Coding

Part:BBa_K3031018

Designed by: David Doyle   Group: iGEM19_SUIS_Shanghai   (2019-10-15)
Revision as of 18:00, 21 October 2019 by Davystar (Talk | contribs)


OxyR mutated at residues 147 & 203


OxyR is a Transcription factor protein. OxyR reacts with H2O2 resulting in the oxidation of a reactive cysteine (Cys-199) formation of a intermolecular disulfide bond with neighboring cyctein-208 and thus a conformation change in the OxyR protein occurs. This change is shape activates the OxyR protein which then can bind to certain promoters with binding site regions to regulate the expression of downstream genes.

OxyR
Reduces OxyR protein on the left and the oxidized version on the right. Note the disulfide bridge formed between Cys-199 and Cys-208:.

Biology & Uses

This part sequence is a modified version of the OxyR gene sequence (BBa_K1104200) which was submitted by National Yang Ming University iGEM Team in 2013. We attempted to improve the sensitivity of this OxyR to reactive oxygen species (ROS) by editing the sequence to change targeted amino acids surrounding the cysteine-199, thus increasing the accessible surface area of the reactive cysteine (cysteine-199) within the protein and making it more susceptible to oxidation. We hoped that our mutated protein would show a higher sensitivity to low concentration of H2O2, which is a sign of cellular stress and perhaps an immune response to infection from a pathogen. We hoped to make this transcription factor more sensitive to lower concentrations of H2O2 and potentially create a new device which could be used to be a very sensitive indicator of early immune response and infection.

Part Design


Our approach involved using site specific structural data gathered from high resolution crystal images of proteins shown to have an oxidized cysteine (i.e. formed a sulfenic acid). The environments of these resides were explored and analyzed and compared to non-oxidized cysteines within the same proteins. Differences between the environments of oxidized and reduced cysteines that were discovered between these two groups were taken as indicators of facilitating oxidation and therefore could potentially be used to modify OxyR protein and make it more sensitive to oxidative stress. High-resolution crystal structures of proteins (2.2 Angstroms resolution or better) containing S-sulfenylated cysteine sites were first obtained from the PDB (www.pdb.org) and multiple sequence alignment was used to ensure that only unique protein microenvironments would be analyzed. A representative list of unmodified cysteine sites was identified for comparative analysis with the modified sites by first profiling the proteins containing S-sulfenylated sites by UnipriotKB GO annotations (https://www.uniprot.org/uploadlists/) and then by choosing 40% of proteins from the original S-sulfenylated cysteine protein list which contained unmodified cysteines. In total the number of unique S-sulfeylated cysteine environments analyzed was 373 from 322 proteins. While using the selection criteria outlined in above, a total of 426 unmodified cysteine sites were analyzed in comparison.

Cys_SOH
Workflow outlining the selection criteria of all the 3D crystal protein structures used in this study to inform the improvement of the OxyR part.

The Amino acid, solvent, and ligand contacts for each atom contained within all Cys-SOH and unmodified cysteine sites in the dataset was furthered analyzed using PISA (Protein Interphases, Surfaces and Assemblies) (Krissinel & Henrick, 2007). The CCP4 Graphical User Interface (CCP4i) (Potterton, Briggs, Turkenburg, & Dodson, 2003) was used to perform and visualize PISA calculations. Crystal structures of protein containing sites of interest in PDB format were used as inputs into the interface. Default parameters were used and only calculations for contacts between 2.0 to 3.2 Angstroms within the chain containing the residue of interest were obtained.

Cys_SOH
Cys_SOH













Amino Acid composition surrounding the 3.5A space around the S-sulfenylated cystienes (left) and th unmodified cysteines (right)


The solvent accessible surface area (SASA) of Cys-199 was determined using AREAMOL. Areaimol is a tool from the collection of programs from the Collaborative Computational Project No. 4 (CCP4) software suite version 7.0 (Winn et al., 2011). It finds the solvent accessible area of atoms in a PDB coordinate file by calculating the area of an atoms Van der Waals surface that a probe sphere rolls over (Lee & Richards, 1971). The default probe radius of 1.4 Angstroms was used to determine SASA. The CCP4 Graphical User Interface (CCP4i) (Potterton et al., 2003) was used to perform AREAIMOL calculations.


SASA of cysteine-199 in reduced form (PDB ID: 1i69) = 21.5 Angstroms

Relative solvent accessibility (RSA) was determined by dividing the SASA by the max accessible surface area (maxASA).

  1. RSA = SASA/maxASA
  2. where: RSA = relative Solvent Accessibility
  3. SASA = Solvent Accessibly Surface Area
  4. maxASA = maximum Accessible Surface Area

The maxASA value used for cysteine 167.0 Angstroms (Tian et al., 2013). An RSA of 10% was used to be the cut off for classifying a residue as surface accessible (RSA > 10%) or buried (RSA < 10%). A comparison of modified and unmodified cysteine RSA values was conducted in order to determine if there was enrichment for exposed or buried surfaces within the Cys-SOH environments. A quantile– quantile probability plot (Q-Q plot) was used to determine if there was enrichment for exposed or buried cysteines within the Cys-SOH compared to unmodified sites. RSA values of modified and unmodified cysteine residues were sorted and values of RSA for each quantile was plotted against each other (i.e. RSA values of modified and unmodified cysteine residues were sorted from 0.01 to 1.0 and plotted against each other).


QQ
Quantile Quantile plot showing that S-sulfenylated cysteines have a higher distribution of relative solvent accessibility (RSA) values skewed towards a larger solvent accessibility (i.e. higher RSA) when compared to unmodified cysteines. This plot was constructed by sorting the RSA values of S-sulfenylated cysteines in our data set (n = 373) and unmodified reduced cysteine forms (n = 426) into percentiles and plotting them against each other. The diagonal line represents a line where all points would fall should the RSA values follow an equal distribution between sites.

Mutations made to OxyR (part BBa_K1104200):

  1. Residue 203: Glutamine (wild type) mutated to Serine Reasoning: Serine is overrepresented at position + 4 in the amino acid sequences flanking the S-sulfenylated cysteines (fig 7). In OxyR this position was filled with a Glutamine residue. We decided that placing a Serine there may allow for an improvement sensitivity to oxidation. From the literature accompanied by our modeling it was found that Serine, as a residue being an uncharged H-bond donor, likely has an important role in the activation of Cysteine, mainly by lowering its pKa (Mariano & Gladyshev, 2011). These two pieces of evidence allowed us to make this decision to mutate the protein.
  2. Residue 149: Valine (wild type) mutated to Glycine We replaced on hydrophobic residue with another smaller sized one in the hope of increasing the solvent accessibility on the cysteine’s thiol. Val-149 was in close contact with Cys-199 as described below.

Sequence and Features


Assembly Compatibility:
  • 10
    COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[10]
  • 12
    COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[12]
  • 21
    COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[21]
  • 23
    COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[23]
  • 25
    INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[25]
    Illegal NgoMIV site found at 720
  • 1000
    INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[1000]
    Illegal BsaI.rc site found at 673


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