WO2003040695A2 - Protein knobs - Google Patents

Protein knobs Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2003040695A2
WO2003040695A2 PCT/US2002/035914 US0235914W WO03040695A2 WO 2003040695 A2 WO2003040695 A2 WO 2003040695A2 US 0235914 W US0235914 W US 0235914W WO 03040695 A2 WO03040695 A2 WO 03040695A2
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
protein
knob
subunit
cysteine
hcg
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US2002/035914
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
WO2003040695A3 (en
Inventor
William R. Moyle
Yongna Xing
Original Assignee
Moyle William R
Yongna Xing
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority to CA002466595A priority Critical patent/CA2466595A1/en
Application filed by Moyle William R, Yongna Xing filed Critical Moyle William R
Priority to EP02789525A priority patent/EP1497634A4/en
Priority to IL16180402A priority patent/IL161804A0/en
Priority to MXPA04004289A priority patent/MXPA04004289A/en
Priority to EA200400647A priority patent/EA200400647A1/en
Priority to JP2003542901A priority patent/JP2005509652A/en
Priority to KR10-2004-7006994A priority patent/KR20040063928A/en
Publication of WO2003040695A2 publication Critical patent/WO2003040695A2/en
Priority to US10/797,553 priority patent/US20060177894A1/en
Priority to HR20040242A priority patent/HRP20040242A2/en
Priority to ZA2004/04373A priority patent/ZA200404373B/en
Priority to NO20042358A priority patent/NO20042358L/en
Publication of WO2003040695A3 publication Critical patent/WO2003040695A3/en

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Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07KPEPTIDES
    • C07K14/00Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof
    • C07K14/435Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from animals; from humans
    • C07K14/575Hormones
    • C07K14/59Follicle-stimulating hormone [FSH]; Chorionic gonadotropins, e.g.hCG [human chorionic gonadotropin]; Luteinising hormone [LH]; Thyroid-stimulating hormone [TSH]
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07KPEPTIDES
    • C07K1/00General methods for the preparation of peptides, i.e. processes for the organic chemical preparation of peptides or proteins of any length
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07KPEPTIDES
    • C07K2319/00Fusion polypeptide

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to the field of protein tagging.
  • purification currently involve fusing a tag to the carboxy- or amino- terminal ends of the protein or inserting
  • the size of the tag usually must be relatively small (a few residues), unless the tag is inserted between protein
  • cysteine residues which will require protection or the cysteine may become blocked and protein
  • LHR lutropin receptor
  • hCG appears to be secured largely
  • hormone-receptor complex that differ radically, ⁇ Moyle, W. R., Campbell, R. , Rao, S. N. V., Ayad, N. G.,
  • hormone contacts the concave surface of the receptor extracellular domain, ⁇ Jiang, X., Dreano, M,, Buckler, D.
  • Protein-receptor interactions can be modeled on a computer, but
  • modeling is a complex task, especially because molecules are flexible and adopt a number of conformations that are of a similar energy.
  • the modeling of the protein-receptor binding process is also difficult because the
  • mutations that change hCG activity may do so by altering key LHR contacts, shifting the positions of its
  • proteins may be a required intermediate product of a scientific experiment or may be an end product.
  • proteins must retain their biological activity.
  • an invention typically requires that some of the initial contaminants have already been filtered. Accordingly, an invention
  • knobs can be used to 'cover' specific surfaces on proteins. This type
  • knobs could be used to block the activities of agents such as PTEN that promote apoptosis.
  • the present invention relates to compositions comprising proteins tagged at a specific site
  • a knob refers a tag for the protein which
  • proteins tagged with a knob at a specific site in the protein are
  • the site specific tagged protein contains a knob, a tail portion, and a protein portion.
  • the tail portion is located
  • the protein portion has a cysteine residue substituted for
  • the tail portion may contain a protease or other cleavage
  • knobs are disclosed. These methods involve selecting a desired protein for tagging, locating a specific site on
  • the desired protein further comprises a tail portion
  • knob contains a cysteine
  • cysteine residue in the knob forms a disulfide bond with the cysteine residue in the
  • tagged proteins of this invention are disclosed. These methods involve inserting a construct encoding a
  • the encoded protein comprises a cysteine residue substituted at a desired site for
  • tagging a tail portion, that has a cysteine residue and a cleavage site, at one end of the protein, and a knob
  • the cell and purifying the protein based on the characteristics of the knob on the protein.
  • the protein knobs are disclosed.
  • the protein knobs may be used, for example, to map distances between proteins, probe
  • Figure 1 Three-dimensional view of hCG. Illustration of the hCG ⁇ subunit residues that can
  • the ⁇ tail is shown as a black ribbon.
  • cysteine substitutions that enabled efficient crosslink between the ⁇ subunit residue and the probe cysteine
  • the lighter gray spheres refer to residues that gave less amounts of crosslink.
  • residues 90, 91 , and 92 appear to be too mobile to be seen in the crystal structure of hCG and the arbitrary
  • Figure 3A Influence of cysteine substitutions in alpha subunit carboxyterminus. Binding of
  • FIG. 4A Binding of hCG and hCG analogs with ⁇ tail attached to the ⁇ subunit residues in
  • FIG. 4B cAMP accumulation of hCG or hCG analogs in which the ⁇ tail was attached to
  • FIG. 5A Binding of hCG and hCG analogs with ⁇ tail attached to the ⁇ subunit residues at
  • FIG. 5B cAMP accumulation of hCG or hCG analogs in which the ⁇ tail was attached to
  • Figure 7 Amino acid sequences of the ⁇ -subunit and mutants having a substituted cysteine.
  • Figure 8 Amino acid sequences of the ⁇ -subunit analogs. (Note, the cysteine substituted is in
  • Figure 9A Protein Knob with the knob attached at the carboxyterminal end of the protein.
  • Figure 9B Protein Knob with the knob attached at the aminoterminal end of the protein.
  • Figure 10A Protein Knob where the knob is comprised of a cysteine residue.
  • FIG. 10B Protein Knob where the knob is comprised of an amino acid sequence including
  • cysteine residue fused to a protein.
  • FIG. 10C Protein Knob where the cysteine residue of the knob is located on the surface of
  • Figure 12 Summary of Activity of Crosslinked Chimera Analogs in LHR and FSHR Assays
  • Figure 14A Effect of Knob on LH Receptor Signaling.
  • Figure 14B Effect of Knob on LH Receptor Signaling.
  • Figure 15 Amino acid sequences of other analogues (SEQ ID NO: 43 - SEQ ID NO: 53).
  • Figure 16 Signal transduction and binding activities of LONG and SHORT heterodimers.
  • Figure 17 Lutropin activity of hCG Analogs having ⁇ -lactamase knobs.
  • Figure 18 cAMP accumulation in hCG or Analogs lacking ⁇ Asn52 oiigosaccharide.
  • Figure 19 Binding of ⁇ K44A+hCG ⁇ to LHR.
  • Figure 20A Binding of hCG and hCG analog ⁇ K44E, K45Q+hCG ⁇ to LHR.
  • Figure 20B LHR cAMP response to hCG and ⁇ K44E, K45Q+hCG ⁇ .
  • Figure 21 A Binding of hCG and hCG analog ⁇ K91 E+hCG ⁇ to LHR.
  • Figure 21 B Relative activities of hCG and ⁇ K91 E+hCG ⁇ in LHR cAMP accumulation assays.
  • Figure 22A LHR cAMP response to hCG and ⁇ K91 M+hCG ⁇ .
  • Figure 22B LHR binding of hCG and ⁇ K91M+hCG ⁇ .
  • Figure 23 LHR binding of hCG and analogs containing shortened linkers.
  • Figure 24 LHR binding of hCG and an analog containing a shortened linker.
  • Figure 25 Stimulation of LHR cAMP by hCG and ⁇ N52C+hCG ⁇ , S138C.
  • Figure 26 LHR binding of analogs in which a truncated hCG ⁇ -subunit carboxyterminal tail
  • Figure 27 LHR signaling of analogs in which a truncated hCG ⁇ -subunit carboxyterminal tail
  • Figure 28 LHR binding of analogs in which a truncated hCG ⁇ -subunit carboxyterminal tail
  • Figure 29 LHR signaling of analogs in which a truncated hCG ⁇ -subunit carboxyterminal tail
  • Figure 30 LHR signaling of analogs in which a GGC tail was used to add a knob to ⁇ -subunit
  • Figure 31 LHR signaling of analogs in which a truncated hCG ⁇ -subunit carboxyterminal tail
  • Figure 31 LHR signaling of analogs showing the influence of the tail on adding a knob to hCG
  • the terminal tags can be of any size, the tags inserted into a protein loop are usually limited to relatively few
  • Proteins can also be tagged at
  • the present invention provides for improved methods for labeling or tagging proteins.
  • cysteine as described above, and allow various sized probes or knobs to be attached onto the surface of a cysteine, as described above, and allow various sized probes or knobs to be attached onto the surface of a cysteine, as described above, and allow various sized probes or knobs to be attached onto the surface of a cysteine, as described above, and allow various sized probes or knobs to be attached onto the surface of a cysteine, as described above, and allow various sized probes or knobs to be attached onto the surface of a
  • the present invention provides for methods to add "knobs" of varying
  • the knobs can be as small as a single cysteine residue.
  • knobs can be a short peptide, such as residues surrounding hCG ⁇ -subunit residue 138.
  • the knobs can also be a short peptide, such as residues surrounding hCG ⁇ -subunit residue 138.
  • the knobs can also be a short peptide, such as residues surrounding hCG ⁇ -subunit residue 138.
  • the knobs can also be a short peptide, such as residues surrounding hCG ⁇ -subunit residue 138.
  • the knobs can also be a short peptide, such as residues surrounding hCG ⁇ -subunit residue 138.
  • ⁇ -lactamase can be used as a knob.
  • the knobs are added
  • the present invention employs a new strategy for attaching a wide range of probes or tags to
  • Knobs can be a
  • fluorescent protein such as green fluorescent protein or related molecule. They can have the ability to bind
  • antibody fragments sequences such as those found in the TAT protein of the human immunodeficiency virus
  • composition comprising a protein portion, wherein the protein portion
  • the protein portion and a knob, wherein the knob is located at the free terminal end of the tail portion and
  • cysteine residue of the knob contains a cysteine residue, and wherein the cysteine residue of the knob forms a disulfide with the substituted
  • protein portion refers to any protein or polypeptide.
  • tail refers to any protein or polypeptide.
  • portion refers to a stretch of amino acids of a sufficient length to permit the cysteine in the knob to form a
  • the tail portion may comprise a native polypeptide
  • the tail portion should comprise a non-native polypeptide added to a terminal end of the protein portion.
  • knob also lack residues that will prevent the knob from attaching to the substituted cysteine, such as transmembrane domains or residues that will create a site for binding by other proteins.
  • residues that will prevent the knob from attaching to the substituted cysteine such as transmembrane domains or residues that will create a site for binding by other proteins.
  • the knob may include a single cysteine residue, a linear stretch of amino acids that
  • cysteine contains a cysteine, a linear stretch of amino acids fused to a protein, where the cysteine is located in the
  • a knob can be engineered
  • the knob may be an
  • epitope tag a signal sequence, a sequence with high specificity for a bead on a purification column, an
  • the method involves selecting a desired protein, locating a site on the desired protein to be tagged,
  • the method further involves
  • the construct includes a cysteine residue substituted at the site to be tagged.
  • construct refers to a nucleic acid vector comprising a promoter linked to an
  • the construct further includes all
  • sequences may include, but are not limited to, a promoter or
  • RNA processing signals and/or a
  • cassette refers to sequences required to ensure the RNA transcription and subsequent translation of the
  • promoter refers to a DNA sequence that is
  • RNA polymerase binds to RNA polymerase and is required to initiate RNA transcription of a gene.
  • constructs of this invention may be modified by PCR and cassette mutagenesis to
  • Knobs at specific sites on a protein can be used to probe the distance of the tested residues
  • knobs can be utilized to determine the proximity
  • knobs at specific sites Another advantage of using knobs at specific sites is that larger probes can be used to identify the
  • the protein knobs can also be any desired site on the protein surface. Additionally, the protein knobs can also be any desired site on the protein surface. Additionally, the protein knobs can also be any desired site on the protein surface. Additionally, the protein knobs can also be any desired site on the protein surface. Additionally, the protein knobs can also be any desired site on the protein surface. Additionally, the protein knobs can also be any desired site on the protein surface. Additionally, the protein knobs can also be any desired site on the protein surface.
  • protease recognition site is engineered within
  • the tail can then be cleaved after the crosslink is accomplished, leaving the probe tethered by a
  • proteases could be attached to either the aminoterminus or the carboxyterminus of a protein simply by fusing
  • the protease may be held in a position that makes it incapable of
  • the orientation of the protease may enable it to
  • a protease may be engineered onto hCG
  • This protease protein knob may be used in a therapeutically
  • compositions and methods of this invention may be used in another embodiment of the invention.
  • compositions and methods may be used to prepare and prepare a drink.
  • DNA and is stabilized to the polymerase by a disulfide bond would be expected to stabilize the polymerase to
  • compositions and methods of the invention are provided.
  • glycoprotein hormones may be used to produce protein heterodimers of the glycoprotein hormones that lack one or more of their
  • cysteine on the knob may be moved to a site on the surface of the knob
  • knob portion This would permit the direct attachment of the knob to the protein in a desired orientation and
  • the methods of this invention may be employed to tag proteins with
  • Epitope tags are often attached to proteins to facilitate detection of protein-protein or protein-
  • epitope tags were attached to the aminoterminal or carboxyterminal
  • epitope tags added to the ends of proteins are decreased considerably when the ends of a protein are involved
  • the methods of this invention permit the localization of epitope tags at sites other than
  • aldehyde residues may be introduced at specific sites
  • Aldehydes are very desirable reactive groups that are not normally found in proteins and can be
  • residue can be introduced immediately after an enzyme cleavage site on a protein,
  • a site recognized by enterokinase can be introduced immediately aminoterminal to a serine, which would be
  • cysteine aminoterminal of the cysteine to be used to crosslink the knob to the target cysteine at the site to be tagged.
  • tail portion amino acids refer to any tail portion amino acids and I, m, and n refer to the lengths of the tail portion amino acids.
  • Cancer therapy may be an enzyme or a toxin that has the potential to kill cells until this activity is desired. Cancer therapy may be an enzyme or a toxin that has the potential to kill cells until this activity is desired. Cancer therapy may be an enzyme or a toxin that has the potential to kill cells until this activity is desired. Cancer therapy may be an enzyme or a toxin that has the potential to kill cells until this activity is desired. Cancer therapy may be an enzyme or a toxin that has the potential to kill cells until this activity is desired. Cancer therapy may be an enzyme or a toxin that has the potential to kill cells until this activity is desired. Cancer therapy may be an enzyme or a toxin that has the potential to kill cells until this activity is desired. Cancer therapy may be an enzyme or a toxin that has the potential to kill cells until this activity is desired. Cancer therapy may be an enzyme or a toxin that has the potential to kill cells until this activity is desired. Cancer therapy may be an enzyme or a toxin that has the potential to kill cells until this activity is desired. Cancer therapy may be
  • cysteine to the aminoterminal or carboxyterminal end of the protein that has the ability to form a
  • the knob may comprise a targeting protein fused to the end of the tail portion which would
  • This strategy could be used to hide the activity of an enzyme or toxin until it reached a site
  • disulfide would be designed to hold the knob in a position on the
  • the present invention provides a method for precise separation of
  • on the protein of interest may be at the carboxyterminal end, the aminoterminal end, or at any desired location
  • the resulting protein-knob complex is run through a column.
