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Improved protein splicing through viral passaging.

Authors :
Hume AJ
Deeney DJ
Smetana JS
Turcinovic J
Connor JH
Belfort M
Mühlberger E
Lennon CW
Source :
MBio [mBio] 2024 Jun 12; Vol. 15 (6), pp. e0098424. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 May 23.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

In tervening pro teins (inteins) are translated as subdomains within host proteins and removed through an intein-driven splicing reaction where the flanking sequences (exteins) are joined with a peptide bond. Previously, we developed a self-removing translation reporter for labeling Ebola virus (EBOV). In this reporter, an intein (RadA) containing the fluorescent protein ZsGreen (ZsG) is inserted within the EBOV protein VP30. Upon VP30-RadA-ZsG expression from the viral genome, RadA-ZsG is removed from VP30 through the protein splicing activity of RadA, generating functional, non-tagged VP30 and functional ZsGreen. While incorporation of our VP30-RadA-ZsG fusion reporter into recombinant EBOV (rEBOV-RadA-ZsG) resulted in an infectious virus that expresses ZsG upon infection of cells, this virus displayed a replication defect compared to wild-type EBOV, which might be the result of insufficient RadA splicing. Here, we demonstrate that the serial passaging of rEBOV-RadA-ZsG in human cells led to an increase in replication efficiency compared to unpassaged rEBOV-RadA-ZsG. Sequencing of passaged viruses revealed intein-specific mutations. These mutations improve intein activity in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic systems, as well as in multiple extein contexts. Taken together, our findings offer a novel means to select for inteins with enhanced catalytic properties that appear independent of extein context and expression system.IMPORTANCE In tervening pro teins (inteins) are self-removing protein elements that have been utilized to develop a variety of innovative protein engineering technologies. Here, we report the isolation of inteins with improved catalytic activity through viral passaging. Specifically, we inserted a highly active intein within an essential protein of Ebola virus and serially passaged this recombinant virus, which led to intein-specific hyper-activity mutations. The identified mutations showed improved intein activity within both bacterial and eukaryotic expression systems and in multiple extein contexts. These results present a new strategy for developing inteins with improved splicing activity.<br />Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2150-7511
Volume :
15
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
MBio
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38780266
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1128/mbio.00984-24