Abstract
Green fluorescent proteins (GFPs) are ubiquitous for protein tagging and live-cell imaging. Split-
GFPs are widely used to study protein-protein interactions by fusing proteins of interest to split
GFP fragments that create a fluorophore upon complementation. Complementation is typically
irreversible, and controlled dissociation of the fragments would be desirable. The quantum
efficiency of light-induced photodissociation of split GFPs is low, with extensive mutagenesis and
screening using traditional protein engineering approaches proving difficult to implement. To
reduce the search space, key states in the dissociation process were modeled by combining classical
and QM/MM molecular dynamics and enhanced sampling methods, enabling the rational design
and engineering of split GFPs with up to 20-fold faster photodissociation rates using non-intuitive
amino acid changes. This demonstrates the feasibility of modeling complex molecular processes
using state-of-the-art computational methods, and the potential of integrating computational
methods to increase the success rate in protein engineering projects.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supporting information for Simulation-guided engineering of split GFPs with efficient beta-strand photodissociation
Description
Supporting information, containing figures, tables and text.
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Supplementary weblinks
Title
Link to data files on Zenodo server
Description
Parameter and coordinate files for simulations of GFP using QM/MM simulations, classical, and enhanced sampling MD simulations. Also contains short videos of simulation trajectories.
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