Circumventing the stability-function trade-off in an engineered FN3 domain

July 28, 2017

Title

Circumventing the stability-function trade-off in an engineered FN3 domain

Author

Benjamin T. Porebski, Paul J. Conroy, Nyssa Drinkwater, Peter Schofield, Rodrigo Vazquez-Lombardi, Morag R. Hunter, David E. Hoke, Daniel Christ, Sheena McGowan, Ashley M. Buckle

Year

2016

Journal

Protein Engineering, Design & Selection

Abstract

The favorable biophysical attributes of non-antibody scaffolds make them attractive alternatives to monoclonal antibodies. However, due to the well-known stability-function trade-off, these gains tend to be marginal after functional selection. A notable example is the fibronectin Type III (FN3) domain, FNfn10, which has been previously evolved to bind lysozyme with 1 pM affinity (FNfn10- α-lys), but suffers from poor thermodynamic and kinetic stability. To explore this stability-function compromise further, we grafted the lysozyme-binding loops from FNfn10-α-lys onto our previously engineered, ultra-stable FN3 scaffold, FN3con. The resulting variant (FN3con-α-lys) bound lysozyme with a markedly reduced affinity, but retained high levels of thermal stability. The crystal structure of FNfn10-α-lys in complex with lysozyme revealed unanticipated interactions at the protein–protein interface involving framework residues of FNfn10-α-lys, thus explaining the failure to transfer binding via loop grafting. Utilizing this structural information, we redesigned FN3con-α-lys and restored picomolar binding affinity to lysozyme, while maintaining thermodynamic stability (with a thermal melting temperature 2-fold higher than that of FNfn10-α-lys). FN3con therefore provides an exceptional window of stability to tolerate deleterious mutations, resulting in a substantial advantage for functional design. This study emphasizes the utility of consensus design for the generation of highly stable scaffolds for downstream protein engineering studies.

Instrument

J-815

Keywords

Circular dichroism, Secondary structure, Thermal stability, Thermodynamics, Biochemistry