Abstract

Streptavidin is one of the most important hubs for molecular biology, either multimerizing biomolecules, bridging one molecule to another, or anchoring to a biotinylated surface/nanoparticle. Streptavidin has the advantage of rapid ultra-stable binding to biotin. However, the ability of streptavidin to bind four biotinylated molecules in a heterogeneous manner is often limiting. Here, we present an efficient approach to isolate streptavidin tetramers with two biotin-binding sites in a precise arrangement, cis or trans. We genetically modified specific subunits with negatively charged tags, refolded a mixture of monomers, and used ion-exchange chromatography to resolve tetramers according to the number and orientation of tags. We solved the crystal structures of cis-divalent streptavidin to 1.4Å resolution and trans-divalent streptavidin to 1.6Å resolution, validating the isolation strategy and explaining the behavior of the Dead streptavidin variant. cis- and trans-divalent streptavidins retained tetravalent streptavidin's high thermostability and low off-rate. These defined divalent streptavidins enabled us to uncover how streptavidin binding depends on the nature of the biotin ligand. Biotinylated DNA showed strong negative cooperativity of binding to cis-divalent but not trans-divalent streptavidin. A small biotinylated protein bound readily to cis and trans binding sites. We also solved the structure of trans-divalent streptavidin bound to biotin-4-fluorescein, showing how one ligand obstructs binding to an adjacent biotin-binding site. Using a hexaglutamate tag proved a more powerful way to isolate monovalent streptavidin, for ultra-stable labeling without undesired clustering. These forms of streptavidin allow this key hub to be used with a new level of precision, for homogeneous molecular assembly.

Highlights

  • Streptavidin is a tetrameric protein from Streptomyces avidinii [1] that, along with the structurally similar protein from chicken egg white, avidin, exhibits extraordinarily high affinity for the vitamin biotin [2,3]

  • We solved the structure of trans-divalent streptavidin bound to biotin-4-fluorescein, showing how one ligand obstructs binding to an adjacent biotin-binding site

  • We refolded from inclusion bodies the mixture of charged and non-charged streptavidin variants and separated the tetramers on a MonoQ column, since the tetramers with increasing negative charge required higher ionic strength for elution

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Summary

Introduction

Streptavidin is a tetrameric protein from Streptomyces avidinii [1] that, along with the structurally similar protein from chicken egg white, avidin, exhibits extraordinarily high affinity for the vitamin biotin [2,3]. Streptavidin has a long history of use for capture of biotinylated ligands from complex mixtures, it has gained many recent applications for precise and stable assembly in the emerging field of bionanotechnology [4,5,6]. Splitting up the streptavidin tetramer into monomers or dimers is possible, but this has always been accompanied by orders of magnitude lower affinity for biotin [14,15,16,17], because of the contribution of the neighboring subunit to the biotin-binding site [1,18].

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