Abstract

Heme-binding proteins constitute a large family of catalytic and transport proteins. Their widespread presence as globins and as essential oxygen and electron transporters, along with their diverse enzymatic functions, have made them targets for protein design. Most previously reported designs involved the use of α-helical scaffolds, and natural peptides also exhibit a strong preference for these scaffolds. However, the reason for this preference is not well-understood, in part because alternative protein designs, such as those with β-sheets or hairpins, are challenging to perform. Here, we report the computational design and experimental validation of a water-soluble heme-binding peptide, Pincer-1, composed of predominantly β-scaffold secondary structures. Such heme-binding proteins are rarely observed in nature, and by designing such a scaffold, we simultaneously increase the known fold space of heme-binding proteins and expand the limits of computational design methods. For a β-scaffold, two tryptophan zipper β-hairpins sandwiching a heme molecule were linked through an N-terminal cysteine disulfide bond. β-Hairpin orientations and residue selection were performed computationally. Heme binding was confirmed through absorbance experiments and surface plasmon resonance experiments (KD = 730 ± 160 nm). CD and NMR experiments validated the β-hairpin topology of the designed peptide. Our results indicate that a helical scaffold is not essential for heme binding and reveal the first designed water-soluble, heme-binding β-hairpin peptide. This peptide could help expand the search for and design space to cytoplasmic heme-binding proteins.

Highlights

  • Heme-binding proteins constitute a large family of catalytic and transport proteins

  • How important is the presence of a helical scaffold for heme binding?

  • An analysis of 472 nonredundant (70% sequence similarity cutoff; Text S1 and Fig. S2A) heme-binding proteins obtained from the PDB confirmed this

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Summary

Results

Heme binding proteins adopt predominantly ␣-helical folds. An analysis of 472 nonredundant (70% sequence similarity cutoff; Text S1 and Fig. S2A) heme-binding proteins obtained from the PDB confirmed this. Even for proteins composed predominantly of ␤-sheets, the heme-binding motif displays a strong preference for loop or ␣-helical secondary structures. Even when ␤-motifs are present, they are nearly always paired with opposing ␣-helical or loop motifs to form the heme-binding site These observations indicate that natural heme-binding proteins display a strong preference against ␤-sheets both at the fold level and at the binding site level. The final all-atom computational model for Pincer-1 is illustrated, and PDB coordinates are provided in Text S2 This structure contained the sequence CGSWTWENGKHTWK and was chosen for peptide synthesis and experimental characterization. The absorption spectrum for solubilized heme displayed a broad absorbance peak in the 350- to 400-nm wavelength region (Fig. 3B) In both cases, no characteristic Soret peaks were detected, confirming Soret peak formation only upon Pincer-1– heme interaction. From the Job plot, the stoichiometric ratio of heme–Pincer-1 binding was determined to be 0.98:1, which is in very good agreement with the 1:1 stoichiometric ratio expected for our design

Surface plasmon resonance experiments confirm and quantify heme binding
CD experiments reveal conformational changes upon heme binding
Discussion
Experimental procedures
Structural characterization using NMR
Full Text
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