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Published June 18, 2010 | Supplemental Material + Accepted Version
Journal Article Open

Consensus Protein Design without Phylogenetic Bias

Abstract

Consensus design is an appealing strategy for the stabilization of proteins. It exploits amino acid conservation in sets of homologous proteins to identify likely beneficial mutations. Nevertheless, its success depends on the phylogenetic diversity of the sequence set available. Here, we show that randomization of a single protein represents a reliable alternative source of sequence diversity that is essentially free of phylogenetic bias. A small number of functional protein sequences selected from binary-patterned libraries suffice as input for the consensus design of active enzymes that are easier to produce and substantially more stable than individual members of the starting data set. Although catalytic activity correlates less consistently with sequence conservation in these extensively randomized proteins, less extreme mutagenesis strategies might be adopted in practice to augment stability while maintaining function.

Additional Information

© 2010 Elsevier Ltd. Received 31 January 2010; revised 20 April 2010; accepted 22 April 2010. Edited by F. Schmid. Available online 28 April 2010.

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Accepted Version - nihms208928.pdf

Supplemental Material - f.doc

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