De novo designed 3-helix bundle peptides and proteins with controlled topology and stability

Abstract

Computational protein design is advancing rapidly. However, approaches and methods are needed to increase success rates and to elaborate designs. Here we describe the combination of rational and computational design to deliver three-helix bundle (3HB) peptide assemblies and single-chain proteins with control over topology and thermal stability. First, we garner sequence-to-structure relationships from antiparallel 3HBs in the Protein Data Bank. This gives core-packing rules, including layers of hydrogen-bonded polar residues, which are combined with surface-charge patterning to design complementary sequences for acidic (A), basic (B), and neutral (N) helices. By altering the design of the N helix, two sets of synthetic peptides are generated for clockwise and anticlockwise arrangements of the three-helix assemblies. Solution-phase characterisation shows that both ABN peptide mixtures form stable, heterotrimeric assemblies consistent with the targeted ‘up-down-up’ topologies. Next, AlphaFold2 models for both designs are used to seed computational designs of single-chain proteins where the helices are connected by loop building. Synthetic genes for these express in E. coli to yield soluble, monomeric, and thermally stable proteins. By systematically introducing additional polar layers within the core, the thermal stability of these proteins is varied without compromising the specificity of the helix–helix interactions. Chemical and thermal denaturation reveals comparable thermodynamic parameters to those of highly stable natural proteins. Four X-ray crystal structures confirm that the design models and AlphaFold2 predictions match to sub-Å accuracy.

Graphical abstract: De novo designed 3-helix bundle peptides and proteins with controlled topology and stability

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Article information

Article type
Edge Article
Submitted
25 Jul 2025
Accepted
23 Aug 2025
First published
27 Aug 2025
This article is Open Access

All publication charges for this article have been paid for by the Royal Society of Chemistry
Creative Commons BY license

Chem. Sci., 2025, Advance Article

De novo designed 3-helix bundle peptides and proteins with controlled topology and stability

X. Leng, K. I. Albanese, L. R. Golub, A. A. Norman, J. Clayden and D. N. Woolfson, Chem. Sci., 2025, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D5SC05576H

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