drugs in basic research, biotechnology, diagnostics and therapeutics. However, due to the
cost, labor and time associated with production of antibodies focus has recently changed
towards potential of peptides to act as protein affinity reagents. Affinity peptides are easy
to work with, non-immunogenic, cost effective and amenable to scale up. Even though
researchers have developed several affinity peptides, we are far from compiling library of
peptides that encompasses entire human proteome. My thesis describes high throughput
pipeline that can be used to develop and characterize affinity peptides that bind several
discrete sites on target proteins.
Chapter 2 describes optimization of cell-free protein expression using commercially
available translation systems and well-known leader sequences. Presence of internal
ribosome entry site upstream of coding region allows maximal expression in HeLa cell
lysate whereas translation enhancing elements are best suited for expression in rabbit
reticulocyte lysate and wheat germ extract. Use of optimal vector and cell lysate
combination ensures maximum protein expression of DNA libraries.
Chapter 3 describes mRNA display selection methodology for developing affinity peptides
for target proteins using large diversity DNA libraries. I demonstrate that mild denaturant
is not sufficient to increase selection pressure for up to three rounds of selection and
increasing number of selection rounds increases probability of finding affinity peptide s.
These studies enhance fundamental understanding of mRNA display and pave the way
for future optimizations to accelerate convergence of in vitro selections.
Chapter 4 describes a high throughput double membrane dot blot system to rapidly
screen, identify and characterize affinity peptides obtained from selection output. I used
dot blot to screen potential affinity peptides from large diversity of previously
ii
uncharacterized mRNA display selection output. Further characterization of potential
peptides allowed determination of several high affinity peptides from having Kd range 150-
450 nM. Double membrane dot blot is automation amenable, easy and affordable solution
for analyzing selection output and characterizing peptides without ne ed for much
instrumentation.
Together these projects serve as guideline for evolution of cost effective high throughput
pipeline for identification and characterization of affinity peptides.
Illustrated in Chapter 1 is the general history of research on the interaction of DNA and anticancer drugs, most importantly different congener of bleomycin (BLM). Additionally, several synthetic analogues of bleomycin, including the structural components and functionalities, are discussed.
Chapter 2 describes a new approach to study the double-strand DNA lesion caused by antitumor drug bleomycin. The hairpin DNA library used in this study displays numerous cleavage sites demonstrating the versatility of bleomycin interaction with DNA. Interestingly, some of those cleavage sites suggest a novel mechanism of bleomycin interaction, which has not been reported before.
Cytidine methylation has generally been found to decrease site-specific cleavage of DNA by BLM, possibly due to structural change and subsequent reduced bleomycin-mediated recognition of DNA. As illustrated in Chapter 3, three hairpin DNAs known to be strongly bound by bleomycin, and their methylated counterparts, were used to study the dynamics of bleomycin-induced degradation of DNAs in cancer cells. Interestingly, cytidine methylation on one of the DNAs has also shown a major shift in the intensity of bleomycin induced double-strand DNA cleavage pattern, which is known to be a more potent form of bleomycin induced cleavages.
DNA secondary structures are known to play important roles in gene regulation. Chapter 4 demonstrates a structural change of the BCL2 promoter element as a result of its dynamic interaction with the individual domains of hnRNP LL, which is essential to facilitate the transcription of BCL2. Furthermore, an in vitro protein synthesis technique has been employed to study the dynamic interaction between protein domains and the i-motif DNA within the promoter element. Several constructs were made involving replacement of a single amino acid with a fluorescent analogue, and these were used to study FRET between domain 1 and the i-motif, the later of which harbored a fluorescent acceptor nucleotide analogue.
Polymerases that synthesize artificial genetic polymers hold great promise for advancing future applications in synthetic biology. However, engineering natural polymerases to replicate unnatural genetic polymers is a challenging problem. Here we present droplet-based optical polymerase sorting (DrOPS) as a general strategy for expanding polymerase function that employs an optical sensor to monitor polymerase activity inside the microenvironment of a uniform synthetic compartment generated by microfluidics. We validated this approach by performing a complete cycle of encapsulation, sorting and recovery on a doped library and observed an enrichment of ∼1,200-fold for a model engineered polymerase. We then applied our method to evolve a manganese-independent α-L-threofuranosyl nucleic acid (TNA) polymerase that functions with >99% template-copying fidelity. Based on our findings, we suggest that DrOPS is a versatile tool that could be used to evolve any polymerase function, where optical detection can be achieved by Watson-Crick base pairing.