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Cell-targeted ribosome-inactivating proteins derived from protein combinatorial libraries

Posted on:2009-05-07Degree:Ph.DType:Thesis
University:University of Toronto (Canada)Candidate:Perampalam, SubodiniFull Text:PDF
GTID:2440390002492980Subject:Biology
Abstract/Summary:
Combinatorial protein libraries based on a protein template offer a vast potential for deriving protein variants harboring new receptor specificity while retaining other template functions to serve as library search-engines, cell-routing sequences and therapeutic domains. This concept was tested with the design and synthesis of protein libraries where short random peptide motifs were embedded directly within the catalytic A subunit of the bacterial ribosome-inactivating protein (RIP) known as Shiga-like toxin 1 (SLT-1). More precisely, a seven amino acid peptide epitope (PDTRPAP) was inserted between residues 245-246 of its A subunit (SLT-1APDTRPAP) and shown to preserve catalytic function while exposing the epitope. SLT-1 A chain libraries harboring tripeptide and heptapeptide random elements were subsequently constructed, screened and shown to express more than 90% of expected cytotoxic A chain variants. Finally, more than 9,000 purified SLT-1 A chain variants were screened using their ribosome-inactivating function in a cell-based assay to identify mutants that are able to kill human melanoma 518-A2 cells. This search led to the striking discovery of a single chain RIP that displays selectivity for a panel of human melanoma cell lines as well as minimal immunogenicity when injected repeatedly into mice. This directed evolution of a RIP template provides a broad platform for identifying cell type specific cytotoxic agents.
Keywords/Search Tags:Protein, Libraries, Template, RIP, Ribosome-inactivating
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