Issue 25, 2006

Intelligent design: the de novo engineering of proteins with specified functions

Abstract

One of the principal successes of de novo protein design has been the creation of small, robust protein-cofactor complexes which can serve as simplified models, or maquettes, of more complicated multicofactor protein complexes commonly found in nature. Different maquettes, generated by us and others, recreate a variety of aspects, or functional elements, recognized as parts of natural enzyme function. The current challenge is to both expand the palette of functional elements and combine and/or integrate them in recreating familiar enzyme activities or generating novel catalysis in the simplest protein scaffolds.

Graphical abstract: Intelligent design: the de novo engineering of proteins with specified functions

Article information

Article type
Perspective
Submitted
24 Oct 2005
Accepted
09 May 2006
First published
31 May 2006

Dalton Trans., 2006, 3045-3051

Intelligent design: the de novo engineering of proteins with specified functions

R. L. Koder and P. L. Dutton, Dalton Trans., 2006, 3045 DOI: 10.1039/B514972J

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