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Better together: building protein oligomers naturally and by design

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posted on 2025-08-01, 08:09 authored by REA Gwyther, DD Jones, HL Worthy
Protein oligomers are more common in nature than monomers, with dimers being the most prevalent final structural state observed in known structures. From a biological perspective, this makes sense as it conserves vital molecular resources that may be wasted simply by generating larger single polypeptide units, and allows new features such as cooperativity to emerge. Taking inspiration from nature, protein designers and engineers are now building artificial oligomeric complexes using a variety of approaches to generate new and useful supramolecular protein structures. Oligomerisation is thus offering a new approach to sample structure and function space not accessible through simply tinkering with monomeric proteins.

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© 2019 The Author(s). This is an open access article published by Portland Press Limited on behalf of the Biochemical Society and distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 (CC BY).

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This is the final version. Available on open access from Portland Press via the DOI in this record

Journal

Biochemical Society Transactions

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Portland Press for Biochemical Society

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  • Version of Record

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en

FCD date

2019-11-26T21:13:26Z

FOA date

2020-02-19T15:30:00Z

Citation

Vol. 47 (6), pp. 1773–1780

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