  • the protein-knob complex binds to the affinity resin and the unbound
  • (Strategene's AffinityTM) pCAL vector may be used and the
  • CBP calmodulin-bipding peptide
  • the protein of interest may be any protein of interest.
  • the protein knob has a short tail with a cleavage site.
  • the knob tail must be short enough
  • the knob is conducive for forming a disulfide bond with another protein.
  • proteins with short tails would line up like a string of beads, connected by the disulfide bond between the
  • cysteine on a first protein's knob and the cysteine on the protein portion of a second protein.
  • the resulting chain of proteins may be run on a sucrose gradient and centrifuged, the chain would fall to
  • the protein of interest may be constructed so that each
  • protein knob interacts with other protein knobs to form a grid-like structure.
  • the tails should be constructed so
  • knob is unable to react with the cysteine on the protein portion, similar to the tails in the string of beads
  • the proteins may also comprise tails and knobs at both terminal ends of the protein.
  • portion should comprise multiple substitute cysteine residues so that knobs from more than one separate
  • the proteins would form a grid-like structure as a single protein may form disulfide
  • the present invention may be used to add cysteines to proteins. It is
  • cysteine that is used to crosslink the knob to the cysteine that had been introduced at the site of the protein to
  • the present invention may be used to create and obtain high
  • heterodimer may comprise the protein portion. If the dimer of the protein portion does not have a naturally
  • a tail portion may be fused to the dimer of the protein portion.
  • the knob may comprise
  • choriogonadotropin analogs implications for hormone folding and biological activity. Journal of Biological
  • hFSH binds to the FSH receptor in a similar overall fashion but that different parts of hFSH make the key
  • a 'tail portion' sequence requires both that the sequence be sufficiently
  • cysteine in the tail portion can reach the cysteine on the surface of the protein to which it is
  • lutropins such as hCG with the LH receptor
  • follitropins such as hFSH with the FSH receptor
  • hCG ⁇ -subunit residues 101-114 were replaced with their hFSH ⁇ -subunit counterparts, namely hFSH ⁇ -subunit residues 95-108
  • heterodimers that were produced in COS-7 cells were quantified using a sandwich immunoassay
  • COS-7 cells that were co-transfected with vectors encoding most of the ⁇ -subunit analogs
  • glycosylation signal normally found at this position of hCG that is required for efficient secretion of the
  • cysteines in the ⁇ -subunit analogs of analogs that formed little or no crosslinked heterodimers are at the
  • cysteine in place of Tyr89. While this tyrosine is not essential for folding of the ⁇ -subunit because it can be
  • hCG- ⁇ M47A an analog in which ⁇ Met47 had been replaced by alanine was nearly as active as hCG in
  • replacing the ⁇ Lys51 sidechain may alter the conformation of the heterodimer.
  • the ⁇ -subunit core can become crosslinked to the cysteine that was introduced into many of these ⁇ -subunit
  • choriogonadotropin analogs implications for hormone folding and biological activity. Journal of Biological
  • B111 ( ⁇ Y37C, ⁇ P40C, ⁇ L41C, ⁇ R42C, and ⁇ T86C) is nearest the B111 binding site
  • the ⁇ -subunit to these sites may disrupt interactions between these portions of ⁇ -subunit loop 2 with the receptor or alter the conformation of ⁇ -subunit loop 2 in a way that reduces the ability of the hormone to
  • portion of the ⁇ -subunit might not occupy the space in the groove between ⁇ -subunit loop 2 and ⁇ -subunit
  • hCG- ⁇ S138C was expressed with several ⁇ -subunit analogs containing a cysteine in place of a residue
  • ⁇ -subunit to this region alters the structure of the heterodimer or causes the end of the ⁇ -subunit to pass near
  • ⁇ -lactamase a globular protein similar in size to hCG
  • subunit loop 2 and ⁇ -subunit loops 1 and 3 does not participate in essential LH receptor contacts, a key requirement of an earlier model (Moyle, W, , Campbell, R. K., Rao, S. N, V., Ayad, N. G., Bernard, M. P.,
  • Residues that have the greatest influence on hCG activity are located in the seatbelt, but even most
  • a cDNA coding sequence for the hFSH ⁇ -subunit was obtained from Christie Kelton, Ares
  • FC1-108 ⁇ Figure 8, SEQ ID NO: 41
  • FC1-108 ⁇ lacking the leader peptide found in hFSH ⁇ - subunit is also illustrated in Figure 8.
  • FC1-108 ⁇ to create FC1-108,S132C ⁇ ( Figure 8, SEQ ID NO: 42), FC1-108,S132C ⁇ was expressed with
  • the heterodimers secreted by the cells into the culture media were measured using antibodies A113 and 125 l-
  • the former is an antibody to the ⁇ -subunit and the latter is a monoclonal antibody that binds to hFSH
  • the material was re-assayed with A113and 125 I-B603 as above to determine the amount of
  • CFC101-114 ⁇ acid sequence of this chimera termed CFC101-114 ⁇ is shown in Figure 8 (SEQ ID NO: 38) minus the leader residues, An analog of CFC101-114 ⁇ in which residue Ser138 was converted to Cys was prepared by
  • heterodimers secreted by the cells into the culture media were measured using antibodies A113 and 125 I-B110.
  • the former is an antibody to the ⁇ -subunit and the latter is a monoclonal antibody that binds to hCG ⁇ -subunit.
  • the material was re-assayed with A113and 125 I-B110 as above to determine the concentration of
  • knob at ⁇ -subunit residue 37 was much more inhibitory on FSH receptor elicited cyclic AMP accumulation than
  • Example 4 Knobs having ⁇ -lactamase.
  • ⁇ -lactamase was chosen for use as a probe because its crystal
  • lactamase is that it is an enzyme with a high turnover number that cleaves fluorescent substrates (Zlokarnik,
  • ⁇ -lactamase has been used as an efficient reporter (Moore, J. T, Davis, S. T. & Dev, I. K. (1997) Anal. Biochem. 247, 203-209), albeit in a very different context than is envisioned here, ⁇ -lactamase is also inhibited
  • the ⁇ -lactamase knob further simply by adding the inhibitor.
  • the SHORT protein has only one amino acid between the coupling cysteine and the start of the ⁇ -
  • cysteine could serve as the coupling cysteine, a
  • ⁇ -lactamase knob to this site can offset the loss in efficacy caused by removal of the oligosaccharide from loop 2.
  • the relatively high activity of both these LONG and SHORT analogs show that, ⁇ -subunit residue is not
  • Example 5 Knobs having a coupling cysteine at the aminoterminal end of the ⁇ -subunit.
  • a construct capable of expressing the protein may be prepared such that a cysteine residue is substituted for the native residue at the
  • the construct is then inserted into a cell for expression resulting in the
  • Addition of a knob to a protein involves introducing a cysteine onto the surface where the knob
  • cysteine in the end of the protein can form a disulfide with that that has been added to the
  • cysteine to be stabilized at the surface creating a knob at this site (see Figure 9).
  • composition of the tail portion can be varied extensively
  • knobs larger the knob.
  • the smallest knobs would consist only of a cysteine. (See Figure 10A). These would be
  • the knob can be increased in at least three fashions.
  • a protein can be fused to the end of the protein used to construct the knob. (See Figure 10B). As described above, ⁇ -lactamase was fused to the end of the knob.
  • ⁇ -lactamase is not the only protein that is suitable for this purpose.
  • the choice of ⁇ -lactamase is not the only protein that is suitable for this purpose. The choice of ⁇ -lactamase
  • lactamase as a probe was facilitated by its crystal structure, which showed that its aminoterminal end was
  • distance between the coupling cysteine and the fusion protein probe can be varied by increasing or reducing
  • Example 7 Use of shortened tail portion as the probe.
  • the tail portion itself can also be used to probe the surface of proteins and there
  • these include those in which it would be desirable to cover a portion of an active site of a protein,
  • this groove formed a key receptor contact.
  • the use of the tail portion described earlier would permit it to pass
  • hCG ⁇ , ⁇ 116-135,S138C or hCG ⁇ , ⁇ 121-135,S138C had substantial receptor binding activity.
  • toxin site would permit preparation and use of reagents capable of entering cells where endogenous or other proteases would cleave the tail portion to activate the toxin. These agents would be useful as
  • Example 8 Use of probes attached to the ⁇ -subunit.
  • the alpha subunit were produced that contained the carboxyterminal residues in the hCG ⁇ -subunit. While it
  • LHR LH receptors
  • the knob reduced receptor interaction more when it
  • carboxyterminal end of the ⁇ -subunit is near the small seatbelt loop after the hormone interacts with the LHR.
  • ⁇ -subunit can be attached to several sites in the ⁇ -subunit, indicating that its location is not constrained
  • compositions along with the methods and procedures described herein are presently representative of

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Abstract

Compositions containing a knob attached to a specific site of a protein and methods of producing and using these compositions are disclosed. The compositions comprise a knob, a tail portion and a protein portion. The protein portion contains a substituted cysteine residue at the desired location of labeling. The tail portion is located at the terminal end of the protein portion. The knob is linked to the end of the tail portion and contains a cysteine residue. The substituted cysteine residue on the protein portion and the cysteine residue on the knob form a disulfide bond, thereby tagging the protein portion at the desired site with the knob.

Description

Description
PROTEIN KNOBS
Government Interest
[0001] This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants NICHD HD14907 and NICHD
HD38547. This invention was made with United States of America government support. The government may
own certain rights in the present invention.
Field of the Invention
[0002] The present invention relates to the field of protein tagging.
Introduction
[0003] Methods for tagging proteins for use in analyzing protein-protein interactions or in protein
purification currently involve fusing a tag to the carboxy- or amino- terminal ends of the protein or inserting
residues into a loop of the protein. Each of these methods has its limitations. For example, it may be
desirable to tag a protein, whether it be with a dye molecule or a protein, at specific locations on the protein,
rather than being limited to attaching molecules on the ends of the protein. These include studies designed to
probe the interactions of proteins with macromolecules as is the case of hCG with its receptor. In addition,
where the terminal ends of a protein are involved in the protein's function, tagging the ends of the protein may
not be desirable. With respect to inserting a tag into the loop of a protein, this method is limited because the
size of the tag usually must be relatively small (a few residues), unless the tag is inserted between protein
domains. There are occasions when it would be desirable to attach various sized probes onto the surface of a
protein. Further, modifications involving the use of a cysteine residue are also difficult since the protein may
contain other cysteine residues which will require protection or the cysteine may become blocked and protein
denaturation may occur when removing the blocking residue. As a result, the tagged proteins produced by
these methods have limited use and application in the industry.
[0004] For example, efforts to identify portions of human choriogonadotropin (hCG) that contact the
lutropin receptor (LHR) have been stymied by the complex structure of the hormone and the likelihood that it interacts with the receptor at multiple sites. The crystal structure of human choriogonadotropin (hCG) revealed
that a strand of its β-subunit surrounds the α-subunit like a 'seatbelt' {Lapthorn, A. J., Harris, D. C, Litilejohn,
A., Lustbader, J, W., Canfield, R. E., Machin, K. J., Morgan, F. J. & Isaacs, N. W. (1994) Nature 369, 455-461;
Wu, H, Lustbader, J, W., Liu, Y., Canfield, R. E. & Hendrickson, W. A. (1994) Structure 2, 545-558.) Unlike
most dimeric proteins that are stabilized entirely by intersubunit contacts, hCG appears to be secured largely
by its seatbelt; elimination of the disulfide that 'latches' the carboxyterminal end of the seatbelt to Cys26 in the
β-subunit core was found to disrupt hCG secretion (Suganuma, A/., Matzuk, M. M. & Boime, I. (1989) J. Biol.
Chem. 264, 19302-19307), presumably by destabilizing the heterodimer. The evolutionary advantages of this
unusual structural arrangement remain unknown and may reflect the finding that it permits movements of the
subunits within the heterodimer, a phenomenon detected during the binding of some hCG analogs to FSH
receptors, {Wang, Y. H, Bernard, M. P. & Moyle, W. R. (2000) Mol. Cell. Endocrinol. 170, 67-77.)
[0005] The receptors for all three classes of glycoprotein hormones, including hCG, are coupled to G-
proteins and have large extracellular domains containing multiple leucine-rich repeats, (Segaloff, D. L &
Ascoli, M. (1993) Endocr. Rev. 14, 324-347.) The later finding suggests the extracellular domain may be
horseshoe-shaped, similar to portions of other leucine-rich repeat proteins, (Kobe, B. & Deisenhofer, J. (1993)
Nature 366, 751-756.) Two regions of the extracellular domain appear to contribute to ligand binding affinity
and specificity. The affinity of hCG for alternately-spliced and truncated LHR analogs is similar to that for the
intact receptor, suggesting that residues in the aminoterminal two-thirds of the extracellular domain form the
high affinity ligand binding site, (Braun, T., Schofield, P. R. & Sprengel, R. (1991) EMBO. J. 10, 1885-1890;
Thomas, D„ Rozell, T. G„ Liu, X. & Segaloff, D. L (1996) Mol. Endocrinol. 10, 760-768.) Residues in the
carboxyterminal fifth of the human LHR extracellular domain interfere with the binding of non-human
mammalian lutropins, a finding that indicates contacts between this portion of the hormone and receptor are
primarily steric in nature, (Bernard, M. P., Myers, R. V. & Moyle, W. R. (1998) Biochem. J. 335, 611-617.).
[0006] The surfaces of hCG, hFSH, and hTSH most likely to contact the LHR, FSHR, and TSHR
remain debated. The carboxyterminal end of the α-subunit, which is adjacent to a portion of the seatbelt in the
heterodimer, {Wu, H., Lustbader, J. W., Liu, Y., Canfield, R. E. & Hendrickson, W. A. (1994) Structure 2, 545- 558), has been found to influence the affinity of all the glycoprotein hormones for their receptors, (Lapthorn, A.
J., Harris, D. C, Littlejohn, A, Lustbader, J. W„ Canfield, R. E., Machin, K. J., Morgan, F. J. & Isaacs, N. W.
(1994) Nature 369, 455-461; Bernard, M. P., Myers, R. V. & Moyle, W. R. (1998) Biochem. J. 335, 611-617)
and was proposed to be a receptor contact more than 25 years ago, {Lapthorn, A. J., Harris, D. C, Littlejohn,
A., Lustbader, J. W., Canfield, R. E„ Machin, K. J., Morgan, F. J. & Isaacs, N. W. (1994) Nature 369, 455-461.)
Together with data on the structure and function of the hormone, these observations have led to views of the
hormone-receptor complex that differ radically, {Moyle, W. R., Campbell, R. , Rao, S. N. V., Ayad, N. G.,
Bernard, M. P., Han, Y. & Wang, Y. (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270, 20020-20031), ranging from one in which the
hormone contacts the concave surface of the receptor extracellular domain, {Jiang, X., Dreano, M,, Buckler, D.
R., Cheng, S., Ythier, A, Wu, H, Hendrickson, W, A, Tayar, N. E & el Tayar, N. (1995) Structure 3, 1341-
1353), to one in which it contacts its rim, (Moyle, W, R., Campbell, R. K., Rao, S. N. V., Ayad, N. G., Bernard,
M. P., Han, Y. & Wang, Y (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270, 20020-20031.) All views of the hCG-LHR complex
suggest that portions of α-subunit loop 2 face the receptor, but it remains to be determined if this portion of the
hormone participates in receptor contacts. Mutation of this loop has been reported to reduce the activity of
hCG, (Peng, K. C, Bousfield, G. R., Puett, D. & Ward, D. N. (1996) Journal of Protein Chemistry 15, 547-552;
Xia, H, Chen, F. & Puett, D. (1994) Endocrinol. 134, 1768-1770), suggesting that it may make essential LHR
contacts.
