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Published July 9, 2007 | Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

High-Throughput Screening for Methionyl-tRNA Synthetases That Enable Residue-Specific Incorporation of Noncanonical Amino Acids into Recombinant Proteins in Bacterial Cells

Abstract

Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (aaRS) with altered substrate specificities have been used to enable both site-specific and residue-specific incorporation of noncanonical amino acids into recombinant proteins. Rational, computational, and combinatorial methods have been employed to engineer the amino acid binding pockets of several aaRS. Combinatorial strategies have been especially effective; Schultz and co-workers have developed powerful methods for selecting aaRS for site-specific incorporation, and we have reported an efficient screening system for use in the global replacement of amino acids. However, because the latter method relies on bio-orthogonal derivatization of noncanonical amino acid side chains, a new approach is needed for the more general problem of activating noncanonical substrates that lack reactive functionality in the side chains. Here we describe a high-throughput method for screening aaRS libraries for the global incorporation of noncanonical amino acids. We demonstrate this strategy by identifying an Escherichia coli methionyl-tRNA synthetase (MetRS) variant that activates 6,6,6-trifluoronorleucine (Tfn, 1; Scheme 1). Tfn does not support significant protein synthesis in conventional E. coli expression strains.

Additional Information

© 2007 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim Received: February 20, 2007. Published online: June 14, 2007. We thank A. James Link, Kimberly Beatty, and James Van Deventer for helpful discussions. Knocking out of the metE gene from E. coli strain DH10B was done with James Van Deventer. We thank Dr. Mona Shahgholi for assistance with the MALDI-MS and LC-MS analysis. This work was supported by NIH grant GM62523, ONR grant N00014-03-1-0793, and a Samsung Scholarship (to T.H.Y.).

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