Bacterial Display of a Tau-Binding Affibody Construct:Towards Affinity Maturation

University essay from KTH/Skolan för kemi, bioteknologi och hälsa (CBH)

Abstract: Aggregation of microtubule-associated protein tau is involved in the pathology of several neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer’s disease. The affibody TP4 has been shown to inhibit this aggregation process, and its target-binding positions were previously grafted onto a dimeric affibody scaffold, creating the sequestrin seqTP4. This project constitutes a part of the affinity maturation process of seqTP4, using two different bacterial display methods. An error-prone PCR library was first expressed on Staphylococcus carnosus cells for selection of variants with improved tau-binding properties, resulting in a library of 1.4×107 transformants. Flow cytometric tests indicated difficulties in the setup due to nonspecific interactions, and whereas several different approaches to alleviate the problems were investigated, two cell sorting attempts were ultimately unsuccessful. Subcloning of seqTP4 and the library to an Escherichia coli surface display vector resulted in functional surface expression of seqTP4 on E. coli JK321 and BL21 cells, and a BL21 library size of 1.6×109 transformants. An initial flow cytometric test of this library indicates the presence of improved tau-binding variants, paving the way for future cell sorting.

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