Abstract

Soaking small molecules into the solvent channels of protein crystals is the most common method of obtaining crystalline complexes with ligands such as substrates or inhibitors. The solvent channels of some protein crystals are large enough to allow the incorporation of macromolecules, but soaking of protein guests into protein crystals has not been reported. Such protein host crystals (here given the name hostals) incorporating guest proteins may be useful for a wide range of applications in biotechnology, for example as cargo systems or for diffraction studies analogous to the crystal sponge method. The present study takes advantage of crystals of the Escherichia coli tryptophan repressor protein (ds-TrpR) that are extensively domain-swapped and suitable for incorporating guest proteins by diffusion, as they are robust and have large solvent channels. Confocal fluorescence microscopy is used to follow the migration of cytochrome c and fluorophore-labeled calmodulin into the solvent channels of ds-TrpR crystals. The guest proteins become uniformly distributed in the crystal within weeks and enriched within the solvent channels. X-ray diffraction studies on host crystals with high concentrations of incorporated guests demonstrate that diffraction limits of ∼2.5 Å can still be achieved. Weak electron density is observed in the solvent channels, but the guest-protein structures could not be determined by conventional crystallographic methods. Additional approaches that increase the ordering of guests in the host crystal are discussed that may support protein structure determination using the hostal system in the future. This host system may also be useful for biotechnological applications where crystallographic order of the guest is not required.

Highlights

  • Many areas of life science rely on structural information about proteins, for example to provide a basis for the design of experiments to elucidate biochemical processes in cells, to tailor industrial biocatalysts or to support computer-aided drug design (Shi, 2014; Blundell, 2017)

  • The staining of ds-tryptophan repressor protein from Escherichia coli (TrpR) crystals by the two small (

  • As indicated by the work of Cvetkovic et al (2004), confocal laserscanning microscopy (CLSM) is a useful method to follow the diffusion of fluorescent small molecules within crystals

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Summary

Introduction

Many areas of life science rely on structural information about proteins, for example to provide a basis for the design of experiments to elucidate biochemical processes in cells, to tailor industrial biocatalysts or to support computer-aided drug design (Shi, 2014; Blundell, 2017). The continuity of solvent in the channels can be exploited by soaking crystals in solutions containing protein ligands, drug candidates or other compounds of interest (McNae et al, 2005). Such soaking experiments typically use molecules that are much smaller than the crystallized proteins. Many ligands reach their binding sites within seconds to minutes (Mizutani et al, 2014; Collins et al, 2017), but the binding-site occupancy may still increase after hours of soaking (Collins et al, 2017). Soaking of small fluorescent molecules into protein crystals can be followed using confocal laserscanning microscopy (CLSM), as described for lysozyme crystals (Cvetkovic et al, 2004, 2005), and is not limited to molecules that adopt crystallographic order

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