Better library design: data-driven protein engineering

Biotechnol J. 2007 Feb;2(2):180-91. doi: 10.1002/biot.200600170.

Abstract

Data-driven protein engineering is increasingly used as an alternative to rational design and combinatorial engineering because it uses available knowledge to limit library size, while still allowing for the identification of unpredictable substitutions that lead to large effects. Recent advances in computational modeling and bioinformatics, as well as an increasing databank of experiments on functional variants, have led to new strategies to choose particular amino acid residues to vary in order to increase the chances of obtaining a variant protein with the desired property. Strategies for limiting diversity at each position, design of small sub-libraries, and the performance of scouting experiments, have also been developed or even automated, further reducing the library size.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Computational Biology / methods
  • Directed Molecular Evolution
  • Enzymes / chemistry
  • Enzymes / genetics
  • Enzymes / metabolism
  • Gene Library*
  • Protein Engineering / methods*
  • Proteins / chemistry
  • Proteins / genetics
  • Proteins / metabolism
  • Sequence Analysis, Protein
  • Structure-Activity Relationship

Substances

  • Enzymes
  • Proteins