Protein and peptide engineering for chemical exchange saturation transfer imaging in the age of synthetic biology

Assaf A. Gilad, Amnon Bar-Shir, Alexander R. Bricco, Zinia Mohanta, Michael T. McMahon

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

Abstract

At the beginning of the millennium, the first chemical exchange saturation transfer (CEST) contrast agents were bio-organic molecules. However, later, metal-based CEST agents (paraCEST agents) took center stage. This did not last too long as paraCEST agents showed limited translational potential. By contrast, the CEST field gradually became dominated by metal-free CEST agents. One branch of research stemming from the original work by van Zijl and colleagues is the development of CEST agents based on polypeptides. Indeed, in the last 2 decades, tremendous progress has been achieved in this field. This includes the design of novel peptides as biosensors, genetically encoded recombinant as well as synthetic reporters. This was a result of extensive characterization and elucidation of the theoretical requirements for rational designing and engineering of such agents. Here, we provide an extensive overview of the evolution of more precise protein-based CEST agents, review the rationalization of enzyme-substrate pairs as CEST contrast enhancers, discuss the theoretical considerations to improve peptide selectivity, specificity and enhance CEST contrast. Moreover, we discuss the strong influence of synthetic biology on the development of the next generation of protein-based CEST contrast agents.

Original languageEnglish (US)
JournalNMR in biomedicine
DOIs
StateAccepted/In press - 2022

Keywords

  • chemical exchange saturation transfer (CEST)
  • contrast agents
  • magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
  • peptides
  • proton exchange
  • reporter genes and molecular imaging
  • synthetic biology

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Molecular Medicine
  • Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging
  • Spectroscopy

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