Assembly and use of high-density recombinant peptide chips for large-scale ligand screening is a practical alternative to synthetic peptide libraries

BMC Genomics. 2017 Jun 8;18(1):450. doi: 10.1186/s12864-017-3814-3.

Abstract

Background: Recombinant peptide chips could constitute a versatile complementation to state-of-the-art in situ (chemical on-chip) synthesis, particle-based printing, or pre-manufactured peptide spotting. Bottlenecks still impeding a routine implementation - from restricted peptide lengths, low diversity and low array densities to high costs - could so be overcome.

Methods: To assess overall performance, we assembled recombinant chips composed of 38,400 individual peptide spots on the area of a standard 96-well microtiter plate from comprehensive, highly diverse (>107 single clones) short random peptide libraries.

Results: Screening of altogether 476,160 clones against Streptavidin uncovered 2 discrete new binders: a characteristic HPQ-motif containing VSHPQAPF and a cyclic CSGSYGSC peptide. Interactions were technically confirmed by fluorescence polarization as well as biolayer-interferometry, and their potential suitability as novel detection tags evaluated by detection of a peptide-fused exemplary test protein.

Conclusion: From our data we conclude that the presented technical pipeline can reliably identify novel hits, useful as first-generation binders or templates for subsequent ligand design plus engineering.

Keywords: Diversity; High affinity; Ligand design; Peptide library; Peptide screening; Protein chip; Protein tags; Recombinant peptide array; Recombinational cloning; Target binding.

MeSH terms

  • Ligands
  • Peptide Library*
  • Protein Array Analysis / methods*
  • Recombinant Proteins / metabolism*
  • Streptavidin / metabolism

Substances

  • Ligands
  • Peptide Library
  • Recombinant Proteins
  • Streptavidin