2016 Synthetic Biology: Engineering, Evolution & Design (SEED)
Domain Insertion Profiling Reveals Allosteric Hotspots for Protein Engineering
Author
Constructing allosterically regulated protein switches is critical for many synthetic biology applications. However, the rational engineering of allostery remains a challenging problem. Here we describe a methodology – which we term Domain Insertion Profiling (DIP) – that couples the natural process of domain recombination with functional assays and deep sequencing in order to reveal the underlying potential of allostery within a protein. A common need for allosteric regulation is in the construction of ligand-sensitive fluorescent biosensors. As a proof of concept, we show that DIP analysis rapidly identifies allosteric sites within a ligand binding protein and can be used to isolate green fluorescent protein-based biosensors with high dynamic range. DIP can also be used to assess a protein’s ability to functionally accept genetic fusion. In a related set of experiments, we demonstrate how profiling of the programmable nuclease Cas9 reveals numerous unanticipated hotspots for protein engineering and enables the construction of a Cas9 variant capable of reversible, ligand-dependent genome editing.