Cooperativity enhances the responsiveness of biomolecular receptors to small changes in the concentration of their target ligand, albeit with a concomitant reduction in affinity. The binding midpoint of a two-site receptor with a Hill coefficient of 1.9, for example, must be at least. 19 times higher than the dissociation constant of the higher affinity of its two binding sites. This trade-off can be overcome, however, by the extra binding energy provided by the addition of more binding sites, which can be used to achieve highly cooperative receptors that still retain high affinity. Exploring this experimentally, we have employed an "intrinsic disorder" mechanism to design two cooperative, three-binding-site receptors starting from a single-site-and thus noncooperative-doxorubicin-binding aptamer. The first receptor follows a binding energy landscape that partitions the energy provided by the additional binding event to favor affinity, achieving a Hill coeffident of 1.9 but affinity within a factor of 2 of the parent aptamer. The binding energy landscape of the second receptor, in contrast, partitions more of this energy toward cooperativity, achieving a Hill coefficient of 23, but at the cost of 4-fold poorer affinity than that of the parent aptamer. The switch between these two behaviors is driven primarily by the affinity of the receptors' second binding event, which serves as an allosteric "gatekeeper" defining the extent to which the system is weighted toward higher cooperativity or higher affinity.

Ortega, G., Mariottini, D., Troina, A., Dahlquist, F.w., Ricci, F., Plaxco, K.w. (2020). Rational design to control the trade-off between receptor affinity and cooperativity. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 117(32), 19136-19140 [10.1073/pnas.2006254117].

Rational design to control the trade-off between receptor affinity and cooperativity

Mariottini D.;Troina A.;Ricci F.;
2020-01-01

Abstract

Cooperativity enhances the responsiveness of biomolecular receptors to small changes in the concentration of their target ligand, albeit with a concomitant reduction in affinity. The binding midpoint of a two-site receptor with a Hill coefficient of 1.9, for example, must be at least. 19 times higher than the dissociation constant of the higher affinity of its two binding sites. This trade-off can be overcome, however, by the extra binding energy provided by the addition of more binding sites, which can be used to achieve highly cooperative receptors that still retain high affinity. Exploring this experimentally, we have employed an "intrinsic disorder" mechanism to design two cooperative, three-binding-site receptors starting from a single-site-and thus noncooperative-doxorubicin-binding aptamer. The first receptor follows a binding energy landscape that partitions the energy provided by the additional binding event to favor affinity, achieving a Hill coeffident of 1.9 but affinity within a factor of 2 of the parent aptamer. The binding energy landscape of the second receptor, in contrast, partitions more of this energy toward cooperativity, achieving a Hill coefficient of 23, but at the cost of 4-fold poorer affinity than that of the parent aptamer. The switch between these two behaviors is driven primarily by the affinity of the receptors' second binding event, which serves as an allosteric "gatekeeper" defining the extent to which the system is weighted toward higher cooperativity or higher affinity.
2020
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore CHIM/01
English
Con Impact Factor ISI
allostery
aptamers
biosensors
cooperativity
intrinsic disorder
Ortega, G., Mariottini, D., Troina, A., Dahlquist, F.w., Ricci, F., Plaxco, K.w. (2020). Rational design to control the trade-off between receptor affinity and cooperativity. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 117(32), 19136-19140 [10.1073/pnas.2006254117].
Ortega, G; Mariottini, D; Troina, A; Dahlquist, Fw; Ricci, F; Plaxco, Kw
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/346423
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