[0007] Protein-receptor interactions are key in understanding the function and regulation of cell
behavior. A deep understanding of protein-receptor interactions are necessary for many endeavors, such as
the design of new pharmaceutical drugs. Currently, however, there are many limitations to understanding
protein-receptor interactions. It is helpful to understand both the structure of the protein's conformation and the
protein's function, as well as how the structure of the protein interacts with the receptor (which is also
commonly a protein). Through knowledge and experience, one aspect of a protein can sometimes be
extrapolated if other aspects are known. Protein-receptor interactions can be modeled on a computer, but
modeling is a complex task, especially because molecules are flexible and adopt a number of conformations that are of a similar energy. The modeling of the protein-receptor binding process is also difficult because the
characteristics of the receptor, the ligand, and the solvent need to be considered.
[0008] In addition to modeling, another approach to understanding protein-receptor interactions is to
make changes to the structure of the protein, structure of the receptor, or conditions under which they interact
in an experimental setting and measure the effect of the change on the binding, and therefore, on the function
of the protein or lack thereof. These experimental techniques also have limitations because of the difficulty in
manipulating the protein or receptor and limitations in ability to measure changes. Therefore, an invention that
could improve the accuracy of experimental data by consistently causing protein-receptor interaction or
consistently inhibiting protein-receptor interaction would be an improvement in the art because it would allow a
determination of the function or lack of function caused thereby.
[0009] In principle, identification of the portions of the hormone and receptor that contact each other
should be readily elucidated by using site-directed mutagenesis. Unfortunately, mutations of the α-subunit
carboxyterminus and β-subunit seatbelt alter the positions of the subunits within the heterodimer, (Jiang, X.,
Dreano, M., Buckler, D. R., Cheng, S., Ythier, A, Wu, H, Hendrickson, W. A, Tayar, N. E. & el Tayar, N.
(1995) Structure 3, 1341-1353; Pierce, J. G. & Parsons, T F. (1981) Annu. Rev. Biochem. 50, 465-495), and
have made it difficult to interpret the influence of these key parts of the hormone on its function. Further,
mutations that change hCG activity may do so by altering key LHR contacts, shifting the positions of its
subunits, or both. Indeed, mutations to the α-subunit carboxyterminus, (Pierce, J, G. & Parsons, T, F. (1981)
Annu. Rev. Biochem, 50, 465-495, Chen, F., Wang, Y. & Puett, D. (1992) Mol. Endocrinol. 6, 914-919, and the
seatbelt, Campbell, R. K., Dean Emig, D. M. & Moyle, W. R. (1991) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. (USA) 88, 760-764;
Campbell, R. K„ Bergert, E , Wang, Y., Morris, J. C & Moyle, W. R. (1997) Nature Biotech. 15, 439-443;
Grossmann, M., Szkudlinski, M. W., Wong, R„ Dias, J. A, Ji, T. H. & Weintraub, B. D. (1997) J. Biol. Chem.
272, 15532-15540; Lindau-Shepard, B„ Roth, K. E. & Dias, J, A, (1994) Endocrinol. 135, 1235-1240), which
have large influences on hormone-receptor interactions, also alter the positions of the subunits in the
heterodimer, (Wang, Y, H, Bernard, M. P. & Moyle, W, R. (2000) Mol. Cell. Endocrinol. 170, 67-77; Moyle, W.
R„ Campbell, R. K., Rao, S, N, V., Ayad, N. G., Bernard, M. P, Han, Y. & Wang, Y. (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270, 20020-20031.) An alternative method for identifying which portions of the protein and receptor interact
involves identifying the residues that do not contact the receptor. These residues can be identified with much
more certainty. However, it has been difficult to obtain probes for use in identification of these residues.
Accordingly, improved methods for producing probes for use in analysis of protein interaction are necessary.
[0010] In addition to its use in analysis of protein interactions, probes or proteins tagged at a specific
site on the molecule provide invaluable research tools. However as previously described, current methods
involve tagginging or attaching a probe to the terminal ends of the molecule, limiting their use. Other methods
involve complicated procedures requiring various reactions and protecting groups to produce the site specific
modification without modifying other amino acids and the structure of the functional protein. Accordingly,
improved methods for site specific tagginging are desired.
[0011] Protein purification is frequently a necessary, yet somewhat onerous, process. Purified
proteins may be a required intermediate product of a scientific experiment or may be an end product. Protein
purity is often critical to experimental and therapeutic success. In some cases, where injectable proteins are
scrutinized by the Food and Drug Administration, any contaminants must be removed or proven harmless. In
addition to purity, proteins must retain their biological activity.
[0012] There are a number methods of protein purification currently known in the art, although all
methods have some limitations. Size-exclusion chromatography is helpful for gross separations, but is not an
exacting method and requires that samples be concentrated. Gel electrophoresis allows for precise separation
of a protein in a mixture, but is practical only for small samples. Affinity chromatography is a useful method, but
typically requires that some of the initial contaminants have already been filtered. Accordingly, an invention
that could aid in precise separation of proteins with few steps would be a significant improvement in the art,
particularly if the invention could be scaled up to purify larger volumes without sacrificing purity.
[0013] In addition to these uses, knobs can be used to 'cover' specific surfaces on proteins. This type
of use has applications in the design of prodrugs that can be used to target tumors or other unwanted tissues
such as those found in the ovaries of infertile women diagnosed with polycystic ovary syndrome. Thus,
attachment of a knob to near the active site of a toxin or toxic enzyme would permit the toxic enzyme to be used in patients. Once the toxin or enzyme reached the tissue that contained an enzyme capable of cleaving
the linker that attached the knob, toxic or enzymatic activity would be restored. This strategy is expected to
reduce the presence of undesirable side-effects that may otherwise limit the usefulness of the toxin or enzyme.
In the same way, knobs could be used to block the activities of agents such as PTEN that promote apoptosis.
Summary of the Invention
[0014] The present invention relates to compositions comprising proteins tagged at a specific site
with a knob and methods for making and using these compositions. A knob refers a tag for the protein which
can be customized for a specified use.
[0015] In one aspect of the invention, proteins tagged with a knob at a specific site in the protein are
disclosed. The site specific tagged protein contains a knob, a tail portion, and a protein portion. The knob
comprises the tag or probe aspect of the protein and has a cysteine residue. The tail portion is located
between the knob portion and the protein portion. The protein portion has a cysteine residue substituted for
the native amino acid at the desired site of tagging. The cysteine residues of the knob and protein portion form
a disulfide bond. In a further aspect of the invention, the tail portion may contain a protease or other cleavage
site.
[0016] In another aspect of the invention, methods for producing proteins site specifically tagged with
knobs are disclosed. These methods involve selecting a desired protein for tagging, locating a specific site on
the desired protein for tagging, producing the desired protein, wherein a cysteine residue is substituted at the
specific site for tagging in the desired protein, and wherein the desired protein further comprises a tail portion
at one end of the protein and a knob at the end of the tail portion, wherein the knob contains a cysteine
residue, and wherein the cysteine residue in the knob forms a disulfide bond with the cysteine residue in the
protein portion. In a related aspect of the invention, methods for attaching knobs to hCG at specified sites are
disclosed. These methods involve inserting constructs capable of expressing native hCGβ or hCGβ-S138C,
and native hCGα or hCGα-cysteine substituted analogs into a cell for co-expression, and fusing a knob to
residue 140 or 145 of hCGβ. [0017] In another aspect of the invention, methods for protein purification that employ the site specific
tagged proteins of this invention are disclosed. These methods involve inserting a construct encoding a
protein into a cell, wherein the encoded protein comprises a cysteine residue substituted at a desired site for
tagging, a tail portion, that has a cysteine residue and a cleavage site, at one end of the protein, and a knob
portion at the end of the tail portion, providing conditions that allow for the expression of the construct, lysing
the cell, and purifying the protein based on the characteristics of the knob on the protein.
[0018] In another aspect of the inventions, methods for using the site specifically modified proteins
knobs are disclosed. The protein knobs may be used, for example, to map distances between proteins, probe
the surface of a protein-protein interface, form a complex between two unrelated proteins, probe the structure
and function of the protein knob protein, to immobilize proteins on surfaces, to deliver proteins to cells, as a
targeting protein, and for protein purification. Those skilled in the art will recognize that a protein tagged at a
specific site with a customized tag is a valuable research tool with a wide range of applications.
Brief Description of the Drawings
[0019] Figure 1. Three-dimensional view of hCG. Illustration of the hCG α subunit residues that can
be scanned by the hCG β-subunit carboxyterminus, The α- and β-subunit backbones are shown in dark and
light gray ribbons, respectively. The β tail is shown as a black ribbon. The locations of the Cα carbons of
cysteine substitutions that enabled efficient crosslink between the α subunit residue and the probe cysteine
are shown as dark spheres. The lighter gray spheres refer to residues that gave less amounts of crosslink. The
small pale spheres refer to cysteine substitutions that led to negligible amount of crosslink. Note that α-subunit
residues 90, 91 , and 92 appear to be too mobile to be seen in the crystal structure of hCG and the arbitrary
positions of these residues shown here are intended only to emphasize their apparent abilities to be latched to
the seatbelt.
[0020] Figure 2A. Binding of hCG or hCG analogs in which an α subunit residue in loop 2 had been
substituted by a cysteine. [0021] Figure 2B. cAMP accumulation of hCG or hCG analogs in which an α subunit residue in loop
2 had been substituted by a cysteine.
[0022] Figure 3A. Influence of cysteine substitutions in alpha subunit carboxyterminus. Binding of
hCG or hCG analogs in which an α subunit residue at the carboxyterminus had been substituted by a
cysteine.
[0023] Figure 3B. Influence of cysteine substitutions in alpha subunit carboxyterminus. cAMP
accumulation of hCG or hCG analogs in which an α subunit residue at the carboxyterminus had been
substituted by a cysteine.
[0024] Figure 4A. Binding of hCG and hCG analogs with β tail attached to the α subunit residues in
loop 2.
[0025] Figure 4B. cAMP accumulation of hCG or hCG analogs in which the β tail was attached to
the α subunit residues in loop 2.
[0026] Figure 5A. Binding of hCG and hCG analogs with β tail attached to the α subunit residues at
the carboxyterminus.
[0027] Figure 5B. cAMP accumulation of hCG or hCG analogs in which the β tail was attached to
the α subunit residues in the carboxyterminus.
[0028] Figure 6. Binding and signal transduction activities of the analogs in which BLA was attached
to the α subunit residue.
[0029] Figure 7: Amino acid sequences of the α-subunit and mutants having a substituted cysteine.
(Note, the mutations are upper case and highlighted. These were prepared by standard cassette mutagenesis
and PCR mutagenesis methods that are standard in the art.) (SEQ ID NO: 1 - SEQ ID NO: 35).
[0030] Figure 8: Amino acid sequences of the β-subunit analogs. (Note, the cysteine substituted is in
uppercase and highlighted.) (SEQ ID NO: 36 - SEQ ID NO: 42).
[0031] Figure 9A: Protein Knob with the knob attached at the carboxyterminal end of the protein.
[0032] Figure 9B: Protein Knob with the knob attached at the aminoterminal end of the protein. [0033] Figure 10A: Protein Knob where the knob is comprised of a cysteine residue.
[0034] Figure 10B: Protein Knob where the knob is comprised of an amino acid sequence including
a cysteine residue fused to a protein.
[0035] Figure 10C: Protein Knob where the cysteine residue of the knob is located on the surface of
the protein that is the knob.
[0036] Figure 11 : Effect of Knob on FSH Activity.
[0037] Figure 12: Summary of Activity of Crosslinked Chimera Analogs in LHR and FSHR Assays
Relative to CF101-109, a Bifunctional Chimera with no hCG β-subunit carboxyterminus.
[0038] Figure 13: Effect of Knob on FSH Receptor Signaling.
[0039] Figure 14A: Effect of Knob on LH Receptor Signaling.
[0040] Figure 14B: Effect of Knob on LH Receptor Signaling.
[0041] Figure 15: Amino acid sequences of other analogues (SEQ ID NO: 43 - SEQ ID NO: 53).
[0042] Figure 16: Signal transduction and binding activities of LONG and SHORT heterodimers.
[0043] Figure 17: Lutropin activity of hCG Analogs having β-lactamase knobs.
[0044] Figure 18: cAMP accumulation in hCG or Analogs lacking αAsn52 oiigosaccharide.
[0045] Figure 19: Binding of αK44A+hCGβ to LHR.
[0046] Figure 20A: Binding of hCG and hCG analog αK44E, K45Q+hCGβ to LHR.
[0047] Figure 20B: LHR cAMP response to hCG and αK44E, K45Q+hCGβ.
[0048] Figure 21 A: Binding of hCG and hCG analog αK91 E+hCGβ to LHR.
[0049] Figure 21 B: Relative activities of hCG and αK91 E+hCGβ in LHR cAMP accumulation assays.
[0050] Figure 22A: LHR cAMP response to hCG and αK91 M+hCGβ.
[0051] Figure 22B: LHR binding of hCG and αK91M+hCGβ.
[0052] Figure 23: LHR binding of hCG and analogs containing shortened linkers.
[0053] Figure 24: LHR binding of hCG and an analog containing a shortened linker.
[0054] Figure 25: Stimulation of LHR cAMP by hCG and αN52C+hCGβ, S138C. [0055] Figure 26: LHR binding of analogs in which a truncated hCG β-subunit carboxyterminal tail
was used at the carboxyterminal end of the α-subunit to add a knob to hCG β-subunit residues 96, 97, or 99.
[0056] Figure 27: LHR signaling of analogs in which a truncated hCG β-subunit carboxyterminal tail
was used at the carboxyterminal end of the α-subunit to add a knob to hCG β-subunit residues 98 or 99.
[0057] Figure 28: LHR binding of analogs in which a truncated hCG β-subunit carboxyterminal tail
was used to add a knob to β-subunit residues 95 or 96.
[0058] Figure 29: LHR signaling of analogs in which a truncated hCG β-subunit carboxyterminal tail
was used to add a knob to β-subunit residues 95 or 96,
[0059] Figure 30: LHR signaling of analogs in which a GGC tail was used to add a knob to β-subunit
residue 96 compared to one lacking a tail and one in which a truncated hCG β-subunit carboxyterminal tail
was used to add a knob to β-subunit residue 96 of an hCG/hFSH chimera.
[0060] Figure 31 : LHR signaling of analogs in which a truncated hCG β-subunit carboxyterminal tail
was used to add a knob to β-subunit residues 98 or 99.
[0061] Figure 31 : LHR signaling of analogs showing the influence of the tail on adding a knob to hCG
β-subunit residue 95 and on an analog lacking the ability to glycosylate the α-subunit at residue 52.
Figure 32: Cyclic AMP response to crosslin ed analogs.
Detailed Description of the Invention
[0062] Currently, most tagged proteins are prepared as fusion proteins with the tag added to the
aminoterminal or carboxyterminal end of the protein or with a few residues inserted into a protein loop. While
the terminal tags can be of any size, the tags inserted into a protein loop are usually limited to relatively few
amino acid residues unless they are inserted between protein domains. Proteins can also be tagged at
different sites through the introduction of cysteines at the site to be tagged and then reacting the sulfhydryl
group of the cysteine with a sulfhydryl-specific reagent. This may be quite difficult to accomplish, however,
when the protein contains other cysteines or when it is prepared under conditions that cause the cysteine to
become "blocked" as is often the case when proteins are expressed in eukaryotic cells. [0063] The present invention provides for improved methods for labeling or tagging proteins. The
methods of the present invention avoid the complications associated with labeling or tagging by introduction of
a cysteine, as described above, and allow various sized probes or knobs to be attached onto the surface of a
protein other than at its terminal ends. The present invention provides for methods to add "knobs" of varying
size to defined locations on the surface of hCG. The knobs can be as small as a single cysteine residue. The
knobs can be a short peptide, such as residues surrounding hCG β-subunit residue 138. The knobs can also
be as large as an entire protein. For example, β-lactamase can be used as a knob. The knobs are added
during protein synthesis making it unnecessary to remove any blocking residues or attach any protecting
groups, tasks that can cause protein denaturation.
