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Design of a single-chain polypeptide tetrahedron assembled from coiled-coil segments

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TLDR
A strategy to design self-assembling polypeptide nanostructured polyhedra, based on modularization using orthogonal dimerizing segments, which provides the basis for construction of new topological polyPEptide folds based on the set of Orthogonal interacting polypePTide segments.
Abstract
Protein structures evolved through a complex interplay of cooperative interactions, and it is still very challenging to design new protein folds de novo. Here we present a strategy to design self-assembling polypeptide nanostructured polyhedra based on modularization using orthogonal dimerizing segments. We designed and experimentally demonstrated the formation of the tetrahedron that self-assembles from a single polypeptide chain comprising 12 concatenated coiled coil-forming segments separated by flexible peptide hinges. The path of the polypeptide chain is guided by a defined order of segments that traverse each of the six edges of the tetrahedron exactly twice, forming coiled-coil dimers with their corresponding partners. The coincidence of the polypeptide termini in the same vertex is demonstrated by reconstituting a split fluorescent protein in the polypeptide with the correct tetrahedral topology. Polypeptides with a deleted or scrambled segment order fail to self-assemble correctly. This design platform provides a foundation for constructing new topological polypeptide folds based on the set of orthogonal interacting polypeptide segments.

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The coming of age of de novo protein design

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Designer nanoscale DNA assemblies programmed from the top down.

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Protein Assembly: Versatile Approaches to Construct Highly Ordered Nanostructures

TL;DR: This Review outlines recent advances in the field of protein assembly and summarizes several strategies, including biotechnological strategies, chemical strategies, and combinations of these approaches, for manipulating proteins to self-assemble into desired nanostructures.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Comparative Protein Modelling by Satisfaction of Spatial Restraints

TL;DR: A comparative protein modelling method designed to find the most probable structure for a sequence given its alignment with related structures, which is automated and illustrated by the modelling of trypsin from two other serine proteinases.
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MolProbity: all-atom structure validation for macromolecular crystallography

TL;DR: MolProbity structure validation will diagnose most local errors in macromolecular crystal structures and help to guide their correction.
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Folding DNA to create nanoscale shapes and patterns

TL;DR: This work describes a simple method for folding long, single-stranded DNA molecules into arbitrary two-dimensional shapes, which can be programmed to bear complex patterns such as words and images on their surfaces.
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Comparative Protein Structure Modeling Using MODELLER

TL;DR: This unit describes how to calculate comparative models using the program MODELLER and discusses all four steps of comparative modeling, frequently observed errors, and some applications.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparative protein structure modeling using Modeller.

TL;DR: This unit describes how to calculate comparative models using the program MODELLER and discusses all four steps of comparative modeling, frequently observed errors, and some applications.
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