6V8E
Computationally designed C3-symmetric homotrimer from TPR repeat protein
Summary for 6V8E
Entry DOI | 10.2210/pdb6v8e/pdb |
Descriptor | Designed protein (2 entities in total) |
Functional Keywords | designed trimers, designed nanoparticles, ribosome-binding site, de novo protein |
Biological source | synthetic construct |
Total number of polymer chains | 6 |
Total formula weight | 82842.16 |
Authors | Sankaran, B.,Ueda, G.,Zwart, P.H.,Baker, D. (deposition date: 2019-12-10, release date: 2020-08-12, Last modification date: 2024-04-03) |
Primary citation | Ueda, G.,Antanasijevic, A.,Fallas, J.A.,Sheffler, W.,Copps, J.,Ellis, D.,Hutchinson, G.B.,Moyer, A.,Yasmeen, A.,Tsybovsky, Y.,Park, Y.J.,Bick, M.J.,Sankaran, B.,Gillespie, R.A.,Brouwer, P.J.,Zwart, P.H.,Veesler, D.,Kanekiyo, M.,Graham, B.S.,Sanders, R.W.,Moore, J.P.,Klasse, P.J.,Ward, A.B.,King, N.P.,Baker, D. Tailored design of protein nanoparticle scaffolds for multivalent presentation of viral glycoprotein antigens. Elife, 9:-, 2020 Cited by PubMed Abstract: Multivalent presentation of viral glycoproteins can substantially increase the elicitation of antigen-specific antibodies. To enable a new generation of anti-viral vaccines, we designed self-assembling protein nanoparticles with geometries tailored to present the ectodomains of influenza, HIV, and RSV viral glycoprotein trimers. We first designed trimers tailored for antigen fusion, featuring N-terminal helices positioned to match the C termini of the viral glycoproteins. Trimers that experimentally adopted their designed configurations were incorporated as components of tetrahedral, octahedral, and icosahedral nanoparticles, which were characterized by cryo-electron microscopy and assessed for their ability to present viral glycoproteins. Electron microscopy and antibody binding experiments demonstrated that the designed nanoparticles presented antigenically intact prefusion HIV-1 Env, influenza hemagglutinin, and RSV F trimers in the predicted geometries. This work demonstrates that antigen-displaying protein nanoparticles can be designed from scratch, and provides a systematic way to investigate the influence of antigen presentation geometry on the immune response to vaccination. PubMed: 32748788DOI: 10.7554/eLife.57659 PDB entries with the same primary citation |
Experimental method | X-RAY DIFFRACTION (2.53 Å) |
Structure validation
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