[0064] The present invention employs a new strategy for attaching a wide range of probes or tags to
specific sites on a protein surface based on the finding that a flexible β-subunit tail is capable of being
crosslinked to one of several α-subunit residues that have been replaced by a cysteine. Knobs can be a
fluorescent protein, such as green fluorescent protein or related molecule. They can have the ability to bind
other molecules, properties found in ligands or receptors. They can be proteases, toxins, antibodies or
antibody fragments, sequences such as those found in the TAT protein of the human immunodeficiency virus
that enable proteins to be translated across membranes, nucleic acids, or oligosaccharides.
[0065] In one embodiment, a composition comprising a protein portion, wherein the protein portion
contains a substituted cysteine residue at the desired location to be tagged, a tail portion at the terminal end of
the protein portion; and a knob, wherein the knob is located at the free terminal end of the tail portion and
contains a cysteine residue, and wherein the cysteine residue of the knob forms a disulfide with the substituted
cysteine in the protein portion. The term "protein portion" refers to any protein or polypeptide. The term "tail
portion" refers to a stretch of amino acids of a sufficient length to permit the cysteine in the knob to form a
disulfide with the substituted cysteine in the protein portion. The tail portion may comprise a native polypeptide
portion of the protein of the protein portion, as the β-subunit carboxyterminus does in hCG (see Figure 1), or
may comprise a non-native polypeptide added to a terminal end of the protein portion. The tail portion should
also lack residues that will prevent the knob from attaching to the substituted cysteine, such as transmembrane domains or residues that will create a site for binding by other proteins. The term "knob"
refers to a cysteine and any residues on either side of the cysteine that are located adjacent to the free
terminal end of the tail. The knob may include a single cysteine residue, a linear stretch of amino acids that
contains a cysteine, a linear stretch of amino acids fused to a protein, where the cysteine is located in the
stretch of amino acids, or a protein that contains a cysteine residue on its surface. A knob can be engineered
for a particular purpose or use resulting in a customized tag or probe. For example, the knob may be an
epitope tag, a signal sequence, a sequence with high specificity for a bead on a purification column, an
enzyme, or a targeting protein.
[0066] In another embodiment of the invention, methods for tagging a protein at a specific site are
disclosed The method involves selecting a desired protein, locating a site on the desired protein to be tagged,
and selecting a desired knob. The desired knob must contain a cysteine residue. The method further involves
preparing a construct encoding the desired protein, a tail portion and the desired knob. The desired protein
encoded by the construct includes a cysteine residue substituted at the site to be tagged. The construct is
then inserted into a cell for expression of the tagged protein, wherein the cysteine in the knob and the
substituted cysteine in the desired protein form a disulfide bond,
[0067] The term "construct" refers to a nucleic acid vector comprising a promoter linked to an
expression cassette engineered to encode a particular protein product. The construct further includes all
necessary sequences so that the encoded protein can be expressed and any sequences that may be included
to control the expression of the cassette. These sequences may include, but are not limited to, a promoter or
initiation sequence, an enhancer sequence, termination sequence, RNA processing signals, and/or a
polyadenylation signal sequence. The term "necessary sequences for the expression of the expression
cassette" refers to sequences required to ensure the RNA transcription and subsequent translation of the
expression cassette to produce a protein product. The term "promoter" refers to a DNA sequence that is
bound by RNA polymerase and is required to initiate RNA transcription of a gene. There are a number of
promoters that are known in the art, including those that can enhance or control expression of the gene or expression cassette. The constructs of this invention may be modified by PCR and cassette mutagenesis to
create a construct that encodes the desired protein knob.
[0068] Knobs at specific sites on a protein can be used to probe the distance of the tested residues
to the interface of a receptor or another protein. For example, knobs can be utilized to determine the proximity
of the α subunit residues to the receptor binding sites in hCG. Attachment of probes to residues that are
located at the binding pocket would abolish the binding activity indicating that the tag is located in the binding
pocket. Another advantage of using knobs at specific sites is that larger probes can be used to identify the
residues that are close to the protein-receptor interface. This probing strategy can also be used to add epitope
tags or signal sequences to any desired site on the protein surface. Additionally, the protein knobs can also be
widely used for protein immobilization and protein targeting. If a protease recognition site is engineered within
the flexible tail, the tail can then be cleaved after the crosslink is accomplished, leaving the probe tethered by a
disulfide to the protein surface, but not tethered by the tail.
[0069] Uses for the protein knobs produced using the methods of the invention are not limited merely
to inferring the distance between sites on proteins. If a targeted protease were desired, many different
proteases could be attached to either the aminoterminus or the carboxyterminus of a protein simply by fusing
the coding sequences of the protease to the 5' or 3' end of the coding sequence of the protein to be modified
as has already been described for the preparation of fusion proteins. (U.S. Patent 6,300,099, Sledziewski et
al.) Unfortunately, the proximity of the protease to the protein could result in the destruction of the protein.
[0070] The use of protein knobs solves this problem because in using the strategy for attaching a
knob to a protein as described herein, the protease may be held in a position that makes it incapable of
attacking the molecule to which it is attached. Furthermore, the orientation of the protease may enable it to
catalyze the cleavage of a desired substrate, such as a receptor. A protease may be engineered onto hCG
using the methods described herein such that the protease would cleave the LH receptor preferentially to any
other protein, resulting in a loss of lutropin activity, This protease protein knob may be used in a therapeutically
desirable fashion for treating polycystic ovary syndrome, a cause of nearly one-third of all human infertility. [0071] In another embodiment of the invention, the compositions and methods of this invention may
be used to promote the stable association of two proteins. The data provided herein show that the crosslinked proteins analogs of hCG are much more stable than native hCG at low pH. The introduction of intersubunit disulfides into hCG increases the stability of the heterodimer, (Matzuk, M. M. & Boime, I. (1988) J. Cell Biol, 106, 1049-1059; Heikoop.J.C; van.den Boogaaή; Mulders,J.W.; Grootenhuis.P.D., (1997), Structure-based
design and protein engineering of intersubunit disulfide bonds in gonadotropins, Nature Biotechnology 15: 658-
662). Previously, intersubunit disulfide bonds have been introduced into the protein based on its crystal structure. The present invention discloses methods for introducing intersubunit disulfides into two proteins
during their synthesis when a high resolution structure is not available.
[0072] In another embodiment of the invention, the compositions and methods may be used to
promote the stable association of DNA polymerase to DNA. The introduction of a linker that wraps around the
DNA and is stabilized to the polymerase by a disulfide bond would be expected to stabilize the polymerase to
DNA, thereby increasing the length of the resulting transcript.
[0073] In yet another embodiment of the invention, the compositions and methods of the invention
may be used to produce protein heterodimers of the glycoprotein hormones that lack one or more of their
oligosaccharides. Elimination of the glycosylation signal on loop 2 of the α-subunit of hCG reduces the ability
of mammalian cells to secrete the heterodimer and to elicit a biological response (Einstein, M., Lin, W.,
Macdonald, G. J. & Moyle, W. R. (2001) Exp. Biol. Med. 226, 581-590; Slaughter, S., Wang, Y. H, Myers, R.
V. & Moyle, W. R. (1995) Mol, Cell. Endocrinol. 112, 21-25; Yen, S. S. C, Llerena, 0„ Little, B. & Pearson, O.
H. (1968) J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab, 28, 1763-1767; Matzuk,MM; Boime,!,, (1989), Mutagenesis and gene
transfer define site-specific roles of the gonadotropin oligosaccharides, Biol. Reprod. 40: 48-53). As shown
here, co-expression of hCGβS138C and αN52C, an α-subunit analog in which cysteine is substituted for α-
subunit residue Asn52, enabled production of a heterodimer in amounts comparable to hCG. This mutation of
the α-subunit eliminated its glycosylation signal and led to an hCG analog that had considerably greater
efficacy than an analog of hCG in which the α-subunit loop 2 oligosaccharide had been eliminated by
glycanase digestion. [0074] In yet another embodiment, methods for using the compositions and methods of this invention
to promote the formation of protein multimers in which the subunits have little or no affinity for one another are
disclosed. For example, the data provided in Figure 6 illustrates that it is possible to attach the enzyme β-
lactamase to hCG at one of several different sites, β-lactamase is not known to associate with hCG. By
introducing a protease cleavage site, between the hCG β-subunit and the cysteine on the seatbelt, that
cleaves the β-subunit carboxyterminus, it would be possible to prepare heterotrimers in which β-lactamase or
other proteins are attached stably to nearly any site on hCG.
[0075] In another embodiment, the cysteine on the knob may be moved to a site on the surface of the
knob portion. This would permit the direct attachment of the knob to the protein in a desired orientation and
site on the protein.
[0076] In another embodiment, the methods of this invention may be employed to tag proteins with
epitope tags. Epitope tags are often attached to proteins to facilitate detection of protein-protein or protein-
macromolecule interactions. In the past, epitope tags were attached to the aminoterminal or carboxyterminal
end of the protein. However, many epitope tags work only at one end of the protein. Furthermore, the utility of
epitope tags added to the ends of proteins are decreased considerably when the ends of a protein are involved
in the protein's function. The methods of this invention permit the localization of epitope tags at sites other than
the ends of the protein, rendering the epitope tags far more useful. Introduction of a cleavage site into the tail
portion would free the end of the protein without disrupting the epitope tag,
[0077] In another embodiment of the invention, aldehyde residues may be introduced at specific sites
in proteins. Aldehydes are very desirable reactive groups that are not normally found in proteins and can be
used to attach several different reagents such as fluorophores to the surface of the protein, This procedure
takes advantage of the well known reactivity of aminoterminal serine or threonine residues to gentle periodate
oxidation (Yoo, J., Ji, I, & Ji, T. H. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 17741-17743; Geoghegan,K.F.; Stroh .G.,
(1992) Site-directed conjugation ofnonpeptide groups to peptides and proteins via periodate oxidation of a 2-
amino alchol. Application to modification at N-terminal serine. Bioconjug.Chem. 3:138-146), Thus, a serine
residue can be introduced immediately after an enzyme cleavage site on a protein, For example, a site recognized by enterokinase can be introduced immediately aminoterminal to a serine, which would be
aminoterminal of the cysteine to be used to crosslink the knob to the target cysteine at the site to be tagged.
This would result in the sequence Xι-Asp-Asp-Asp-Asp-Lys-Ser-Y -Cys-Zn, (SEQ ID NO: 56) where X, Y, and Z
refer to any tail portion amino acids and I, m, and n refer to the lengths of the tail portion amino acids.
Production of the protein would result in the cysteine in the tail portion becoming crosslinked to the desired site
on the protein, which had been changed to cysteine. Cleavage with enterokinase would result in the creation of
an aminoterminal serine that is readily oxidized by gentle periodate treatment. The aldehyde that is produced
can be readily reacted with any of a variety of hydrazide derived compounds including various fluorophores
and biotin. This method would be especially useful in proteins that do not contain unbonded cysteines.
[0078] In yet another embodiment, methods for using the compositions of this invention to block
specific sites on proteins are disclosed. For example, it would be desirable to block the active site of an
enzyme or a toxin that has the potential to kill cells until this activity is desired. Cancer therapy may be an
excellent area for use of the compositions and methods of this invention. Thus, a cysteine could be
introduced into the enzyme or toxin at a site near the active site of the enzyme or toxin. Addition of a knob that
contains a cysteine to the aminoterminal or carboxyterminal end of the protein that has the ability to form a
disulfide with the cysteine near the active site would cause the knob to prevent the active site from interacting
with its target. The knob may comprise a targeting protein fused to the end of the tail portion which would
enable the enzyme/toxin-targeting protein complex to dock with a specific target on the surface of a cell.
Treatment of the complex with a protease that cleaves the tail portion would expose the active site of the
enzyme or toxin. This strategy could be used to hide the activity of an enzyme or toxin until it reached a site
that contained an enzyme that cleaved the tail portion, thereby exposing the toxin. For example, this could
occur after internalization of the complex into the cell.
[0079] Another use of a knob would be to prevent undesirable associations between proteins that
normally complex with one another. Thus, the disulfide would be designed to hold the knob in a position on the
interface between the two proteins. [0080] In yet another embodiment, the present invention provides a method for precise separation of
a target protein with only a few steps. Employing the methods described herein, an expression construct
encoding the protein of interest, a tail portion and a knob is created. The location of the target cysteine residue
on the protein of interest may be at the carboxyterminal end, the aminoterminal end, or at any desired location
on the surface of the protein of interest, Once the coupling cysteine on the knob binds to the cysteine on the
desired protein after construct expression, the resulting protein-knob complex is run through a column. With
proper choice of a tightly-binding knob, the protein-knob complex binds to the affinity resin and the unbound
proteins and cellular components are washed off, Then, the complex is eluted, the knob is cleaved off, and
only the purified protein remains. For example, (Strategene's Affinity™) pCAL vector may be used and the
calmodulin-bipding peptide (CBP) may be chosen as the knob. The CBP-knob binds to the calmodulin resin
and can be eluted with 2mM EDTA at a neutral pH, thus avoiding harsh elution conditions that may denature
proteins. However, there are many possible vector and knob combinations that may be utilized with the
present invention,
[0081] In a further aspect of the invention related to protein purification, the protein of interest may be
constructed so that the protein knob has a short tail with a cleavage site. The knob tail must be short enough
so that the knob cannot form a disulfide linkage with the protein itself, Instead, the structure of the protein and
tail are such that the knob is conducive for forming a disulfide bond with another protein. In solution, the
proteins with short tails would line up like a string of beads, connected by the disulfide bond between the
cysteine on a first protein's knob and the cysteine on the protein portion of a second protein. The knob of the
second protein would then form a disulfide bond with a cysteine on the protein portion of a third protein and so
on. The resulting chain of proteins may be run on a sucrose gradient and centrifuged, the chain would fall to
the bottom of the gradient due to its weight. Finally, to separate the protein chains from other heavy material
such as lysed cell membranes, the bottom layer where the chains reside would be treated with an enzyme
specific for the cleavage site in the short tail, resulting in individual proteins. The mixture would then be
recentrifuged. The individual proteins would stay near the top of the gradient, allowing for easy removal and purification. This chain of proteins could also be purified using other methods discussed above or other
methods known in the art for protein purification.
