De novo design of a peptide ligand for specific affinity purification of human complement C1q

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Affinity purification is a essential technique for isolating highly purified proteins; however, generating affinity ligands require significant time and financial investment. To address these limitations, this study proposes a novel affinity chromatography method utilizing in silico -designed cyclic peptides as ligands. Targeting Complement C1q (C1q), a plasma protein that plays crucial roles in classical complement pathway, we employed the biomolecular structure prediction model, AlphaFold2, to design specific binding cyclic peptides. Based on these designs, we synthesized lariat-type cyclic peptides characterized by disulfide cyclization and biotinylation, which were subsequently immobilized on streptavidin carriers. Performance tests confirmed that the resulting column specifically captured C1q, allowing for elution via a standard NaCl concentration gradient. Notably, high selectivity was preserved even in the presence of plasma, underscoring the ligand’s practical robustness. By overcoming traditional constraints through (1) rapid and simple design, (2) high specificity, and (3) universal versatility without genetic modification, this de novo design strategy represents a potential breakthrough in protein purification technologies.

Highlights

  • AI-driven de novo design generated a specific cyclic peptide ligand for Complement C1q

  • The synthetic ligand enabled one-step purification of Complement C1q directly from human plasma

  • Mild elution conditions preserved the target’s oligomeric structure and native interactome

  • This label-free strategy offers a rapid, low-cost alternative to antibody-based chromatography

Article activity feed