Expanding the genetic code of living cells with noncanonical monomers (ncMs) relies on engineered aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (aaRS) and their cognate tRNAs. Conventional aaRS engineering strategies rely on translation-dependent selection systems, limiting their utility for ncMs that are poorly accommodated by the native translational machinery. To address this limitation, we recently developed START, a translation-independent platform that selects Methanomethylophilus alvus pyrrolysyl-synthetase (MaPylRS) mutants based on their ability to acylate cognate tRNAMaPyl. START uses barcoded tRNAs to encode the identity of distinct aaRS mutants in a library. Acylation by active aaRS mutants protects the corresponding tRNAs from periodate oxidation, and their identity is retrieved subsequently through sequencing. START was previously applied to genetically encode noncanonical α-amino acids. Here, we successfully applied START to engineer MaPylRS mutants capable of acylating tRNAMaPyl with diverse non-α-amino acid substrates with good efficiency and fidelity, including (R) and (S) enantiomers of a β2-hydroxy acid, a β2-amino acids, and a malonate. Several mutants exhibit notable polyspecificity across noncanonical backbones while maintaining selectivity against their α-amino acid counterparts. Using these novel enzymes, we demonstrate the ribosomal incorporation of both (R)- and (S)-β2-hydroxy acids into a luciferase reporter protein expressed in Escherichia coli with good efficiency and fidelity. These results imply that highly active engineered aaRS/tRNA pairs can overcome the recently established limitations of EF-Tu with respect to non-α-amino acid substrates. The engineered MaPylRS mutants also enabled the successful incorporation of both (R)- and (S)-β2-hydroxy acids into a protein expressed in mammalian cells, demonstrating for the first time that eukaryotic translation can accommodate non-α-backbones.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Chintan Soni
Boston College
Meghan A. Pressimone
University of California System
Malavika A. Nair
Boston College
Journal of the American Chemical Society
Boston College
University of California System
QB3
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Soni et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69a3d8a7ec16d51705d2fb5e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.5c18595