[0082] In another aspect of this invention, the protein of interest may be constructed so that each
protein knob interacts with other protein knobs to form a grid-like structure. The tails should be constructed so
that the knob is unable to react with the cysteine on the protein portion, similar to the tails in the string of beads
method. The proteins may also comprise tails and knobs at both terminal ends of the protein. The protein
portion should comprise multiple substitute cysteine residues so that knobs from more than one separate
protein may form disulfide bonds with the protein. The number and location of substituted cysteines on the
protein knobs would have to be determined in advance of construction using a computer modeling program or
other method. In solution, the proteins would form a grid-like structure as a single protein may form disulfide
bonds with more than one protein. This matrix of protein knobs could then be purified by any of the above
methods, keeping in mind that the high molecular weight of the structure would make it a good candidate for
centrifugation techniques,
[0083] In another embodiment, the present invention may be used to add cysteines to proteins. It is
often desirable to introduce cysteines into proteins to take advantage of the unique reactivity of cysteine for
attaching the proteins to surfaces and for attaching other molecules such as fluorophores to the protein
containing the additional cysteine. Many proteins contain cysteines or disulfides, making it difficult to utilize the
cysteine that had been introduced into the molecule, By introducing a tryptophan into the tail adjacent to the
cysteine that is used to crosslink the knob to the cysteine that had been introduced at the site of the protein to
be modified, this difficulty can be circumvented, Due to differences in the absorption spectra of tryptophan,
tyrosine, and phenylalanine, irridation of the protein with light at 295 nm will selectively target the tryptophan
residues. This will cause the disruption of the adjacent disulfide, making the thiol residue on the desired
cysteine reactive. Irridation in the presence of the group that is to be added to the protein will enabled the
protein to become labeled at the desired site, even in proteins that contain several other disulfides. While it is
conceivable that other disulfides near tryptophan residues will also be made reactive, the fact that most
proteins contain few tryptophans means that this is usually not a problem. [0084] In yet another embodiment, the present invention may be used to create and obtain high
yields of heterodimeric proteins, When creating an expression construct for the protein knob one dimer of the
heterodimer may comprise the protein portion. If the dimer of the protein portion does not have a naturally
occurring tail portion, a tail portion may be fused to the dimer of the protein portion. The knob may comprise
the other dimer of the heterodimer, Upon expression of the construct, there is a higher likelihood that the
heterodimer will form due to the tail portion that connects the dimers and the capability of forming the disulfide
bond, This method avoids problems of homodimer formation where dimers of a heterodimer are co-expressed
in the same cell,
Example 1 - Protein Knobs to Study hCG-LHR Interaction
[0085] The sources of hCG and antibodies used in these studies have been described (Bernard, M.
P., Myers, R. V. & Moyle, W. R. (1998) Biochem. J. 335, 611-617; Moyle, W. R„ Campbell, R. K„ Rao, S. N.
V„ Ayad, N. G„ Bernard, M. P., Han, Y & Wang, Y, (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270, 20020-20031; Moyle, W. R.,
Matzuk, M. M., Campbell, R. K., Cogliani, E., Dean Emig, D. M., Krichevsky, A, Barnett, R. W. & Boime, I.
(1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 8511-8518.) A construct capable of expressing hCGβ-S138C was prepared by
cassette mutagenesis between the natural Apal site in the hCG cDNA and a BamHI site that had been
engineered downstream of the termination codon as described (Campbell, R. K., Dean Emig, D. M. & Moyle,
W. R. (1991) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. (USA) 88, 760-764.; Campbell, R. K., Dean Emig, D. M. & Moyle, W. R.
(1991) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. (USA) 88, 760-764.) Vectors used to express α-subunit cysteine substitutions
were also prepared as described (Xing, Y., Lin, W., Jiang, M., Myers, R. V,, Cao, D., Bernard, M. P. & Moyle,
W. R. Alternatively folded choriogonadotropin analogs: implications for hormone folding and biological activity.
Journal of Biological Chemistry . 2001.) Constructs encoding the human α-subunit or cysteine substituted
analogs were co-expressed with the hCG β-subunit or hCGβ-S138C in COS-7 cells as described (Campbell,
R. K„ Dean Emig, D. M. & Moyle, W. R. (1991) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. (USA) 88, 760-764.) Materials secreted
into the culture media were assayed by sandwich immunoassays (Moyle, W. R., Ehrlich, P. H. & Canfield, R.
E. (1982) Proc. Natl, Acad. Sci. (USA) 79, 2245-2249) employing α-subunit antibody A113 for capture and radioiodinated β-subunit antibody B110 for detection, They were treated at acid pH to promote the dissociation
of heterodimers that lack a disulfide crosslink, also as described (Xing, Y., Lin, W,, Jiang, M., Myers, R. V,,
Cao, D., Bernard, M. P. & Moyle, W. R. Alternatively folded choriogonadotropin analogs: implications for hormone folding and biological activity. Journal of Biological Chemistry . 2001.) Chinese hamster cells (CHO
cells) that overexpress the rat LHR were used to monitor the influence of the analogs on the ability of 125l-hCG
to bind LHR binding and elicit cyclic AMP accumulation as reported previously (Bernard, M. P., Myers, R. V. &
Moyle, W. R. (1998) Biochem, J. 335, 611-617; Moyle, W. R„ Matzuk, M. M., Campbell, R, K„ Cogliani, E,
Dean Emig, D. M., Krichevsky, A, Barnett, R. W. & Boime, I. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 8511-8518; Moyle, W.
R, Campbell, R, K, Myers, R. V., Bernard, M. P., Han, Y & Wang, X. (1994) Nature 368, 251-255.)
[0086] An alternative approach to deciphering hCG-LHR interactions involves identifying surfaces of
the hormone that remain exposed in the hormone-receptor complex (Moyle, W. R., Matzuk, M. M., Campbell,
R. K., Cogliani, E, Dean Emig, D. M., Krichevsky, A., Barnett, R. W. & Boime, I. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265,
8511-8518.) Through a process of elimination, areas that remain exposed in the hormone-receptor complex
are then mapped on the surface of the hormone to reveal sites capable of contacting the receptor. Since these
data are collected during studies in which the hormone retains its ability to interact with receptors, the data are
more readily interpreted than those dependent on changes in hormone receptor interactions. Most methods to
detect non-contact residues have relied on the use of monoclonal antibody probes, a procedure that is
severely limited in resolution. To circumvent this limitation, the activities of analogs in which the seatbelt was
latched to the α-subunit were measured
(Xing, Y„ Lin, W., Jiang, , Myers, R. V., Cao, D., Bernard, M. P. & Moyle, W. R. Alternatively folded
choriogonadotropin analogs: implications for hormone folding and biological activity. Journal of Biological
Chemistry . 2001. ) Several of these analogs had essentially the same activity as hCG, even though they
contained parts of the seatbelt and the β-subunit carboxyterminus attached to areas that might be expected to
block hormone receptor interaction. Linking the seatbelt to the α-subunit has the potential to alter the
conformation of the heterodimer; a phenomenon that may have been responsible for the low activity of some
analogs. Recently, it was found that the long disordered carboxyterminal end of the β-subunit was sufficiently mobile to scan much of the surface of the heterodimer until a cysteine introduced at residue 138 formed a
disulfide with the cysteine introduced into the α-subunit. The seatbelts of these analogs are latched as they
are in hCG, making it less likely that the mutation alters the conformation of the heterodimer, As described
here, many of these hCG analogs are much more active than those in which the seatbelt had been attached to
the β-subunit. The results of the studies performed also show that much of hCG α-subunit loop 2, a portion of
the hormone likely to be near the receptor interface, does not contact the LHR. The activities of hCG analogs
before and after a portion of the disordered β-subunit carboxyterminus had been tethered to cysteines
introduced into loop 2 and the carboxyterminus of the α-subunit by a disulfide were compared (See Figures 2
and 3), Except for analogs with cysteines at the tip of loop 2, heterodimers lacking the crosslink had at least
25% the activity of hCG in LHR binding and signaling assays, This suggests that few residues in either region
contribute more than a fraction of the total hCG-LHR binding energy and conflicts with reports that
carboxyterminal residues are essential for efficacy. Tethering the β-subunit carboxyterminus probe to the
surface of α-subunit loop 2 facing β-subunit loops 1 and 3 had relatively little influence on binding or signaling,
indicating this portion of the hormone is unlikely to contact the receptor. The loss of activity caused by linking
the β-subunit carboxyterminus to other residues may indicate these portions of the α-subunit are near the
receptor. Application of this procedure to the study of hFSH interactions with the FSH receptor revealed that
hFSH binds to the FSH receptor in a similar overall fashion but that different parts of hFSH make the key
receptor contacts. Application of this procedure to the study of a chimeric hCG-hFSH ligand that has the ability
to interact with both LH and FSH receptors confirmed these observations. Thus, different portions of the
chimera were found to be closer to the LHR than to the FSHR. Similar mutagenesis strategies should be
useful for identifying the surfaces of other proteins that do not participate in protein-protein contacts.
[0087] Studies described here also illustrate application of this procedure to identify the binding site
of hFSH to the FSH receptor and to compare the interactions of a bifunctional hCG/hFSH analog with both LH
and FSH receptors. An analog of hFSH β-subunit that encoded a portion of the residues of the hCG β-subunit
carboxyterminus (fqdsssskapppslpspsrlpgpstdpilpg, SEQ ID NO: 55) at its β-subunit carboxyterminus was
prepared since hFSH does not have a "seatbelt" (tai* "ortion) (Figure 8, SEQ ID NO: 41). Similar to the studies performed with hCG in which serine residue 138 was replaced with cysteine, the serine residue 132 of the
hFSH β-subunit analog was replaced with a cysteine (Figure 8, SEQ ID NO: 42). The hFSH β-subunit S132C
analog was then expressed with several α-subunit analogs that contained a substituted cysteine. As expected
based on the experience with similar hCG analogs, the β-subunit of the hFSH analog became crosslinked with
the α-subunit by a disulfide as evidenced by the fact that the heterodimer was much more stable at low pH
than was native hFSH. Many of these analogs had high activities in hFSH receptor assays (Figure 13),
Several differences were detected in the activities of the FSH-derived analogs compared with those of the
hCG-derived analogs. These differences revealed that FSH interacted with the FSH receptor differently than
hCG interacted with the LH receptor thereby enabling the construction of models of each hormone-receptor
complex. The results also indicate that the hCG β-subunit carboxyterminus sequence can be used as the 'tail
portion' for adding a knob to the surface of a protein that lacks a suitable site or 'tail portion' for doing so. One
skilled in the art will recognize that many sequences other than the hCG β-subunit carboxyterminus could be
used to accomplish the same task. A 'tail portion' sequence requires both that the sequence be sufficiently
long such that the cysteine in the tail portion can reach the cysteine on the surface of the protein to which it is
to be attached, and that the sequence not contain residues that prevent it from reaching the cysteine on the
surface of the protein, Residues that would prevent the cysteine on the tail portion from reaching the cysteine
on the surface of the protein include residues that would cause the sequence to fold into a separate domain
that would sequester the cysteine on the tail portion, residues such as those that contain a signal for the
protein to become attached to a cellular membrane thereby sequestering the cysteine, residues that contain a
signal for the protein to bind another protein thereby sequestering the cysteine, or residues that are highly
charged that block interactions between the surface of the protein,
[0088] Bifunctional analogs of the glycoprotein hormones can be prepared by interchanging parts of
their seatbelts. (U.S. Patent No, 5,508,261 , Moyle et al), To further distinguish differences in the interactions
of lutropins, such as hCG with the LH receptor, and follitropins, such as hFSH with the FSH receptor, an
analog of hCG that is known to bind both LH and FSH receptors was prepared. The hCG β-subunit residues 101-114 were replaced with their hFSH β-subunit counterparts, namely hFSH β-subunit residues 95-108
(Figure 8, SEQ ID NO: 38). As done earlier in the case of the hCG and hFSH analogs, serine residue 38 in
the β-subunit carboxyterminus of this analog was replaced with cysteine (Figure 8, SEQ ID NO: 39). The
construct was expressed in COS-7 cells with several α-subunit analogs that contained a substituted cysteine.
The heterodimers that were produced in COS-7 cells were quantified using a sandwich immunoassay
employing antibodies to the α- and β-subunits of hCG, Many were found to be crosslinked by a disulfide
between the α- and β-subunits on the basis of their increased stability at low pH. Some of these analogs had
significantly different interactions with LH and FSH receptors. For example, the analog in which the β-subunit
carboxyterminus was crosslinked to α-subunit residue cysteine 37 interacted well with LH receptors and poorly
with FSH receptors (Figures 12 - 14). This confirmed the finding that the interactions of hCG with LH receptors
differed significantly from those of hFSH with FSH receptors and provided considerable further support for the
models by which each of these hormones interact with their receptors.
Results
hCG α-Subunit Analogs and Either Native hCG β-Subunit or hCGβ-S138C
[0089] COS-7 cells that were co-transfected with vectors encoding most of the α-subunit analogs
and either the native β-subunit (Table 1) or hCGβ-S138C (Table 2) were capable of assembling the
heterodimer and secreting it into the culture medium, Heterodimers secreted poorly or not at all included those
containing the β-subunit and α-subunit analogs in which a cysteine had been substituted for residues Tyr37,
Pro40, Asn52, and Y89C (Table 1). The poor secretion of αN52C/β may reflect the absence of the N-linked
glycosylation signal normally found at this position of hCG that is required for efficient secretion of the
heterodimer {Matzuk, M. M. & Boime, I. (1988) J. Cell Biol. 106, 1049-1059.) Table 1. Production of heterodimers by COS-7 cells transfected with the indicated subunit constructs
Figure imgf000025_0001
[0090] Most of the α-subunit analogs tested were detected in heterodimers that contained hCGβ-
S138C (Table 2). hCGβ-S138C rescued the formation of some analogs that were secreted poorly when
expressed with the native β-subunit, including Tyr37, Pro40, and Asn52 but not Tyr89 (Table 2, Fig. 1). Many
of these heterodimers in Table 2 appeared to contain an intersubunit crosslink because they were readily
detected following a brief treatment at low pH. Heterodimers containing the native α-subunit or the αG22C
and αV53C α-subunit analogs were destroyed at low pH suggesting that they lacked an intersubunit disulfide,
Only a fraction of the heterodimers that contained the αQ5C, αQ27C, αP40C, αK51 C, αL41 C, αM71C, and
αV76C α-subunit analogs appeared to be stabilized by intersubunit disulfides, however (Table 2). The
cysteines in the α-subunit analogs of analogs that formed little or no crosslinked heterodimers are at the
subunit interface or are far from β-subunit residue Asp1 11 , the first residue in the carboxyterminal extension
on the β-subunit. Consequently, the cysteine at β-subunit residue 138 appears to have been prevented from reaching these α-subunit cysteines. This phenomenon suggests that most intersubunit disulfide crosslinks
formed after the subunits had assembled into a heterodimer similar in structure to hCG. The only α-subunit
analog tested that failed to form a heterodimer with either the hCG β-subunit or hCGβ-S138C contained a
cysteine in place of Tyr89. While this tyrosine is not essential for folding of the α-subunit because it can be
deleted or changed to residues other than cysteine without disrupting heterodimer formation (Pierce, J. G. &
Parsons, T F. (1981) Annu. Rev. Biochem. 50, 465-495), replacing the tyrosine with a cysteine may have
disrupted folding of the α-subunit (Chen, F., Wang, Y. & Puett, D, (1992) Mol. Endocrinol. 6, 914-919.)
the indicated α-subunit constructs and hCGβ-S138C.
Figure imgf000027_0001
a) This value was calculated as the percentage of material that remained in the sample following treatment at acid pH as described in the text. b) This value was calculated as the ratio of activity determined in sandwich assays employing Al 13 and I-B 111 relative to that observed in Al 13 and 125I-B110 after low pH treatment. Detection of any Bil l binding indicates that the seatbelt is latched. The low values observed in some cases may reflect a steric influence of the β-subunit carboxyterminus on the ability of Bl 11 to interact with the crosslinked heterodimer. [0091] Substitution of cysteine for many α-subunit residues in loop 2 had only a small influence on
the receptor-binding and signal-transduction activities of hCG (Table 3, Fig. 2). Replacing α-subunit residues
αMet47 (Table 3, Fig. 2) and αLys51 (Einstein, M„ Lin, W„ Macdonald, G. J. & Moyle, W. R. (2001) Exp. Biol.
