Summary information and primary citation
- PDB-id
-
7mg7;
DSSR-derived features in text and
JSON formats
- Class
- sugar binding protein-DNA
- Method
- X-ray (1.75 Å)
- Summary
- Concanavalin a bound to a DNA glycoconjugate,
man-gtac
- Reference
-
Partridge BE, Winegar PH, Han Z, Mirkin CA (2021):
"Redefining
Protein Interfaces within Protein Single Crystals with
DNA." J.Am.Chem.Soc., 143,
8925-8934. doi: 10.1021/jacs.1c04191.
- Abstract
- Proteins are exquisite nanoscale building blocks:
molecularly pure, chemically addressable, and inherently
selective for their evolved function. The organization of
proteins into single crystals with high positional,
orientational, and translational order results in materials
where the location of every atom can be known. However,
controlling the organization of proteins is challenging due
to the myriad interactions that define protein interfaces
within native single crystals. Recently, we discovered that
introducing a single DNA-DNA interaction between protein
surfaces leads to changes in the packing of proteins within
single crystals and the protein-protein interactions (PPIs)
that arise. However, modifying specific PPIs to effect
deliberate changes to protein packing is an unmet
challenge. In this work, we hypothesized that disrupting
and replacing a highly conserved PPI with a DNA-DNA
interaction would enable protein packing to be modulated by
exploiting the programmability of the introduced
oligonucleotides. Using concanavalin A (ConA) as a model
protein, we circumvent potentially deleterious mutagenesis
and exploit the selective binding of ConA toward mannose to
noncovalently attach DNA to the protein surface. We show
that DNA association eliminates the major PPI responsible
for crystallization of native ConA, thereby allowing subtle
changes to DNA design (length, complementarity, and
attachment position) to program distinct changes to ConA
packing, including the realization of three novel crystal
structures and the deliberate expansion of ConA packing
along a single crystallographic axis. These findings
significantly enhance our understanding of how DNA can
supersede native PPIs to program protein packing within
ordered materials.