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Engineered,highly reactive substrates of microbial transglutaminase enable protein labeling within various secondary structure elements
Authors:Natalie M Rachel  Daniela Quaglia  Éric Lévesque  André B Charette  Joelle N Pelletier
Institution:1. Department of Chemistry, Université de Montréal, 2900 Boulevard Edouard‐Montpetit, Montréal, Québec, Canada;2. PROTEO, the Québec Network for Protein Function, Engineering and Applications, Québec, Canada;3. CGCC, the Center in Green Chemistry and Catalysis, Montréal, Québec, Canada;4. Department of Biochemistry, Université de Montréal, 2900 Boulevard Edouard‐Montpetit, Montréal, Québec, Canada
Abstract:Microbial transglutaminase (MTG) is a practical tool to enzymatically form isopeptide bonds between peptide or protein substrates. This natural approach to crosslinking the side‐chains of reactive glutamine and lysine residues is solidly rooted in food and textile processing. More recently, MTG's tolerance for various primary amines in lieu of lysine have revealed its potential for site‐specific protein labeling with aminated compounds, including fluorophores. Importantly, MTG can label glutamines at accessible positions in the body of a target protein, setting it apart from most labeling enzymes that react exclusively at protein termini. To expand its applicability as a labeling tool, we engineered the B1 domain of Protein G (GB1) to probe the selectivity and enhance the reactivity of MTG toward its glutamine substrate. We built a GB1 library where each variant contained a single glutamine at positions covering all secondary structure elements. The most reactive and selective variants displayed a >100‐fold increase in incorporation of a recently developed aminated benzoa]imidazo2,1,5‐cd]indolizine‐type fluorophore, relative to native GB1. None of the variants were destabilized. Our results demonstrate that MTG can react readily with glutamines in α‐helical, β‐sheet, and unstructured loop elements and does not favor one type of secondary structure. Introducing point mutations within MTG's active site further increased reactivity toward the most reactive substrate variant, I6Q‐GB1, enhancing MTG's capacity to fluorescently label an engineered, highly reactive glutamine substrate. This work demonstrates that MTG‐reactive glutamines can be readily introduced into a protein domain for fluorescent labeling.
Keywords:protein labeling  transglutaminase  fluorescence  protein engineering
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