Med. 226, 581-590.) with cysteine reduced the activity of the heterodimer in binding and signaling assays
relative to that of hCG, While an analog in which αLys51 had been replaced by alanine also had considerably
less activity than hCG (Einstein, M., Lin, W., Macdonald, G. J. & Moyle, W. R. (2001) Exp. Biol. Med. 226, 581-
590), hCG-αM47A, an analog in which αMet47 had been replaced by alanine was nearly as active as hCG in
both assays (Table 3), This suggested that the presence of a methionine at α-subunit residue 47 was not
essential for hCG activity. The specific role of αLys51 in receptor interaction remains to be determined,
Based on the finding that a heterodimer in which α-subunit residue 51 is crosslinked to β-subunit residue 99
by a disulfide is more active than those in which αLys51 is replaced by cysteine or alanine, it appears likely
that replacing the αLys51 sidechain may alter the conformation of the heterodimer.
Table 3. Influence of the mutations in α-subunit loop 2 and carboxyterminus on heterodimer lutropin activity
Figure imgf000029_0001
a) Based on the concentration of analog determined by sandwich immunoassay. These values were calculated from the IC50 values from experiments summarized. Several analogs were not tested in these assays due to the fact that only small amounts were produced by transfected COS-7 cells. As also shown in Table 1, we did not obtain any stable heterodimer following acid treatment of α/hCGβ-S138C.
[0092] Changing α-subunit loop 2 residue αLys44 to alanine has been reported to reduce hCG
activity 100-fold or more (Xia, H, Chen, F. & Puett, D. (1994) Endocrinol. 134, 1768-1770.) Thus, the finding
that replacing αLys44 and several nearby α-subunit residues with cysteine had much less influence on hCG
activity than expected (Table 3). During part of an unrelated study to test predictions made about the charge
on the tip of α-subunit loop 2 on subunit combination (Slaughter, S., Wang, Y. H., Myers, R. V. & Moyle, W. R.
(1995) Mol. Cell. Endocrinol. 112, 21-25), an hCG analog that contained glutamate and glutamine in place of
the lysines at residues 44 and 45, respectively, was prepared (hCG-αK44E,K45Q) (Figure 15, SEQ ID NO:
52). Unexpectedly, this analog had high activity in both assays as did hCG-αK44A (Figure 15, SEQ ID NO: 51)
and hCG-αK44R (Figure 15, SEQ ID NO: 53), analogs that had alanine and arginine in place of αLys44
(Table 3, Fig, 19), The high activity of the latter analog was expected based on the fact that the equine α-
subunit has this same substitution (Pierce, J. G. & Parsons, T. F, (1981) Annu. Rev. Biochem. 50, 465-495;
Pierce, J. G. & Parsons, T. F. (1981) Annu. Rev. Biochem. 50, 465-495.) These studies were consistent with
observations made by replacing these residues with cysteine. These observations were contrary to earlier
findings (Xia, H, Chen, F. & Puett, D. (1994) Endocrinol, 134, 1768-1770), suggesting that neither of the highly
conserved positively charged lysine residues in the small helix found in α-subunit loop 2 are essential for LHR
interactions.
Elimination of βCys26
[0093] It was found that βCysl 10, the cysteine that latches the carboxyterminal end of the seatbelt to
the β-subunit core, can become crosslinked to the cysteine that was introduced into many of these α-subunit
analogs if the βCysl 10 is prevented from forming a disulfide with β-subunit residue 26 (Xing, Y„ Lin, W„
Jiang, M., Myers, R. V., Cao, D., Bernard, M. P. & Moyle, W. R, Alternatively folded choriogonadotropin
analogs: implications for hormone folding and biological activity. Journal of Biological Chemistry 50, 46953-
46960, 2001.) This finding changed the position of the seatbelt and eliminated the epitope for antibody B111.
To learn if the seatbelts of these crosslinked analogs were attached to βCys26, their abilities to be recognized by antibody B111 and by B110 were compared, an antibody that recognizes a different β-subunit epitope. As
shown in Table 2, each crosslinked heterodimer was recognized by B111 , albeit not always as well as B110,
an observation that suggested that the seatbelt was latched to βCys26 in the same manner as it is in hCG,
While we cannot exclude the possibility that the βCysl 10 is latched to the cysteine that had been introduced
into the α-subunit of some analogs, this seems highly unlikely for two reasons. First, all of the β-subunits used
in these studies contain a cysteine at residue 26. Elimination of this cysteine at residue 26 is required to cause
the seatbelt to become crosslinked to a cysteine introduced into the α-subunit regardless of their location
(Xing, Y., Lin, W„ Jiang, M., Myers, R. V., Cao, D., Bernard, M. P. & Moyle, W. R. Alternatively folded
choriogonadotropin analogs: implications for hormone folding and biological activity. Journal of Biological
Chemistry . 2001.) And second, the location of the α-subunit cysteine in the crosslinked analogs that were
recognized least by B111 (αY37C, αP40C, αL41C, αR42C, and αT86C) is nearest the B111 binding site
(Fig. 1). This suggests that the crosslink may have stabilized position of the β-subunit carboxyterminus of
these analogs in a position that interfered with the access of B111 to the heterodimer.
Carboxyterminal End of The α-Subunit
[0094] The carboxyterminal end of the α-subunit is thought to be essential for LHR interactions
(Pierce, J. G. & Parsons, T. F. (1981) Annu. Rev. Biochem. 50, 465-495; Yen, S. S. C, Llerena, 0., Little, B. &
Pearson, O. H. (1968) J. Clin, Endocrinol. Metab. 28, 1763-1767.). The presence of cysteines in the
carboxyterminal end of the α-subunit also led to a small reduction in activity of the heterodimer (Table 3, Fig.
3), a phenomenon consistent with the putative role of this portion of the hormone as a receptor contact [Pierce,
J. G. & Parsons, T. F. (1981) Annu, Rev. Biochem. 50, 465-495; Chen, F„ Wang, Y. & Puett, D. (1992) Mol.
Endocrinol. 6, 914-919.) Nonetheless, these analogs were much more active than an analog lacking the five
carboxyterminal α-subunit residues (Pierce, J. G. & Parsons, T. F (1981) Annu. Rev. Biochem. 50, 465-495),
an indication that no single residue in this region is essential for hormone activity and that each makes only a
minor contribution to the total binding energy of hCG for the LHR. It was surprising to find that the heterodimer containing αK91C retained much of the efficacy of hCG (Fig, 3), since αLys91 has been reported to have an
essential role in signal transduction (Yoo, J., Ji, I. & Ji, T, H. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 17741-17743) due to a
putative contact that it makes with an aspartic acid residue in the transmembrane domain (Ji, I., Zeng, H. & Ji,
T. H. (1993) J. Biol. Chem. 268, 22971-22974.) The finding that hCG-αK91C retained substantial efficacy is
inconsistent with this proposal, As a result, hCG-αK91 E and hCG-αK91 M were prepared and their activities
were tested, These analogs have been reported to have very low efficacy (Yoo, J., Ji, I, & Ji, T. H. (1991) J.
Biol. Chem. 266, 17741-17743.) As shown in Figure 17, both analogs had substantial efficacy, although the
analog containing the glutamate interacted with LHR with approximately 10-fold lower affinity than hCG. This
observation is consistent with observations made when αLys91 was converted to cysteine (Table 3, Fig. 3)
and may indicate that this lysine residue is not as important for signal transduction as has been reported (Yoo,
J., Ji, I. & Ji, T H. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 17741-17743,).
Carboxyterminus of The β-Subunit and α-Subunit Loop 2
[0095] Many of the acid-stable analogs in which the carboxyterminus of the β-subunit was
crosslinked to residues in α-subunit loop 2 had considerable activities in receptor-binding and signal-
transduction assays (Table 3, Fig. 4). These include those in which it was attached to α-subunit loop 2
residues 35, 37, 40, 44, 42, 45, 50, and 52 (Table3), Attachment of the carboxyterminus of the β-subunit to α-
subunit loop 2 residue 47 nearly abolished receptor binding activity and coupling it to residue 43 and 46
reduced the activity of the heterodimer by half, The sidechains of α-subunit loop 2 residues in nearly all the
most active analogs project towards β-subunit loops 1 and 3, This suggests that the surface of α-subunit loop
2 that faces β-subunit loops 1 and 3 does not contact the LHR. The sidechains of α-subunit residues 43 and
46 project towards the seatbelt and that of residue 47 faces the small seatbelt loop formed by the disulfide
between Cys93 and CyslOO. Therefore, the loss in activity caused by linking the carboxyterminal portion of
the β-subunit to these sites may disrupt interactions between these portions of α-subunit loop 2 with the receptor or alter the conformation of α-subunit loop 2 in a way that reduces the ability of the hormone to
interact with the receptor,
[0096] The length of the β-subunit carboxyterminus suggests that residue 138 could be attached to
residues in α-subunit loop 2 by passing over β-subunit loops 1 and 3 (Fig, 1), Thus, the carboxyterminal
portion of the β-subunit might not occupy the space in the groove between α-subunit loop 2 and β-subunit
loops 1 and 3 in any of these analogs. To study the activities of analogs in which this portion of the
carboxyterminal portion of the β-subunit occupies this groove, analogs lacking β-subunit residues 116-135 and
121-135 were prepared, In these analogs, the β-carboxyterminus was too short to form a crosslink with α-
subunit residues in loop 2 without passing through this intersubunit groove. These analogs had substantial
activities in LHR binding and signaling assays (Fig, 4), providing additional support for the concept that this
portion of α-subunit loop 2 does not contact the LHR,
β-Subunit and α-Subunit Loops 1 and 3
[0097] To learn if β-subunit residue 138 could become crosslinked to other portions of the α-subunit
core, hCG-βS138C was expressed with several α-subunit analogs containing a cysteine in place of a residue
in loops 1 or 3. With the exception of the heterodimer that contained a cysteine in place of αSer64, only small
amounts of the resulting heterodimers were crosslinked as revealed by their low stability at acid pH (Table 2).
The cysteines of many of the α-subunit analogs in these heterodimers were located much further from the
carboxyterminal end of the seatbelt than those of analogs that participated in intersubunit crosslinks and, may
have been beyond the range that was capable of being reached efficiently by the carboxyterminal region of the
β-subunit (Fig. 1), The αS64C/hCG-βS138C heterodimer had considerable activity in receptor binding and
signaling assays (Table 3), showing that this α-subunit residue does not make essential contacts with the
LHR.
[0098] Crosslinking the β-subunit carboxyterminus to residues in the α-subunit carboxyterminus had
a much larger influence on the interactions of the heterodimer with LHR than substitutions of cysteines in either subunit (Fig, 5). This suggested that the α-subunit carboxyterminus is near the LH receptor interface as
had been proposed based on studies performed more than 25 years ago (Pierce, J. G. & Parsons, T. F. (1981)
Annu. Rev. Biochem. 50, 465-495.) Nonetheless, it is possible that attaching the carboxyterminal end of the
β-subunit to this region alters the structure of the heterodimer or causes the end of the β-subunit to pass near
other portions of the hormone that contact the receptor.
Protein Knobs - hCG-βLactamase
[0099] These studies provide considerable support for the idea that most residues in α-subunit loop
2 do not participate in essential LH receptor contacts. The studies do not exclude the possibility that this
portion of the hormone is near the receptor interface, however, To address this issue, hCG β-subunit analogs
in which β-lactamase, a globular protein similar in size to hCG, was attached to specific sites on the α-subunit
were prepared, This was accomplished by fusing β-lactamase to residues 140 and 145 of hCG-βS138C to
yield hCG-βS138C-βLA140 and hCG-βS138C-βLA145, respectively. The latter analog had a "spacer" of
seven residues between the cysteine that was to be crosslinked to the α-subunit and the aminoterminus of β-
lactamase, Co-expression of these β-subunit analogs with α-subunit analogs αT46C, αL48C, αS64C, and
αS92C led to the formation of acid stable heterodimers (Figure 6), This showed that the presence of the β-
lactamase did not prevent the β-subunit residue 138 from becoming attached to the α-subunit,'
[00100] These hCG-β-lactamase analogs had much lower biological activities than the corresponding
analogs that lacked the β-lactamase (Fig. 6).
[00101] In conjunction with results of earlier studies designed to identify portions of the α-subunit that
are not involved in key receptor contacts (Xing, Y., Lin, W., Jiang, M., Myers, R. V., Cao, D., Bernard, M. P. &
Moyle, W, R. Alternatively folded choriogonadotropin analogs: implications for hormone folding and biological
activity. Journal of Biological Chemistry , 2001.), these observations expand the present knowledge of the
surfaces of the hormone that do not appear to contact the LHR and suggest that the groove between α-
subunit loop 2 and β-subunit loops 1 and 3 does not participate in essential LH receptor contacts, a key requirement of an earlier model (Moyle, W, , Campbell, R. K., Rao, S. N, V., Ayad, N. G., Bernard, M. P.,
Han, Y. & Wang, Y. (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270, 20020-20031.) Indeed, based on the abilities of monoclonal
antibodies to recognize hCG and hCG analogs bound to LHR on the surface of cells (Wang, Y. H., Bernard, M.
P. & Moyle, W. R. (2000) Mol. Cell. Endocrinol. 170, 67-77) and the abilities of hCG/hFSH and hCG/hTSH
chimeras to bind LHR [Campbell, R. K, Dean Emig, D. M. & Moyle, W. R. (1991) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. (USA)
88, 760-764; Campbell, R. K, Bergen, E. R, Wang, Y., Morris, J. C. & Moyle, W. R. (1997) Nature Biotech.
15, 439-443; Grossmann, M., Szkudlinski, M. W., Wong, R., Dias, J. , Ji, T. H. & Weintraub, B. D. (1997) J.
Biol. Chem. 272, 15532-15540; Moyle, W. R, Campbell, R. K, Myers, R. V., Bernard, M. P., Han, Y. & Wang,
X. (1994) Nature 368, 251-255), it appears that few hCG-specific residues participate in essential LHR
contacts, Residues that have the greatest influence on hCG activity are located in the seatbelt, but even most
of these can be altered one-by-one without disrupting hormone-receptor interactions more than a few fold
[Han, Y., Bernard, M. P. & Moyle, W, R. (1996) Mol. Cell. Endocrinol. 124, 151-161.) Based on these
observations, the finding that two distant sites of the receptor appear to influence hCG-LHR interactions
Bernard, M. P., Myers, R. V. & Moyle, W. R. (1998) Biochem. J. 335, 611-617, and the finding that mammalian
lutropin interactions with human LHR are particularly sensitive to small changes in the conformation of the
hormone, it is proposed that interactions of the glycoprotein hormones and their receptors are not dominated
by relatively few contacts, such as those found between growth hormone- and its receptor (Clackson, T. &
Wells, J. A. (1995) Science 267, 383-386; Wells, J, A. (1996) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. (USA) 83, 1-6.)
Example 2 - Protein Knobs to Study Docking of hFSH to FSH Receptors
[00102] A cDNA coding sequence for the hFSH β-subunit was obtained from Christie Kelton, Ares
Advanced Technology, a division of Serono, 280 Pond Street, Randolph MA that corresponds to the translated
portion of the mRNA, The amino acid sequence of this β-subunit lacking the leader peptide is illustrated in
(Figure 8, SEQ ID NO: 40). The hFSH cDNA was modified by PCR and cassette mutagenesis to create a
construct termed FC1-108β (Figure 8, SEQ ID NO: 41) that encodes hFSH residues 1-108 and hCG residues
115-145 in tandem. The amino acid sequence of FC1-108β lacking the leader peptide found in hFSH β- subunit is also illustrated in Figure 8. An analog of FC1-108β in which residue Ser132 was converted to Cys
was prepared by replacing the Xhol-Apal fragment of the construct that encodes hCG-S138Cβ with that of
FC1-108β to create FC1-108,S132Cβ (Figure 8, SEQ ID NO: 42), FC1-108,S132Cβ was expressed with
several of the α-subunit analogs shown in Figure 7 in COS-7 cells using methods described in Example 1.
