Emina Derakovic's research while affiliated with University of Kansas and other places

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Publications (1)


Figure 5. Free energy of binding estimates for sets of three adjacent residues for the high-stability collagen-binding peptide (TKKLTLRT) on human collagen type I alpha chain 2 (COL1A2) residues 861-871. The binding site (LTL) reference view is in (A), with views of 90° rotations along the indicated axis in (B,D,E). Each circle represents a potential three-amino-acid binding site between a peptide and collagen. Positive binding sites are energetically unfavorable, while negative binding sites are favorable. Binding sites significantly below −kT are likely to be stable. The potential binding free energy was calculated from the Wimley-White hydropathy scale values for the amino acids within the binding site. In (C), the predicted binding sites for the TKKLTLRT peptide (orange) was shown to include a binding site (LTL of peptide to GLL of collagen or LLG of collagen) at pH 4 which is missing from TKKTLRT (magenta). The LRR-10 cyan labeled binding sites are the same as in Figure 3. This binding site is the lowest free energy binding site among LRR-10 binding sites (cyan) and TKKTLRT binding sites at pH 4. This labeled TKKLTLRT binding site of LTL at pH 7 is about the same free energy as the lowest energy binding site of LRR-10 shown in Figure 4.
Figure 8. Streptavidin-coated quantum dot labelling of biotinylated peptides on type I collagen. The Q-dots complexed with biotinylated peptides remained on collagen after washing. The corresponding summed pixel intensities are provided in the bar chart. The predicted peptide TKKLTLRT resulted in the highest coverage based on the quantum dots assay.
Designing Collagen-Binding Peptide with Enhanced Properties Using Hydropathic Free Energy Predictions
  • Article
  • Full-text available

March 2023

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138 Reads

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2 Citations

Applied Sciences

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Aya Kirahm Cloyd

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Emina Derakovic

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[...]

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Collagen is fundamental to a vast diversity of health functions and potential therapeutics. Short peptides targeting collagen are attractive for designing modular systems for site-specific delivery of bioactive agents. Characterization of peptide–protein binding involves a larger number of potential interactions that require screening methods to target physiological conditions. We build a hydropathy-based free energy estimation tool which allows quick evaluation of peptides binding to collagen. Previous studies showed that pH plays a significant role in collagen structure and stability. Our design tool enables probing peptides for their collagen-binding property across multiple pH conditions. We explored binding features of currently known collagen-binding peptides, collagen type I alpha chain 2 sense peptide (TKKTLRT) and decorin LRR-10 (LRELHLNNN). Based on these analyzes, we engineered a collagen-binding peptide with enhanced properties across a large pH range in contrast to LRR-10 pH dependence. To validate our predictions, we used a quantum-dots-based binding assay to compare the coverage of the peptides on type I collagen. The predicted peptide resulted in improved collagen binding. Hydropathy of the peptide–protein pair is a promising approach to finding compatible pairings with minimal use of computational resources, and our method allows for quick evaluation of peptides for binding to other proteins. Overall, the free-energy-based tool provides an alternative computational screening approach that impacts protein interaction search methods.

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Citations (1)


... Therefore, we constructed our own full-atom model by conforming the backbone atoms to an ideal triple-helix [80]. This model was then sampled for binding to the peptide LRELHLNNN, derived from decorin, and previously used for the development of molecular imaging probes [26,81]. This simulation produced several potential binding sites, including at the hypothesized d band location. ...

Reference:

Collagen-targeted Protein Nanomicelles for the in vivo Imaging of Non- Alcoholic Steatohepatitis (NASH)
Designing Collagen-Binding Peptide with Enhanced Properties Using Hydropathic Free Energy Predictions

Applied Sciences