Publications
bioRxiv : the preprint server for biologyMay 2025 DOI:
10.1101/2025.05.15.654352

Unusually Broad-spectrum small-molecule sensing using a single protein scaffold

Tian, H; Beltrán, J; George, W; Lenert-Mondou, C; Seder, N; Davis, Z I; Swift, S D; Girke, T; Whitehead, T A; Wheeldon, I; Cutler, S R
Product Used
Variant Libraries
Abstract
Small-molecule sensing in plants is dominated by chemical-induced dimerization modules. In the abscisic acid (ABA) system, allosteric receptors recruit phosphatase effectors and achieve nM in vivo responses from μM receptor-ligand interactions. This sensitivity amplification could enable ABA receptors to serve as generic scaffolds for designing small-molecule sensors. To test this, we screened collections of mutant ABA-receptors against 2,726 drugs and other ligands and identified 569 sensors for 6.7% of these ligands. The mutational patterns indicate strong selection for ligand-specific binding pockets. We used these data to develop a sensor design pipeline and isolated sensors for multiple plant natural products, 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT), and forever per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS). Thus, the ABA sensor system enables design and isolation of small-molecule sensors with broad chemical scope and antibody-like simplicity.
Product Used
Variant Libraries

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