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Engineering Cell-permeable Protein
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Engineering an AB5 Protein Carrier.

Bruce R Lichtenstein1,2, Birte Höcker3,4

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|August 25, 2018
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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Researchers engineered fusion peptides to improve protein delivery using AB5 toxin carriers. This breakthrough enables efficient co-assembly and cellular delivery of non-native protein cargo, advancing biologic therapeutics.

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Area of Science:

  • Biotechnology
  • Molecular Biology
  • Protein Engineering

Background:

  • Biologic therapeutics face delivery challenges to target sites within diseased cells.
  • Natural protein carriers like AB5 toxins offer potential but require methods for non-native cargo assembly.
  • Existing methods for integrating cargo with AB5 carriers are limited by unresolved assembly requirements.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To identify properties of fusion peptides enabling co-assembly of non-native protein cargo with AB5 toxin carriers.
  • To investigate the impact of linker sequence length, identity, and secondary structure on complex assembly and disassembly.
  • To engineer improved fusion sequences for robust protein delivery applications.

Main Methods:

  • Utilized a protein engineering framework to design and test fusion peptides.
  • Co-assembled fluorescent protein cargo with the non-toxic B subunit of heat-labile enterotoxin.
  • Analyzed the influence of linker properties on complex formation and cargo delivery.

Main Results:

  • Clarified fusion peptide properties essential for co-assembly with AB5 carriers.
  • Identified reduced-length fusion sequences that robustly assemble with native carriers.
  • Demonstrated that engineered constructs maintain cellular protein delivery and exhibit improved in vitro properties.

Conclusions:

  • Developed an engineering framework for designing fusion peptides for AB5 protein carriers.
  • Identified novel fusion sequences enabling efficient delivery of non-native protein cargo.
  • These findings facilitate broader applications of AB5 protein carriers in biologic therapeutics and protein delivery.