbiology, Immunology, and Molecular Genetics,
David Geffen School of Medicine and the Molecular Biology Institute,
University of California, Los Angeles; and Sergei Doulatov,
Department of Microbiology and Medical Genetics, University
of Toronto.
Stephen McMahon is
now at the Centre for Biomolecular Sciences at The University
of St. Andrews in Scotland.
This research was supported
by a W.M. Keck Distinguished Young Scholars in Medicine Award
and a UC Discovery Grant.
Media Contact:
Sherry Seethaler (858)
534-4656
Comment: Partho
Ghosh (858) 822-1139
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