Low-affinity
protein binders are emerging as valuable domains for
therapeutic applications because of their higher specificity when
presented in multivalent ligands that increase the overall strength
and selectivity of receptor binding. De novo discovery
of low-affinity binders would be enhanced by the large library sizes
attainable with in vitro selection systems, but these
platforms generally maximize recovery of high-affinity monovalent
binders. Here, we present a facile technology that uses rolling circle
amplification to create homomultivalent libraries. We show proof of
principle of this approach in ribosome display with off-rate selections
of a bivalent ligand against monovalent and bivalent targets, thereby
demonstrating high enrichment (up to 166-fold) against a low-affinity
target that is bivalent but not monovalent. This approach to homomultivalent
library construction can be applied to any binder tolerant of N- and
C-terminal fusions and provides a platform for performing in vitro display selections with controlled protein valency
and orientation.
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