New Synthetic Chaperones to Enhance Protein Activity

Lead Research Organisation: De Montfort University
Department Name: School of Pharmacy

Abstract

3D structure is fundamental to the biological function, level of activity and very nature of a protein. Key interactions between the protein and its ligand albeit a small molecule or another protein exploit specific structure.

Variations in primary, secondary and tertiary structure can therefore result in significant changes in a protein's behaviour. These changes can range from a simple increase or decrease in enzymatic activity caused by alterations to its structure (caused by the presence of another molecular entity); through to the misfold pathogenesis observed in diseases such as Diabetes and Alzheimer's.

Nature has developed control mechanisms to regulate structure/function in many biological systems. The big idea here is that nanoscale polymeric materials with exceptional selectivity, affinity and biocompatibility will act as biomimetics of these control mechanisms and influence protein behaviours. The vision is that these materials will act as role-specific artificial chaperones, opening a new field of bio-inspired materials with a single design process but multiple applications.

The proposed programme of research is a unified design approach to the development of these artificial biomimetics using the principle of Molecular Imprinting. Molecular modelling techniques will identify target binding sites alongside compatible polymer components. These simple, elegant biomimetics incorporate binding sites bearing steric and chemical functionality complementary to a given target and as such represent a generic, versatile, scalable, cost-effective approach to the creation of synthetic molecular receptors. They currently are used in separation sciences, purification, sensors and catalysis; but this proposal will broaden their application, allowing the technology to reach its true potential.

In activities 1 and 2, nanoscale MIPs including aptaMIPs (nucleic acid-hybrids in which the PI is a leading proponent) will be targeted towards specific binding sites (epitope or larger domain) with the aim to modulate the function of its target. The ability to enhance or inhibit enzymatic activity in relevant environments will be explored, all while building an understanding how these materials interact, and how the composition/target site generates the desired activity.

In activities 3 and 4, the ability to guide the folding of protein into specific structures will be explored. By providing MIPs that favour binding a specific shape or conformation, we will look at the creation of misfolds to produce biomaterials for further use (tissue engineering). We will also explore the potential of these materials to reduce or reverse misfolding itself, providing proof-of-concept data for potential future therapeutics.

Throughout commercial and clinically relevant targets are used to increase impact of the study, but also to show the power of the developed methodologies.

The project will use facilities at DMU, and with an experienced project team, this interdisciplinary proposal which covers protein, polymer and analytical chemistry will take a deep-dive approach to MIP synthesis. It will build on existing proof-of-concept ideas, translating novel synthetic processes into viable options for artificial chaperones which can be exploited in multiple ways.

The University of Auckland will host the PI on sabbatical who will study effects of MIPs on folding during this period. The host Dr Laura Domigan, as a visiting researcher, will visit the UK to learn MIP design prior to this, to best support the sabbatical goals.

Project partners will support the program throughout, with experience in rational design, sensor application, circular dichroism expertise and folding experience. We will develop the synthetic methods to be scalable through clear step processes, with automation in mind. Potential commercialisation exists through UK based industrial project partners (MIP Diagnostics and Aptamer Group).

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Aptamer Group 
Organisation Aptamer Group
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution From the grant linked this has led to a new partnership in progress with The Aptamer group (York) for support of grant submission. This grant has provided an active collaboration and we are moving forward with discussions on further applications. We are working on development of hybrid materials using materials from the company. Several publications are in draft where we are improving aptamers through this method. A formal NDA/MTA is in place Aptamer group have supported with in-kind support a fellowship bid (EPSRC Dec 2020)
Collaborator Contribution AG are providing sequences for specific targets that we are using for basing the research on. Support for successful EPSRC Fellowship bid. (Dec 2020). engaging in patent discussions and applications of developed materials. Papers published with Aptamer Group as collaborative team
Impact https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2021/py/d1py00607j 2 further publications are in submission
Start Year 2015
 
Description Collaborative Partnership - MIP Discovery 
Organisation MIP Diagnostics
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution Formal collaborative agreement signed with MIP Discovery. Licence options and input to research Agreement covers publication and dissemination of joint research
Collaborator Contribution Support knowhow/ facilities on grants. Joint projects.
Impact Joint research currently being undertaken
Start Year 2022
 
Description Nanoparticles 
Organisation University of Leicester
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution I have strong links with the research group of Professor Piletsky, prior of Cranfield, but now Leicester Chemistry. We have regular research meetings to discuss current projects and future ideas. We also share equipment and methods.
Collaborator Contribution Discussions on nanoparticle production and use of specialized equipment based at Leicester. Support on successful EPSRC submission (letter of support as project partner) Joint submission of papers. Joint submission of grants (CRUK - EPSRC)
Impact Several papers as found in Publications. Latest of which was published in 2022 Grant submissions
 
Description Research Collaboration - Bhavik Patel 
Organisation University of Brighton
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Preparation of materials for electrochemical detection of disease states (biomarkers). Submission of two proposals (awaiting results) Joint supervision of PhD student - linked to grants Research leading to manuscript submission
Collaborator Contribution Submission of two proposals (awaiting results) Joint supervision of PhD student - linked to grants Electrochemical experiment leading to publication submission
Impact One submission of manuscript (under review) 2 joint proposals
Start Year 2021
 
Description Research Collaboration with Booth, UCL 
Organisation University College London
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Based on my expertise from the following two grants and my move to Uni of Sheffield, i was part of the team who led a CDT submission. This partnership was joint across three universities. Engaged with stakeholders, prepared writing . From this a new collaboration with Mike Booth (UCL Chemistry) has started
Collaborator Contribution Booth brings novel modification chemistry to enable aptamip preparation
Impact CDT submission. New research collaboration
Start Year 2022
 
Description Sensor Collaboration - Peeters 
Organisation Newcastle University
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Collaboration with Dr Marloes Peeters (Chen Eng - Newcastle University) on sensor design. We have provided access to instrumentation and knowhow for polymer development
Collaborator Contribution Two projects have been focus of the interaction. Both targeting protein templates. We have provided material performance analysis using EPSRC supported instrumentation. Data provided has gone into two manuscripts
Impact 2 Paper manuscript in submission process. Expected in 2023
Start Year 2020
 
Description Interview by Guardian Newspaper 
Form Of Engagement Activity A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Interviewed for article on Aptamer technology - supporting Apatmer Group profile article in the guardian
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://www.theguardian.com/business/2022/dec/25/aptamer-york-biotech-cancer-treatments
 
Description Invited Seminar 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Postgraduate students
Results and Impact Invited Talk to present research at:
University of Sheffield

This led to being approached by University for Job Offer
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022