Protein-protein interactions enhance the thermal resilience of SpyRing enzymes: a molecular dynamic simulation study
Qi Gao, Dengming Ming

TL;DR
This study uses molecular dynamics simulations to explore how SpyTag/SpyCatcher interactions influence the thermal resilience of enzymes in SpyRing systems, revealing key interface interactions and mutations that can inform rational design.
Contribution
It provides new molecular insights into SpyRing enzyme stabilization mechanisms and identifies key interface interactions affecting thermal resilience.
Findings
Interface interactions differ from geometric matching predictions.
Key mutations influence interaction strength at the interface.
Simulations suggest pathways for rational enzyme design.
Abstract
Recently a technique based on the interaction between adhesion proteins extracted from Streptococcus pyogenes, known as SpyRing, has been widely used to improve the thermal resilience of enzymes, the assembly of biostructures, cancer cell recognition and other fields. In SpyRing, the two termini of the target enzyme are respectively linked to the peptide SpyTag and its protein partner SpyCatcher. SpyTag spontaneously reacts with SpyCatcher to form an isopeptide bond, with which the target enzyme forms a close ring structure. It was believed that the covalent cyclization of protein skeleton caused by SpyRing reduces the conformational entropy of biological structure and improves its rigidity, thus improving the thermal resilience of the target enzyme. However, the effects of SpyTag/ SpyCatcher interaction with this enzyme are poorly understood, and their regulation of enzyme properties…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBiochemical and Structural Characterization · Glycosylation and Glycoproteins Research · Monoclonal and Polyclonal Antibodies Research
