Directed evolution of ligand dependence: Small-molecule-activated protein splicing

  1. Allen R. Buskirk,
  2. Yi-Ching Ong,
  3. Zev J. Gartner, and
  4. David R. Liu*
  1. Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, Harvard University, 12 Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA 02138
  1. Edited by Jack W. Szostak, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, and approved June 11, 2004 (received for review April 19, 2004)

Abstract

Artificial molecular switches that modulate protein activities in response to synthetic small molecules would serve as tools for exerting temporal and dose-dependent control over protein function. Self-splicing protein elements (inteins) are attractive starting points for the creation of such switches, because their insertion into a protein blocks the target protein's function until splicing occurs. Natural inteins, however, are not known to be regulated by small molecules. We evolved an intein-based molecular switch that transduces binding of a small molecule into the activation of an arbitrary protein of interest. Simple insertion of a natural ligand-binding domain into a minimal intein destroys splicing activity. To restore activity in a ligand-dependent manner, we linked protein splicing to cell survival or fluorescence in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Iterated cycles of mutagenesis and selection yielded inteins with strong splicing activities that highly depend on 4-hydroxytamoxifen. Insertion of an evolved intein into four unrelated proteins in living cells revealed that ligand-dependent activation of protein function is general, fairly rapid, dose-dependent, and posttranslational. Our directed-evolution approach therefore evolved small-molecule dependence in a protein and also created a general tool for modulating the function of arbitrary proteins in living cells with a single cell-permeable, synthetic small molecule.

Footnotes

  • * To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: drliu{at}fas.harvard.edu.

  • This paper was submitted directly (Track II) to the PNAS office.

  • Abbreviations: LBD, ligand-binding domain; GDA, geldanamycin; 4-HT, 4-hydroxytamoxifen; ER, estrogen receptor; FACS, fluorescence-activated cell sorting.

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