Criteria for selecting PEGylation sites on proteins for higher thermodynamic and proteolytic stability
Publication information:
P. B. Lawrence*, Y. Gavrilov*, S. S. Matthews, M. I. Langlois, D. Shental-Bechor, H. M. Greenblatt, B. K. Pandey, M. S. Smith, R. Paxman, C. B. Torgerson, J. P. Merrell, C. Ritz, M. B. Prigozhin, Y. Levy, and J. L. Price. 2014. “Criteria for Selecting PEGylation Sites on Proteins for Higher Thermodynamic and Proteolytic Stability”. J. Am. Chem. Soc., 136, 50, Pp. 17547-60
Abstract
PEGylation of protein side chains has been used for more than 30 years to enhance the pharmacokinetic properties of protein drugs. However, there are no structure- or sequence-based guidelines for selecting sites that provide optimal PEG-based pharmacokinetic enhancement with minimal losses to biological activity. We hypothesize that globally optimal PEGylation sites are characterized by the ability of the PEG oligomer to increase protein conformational stability; however, the current understanding of how PEG influences the conformational stability of proteins is incomplete. Here we use the WW domain of the human protein Pin 1 (WW) as a model system to probe the impact of PEG on protein conformational stability. Using a combination of experimental and theoretical approaches, we develop a structure-based method for predicting which sites within WW are most likely to experience PEG-based stabilization, and we show that this method correctly predicts the location of a stabilizing PEGylation site within the chicken Src SH3 domain. PEG-based stabilization in WW is associated with enhanced resistance to proteolysis, is entropic in origin, and likely involves disruption by PEG of the network of hydrogen-bound solvent molecules that surround the protein. Our results highlight the possibility of using modern site-specific PEGylation techniques to install PEG oligomers at predetermined locations where PEG will provide optimal increases in conformational and proteolytic stability.