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In Vitro-Evolved Peptides Bind Monomeric Actin and Mimic Actin-Binding Protein Thymosin-β4

Authors :
Davide Bertoldo
Verena Hurst
Kai Harada
Kenji Shimada
Christian Heinis
Jonas Wilbs
Raphael J. Gübeli
Yuichiro Takahashi
Ganesh Kumar Mothukuri
Masahiko Harata
Susan M. Gasser
Christian B. Gerhold
Source :
ACS Chemical Biology. 16:820-828
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2021.

Abstract

Actin is the most abundant protein in eukaryotic cells and is key to many cellular functions. The filamentous form of actin (F-actin) can be studied with help of natural products that specifically recognize it, as for example fluorophore-labeled probes of the bicyclic peptide phalloidin, but no synthetic probes exist for the monomeric form of actin (G-actin). Herein, we have panned a phage display library consisting of more than 10 billion bicyclic peptides against G-actin and isolated binders with low nanomolar affinity and greater than 1000-fold selectivity over F-actin. Sequence analysis revealed a strong similarity to a region of thymosin-β4, a protein that weakly binds G-actin, and competition binding experiments confirmed a common binding region at the cleft between actin subdomains 1 and 3. Together with F-actin-specific peptides that we also isolated, we evaluated the G-actin peptides as probes in pull-down, imaging, and competition binding experiments. While the F-actin peptides were applied successfully for capturing actin in cell lysates and for imaging, the G-actin peptides did not bind in the cellular context, most likely due to competition with thymosin-β4 or related endogenous proteins for the same binding site.

Details

ISSN :
15548937 and 15548929
Volume :
16
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ACS Chemical Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........d4145d4f31db081f1ab4373606e889e0