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UCLA physicists report a significant
step toward a new approach to protein engineering
in the June 8 online edition, and in the July print
issue, of the Journal of the American Chemical Society.
"We are learning to control proteins in a new way," said
Giovanni Zocchi, UCLA associate professor of physics
and co-author of the study. Zocchi said the new approach
could lead ultimately to "smart medicines that can
be controlled" and could have reduced side effects.
Mimicking one essential cellular control mechanism,
Zocchi's laboratory has completed an important preliminary
step.
Zocchi and UCLA physics graduate student Brian Choi
report one representative example where the chemical
mechanism by which the cell controls the function
of its proteins can be effectively replaced, in vitro,
by mechanical control. Specifically, they show how
an enzyme complex called Protein Kinase A (PKA) --
which plays a fundamental role in the cell's signaling
and metabolic pathways, and is controlled in the
cell by a ubiquitous messenger molecule called cyclic
AMP -- can instead be controlled mechanically by
a nanodevice that the researchers attached to the
enzyme complex. The nanodevice is essentially a molecular
spring made of DNA.
"Molecular
biologists have been trained for 50 years to think
that because the sequence of amino acids determines
a protein's structure and the structure determines
its function, if you want to change the structure,
the way to do so is to change the sequence of amino
acids. While that approach is correct, it is not
the only way. We are introducing the notion that
you can keep the sequence but change the structure
with mechanical forces.
"This
research has many ramifications, and may lead to
a better fundamental understanding, as well as
new directions for biotechnology and perhaps new
approaches to medical treatments."
PKA, a complex of four protein molecules, contains
two regulatory subunits and two catalytic subunits.
Zocchi and Choi mechanically activated PKA by placing
a controlled mechanical stress on two specific points
in the regulatory subunit, which causes that subunit
to fall off from the catalytic subunit, activating
the enzyme.
In order to obtain the desired effect, the mechanical
tension is applied at specific locations in the regulatory
subunit, Choi said. Knowing those locations requires
a detailed understanding of the structure of the
enzyme.
The research was federally funded by the National
Science Foundation.
Proteins, the molecular machines that perform all
tasks in the living cell, are switched on and off
in living cells by a mechanism called allosteric
control; proteins are regulated by other molecules
that bind to their surface, inducing a change of
conformation, or distortion in the shape, of the
protein, making the protein either active or inactive,
Zocchi explained.
Cyclic AMP (cAMP) binds to PKA's regulatory subunit
and induces a change of conformation that leads to
the catalytic subunit's detaching from the regulatory
subunit; this separation of the two subunits is how
the enzyme complex is turned on in the cell, Zocchi
said.
"We can activate the enzyme mechanically, while
leaving intact the natural activation mechanism by
cAMP," said Zocchi, a member of the California NanoSystems
Institute. "We believe this approach to protein control
can be applied to virtually any protein or protein
complex."
Zocchi's group first demonstrated mechanical control
of protein conformation last year, when the physicists
attached a controllable molecular spring, made of
a short piece of DNA, to a protein and used it to
inhibit its function. In the new research, the group
succeeded in activating the enzyme PKA through the
same principle, by using the molecular spring to
induce the change in conformation that, in the cell,
is induced by the natural activator of PKA (the signaling
molecule cAMP).
Zocchi's group can mimic with mechanical tension
the natural allosteric mechanism by which PKA is
regulated by cAMP. PKA is significantly more complex
than the protein that Zocchi's group used last year.
What are Zocchi's future research plans?
"I want to see whether we can make molecules which
kill a cell based on the genetic signature of the
cell," Zocchi said. "Cancer cells would be an obvious
application. This will however require many further
steps. So far, we have only worked in vitro. The
exciting part is, from the outside, cancer cells
can look like normal cells, but inside they carry
a genetic mark.
"In
the future, perhaps we can control more complicated
molecular machines such as ribosomes. Many antibiotics
work by blocking the ribosome of bacteria."
California's largest university, UCLA enrolls approximately
38,000 students per year and offers degrees from
the UCLA College of Letters and Science and 11 professional
schools in dozens of varied disciplines. UCLA consistently
ranks among the top five universities and colleges
nationally in total research-and-development spending,
receiving more than $820 million a year in competitively
awarded federal and state grants and contracts. For
every $1 state taxpayers invest in UCLA, the university
generates almost $9 in economic activity, resulting
in an annual $6 billion economic impact on the Greater
Los Angeles region. The university's health care
network treats 450,000 patients per year. UCLA employs
more than 27,000 faculty and staff, has more than
350,000 living alumni, and has been home to five
Nobel Prize recipients.
Contact: Stuart Wolpert
swolpert@support.ucla.edu
310-206-0511
University of California - Los Angeles
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