The heterodimers secreted by the cells into the culture media were measured using antibodies A113 and 125l-
B603, The former is an antibody to the α-subunit and the latter is a monoclonal antibody that binds to hFSH
β-subunit, Purified hFSH was used as a standard, Following acid treatment to dissociate any non-crosslinked
heterodimer, the material was re-assayed with A113and 125I-B603 as above to determine the amount of
crosslinked material in the sample, The resulting crosslinked analogs were tested for their abilities to elicit
cyclic AMP accumulation in CHO cells that express FSH receptors.
[00103] As shown in Figure 11, the influence of the knob at α-subunit residue 35 resulted in only a
modest decrease in the activity of this FSH analog. Addition of the knob to α-subunit residues 92, 64, 48, 46,
42 90, 43, 88, and 86 resulted in a progressive loss in analog activity, This showed that the α-subunit residue
35 is not near the FSH receptor interface and that several other residues appear to be near the receptor
interface. Unlike the interactions of hCG with the LH receptor, the presence of a knob at residues 42 and 43
were much more inhibitory to the binding of the FSH analog to its receptor. This revealed that the surface of
part of α-subunit loop 2 was much closer to the FSH receptor than to the LH receptor when FSH and hCG
interact with their respective receptors, The finding that attaching a knob to α-subunit residue 86 of both
receptors showed that this portion of both ligands is near the receptor interface.
Example 3 - Protein Knobs to Study Docking of Bifunctional hCG/hFSH chimera to LH and FSH
Receptors
[00104] A cDNA sequence encoding a chimera in which hCG β-subunit codons for amino acids 101-
114 were replaced with their hFSH β-subunit counterparts was prepared by standard methods. The amino
acid sequence of this chimera termed CFC101-114β is shown in Figure 8 (SEQ ID NO: 38) minus the leader residues, An analog of CFC101-114β in which residue Ser138 was converted to Cys was prepared by
replacing the Xhol-Apal fragment of the construct that encodes hCG-S138Cβ with that of CFC101-114β to
create CFC101-114β,S138C (Figure 8, SEQ ID NO: 39). CFC101-114β,S138C. was expressed with several
of the α-subunit analogs shown in Figure 7 in COS-7 cells using methods described in Example 1. The
heterodimers secreted by the cells into the culture media were measured using antibodies A113 and 125I-B110.
The former is an antibody to the α-subunit and the latter is a monoclonal antibody that binds to hCG β-subunit.
Purified hCG was used as a standard. Following acid treatment to dissociate any non-crosslinked
heterodimer, the material was re-assayed with A113and 125I-B110 as above to determine the concentration of
crosslinked material in the sample. The resulting crosslinked analogs were tested for their abilities to inhibit
binding of 125l-hCG to CHO cells expressing LH receptors and to inhibit the binding of 1 5l-hFSH to CHO cells
expressing FSH receptors (Figure 12). They were also tested for their abilities to elicit cyclic AMP
accumulation in CHO cells that express LH receptors and in CHO cells that express FSH receptors.
[00105] As shown in Figure 12, the presence of a knob at α-subunit residue 35 did not interfere with
the ability of the chimera to block binding of radioiodinated hCG or radioiodinated hFSH to the LH or FSH
receptors, respectively relative to a bifunctional chimera lacking most of the hCG β-subunit carboxyterminus.
The presence of a knob at α-subunit residue 37 led to a dramatically different result, however. Thus, this knob
had very little influence on the ability of the chimera to bind to LH receptors but nearly eliminated its ability to
bind to the FSH receptors. The presence of a knob at α-subunit residues 43 and 46 reduced the abilities of
the chimera to bind both receptors, As was found for hCG binding to LH receptors and hFSH binding to FSH
receptors, the presence of the knob at these sites was much more inhibitory to FSH receptor interactions than
LH receptor interactions. This showed that these residues were much closer to the FSH receptor interface
than the LH receptor interface. The presence of the knob at α-subunit residues 48 and 52 had much less
influence on interactions of the chimera with either receptor, indicating that these residues are further from the
receptor interface, As had been observed in examples 1 and 2, the presence of a knob at α-subunit residue
86 was very inhibitory to binding of the chimeras to both receptors. This showed that this portion of the ι hormone is near the interface of the chimera with both receptors. A similar result was observed with the knob
at α-subunit residue 91.
[00106] As can be seen in Figures 13 and 14, the presence of a knob reduced the activity of most
chimeras in LH receptor and FSH receptor signal transduction assays. The amount of reduction differed,
however, depending on the receptor with which the analog was being tested. For example, the presence of a
knob at α-subunit residue 37 was much more inhibitory on FSH receptor elicited cyclic AMP accumulation than
on LH receptor mediated cyclic AMP accumulation. Overall, the relative influence of the knobs on the abilities
of the chimeras to elicit a cellular response was similar to their abilities to affect receptor interactions. These
studies led to the conclusion that the interactions of lutropins such as hCG with LH receptors were readily
distinguished from those of follitropins such as hFSH with FSH receptors, Thus, even though lutropins and
follitropins have very similar structures and even though their receptors are quite similar, the manner in which
these ligands were found to interact with the receptors were not identical. This example illustrates the power
of using the probes of the present invention in identifying protein-protein interactions.
Example 4: Knobs having β-lactamase.
[00107] Analogs containing hCGβ,S138C β-subunits have relatively small knobs consisting of
residues surrounding Ser138. These are sufficiently large to detect distances between the ligand and its
receptor that are relatively small. However, these knobs are too small to be useful for detecting the proximity
of residues that are further from the receptor. This limitation can be circumvented by increasing the size of the
probe, as was done by adding β-lactamase, β-lactamase was chosen for use as a probe because its crystal
structure is known and because its aminoterminal and carboxyterminal ends are on the surface of the protein.
Thus, it is useful for generating fusion proteins at either end of the hormone. Another advantage of β-
lactamase is that it is an enzyme with a high turnover number that cleaves fluorescent substrates (Zlokarnik,
G,, Negulescu, P. A., Knapp, T. £, Mere, L, Burres, N., Feng, L, Whitney, M., Roemer, K. & Tsien, R. Y.
(1998) Science 279, 84-88), a phenomenon that would be useful for detection of the fusion protein. In this
regard β-lactamase has been used as an efficient reporter (Moore, J. T, Davis, S. T. & Dev, I. K. (1997) Anal. Biochem. 247, 203-209), albeit in a very different context than is envisioned here, β-lactamase is also inhibited
by a protein that binds to it (Strynadka, N. C, Jensen, S. £, Johns, K, Blanchard, H„ Page, M., Matagne, A„
Frere, J. M. & James, M. N. (1994) Nature 368, 657-660.) Thus, it would be possible to increase the size of
the β-lactamase knob further simply by adding the inhibitor.
[00108] Two derivatives of hCGβ,S138C were prepared that contained a β-lactamase fusion protein.
One, known as hCGβ,S138C-βl_A(long) (SEQ tD NO: 44) or more simply LONG, contains β-lactamase fused
to the carboxyterminal end of hCGβ,S138C as shown in Figure 15. This protein was prepared by PCR
mutagenesis using pUC18 as a template. The other probe known as hCGβ,S138C-βLA(short) (SEQ ID NO:
43) or more simply SHORT, contains β-lactamase fused to a truncated version of hCGβ,S138C as shown in
Figure 15, The SHORT protein has only one amino acid between the coupling cysteine and the start of the β-
lactamase, Clearly, other versions of these could be made in which a different number of residues are placed
between the coupling cysteine and the β-lactamase. It should also be recognized that one skilled in the art of
molecular modeling and molecular biology could design and engineer an analog of β-lactamase in which a
surface residue was replaced by a cysteine. This cysteine could serve as the coupling cysteine, a
phenomenon that would hold the β-lactamase knob in a more rigid connection to the target cysteine than
would be possible using a tail,
[00109] Five different acid stable heterodimers were produced containing the LONG and SHORT β-
subunits. These were made to determine the relative proximity of α-subunit residues 46, 48, 52, 64, and 92 to
the LH receptor. As shown in Figures 16 and 17, none of these analogs were as active as hCG.
Heterodimers in which the LONG and SHORT β-subunit knot probes were coupled α-subunit residue 52 [i.e.,
αN52C+hCGβ,S138C-βLA(long) and αN52C+hCGβ,S138C-βLA(short), respectively] retained much of the
activity of hCG in signal transduction assays. Changing α-subunit residue Asn52 to cysteine disrupts a
glycosylation signal and results in the loss of an oligosaccharide on α-subunit loop 2. Removal of this
oligosaccharide from hCG causes it to lose approximately 60% of its efficacy (Figure 18). Thus, addition of the
β-lactamase knob to this site can offset the loss in efficacy caused by removal of the oligosaccharide from loop 2. The relatively high activity of both these LONG and SHORT analogs show that, α-subunit residue is not
near the receptor interface. Since both analogs have high efficacy, these findings have implications for the
role of the oligosaccharide in hCG-induced signal transduction. The activities of the LONG and SHORT
analogs indicate that the role of the oligosaccharide on α-subunit loop 2 is to distort the positions of the
subunits within hCG; a phenomenon that does not depend on specific contacts between the oligosaccharide
and either subunit,
[00110] The activities of the remaining LONG and SHORT analogs show that α-subunit residues 48
and 64 are much closer to the receptor than would have been determined from the activities of
hCGβS138C+αL48C and hCGβS138C+αS64C, This discovery has important consequences for models of
the hCG-LH receptor complex. It also confirms the earlier findings that α-subunit residues 46 and 92 are close
to the receptor interface.
Example 5: Knobs having a coupling cysteine at the aminoterminal end of the α-subunit.
[00111] It is not necessary for the coupling cysteine to be at the carboxyterminal end of the protein
and analogs have been designed in which the coupling cysteine is at the aminoterminal end of the protein. The
amino acid sequence of one such analog (βι o ι- 145 , α) is illustrated below, This analog was prepared by
deleting hCG β-subunit residues 3-100 and fusing the α-subunit to the end of the remaining β-subunit using
standard PCR and cassette mutagenesis methods. It has a free cysteine at residue 12 that serves as the
coupling cysteine.
10 20 30 40 50 60 βl01-145,α (SEQ ID NO: 54) skggpkdhpltcddprfqdsssskapppslpspsrlpgpsdtpilpqapdvqdcpectlq-
70 80 90 100 110 120 enpffsqpgapilqcmgccfsrayptplrskktmlvqknvtsestccvaksynrvtvmgg- 130 140 fkvenhtachcstcyyhks
Example 6 - Method for Producing Site-Specific Protein Knobs
[00112] A protein to which a knob is to be attached is selected, Then, the specific location to be
labeled on the protein is determined. Using mutagenesis techniques known in the art, a construct capable of expressing the protein may be prepared such that a cysteine residue is substituted for the native residue at the
specific location of labeling in the encoded protein. In addition, the protein encoded in the construct will further
comprise a tail portion which contains a cysteine residue attached to one end of the protein, and a knob
attached to the end of the tail portion. The construct is then inserted into a cell for expression resulting in the
production of a protein with a knob attached at the specified site.
[00113] Addition of a knob to a protein involves introducing a cysteine onto the surface where the knob
is to be located and introducing a cysteine at a site in the aminoterminal or carboxyterminal end of the protein
such that the cysteine in the end of the protein can form a disulfide with that that has been added to the
surface. Formation of a disulfide between these two cysteines will cause the end of the protein containing the
cysteine to be stabilized at the surface creating a knob at this site (see Figure 9).
[00114] In order for the knob to be created, the end of the protein that contains the cysteine should be
of sufficient length to permit its cysteine to form a disulfide with the cysteine at the site that will contain the
knob, This may require addition of a tail portion such as the carboxyterminal end of the hCG β-subunit as was
the case for addition of a protein knob to hFSH. The composition of the tail portion can be varied extensively
and need not be limited to that of the hCG β-subunit, The major requirements of the tail portion are that it
should be sufficiently long to reach the cysteine on the surface of the protein that defines the location of the
knob and that it lack residues that prevent it from getting to that site, These would include residues
characteristic of transmembrane domains and residues that create sites that bind to other proteins or to a part
of the protein distant from the cysteine on the surface of the protein at the knob.
[00115] The residues on either side of the cysteine that is in the aminoterminal or carboxyterminal end
of the protein form the knob. (See Figure 9). In general, the greater the number of residues at this site, the
larger the knob. The smallest knobs would consist only of a cysteine. (See Figure 10A). These would be
created by incorporating a cysteine at the end of the aminoterminal or carboxyterminal end of the linker and
adding a cleavage site immediately adjacent to the cysteine, (See Figure 10A). The cleavage site should
contain an amino acid sequence for a protease that is not found within other parts of the protein. The size of
the knob can be increased in at least three fashions. First, a protein can be fused to the end of the protein used to construct the knob. (See Figure 10B). As described above, β-lactamase was fused to the end of the
protein. However, β-lactamase is not the only protein that is suitable for this purpose. The choice of β-
lactamase as a probe was facilitated by its crystal structure, which showed that its aminoterminal end was
located on its surface, a position favorable for construction of a fusion protein. Second, cleavage of the linker
by a protease can be used to reduce the size of the linker and its contribution to the knob. And third, the
distance between the coupling cysteine and the fusion protein probe can be varied by increasing or reducing
the number of amino acids. As seen for the hCG example, a shorter distance caused a greater reduction in
hormone activity due to the fact that it restricted movements of the knob, This kept the knob closer to the
interface between the hormone and the LH receptor,
[00116] As should be evident from Figure 10, it is not essential for the coupling cysteine to be present
in the tail portion. Introduction of a cysteine in the surface of the fusion protein that is part of the knob where it
can form a disulfide with the target cysteine on the protein should cause the fusion protein to become attached
directly to the surface of the protein to be probed. (See Figure 10C). This method can also be used to control
the orientation of the fusion protein that is part of the knob portion, When proteases are used as fusion
proteins, introduction of cysteines into a surface distant from the active site will keep the active site of the
fusion protein from the surface to which the knob is being attached.
Example 7. Use of shortened tail portion as the probe.
[00117] Addition of knobs to proteins permits the estimation of distances between two protein
surfaces. As shown, substantial portions of α-subunit loop 2 of hCG do not contact the receptor, The location
of the coupling cysteine at amino acid 138 of the hCG β-subunit places relatively few constraints on the
positions that can be occupied by β-subunit residues 111-137 that link the coupling cysteine on the knob to the
core of the hCG β-subunit, The tail portion itself can also be used to probe the surface of proteins and there
are several instances in which it would be desirable to constrain its position to particular portions of the
molecule, these include those in which it would be desirable to cover a portion of an active site of a protein,
thereby rendering it inactive until the tail portion is cliDDed by a protease. [00118] In studies of hCG-LH receptor interactions, it was desirable to constrain the location of the tail
portion to the groove between α-subunit loop 2 and β-subunit loops 1 and 3, in order to test the assertion that
this groove formed a key receptor contact. The use of the tail portion described earlier would permit it to pass
through this portion of the hormone but it would not force it to be located there. Due to its length, the tail
portion might have passed over the convex surface of β-subunit loops 1 and 3 to enable the knob coupling
cysteine to reach various cysteines that had been substituted for residues in α-subunit loop 2, Therefore, we
shortened the tail portion to force it to pass through the groove between α-subunit loop 2 and β-subunit loops
1 and 3 when targeting the cysteine that had been substituted for residues 42, 46 or 48 of the α-subunit. The
tail portion analogs hCGβ,δ116-135,S138C (SEQ ID NO: 45) and hCGβ,δ121-135,S138C (SEQ ID NO: 46)
(Figure 15) were too short to enable the formation of a disulfide between the knob and the target protein
unless the tail portion analogs passed through the groove between α-subunit loop 2 and β-subunit loops 1 and
3. As can be seen from the results shown in Figure 23 and 24, heterodimers containing αT46C and
hCGβ,δ116-135,S138C or hCGβ,δ121-135,S138C had substantial receptor binding activity. The heterodimer
containing αL48C and hCGβ,δ121-135,S138C also had considerable receptor binding activity, Much smaller
amounts of acid stable heterodimer containing αL48C and hCGβ,δ116-135,S138C were formed, indicating
that the shortest tail portion tested may not have been of sufficient length for the knob coupling cysteine to
reach the target cysteine on the protein. Since it was not necessary for the tail portion of these analogs to
pass through the groove between α-subunit loop 2 and β-subunit loops 1 and 3 for the knob coupling cysteine
to reach the target cysteine at α-subunit residue 42, this analog was used as a positive control,
[00119] Taken together, these observations showed that the groove did not participate in essential
receptor contacts. It also demonstrated how the position of the tail portion can be manipulated to enable it to
pass near specific portions of the protein. This would permit the tail portion to be used to obscure a specific
site, a property that when combined with cleavage sites that have been introduced into the tail portion would
be useful for preparing latent proteases, toxins, or other useful analogs. Tail portions that obscures a protease
or toxin site would permit preparation and use of reagents capable of entering cells where endogenous or other proteases would cleave the tail portion to activate the toxin. These agents would be useful as
therapeutics to treat malignancies or other diseases.
