4.7 Article

Incorporation of Modified Amino Acids by Engineered Elongation Factors with Expanded Substrate Capabilities

Journal

ACS SYNTHETIC BIOLOGY
Volume 8, Issue 2, Pages 287-296

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.8b00305

Keywords

EF-Tu; noncanonical amino acid; orthogonal translation system; genetic code expansion; polyspecificity

Funding

  1. Georgia Institute of Technology's Park H. Petit Institute for Bioengineering and Bioscience including the Systems Mass Spectrometry Core Facility
  2. National Institutes of Health [NRSA 5F32GM095182]
  3. Department of Defense [MUM W911NF-16-1-0372]

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Noncanonical amino acid (ncAA) incorporation has led to significant advances in protein science and engineering. Traditionally, in vivo incorporation of ncAAs is achieved via amber codon suppression using an engineered orthogonal aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase:tRNA pair. However, as more complex protein products are targeted, researchers are identifying additional barriers limiting the scope of currently available ncAA systems. One barrier is elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu), a protein responsible for proofreading aa-tRNAs, which substantially restricts ncAA scope by limiting ncaa-tRNA delivery to the ribosome. Researchers have responded by engineering ncAA-compatible EF-Tus for key ncAAs. However, this approach fails to address the extent to which EF-Tu inhibits efficient ncAA incorporation. Here, we demonstrate an alternative strategy leveraging computational analysis to broaden EF-Tu's substrate specificity. Evolutionary analysis of EF-Tu and a naturally evolved specialized elongation factor, SelB, provide the opportunity to engineer EF-Tu by targeting amino acid residues that are associated with functional divergence between the two ancient paralogues. Employing amber codon suppression, in combination with mass spectrometry, we identified two EF-Tu variants with non-native substrate compatibility. Additionally, we present data showing these EF-Tu variants contribute to host organismal fitness, working cooperatively with components of native and engineered translation machinery. These results demonstrate the viability of our computational method and lend support to corresponding assumptions about molecular evolution. This work promotes enhanced polyspecific EF-Tu behavior as a viable strategy to expand ncAA scope and complements ongoing research emphasizing the importance of a comprehensive approach to further expand the genetic code.

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