Asparaginyl endopeptidases (AEPs) have recently been widely utilized for peptide and protein modification. Labeling is however restricted to protein termini, severely limiting flexibility and scope in creating diverse conjugates as needed for therapeutic and diagnostic applications. Here, we use genetic code expansion to site-specifically modify target proteins with an isopeptide-linked glycylglycine moiety that serves as an acceptor nucleophile in AEPmediated transpeptidation with various probes containing a tripeptidic recognition motif. Our approach allows simple and flexible labeling of recombinant proteins at any internal site and leaves a minimal, entirely peptidic footprint (NGG) in the conjugation product. We show site-specific labeling of diverse target proteins with various biophysical probes, including dual labeling at an internal site and the N-terminus. Furthermore, we harness AEP-mediated transpeptidation for generation of ubiquitinand ubiquitin-like-modifier conjugates bearing a native isopeptide bond and only one point mutation in the linker region.
Novel and improved biocatalysts are increasingly sourced from libraries via experimental screening. The success of such campaigns is crucially dependent on the number of candidates tested. Water-in-oil emulsion droplets can replace the classical test tube, to provide in vitro compartments as an alternative screening format, containing genotype and phenotype and enabling a readout of function. The scale-down to micrometer droplet diameters and picoliter volumes brings about a >10 7 -fold volume reduction compared to 96-well-plate screening. Droplets made in automated microfluidic devices can be integrated into modular workflows to set up multistep screening protocols involving various detection modes to sort >10 7 variants a day with kHz frequencies. The repertoire of assays available for droplet screening covers all seven enzyme commission (EC) number classes, setting the stage for widespread use of droplet microfluidics in everyday biochemical experiments. We review the practicalities of adapting droplet screening for enzyme discovery and for detailed kinetic characterization. These new ways of working will not just accelerate discovery experiments currently limited by screening capacity but profoundly change the paradigms we can probe. By interfacing the results of ultrahigh-throughput droplet screening with next-generation sequencing and deep learning, strategies for directed evolution can be implemented, examined, and evaluated.
CONTENTSAA 11.6.2. Combining High-Throughput Selections with High-Throughput Analysis AB 12. Conclusions
Droplet microfluidics
is a valuable method to “beat the
odds” in high throughput screening campaigns such as directed
evolution, where valuable hits are infrequent and large library sizes
are required. Absorbance-based sorting expands the range of enzyme
families that can be subjected to droplet screening by expanding possible
assays beyond fluorescence detection. However, absorbance-activated
droplet sorting (AADS) is currently ∼10-fold slower than typical
fluorescence-activated droplet sorting (FADS), meaning that, in comparison,
a larger portion of sequence space is inaccessible due to throughput
constraints. Here we improve AADS to reach kHz sorting speeds in an
order of magnitude increase over previous designs, with close-to-ideal
sorting accuracy. This is achieved by a combination of (i) the use
of refractive index matching oil that improves signal quality by removal
of side scattering (increasing the sensitivity of absorbance measurements);
(ii) a sorting algorithm capable of sorting at this increased frequency
with an Arduino Due; and (iii) a chip design that transmits product
detection better into sorting decisions without false positives, namely
a single-layered inlet to space droplets further apart and injections
of “bias oil” providing a fluidic barrier preventing
droplets from entering the incorrect sorting channel. The updated
ultra-high-throughput absorbance-activated droplet sorter increases
the effective sensitivity of absorbance measurements through better
signal quality at a speed that matches the more established fluorescence-activated
sorting devices.
Droplet microfluidics allows one to address the ever-increasing demand to screen large libraries of biological samples. Absorbance spectroscopy complements the established fluorescence detection by alternative target identification and providing quantifiable...
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