Issue 14, 2023

Modification of bacterial microcompartments with target biomolecules via post-translational SpyTagging

Abstract

Bacterial microcompartments (BMCs) are proteinaceous organelle-like structures formed within bacteria, often encapsulating enzymes and cellular processes, in particular, allowing toxic intermediates to be shielded from the general cellular environment. Outside of their biological role they are of interest, through surface modification, as potential drug carriers and polyvalent antigen display scaffolds. Here we use a post-translational modification approach, using copper free click chemistry, to attach a SpyTag to a target protein molecule for attachment to a specific SpyCatcher modified BMC shell protein. We demonstrate that a post-translationally SpyTagged material can react with a SpyCatcher modified BMC and show its presence on the surface of BMCs, enabling future investigation of these structures as polyvalent antigen display scaffolds for vaccine development. This post-translational ‘click’ methodology overcomes the necessity to genetically encode the SpyTag, avoids any potential reduction in expression yield and expands the scope of SpyTag/SpyCatcher vaccine scaffolds to form peptide epitope vaccines and small molecule delivery agents.

Graphical abstract: Modification of bacterial microcompartments with target biomolecules via post-translational SpyTagging

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
14 Feb 2023
Accepted
31 May 2023
First published
12 Jun 2023
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Mater. Adv., 2023,4, 2963-2970

Modification of bacterial microcompartments with target biomolecules via post-translational SpyTagging

D. M. Beal, M. Liang, I. Brown, J. D. Budge, E. R. Burrows, K. Howland, P. Lee, S. Martin, A. Morrell, E. Nemoto-Smith, J. Roobol, M. Stanley, C. M. Smales and M. J. Warren, Mater. Adv., 2023, 4, 2963 DOI: 10.1039/D3MA00071K

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