Switchable Control of Scaffold Protein Activity via Engineered Phosphoregulated Autoinhibition

ACS Synth Biol. 2022 Jul 15;11(7):2464-2472. doi: 10.1021/acssynbio.2c00122. Epub 2022 Jun 29.

Abstract

Scaffold proteins operate as organizing hubs to enable high-fidelity signaling, fulfilling crucial roles in the regulation of cellular processes. Bottom-up construction of controllable scaffolding platforms is attractive for the implementation of regulatory processes in synthetic biology. Here, we present a modular and switchable synthetic scaffolding system, integrating scaffold-mediated signaling with switchable kinase/phosphatase input control. Phosphorylation-responsive inhibitory peptide motifs were fused to 14-3-3 proteins to generate dimeric protein scaffolds with appended regulatory peptide motifs. The availability of the scaffold for intermolecular partner protein binding could be lowered up to 35-fold upon phosphorylation of the autoinhibition motifs, as demonstrated using three different kinases. In addition, a hetero-bivalent autoinhibitory platform design allowed for dual-kinase input regulation of scaffold activity. Reversibility of the regulatory platform was illustrated through phosphatase-controlled abrogation of autoinhibition, resulting in full recovery of 14-3-3 scaffold activity.

Keywords: 14-3-3; auto-regulation; protein engineering; scaffold proteins; synthetic signaling.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • 14-3-3 Proteins* / chemistry
  • Peptides* / metabolism
  • Phosphoric Monoester Hydrolases / metabolism
  • Phosphorylation
  • Protein Binding

Substances

  • 14-3-3 Proteins
  • Peptides
  • Phosphoric Monoester Hydrolases