Chemical and genetic wrappers for improved phage and RNA display.

  • Jorge A. Lamboy
  • , Phillip Y. Tam
  • , Lucie S. Lee
  • , Pilgrim J. Jackson
  • , Sara K. Avrantinis
  • , Hye J. Lee
  • , Robert M. Corn
  • , Gregory A. Weiss

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

30 Scopus citations

Abstract

An Achilles heel inherent to all molecular display formats, background binding between target and display system introduces false positives into screens and selections. For example, the negatively charged surfaces of phage, mRNA, and ribosome display systems bind with unacceptably high nonspecificity to positively charged target molecules, which represent an estimated 35% of proteins in the human proteome. Here we report the first systematic attempt to understand why a broad class of molecular display selections fail, and then solve the underlying problem for both phage and RNA display. Firstly, a genetic strategy was used to introduce a short, charge-neutralizing peptide into the solvent-exposed, negatively charged phage coat. The modified phage (KO7(+)) reduced or eliminated nonspecific binding to the problematic high-pI proteins. In the second, chemical approach, nonspecific interactions were blocked by oligolysine wrappers in the cases of phage and total RNA. For phage display applications, the peptides Lys(n) (where n=16 to 24) emerged as optimal for wrapping the phage. Lys(8), however, provided effective wrappers for RNA binding in assays against the RNA binding protein HIV-1 Vif. The oligolysine peptides blocked nonspecific binding to allow successful selections, screens, and assays with five previously unworkable protein targets.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2846-2852
Number of pages7
JournalChemBioChem
Volume9
Issue number17
DOIs
StatePublished - 24 Nov 2008

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