2 Papers
8 Citations
Harlan King is an academic researcher from National Institute of Standards and Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Proteases & Subtilisin. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 2 publications.
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Papers
Engineering subtilisin proteases that specifically degrade active RAS.
Yingwei Chen,Eric A. Toth,Biao Ruan,Eun Jung Choi,Richard Simmerman,Yihong Chen,Yanan He,Ruixue Wang,Raquel Godoy-Ruiz,Harlan King,Gregory S. Custer,D. Travis Gallagher,David A. Rozak,Melani Solomon,Silvia Muro,David J. Weber,John Orban,Thomas R. Fuerst,Philip N. Bryan +18 more
- 05 Mar 2021
Abstract: We describe the design, kinetic properties, and structures of engineered subtilisin proteases that degrade the active form of RAS by cleaving a conserved sequence in switch 2. RAS is a signaling protein that, when mutated, drives a third of human cancers. To generate high specificity for the RAS target sequence, the active site was modified to be dependent on a cofactor (imidazole or nitrite) and protease sub-sites were engineered to create a linkage between substrate and cofactor binding. Selective proteolysis of active RAS arises from a 2-step process wherein sub-site interactions promote productive binding of the cofactor, enabling cleavage. Proteases engineered in this way specifically cleave active RAS in vitro, deplete the level of RAS in a bacterial reporter system, and also degrade RAS in human cell culture. Although these proteases target active RAS, the underlying design principles are fundamental and will be adaptable to many target proteins.
Engineering protein-specific proteases: targeting active RAS
Yingwei Chen,Eric A. Toth,Biao Ruan,Eun Jung Choi,Richard Simmerman,Yihong Chen,Yanan He,Ruixue Wang,Raquel Godoy-Ruiz,Harlan King,Gregory S. Custer,D. Travis Gallagher,David A. Rozak,Melani Solomon,Silvia Muro,David J. Weber,John Orban,Thomas R. Fuerst,Philip N. Bryan +18 more
TL;DR: The design, kinetic properties, and structures of engineered subtilisin proteases that degrade the active form of RAS by cleaving a conserved sequence in switch 2 are described and will be adaptable to many target proteins.
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