3vdz Citations

Tailoring encodable lanthanide-binding tags as MRI contrast agents.

Chembiochem 13 2567-74 (2012)
Cited: 8 times
EuropePMC logo PMID: 23150430

Abstract

Lanthanide-binding tags (LBTs), peptide-based coexpression tags with high affinity for lanthanide ions, have previously been applied as luminescent probes to provide phasing for structure determination in X-ray crystallography and to provide restraints for structural refinement and distance information in NMR. The native affinity of LBTs for Gd(3+) indicates their potential as the basis for engineering of peptide-based MRI agents. However, the lanthanide coordination state that enhances luminescence and affords tightest binding would not be ideal for applications of LBTs as contrast agents, due to the exclusion of water from the inner coordination sphere. Herein, we use structurally defined LBTs as the starting point for re-engineering the first coordination shell of the lanthanide ion to provide for high contrast through direct coordination of water to Gd(3+) (resulting in the single LBT peptide, m-sLBT). The effectiveness of LBTs as MRI contrast agents was examined in vitro through measurement of binding affinity and proton relaxivity. For imaging applications that require targeted observation, fusion to specific protein partners is desirable. However, a fusion protein comprising a concatenated double LBT (dLBT) as an N-terminal tag for the model protein ubiquitin had reduced relaxivity compared with the free dLBT peptide. This limitation was overcome by the use of a construct based on the m-sLBT sequence (q-dLBT-ubiquitin). The structural basis for the enhanced contrast was examined by comparison of the X-ray crystal structure of xq-dLBT-ubiquitin (wherein two tryptophan residues are replaced with serine), to that of dLBT-ubiquitin. The structure shows that the backbone conformational dynamics of the MRI variant may allow enhanced water exchange. This engineered LBT represents a first step in expanding the current base of specificity-targeted agents available.

Reviews citing this publication (1)

  1. Metalloprotein-based MRI probes. Matsumoto Y, Jasanoff A. FEBS Lett 587 1021-1029 (2013)

Articles citing this publication (7)

  1. Using Genetically Encodable Self-Assembling Gd(III) Spin Labels To Make In-Cell Nanometric Distance Measurements. Mascali FC, Ching HY, Rasia RM, Un S, Tabares LC. Angew Chem Int Ed Engl 55 11041-11043 (2016)
  2. Location dependent coordination chemistry and MRI relaxivity, in de novo designed lanthanide coiled coils. Berwick MR, Slope LN, Smith CF, King SM, Newton SL, Gillis RB, Adams GG, Rowe AJ, Harding SE, Britton MM, Peacock AFA. Chem Sci 7 2207-2216 (2016)
  3. A cell-penetrating protein designed for bimodal fluorescence and magnetic resonance imaging. Wu Q, Cheng Q, Yuan S, Qian J, Zhong K, Qian Y, Liu Y. Chem Sci 6 6607-6613 (2015)
  4. Luminescence resonance energy transfer between genetically encoded donor and acceptor for protein-protein interaction studies in the molecular chaperone HSP70/HSP90 complexes. Bhattacharya K, Bernasconi L, Picard D. Sci Rep 8 2801 (2018)
  5. Synthesis and characterisation of lanthanide-hydroporphyrin dyads. Xiong R, Andres J, Scheffler K, Borbas KE. Dalton Trans 44 2541-2553 (2015)
  6. Large Protein Assemblies for High-Relaxivity Contrast Agents: The Case of Gadolinium-Labeled Asparaginase. Licciardi G, Rizzo D, Salobehaj M, Massai L, Geri A, Messori L, Ravera E, Fragai M, Parigi G. Bioconjug Chem 33 2411-2419 (2022)
  7. claMP Tag: a versatile inline metal-binding platform based on the metal abstraction peptide. Mills BJ, Mu Q, Krause ME, Laurence JS. Bioconjug Chem 25 1103-1111 (2014)