The sequestration of functional units from the environment is a hallmark of biological organization. In addition to encapsulation within lipid membrane-bound organelles, proteinaceous cages serve this purpose for many prokaryotes.[1] From a chemical perspective, the outstanding advantages of such packages are their capabilities for high selectivity and activity, both achieved by encapsulating only those catalysts required for the desired task in confined space, and the potential for the container to control its position in a complex environment. Artificial encapsulation or immobilization on solid supports has been shown to confer stability as well as facilitate purification and reuse.[2] While chemists have sequestered enzymes in or on a wide variety of non-biological compartments, Nature remains the undisputed master of the art.
Protein nanoparticles represent a uniquely useful bridge between chemistry, materials science, and biology because they combine robust self-assembly properties with genetically-enabled atomic control of chemical reactivity. The synthetic biomimetic packaging of functional proteins has been accomplished with several different types of protein nanoparticles. Two general strategies have been employed: genetic fusion of the cargo to a component that directs localization to the particle interior,[3] and non-specific packaging by in vitro assembly.[4] However, yields of the encapsulated protein products have been low, and, while examples of increased stability towards a variety of treatments have been noted,[3b, 3e, 4b] no quantitative kinetic comparisons of enzymes in free vs. protein-encapsulated forms have been described. We report here the use of a virus-like particle for this purpose, providing a general and robust method for the encapsulation of highly active enzymes.
Bacteriophage Qβ form icosahedral virus-like particles (VLPs) from 180 copies of a 14.3 kD coat protein (CP).[5] These VLPs are highly stable under a variety of conditions and have been used to display functional small molecules,[6] immungenic ligands,[7] and peptides and proteins on their exterior surface.[8] The infectious phage particle packages its single-stranded RNA genome by virtue of a high-affinity interaction between a hairpin structure and interior-facing residues of the CP.[9] This interaction is preserved when the CP is expressed recombinantly to form VLPs[10] and we used this to direct the packaging of cargo materials (Figure 1). A related approach has been reported by Franzen and coworkers to entrain gold nanoparticles inside red clover necrotic mosaic virus.[11]
Figure 1
Schematic representation of the technique used to package protein inside Qβ VLPs. Dual-plasmid transformation of E. coli with compatible T7 expression vectors is the only input into the system. IPTG induction results in the expression of capsid ...
To facilitate RNA-directed encapsidation, two binding domains were introduced to the CP mRNA, carried on a ColE1-group plasmid. An RNA aptamer developed by in vitro selection to bind an arginine-rich peptide (Rev) derived from HIV-1[12] was inserted just upstream of the ribosome binding site. The sequence of the Qβ packaging hairpin was positioned immediately downstream of the stop codon. The cargo enzyme was N-terminally tagged with the Rev peptide and inserted into a compatible CloDF13-group plasmid. Transformation with both plasmids and expression in BL21(DE3) E. coli yielded VLPs encapsidating the Rev-tagged protein. Such species are designated Qβ@(protein)n, where n = the average number of proteins packaged per particle, determined by electrophoretic analysis as in Figure 2a and Supporting Figure S1a. We report here the packaging of the 25-kD N-terminal aspartate dipeptidase peptidase E (PepE)[13], 62-kD firefly luciferase (Luc), and a thermostable mutant of Luc (tsLuc)[14] inside VLPs.
Figure 2
Characterization of Qβ@(RevPepE)18. (A) Electrophoretic analysis: lane M = protein ladder marker, 1 = E.coli cell lysate 4 h after induction, 2 = purified particles showing CP and Rev-pepE bands. (B) Transmission electron micrograph; images are ...
The enzyme-filled VLPs were indistinguishable from standard VLPs by techniques that report on the exterior dimensions of the particles (transmission electron microscopy, size-exclusion chromatography, and dynamic light scattering; Fig. 2b,c Supporting Figures S2b,c and Table S3). However, the particles exhibited different densities by analytical ultracentrifugation: non-packed Qβ VLPs, 76S; Qβ@(RevLuc)4, 79S; and Qβ@(RevPepE)18, 86S (Fig. S2). These values agree with variations expected in overall molecular weights calculated from estimates of the RNA and protein content of each particle (Supporting Information).
