Skip to main content

Write a PREreview

A complete map of specificity encoding enables reprogramming of a dynamic protein interaction

Posted
Server
bioRxiv
DOI
10.1101/2024.04.25.591103

Thousands of human proteins function by binding short linear motifs embedded in intrinsically disordered regions that can sample different conformations. How affinity and specificity are encoded in these regions and the relative contribution of structured and dynamic binding modes is not completely understood. Here we present a complete map of specificity encoding in a PDZ domain binding to a structurally heterogeneous disordered ligand and use this map to reprogram binding to new ligands. Quantifying >200,000 energetic interactions between the PDZ domain and its ligand identifies 17 residues that control specificity for six sites in the ligand through both direct and allosteric mechanisms. Most sites where specificity can be controlled through the domain are in the structured part of the ligand, but dynamic residues additively contribute to binding affinity and communicate with structured ligand residues to enable specificity changes. Combining mutations in each of the six PDZ domain modules allows specificity to be quantitatively reprogrammed to recognize new ligands. This approach of quantifying the specificities of thousands of proteins in a single experiment should allow many different types of molecular interaction to be understood and interpretably reprogrammed.

You can write a PREreview of A complete map of specificity encoding enables reprogramming of a dynamic protein interaction. A PREreview is a review of a preprint and can vary from a few sentences to a lengthy report, similar to a journal-organized peer-review report.

Before you start

We will ask you to log in with your ORCID iD. If you don’t have an iD, you can create one.

What is an ORCID iD?

An ORCID iD is a unique identifier that distinguishes you from everyone with the same or similar name.

Start now