Lower critical solution temperature behavior of elastin-coiled-coil polymer, a potential platform for treatment of non-hodgkin's lymphoma

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Publication Type honors thesis
School or College College of Engineering
Department Biomedical Engineering
Faculty Mentor Hamidreza Ghandehari
Creator Armstrong, Blair P.
Title Lower critical solution temperature behavior of elastin-coiled-coil polymer, a potential platform for treatment of non-hodgkin's lymphoma
Date 2021
Description Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma takes the lives of 20,000 Americans each year. When traditional therapies fail, clinicians have turned to a drug, rituximab, for treatment. However, rituximab is now curative for less than 50% of patients and new treatments are needed. Drug-free macromolecular therapeutics (DFMTs) are an emerging form of therapeutics that seek to bridge the gap created by clinical drug resistance, specifically for Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma. DFMTs function by clustering surface cell receptors to elicit a cellular response. Typically in DFMTs, a primary molecule targets cell-bound receptors, and a secondary crosslinker binds to the primary molecule causing supramolecular interactions, clustering cell receptors. We hypothesize that elastin-like polypeptides (ELPs) with appropriate biorecognizable moieties can be used as well-defined polymeric backbones to cluster cell-surface receptors due to their lower critical solution temperature (LCST) behavior and to ultimately push development in non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma treatments. The LCST is the temperature above which the protein aggregates in an aqueous solution. ELP fusion with complementary alpha-helical peptides capable of forming coiled coils (CCE and CCK) will produce novel, bifunctional biomaterials. Four elastin-like fusion proteins were produced recombinantly using E. coli, purified by inverse transition cycling (ITC), and characterized. The CCE-48ELP, CCK-48ELP, CCE-192ELP, and CCK-192ELP were confirmed via amino acid analysis and gel electrophoresis. The fusion proteins were then analyzed using dynamic light scattering (DLS), turbidimetry, and precipitation assays. Turbidimetry data show that at 10 μM the CCE-48ELP LCST is undetectable below 80°C. CCK-48ELP (10 μM) and mixing of CCE-48ELP/CCK-48ELP (5 μM/5 μM) have LCSTs of 54.8°C and 46.7°C, respectively. The CCE-192ELP (10 μM) has a higher LCST compared to the CCE/CCK-192ELP (5 μM/5 μM) mix at 29.7°C compared to 28.0°C. Additionally, CCE/CCK fusion protein mixtures generate increased aggregate size evidenced by dynamic light scattering by comparison at 23°C, 37°C, and 50°C. The CCE protein subunit also demonstrated capability as a solubility tag for proteins in solution.
Type Text
Publisher University of Utah
Language eng
Rights Management (c) Blair P. Armstrong
Format Medium application/pdf
Permissions Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s62445ay
ARK ark:/87278/s6pgvfyk
Setname ir_htoa
ID 2389492
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6pgvfyk
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