The average number of encapsidated cargo proteins was controlled by changing expression conditions or by removing interaction elements from the plasmids (Table S2). In this way, PepE incorporation could be reproducibly varied between 2 and 18 per particle. Fewer copies of Luc proteins were packaged, with less variation in the number: 4–8 copies per particle were found for most conditions, whereas the number of packaged tsLuc molecules was varied between 2 and 11 per VLP. In addition to its larger size, Luc is less stable than PepE and its gene was not optimized for expression in E. coli (Supporting Fig. S1a, lane 1), all factors that could contribute to the lower numbers of packaged enzyme in this case. Yields of purified particles ranged from approximately 50–75 mg per liter of culture for the typical particles encapsidating PepE, and 75–140 mg per liter for the Luc or tsLuc particles (Table S2).
To test the functional capabilities of the packaged enzymes, the activities of encapsidated Rev-PepE and free PepE were compared using the fluorogenic substrate Asp-AMC[15] (Fig. 3). The kinetic parameters, obtained by standard Michaelis-Menten analysis, were found to be quite similar for the two forms of the enzyme, with kcat/Km for free PepE exceeding that of Qβ@(RevPepE)9 by a factor of only three (1.8±0.2 ×10−2 vs. 6.3±0.9 ×10−3). The observed Km values are comparable to those reported for cleavage of Asp-Leu (0.3 mM)[13]. For this analysis, all copies of encapsidated RevPepE in Qβ@(RevPepE)9 were assumed to be independently and equivalently active, and the substrate and product were assumed to diffuse freely in and out of the capsid. The close correspondence between the reactions of free and encapsidated enzyme appear to support these assumptions.
Figure 3
Kinetics of PepE-catalyzed hydrolysis of fluorogenic Asp-AMC. Squares show the average of three independent initial rate measurements (<4 min) with standard deviation as the error bars. Solid curves show the best fit using the Michaelis-Menten ...
Peptidase E was also significantly stabilized by encapsidation. Free PepE retained only half of its initial activity after incubation for 30 min at 45 °C and 20% of its activity at 50 °C (Fig. 4A). In contrast, Qβ@(RevPepE)9 showed no loss of activity at temperatures up to 50 °C for 30 min. Extended incubation at these temperatures showed the packaged enzyme was about 60 times more resistant than the free enzyme to thermal deactivation (Supporting Fig. S3). Heating did not disrupt the particle structure (Supporting Fig. S4), suggesting that at least partial denaturation of the packaged protein can occur inside the capsid shell. Packaged RevPepE was also protected from protease digestion, maintaining more than 80% activity under conditions in which the activity of the free enzyme was entirely degraded by proteinase K (Fig. 4B).
Figure 4
Protection from thermal and protease inactivation of peptidase E by encapsidation. (A) Relative initial (<10 min) rates of substrate hydrolysis after incubation of the enzyme for 30 min at the indicated temperature followed by cooling to room ...
The activity of Qβ@(RevLuc) was similarly compared to free recombinant firefly luciferase. In this case, packaging of the enzyme did not substantially change kcat, but Km in both luciferin and ATP substrates was significantly higher for the packaged enzyme (Table 1, Supporting Fig. S5). Luciferase is quite unstable toward thermal denaturation in both free and immobilized forms,[16] the free tsLuc variant having a half-life at 37 °C of only 16 minutes.[14] No improvement in thermal sensitivity was observed for Qβ@(Rev-tsLuc)9, but both packaged enzymes were protected from inactivation (presumably from adsorption) to unblocked polystyrene plates, to which the free enzyme was highly susceptible (Supporting Fig. S6).
Table 1
Kinetic constants for free and packaged luciferase enzymes.
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