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Explore the various applications of synthetic biology through protein engineering. Using high-quality, high-fidelity DNA fragments, together with technologies like artificial intelligence and machine learning, discover how protein engineering enables rapid discovery and advancement.
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Request a consultationProtein engineering is an application that takes advantage of synthetic biology, where engineering principles are applied to living systems with the goal of creating new protein versions with desirable traits. This includes altering the nucleic acid sequence that encodes an amino acid sequence. Each amino acid is linked together by non-covalent bonds, and they are assembled to form a peptide chain. By understanding a protein’s folding patterns and testing various conformations of the protein, researchers can engineer unique proteins with desirable properties for various purposes.
In protein engineering, altering the structure of the protein is dependent on the linear amino acid sequence and how the amino acids interact, which determines how the protein folds.
Proteins have diverse functions which depend on various characteristics and requirements of the cell. For instance, a structural protein is used to maintain a cell’s shape while an enzyme, another type of protein, is used for catalyzing a biochemical reaction occurring within a cell. Proteins are also involved in synthesizing and repairing DNA, transporting nutrients and molecules, receiving or sending chemical communication signals, and receiving or responding to stimuli [1].
For therapeutic protein engineering applications, the goal is to create a protein with increased potential for treating a disease while also ensuring minimal side effects. There are two approaches commonly applied in protein engineering. These approaches are directed evolution and rational design.
Directed evolution is a more conceptional and methodological approach that involves introducing gene mutations in a process known as mutagenesis. This approach follows a natural selection process and then evaluating the properties of the resulting variants and repeating in an iterative process.
Rational design is a hypothesis-driven approach based on a detailed understanding of the structure and subsequent function of a protein that contributes to its properties. This approach involves altering individual or multiple amino acid(s) generally at specific locations and then testing the variants to evaluate what characteristics may have changed.
Therapeutic protein engineering has proven essential in modern medicine by engineering versions of a protein that are more efficient and targeted, leading to better therapies. They have advantages over small molecule drugs—performing more specific and complex functions and having less toxicity and likelihood of an unwanted immunogenicity.
Therapeutic protein engineering goes beyond monoclonal antibodies which specifically bind to a single target. Various applications include:
Even with engineering, you often need to screen thousands of protein variants to find ones with higher efficiency and stability without side effects like loss of different functions or toxicity. Some of the difficulties include folding and protein stability, or the short half-life of non-endogenous proteins within the body.
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