Example 8. Use of probes attached to the β-subunit.
[00120] The small loop in the seatbelt has been suggested to have a role in the biological activity of
hCG and it was desired to attach knobs to this region of the β-subunit to investigate this possibility. Analogs of
the alpha subunit were produced that contained the carboxyterminal residues in the hCG β-subunit. While it
has been shown that the attachment of a portion of the carboxyterminus of the hCG β-subunit to the
carboxyterminal end of the α-subunit reduced the activity of the heterodimer by 50-fold or more, the use of the
entire β-subunit sequence had no such consequence. Analogs containing the. entire carboxyterminal residues
of the hCG β-subunit attached to the α-subunit, including amino acids Asp-Asp-Pro-Arg-Phe-Gln-Asp-Ser-Ser-
Ser-Ser-Lys-Ala-Pro-Pro-Pro-Ser-Leu-Pro-Ser-Pro-Ser-Arg-Leu-Pro-Gly-Pro-Ser-Asp-Thr-Pro-lle-Leu-Pro-Gln,
had 50% or more the activity of hCG in receptor binding and signaling assays. This was found to be due to the
presence of charged residues near the junction of the residues derived from the α-subunit and the β-subunit.
To attach a knob to β-subunit residues in the small seatbelt loop, a truncated version of the hCG β-subunit
carboxyterminus was added to the end of the α-subunit to create hCG-αCTδ116/135,138C (SEQ ID NO: 57).
This was co-expressed in COS-7 cells with a hCG β-subunit analog having a cysteine in place of Arg94 (SEQ
ID NO: 58), Arg95 (SEQ ID NO: 59), Ser96 (SEQ ID NO: 60), Thr97 (SEQ ID NO: 61), Thr98 (SEQ ID NO: 62),
and Asp99 (SEQ ID NO: 63). All of these proteins formed acid-stable heterodimers and as can be seen from
the data in Figures 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, and 32, these studies revealed how this part of the β-subunit
interacts with LH receptors (LHR). The presence of this knob at residues 95 and 99 eliminated LHR interaction
and biological activity, This knob had much less influence when present at residues 96 or 97 as these analogs
had substantial activity in binding and signaling assays. The knob reduced receptor interaction more when it
was attached to residue 98 but not nearly to the level seen when it was attached to residues 95 or 99. This
suggests the latter residues may be located nearer the receptor interface, [00121] The sidechain of hCG β-subunit residue 95 faces in an opposite direction from those of
residues 94 and 96, a phenomenon that may account for the fact that attaching a knob to this site was much
more inhibitory to hCG-LHR interactions than attaching a knob at residues 94 and 96. This suggested that the
surface of the seatbelt near the sidechain of Arg95 might be near the receptor interface. To learn if the
sidechain contacted the surface of the protein, analogs were prepared that contained smaller knobs. These
were constructed by replacing the serine in the at α-subunit residue 92 with cysteine (SEQ ID NO: 35) or by
adding a tail composed of Gly-Gly-Cys to the carboxyterminus of the α-subunit (SEQ ID NO: 64), As can be
seen in Figures 30 and 32, these smaller knobs had much less ability to interfere with the activity of the
heterodimer in LHR assays. Thus, both acid-stable crosslinked heterodimers retained considerable activities in
these assays. This showed that the sidechain of β-subunit residue Arg95 is likely to be near the receptor
interface but not needed for essential receptor contacts. This also showed that the location of the
carboxyterminal end of the α-subunit is near the small seatbelt loop after the hormone interacts with the LHR.
[00122] Since the α-subunit carboxyterminus is needed for full glycoprotein hormone activity, as is the
oligosaccharide on α-subunit loop 2 at Asn52, it was of interest to see determine how changing the position of
the α-subunit carboxyterminus in the heterodimer influenced its biological activity, An analog of hCG α-subunit
that cannot be glycosylated at α-subunit loop 2 due to the change of Asn52 to Asp and that had the ability to
add a cysteine knob to β-subunit residues 92, 94, 95, and 96 was prepared (SEQ ID NO: 65). Co-expression
of this analog in COS-7 cells with β-subunit analogs containing a cysteine at residues 92, 94, 95, and 96 led to
the formation of acid-stable crosslinked heterodimers. The activities of these analogs and a chimera β-subunit
analog that contained a cysteine in place of Arg96 (SEQ ID NO: 66) showed that the carboxyterminus of the
α-subunit can be attached to several sites in the β-subunit, indicating that its location is not constrained
unduely (Figure 33). Further, the finding that the efficacy of the chimera analog was low showed that the
conformation of this portion of the hormone has an influence on signal transduction.
[00123] One skilled in the art will readily appreciate that the present invention is well adapted to carry
out the objects and obtain the ends and advantages mentioned as well as those inherent therein. The compositions along with the methods and procedures described herein are presently representative of
preferred embodiments and are exemplary and not intended as limitations on the scope of the invention.
Changes therein and other uses will occur to those skilled in the art which are encompassed within the spirit of
the invention or defined by this scope with the claims.
[00124] It will be readily apparent to one skilled in the art that varying substitutions and modifications
may be made to the invention disclosed herein without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention.
[00125] All patents and publications referenced herein are incorporated by reference to the same
extent as if each individual publication was specifically and individually indicated to be incorporated by
reference, The following list of references are likewise incorporated by reference.
References
[00126] 1. Lapthorn, A. J., Harris, D. C, Littlejohn, A, Lustbader, J. W., Canfield, R. E, Machin, K. J„
Morgan, F. J. & Isaacs, N. W. (1994) Nature 369, 455-461
[00127] 2, Wu, H„ Lustbader, J. W., Liu, Y, Canfield, R. E. & Hendrickson, W. A. (1994) Structure 2,
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[0103] 8. Thomas, D., Rozell, T. G., Liu, X. & Segaloff, D. L. (1996) Mol. Endocrinol. 10, 760- 768.
[0104] 9. Bernard, M. P., Myers, R. V. & Moyle, W. R. (1998) Biochem. J. 335, 611-617. [0105] 10. Cosowsky, L., Rao, S. N. V., Macdonald, G. , Papkoff, K, Campbell, R. K. & Moyle, W. R. (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270, 20011-20019.
[0106] 11. Moyle, W. R., Campbell, R. K., Rao, S. N. V., Ayad, N. G, Bernard, M. P., Han, Y. & Wang, Y. (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270, 20020-20031.
[0107] 12. Myers, R. V., Wang, Y. & Moyle, W. R. (2000) Biochim. Biophys. Ada 1475, 390- 394.
[0108] 13. Jiang, X, Dreano, M., Buckler, D. R., Cheng, S., Ythier, A., Wu, H., Hendrickson, W. A., Tayar, N. E. & el Tayar, N. (1995) Structure 3, 1341-1353.
[0109] 14. Peng, K. C, Bousfield, G. R., Puett, D. & Ward, D. N. (1996) Journal of Protein Chemistry 15, 547-552.
[0110] 15. Xia, H., Chen, F. & Puett, D. (1994) Endocrinol. 134, 1768-1770.
[0111] 16. Pierce, J. G. & Parsons, T. F. (1981) Annu. Rev. Biochem. 50, 465-495.
[0112] 17. Chen, F., Wang, Y. & Puett, D. (1992) Mol. Endocrinol. 6, 914-919.
[0113] 18. Campbell, R. K., Dean Emig, D. M. & Moyle, W. R. (1991) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. (USA) 88, 760-764.
[0114] 19. Campbell, R. K., Bergert, E. R., Wang, Y., Morris, J. C. & Moyle, W. R. (1997) Nature Biotech. 15, 439-443.
[0115] 20. Grossmann, M., Szkudlinski, M. W., Wong, R., Dias, J. A., Ji, T. H. & Weintraub, B. D. (1997) J. Biol. Chem. 272, 15532-15540.
[0116] 21. Lindau-Shepard, B., Roth, K. E. & Dias, J. A. (1994) Endocrinol. 135, 1235-1240. [0117] 22. Moyle, W. R., Matzuk, M. M., Campbell, R. K, Cogliani, E., Dean Emig, D. M., Krichevsky, A., Barnett, R. W. & Boime, I. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 8511-8518.
[0118] 23. Xing, Y, Lin, W., Jiang, M., Myers, R. V., Cao, D., Bernard, M. P. & Moyle, W. R. Alternatively folded choriogonadotropin analogs: implications for hormone folding and biological activity. Journal of Biological Chemistry . 2001.
[0119] 24. Moyle, W. R., Ehrlich, P. H. & Canfield, R. E. (1982) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. (USA) 79, 2245-2249.
[0120] 25. Moyle, W. R., Campbell, R. K, Myers, R. V., Bernard, M. P., Han, Y. & Wang, X. (1994) Nature 368, 251-255.
[0121] 26. Matzuk, M. M. & Boime, I. (1988) J. Cell Biol. 106, 1049-1059.
[0122] 27. Einstein, M., Lin, W., Macdonald, G. J. & Moyle, W. R. (2001) Exp. Biol. Med. 226, 581-590.
[0123] 28. Slaughter, S, Wang, Y. H, Myers, R. V. & Moyle, W. R. (1995) Mol. Cell. Endocrinol. 112, 21-25.
[0124] 29. Yen, S. S. C, Llerena, O., Little, B. & Pearson, O. H. (1968) J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. 28, 1763-1767.
[0125] 30. Yoo, , Ji, I. & Ji, T. H. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 17741-17743.
[0126] 31. Ji, I., Zeng, H. & Ji, T. H. (1993) J. Biol. Chem. 268, 22971-22974.
[0127] 32. Han, Y., Bernard, M. P. & Moyle, W. R. (1996) Mol. Cell. Endocrinol. 124, 151-161.
[0128] 33. Clackson, T. & Wells, J A. (1995) Science 267, 383-386.
[0129] 34. Wells, J. A. (1996) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. (USA) 83, 1-6. [0130] 35. Zlokarnik, G, Negulescu, P. A., Knapp, T. E., Mere, L., Burres, N., Feng, L., Whitney, M., Roemer, K & Tsien, R. Y. (1998) Science 279, 84-88.
[0131] 36. Moore, J. T, Davis, S. T. & Dev, I. K. (1997) Anal. Biochem. 247, 203-209.
[0132] 37. Strynadka, N. , Jensen, S. E., Johns, K, Blanchard, H, Page, M., Matagne, A., Erere, J. M. & James, M. N. (1994) Nature 368, 657-660.

Claims

Claims
What is claimed is: 1. A composition comprising, a protein portion, wherein the protein portion contains a substituted cysteine residue at a desired location to be tagged; a tail portion at the terminal end of the protein portion; and a knob, wherein the knob is located at the free terminal end of the tail portion and contains a cysteine residue, and wherein the cysteme residue of the knob is capable of forming a disulfide with the substituted cysteine in the protein portion.
2. The composition of claim 1, wherein the tail contains a protease cleavage site.
3. The composition of claim 1 , wherein the knob comprises an epitope tag.
4. The composition of claim 1 , wherein the knob comprises a polypeptide.
5. The composition of claim I, wherein the knob comprises a protein.
6. The composition of claim 5, wherein the knob cysteine is located on the surface of the protein.
7. The composition of claim 1, wherein the protein portion is a monomeric protein.
8. The composition of claim 1, wherein the protein portion is a multimeric protein. 9. A method for tagging a protein at a specific site comprising, a) selecting a desired protein; b) locating a specific site on the desired protein to be tagged; c) selecting a desired knob, wherein the desired knob contains a cysteine residue; d) preparing a construct encoding the desired protein, a tail portion and the desired knob, wherein the desired protein has a cysteine residue substituted at the site to be tagged; e) inserting the construct into a cell for expression of the tagged protein, wherein the cysteine in the knob and the substituted cysteine in the desired protein form a disulfide bond.
10. The method of claim 9, wherein the knob comprises an epitope tag, a signal sequence or a protein.
11. The method of claim 10, wherein the knob protein is a protease.
12. The method of claim 9, wherein the desired protein is monomeric.
13. The method of claim 9, wherein the desired portein is multimeric.
14. A protein purification method comprising, a) inserting a construct capable of expression in a cell, wherein the construct encodes a protein, wherein the protein comprises a cysteine residue substituted at a desired site to be tagged, a tail portion at the terminal end of the protein, wherein the tail portion contains a protease cleavage site, and a knob at the end of the tail portion, wherein the knob contains a cysteine residue; b) lysing the cell; c) purifying the protein based on the characteristics of the knob.
15. A method for tagging hCG comprising,
a) preparing a construct capable of expressing native hCGβ or hCGβ-S 138C;
b) preparing a construct capable of expressing native hCGα or hCGα cysteine
substituted analogs; c) inserting the constructs of step a) and b) into COS-7 cells for co-expression.
16. The method of claim 15, wherein the construct of step a) further comprises fusing a
protein to residue 140 or 145 of hCGβ.
17. The method of claim 16, wherein the protein is β-lactamase.
18. The method of claim 15, wherein the hCGα cysteine substituted analogs are selected
from SEQ ID NO: 1 thru SEQ ID NO: 35.
9. A method for mapping the distance between protein molecules comprising, a) selecting a first protein molecule; b) selecting a second protein molecule, wherein the first protein molecule and the second protein molecule interact; c) producing first protein molecules, wherein each first protein molecule produced contains a knob located at a different site on the first protein; d) producing the second protein molecule; e) using the proteins produced in steps c) and d) to analyze the distance between the first protein and the second protein.
PCT/US2002/035914 2001-11-08 2002-11-08 Protein knobs WO2003040695A2 (en)

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IL16180402A IL161804A0 (en) 2001-11-08 2002-11-08 Protein knobs
MXPA04004289A MXPA04004289A (en) 2001-11-08 2002-11-08 Protein knobs.
EA200400647A EA200400647A1 (en) 2001-11-08 2002-11-08 MARK OF PROTEINS
CA002466595A CA2466595A1 (en) 2001-11-08 2002-11-08 Protein knobs
KR10-2004-7006994A KR20040063928A (en) 2001-11-08 2002-11-08 Protein knobs
US10/797,553 US20060177894A1 (en) 2002-11-08 2004-03-10 Protein knobs
HR20040242A HRP20040242A2 (en) 2001-11-08 2004-03-12 Protein knobs
ZA2004/04373A ZA200404373B (en) 2001-11-08 2004-06-03 Protein knobs
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