Enhanced Directed Evolution in Mammalian Cells Yields a Hyperefficient Pyrrolysyl tRNA for Noncanonical Amino Acid Mutagenesis

Angew Chem Int Ed Engl. 2024 Feb 26;63(9):e202316428. doi: 10.1002/anie.202316428. Epub 2024 Jan 26.

Abstract

Heterologous tRNAs used for noncanonical amino acid (ncAA) mutagenesis in mammalian cells typically show poor activity. We recently introduced a virus-assisted directed evolution strategy (VADER) that can enrich improved tRNA mutants from naïve libraries in mammalian cells. However, VADER was limited to processing only a few thousand mutants; the inability to screen a larger sequence space precluded the identification of highly active variants with distal synergistic mutations. Here, we report VADER2.0, which can process significantly larger mutant libraries. It also employs a novel library design, which maintains base-pairing between distant residues in the stem regions, allowing us to pack a higher density of functional mutants within a fixed sequence space. VADER2.0 enabled simultaneous engineering of the entire acceptor stem of M. mazei pyrrolysyl tRNA (tRNAPyl ), leading to a remarkably improved variant, which facilitates more efficient incorporation of a wider range of ncAAs, and enables facile development of viral vectors and stable cell-lines for ncAA mutagenesis.

Keywords: Directed Evolution; Genetic Code Expansion; Nonsense Suppression; tRNA Engineering.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Amino Acids* / chemistry
  • Amino Acyl-tRNA Synthetases* / genetics
  • Escherichia coli / metabolism
  • Mutagenesis
  • RNA, Transfer / genetics
  • RNA, Transfer / metabolism

Substances

  • Amino Acids
  • Amino Acyl-tRNA Synthetases
  • RNA, Transfer