Abstract

The expansion of the genetic code beyond a single type of noncanonical amino acid (ncAA) is hindered by inefficient machinery for reassigning the meaning of sense codons. A major obstacle to using directed evolution to improve the efficiency of sense codon reassignment is that fractional sense codon reassignments lead to heterogeneous mixtures of full-length proteins with either a ncAA or a natural amino acid incorporated in response to the targeted codon. In stop codon suppression systems, missed incorporations lead to truncated proteins; improvements in activity may be inferred from increased protein yields or the production of downstream reporters. In sense codon reassignment, the heterogeneous proteins produced greatly complicate the development of screens for variants of the orthogonal machinery with improved activity. We describe the use of a previously-reported fluorescence-based screen for sense codon reassignment as the first step in a directed evolution workflow to improve the incorporation of a ncAA in response to the Arg AGG sense codon. We first screened a library with diversity introduced into both the orthogonal Methanocaldococcus jannaschii tyrosyl tRNA anticodon loop and the cognate aminoacyl tRNA synthetase (aaRS) anticodon binding domain for variants that improved incorporation of tyrosine in response to the AGG codon. The most efficient variants produced fluorescent proteins at levels indistinguishable from the E. coli translation machinery decoding tyrosine codons. Mutations to the M. jannaschii aaRS that were found to improve tyrosine incorporation were transplanted onto a M. jannaschii aaRS evolved for the incorporation of para-azidophenylalanine. Improved ncAA incorporation was evident using fluorescence- and mass-based reporters. The described workflow is generalizable and should enable the rapid tailoring of orthogonal machinery capable of activating diverse ncAAs to any sense codon target. We evaluated the selection based improvements of the orthogonal pair in a host genomically engineered for reduced target codon competition. Using this particular system for evaluation of arginine AGG codon reassignment, however, E. coli strains with genomes engineered to remove competing tRNAs did not outperform a standard laboratory E. coli strain in sense codon reassignment.

Highlights

  • The genetically-encoded introduction of noncanonical amino acids is a powerful tool for increasing the chemical diversity of proteins because it enables the precise placement of desired side chain functionality within a growing peptide chain

  • A major obstacle to using directed evolution to improve the efficiency of sense codon reassignment is that fractional sense codon reassignments lead to heterogeneous mixtures of fulllength proteins with either a noncanonical amino acid (ncAA) or a natural amino acid incorporated in response to the targeted codon

  • We have described a general directed evolution pipeline for tailoring the tRNA/aminoacyl tRNA synthetase (aaRS) interactions of already-evolved ncAAactivating aaRSs for improved sense codon reassignment

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Summary

Introduction

The genetically-encoded introduction of noncanonical amino acids (ncAAs) is a powerful tool for increasing the chemical diversity of proteins because it enables the precise placement of desired side chain functionality within a growing peptide chain. Two general approaches to expand the genetic code have been widely employed: nonsense suppression and residue specific reassignment (Figure 1) (Wiltschi and Budisa, 2007; Ngo and Tirrell, 2011) Advances in both technologies have increased the efficiency with which a single ncAA can be genetically encoded. Amino acid-specific reassignment has been updated by breaking the degeneracy of the genetic code to enable the reassignment of individual sense codons (Kwon et al, 2003; Bohlke and Budisa, 2014; Zeng et al, 2014; Lee et al, 2015; Mukai et al, 2015; Ho et al, 2016; Kwon and Choi, 2016; Wang and Tsao, 2016) Improvements in both methods have focused primarily on genetic additions and deletions rather than on functional improvements of the evolved orthogonal translation components central to both technologies

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