Using a high performance computing infrastructure, a team of
researchers developed the first versatile and modular example of a fully
artificial protein-mimetic model system that recreates principal activities of
proteins.
Physicists of the University of Vienna together with
researchers from the University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Vienna
developed nano-machines which recreate principal activities of proteins. They
present the first versatile and modular example of a fully artificial
protein-mimetic model system, thanks to the Vienna Scientific Cluster (VSC), a
high performance computing infrastructure. These “bionic proteins” could play
an important role in innovating pharmaceutical research. The results have now
been published in the renowned journal “Physical Review Letters”.
Proteins are the fundamental building blocks of all living
organism we currently know. Because of the large number and complexity of
bio-molecular processes they are capable of, proteins are often referred to as
“molecular machines”. Take for instance the proteins in your muscles: At each
contraction stimulated by the brain, an uncountable number of proteins change
their structures to create the collective motion of the contraction. This extraordinary
process is performed by molecules which have a size of only about a nanometer,
a billionth of a meter. Muscle contraction is just one of the numerous
activities of proteins: There are proteins that transport cargo in the cells,
proteins that construct other proteins, there are even cages in which proteins
that “mis-behave” can be trapped for correction, and the list goes on and on.
“Imitating these astonishing bio-mechanical properties of proteins and
transferring them to a fully artificial system is our long term objective”,
says Ivan Coluzza from the Faculty of Physics of the University of Vienna, who
works on this project together with colleagues of the University of Natural
Resources and Life Sciences Vienna.
Simulations thanks to Vienna Scientific Cluster (VSC)
In a recent paper in Physical Review Letters, the team
presented the first example of a fully artificial bio-mimetic model system
capable of spontaneously self-knotting into a target structure. Using computer
simulations, they reverse engineered proteins by focusing on the key elements
that give them the ability to execute the program written in the genetic code.
The computationally very intensive simulations have been made possible by
access to the powerful Vienna Scientific Cluster (VSC), a high performance
computing infrastructure operated jointly by the University of Vienna, the
Vienna University of Technology and the University of Natural Resources and
Life Sciences Vienna.
Artificial proteins in the laboratory
The team now works on realizing such artificial proteins in
the laboratory using specially functionalized nanoparticles. The particles will
then be connected into chains following the sequence determined by the computer
simulations, such that the artificial proteins fold into the desired shapes.
Such knotted nanostructures could be used as new stable drug delivery vehicles
and as enzyme-like, but more stable, catalysts.
This project was supported by the Austrian Science Fund
(FWF) within the SFB “Vienna Computational Materials Laboratory” (ViCoM).
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