Article 5ABT6 Genetic Eraser: Newly Developed Technology Precisely and Rapidly Degrades Targeted Proteins

Genetic Eraser: Newly Developed Technology Precisely and Rapidly Degrades Targeted Proteins

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Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:

Researchers can now more accurately and precisely target specific proteins in yeast, mammalian cells and mice to study how knocking down specific protein traits can influence physical manifestation in a cell or organism.

[...] "Conditional gene knockout and small interfering RNA (siRNA), which is used to silence proteins without knocking them out completely, has been employed in many studies," said Masato T. Kanemaki, professor at the National Institute of Genetics in the Research Organization of Information and Systems (ROIS). "However, these technologies are not ideal for studying highly dynamic processes, such as cell cycle, differentiation or neural activity, because of the slow rate of depletion of the protein of interest."

[...] The ability to knock out genes in mice is a critical step in genetic research and therapeutics. According to Kanemaki, an approach may work well in cultured cells, but it must work in a whole model system, such as a mouse. The "leaky degradation" of the AID system meant that a targeted protein would only degraded weakly without auxin, but the level of auxin required to induce full degradation appeared to have long-term negative effects on cell growth.

"In this paper, we describe the AID2 system, which overcomes all the drawbacks of the original AID system," Kanemaki said, noting that they did not detect leaky degradation with the system, the degradation was quicker, and the required dose of auxin was much lower.

To establish the AID2 system, the researchers employed what is known as a "bump-and-hole" strategy to create an empty space in a mutant version of a plant protein (called TIR1) that recognizes and induces the degradation of degron-fused proteins. An auxin analog can bind directly to the TIR1 mutant and initiate the degradation process. Since the approach is very efficient, less auxin analog is needed. The researchers found that depletion could be induced at a concentration about 670 times lower than in the original system.

More information:
Aisha Yesbolatova et al. The auxin-inducible degron 2 technology provides sharp degradation control in yeast, mammalian cells, and mice, Nature Communications (2020). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-19532-z

Journal information: Nature Communications

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