2021 Annual Meeting
(462b) Directed Evolution of TIMP-Based Protein Scaffolds for Metalloproteinase Inhibition
Authors
We used yeast surface display and protein engineering techniques such as DNA shuffling and directed evolution to identify a minimal inhibitory domain and fragment in the TIMP family. First, we displayed full-length and N-terminal domains of the TIMP family (TIMP-1, -2, -3, -4) on the yeast surface and analyzed binding and expression using flow cytometry. Various TIMPs displayed varied levels of expression and MP binding on the yeast surface, with full-length TIMP-3 having the lowest binding and expression. Additionally, we screened a scrambled TIMP library, made using DNA shuffling within the TIMP family, for expression and MP binding via fluorescent-activated cell sorting (FACS). Interestingly, several scrambled TIMP fragments with sizes as low as 40 amino acids were isolated after rounds of FACS screening, with maintained or improved binding to MMP-3 catalytic domain. The study allowed us to explore any TIMP motifs involved in binding to MP or other cell signaling targets, and hypothetically engineer more functional, tissue-penetrable and selective peptide drug candidates.