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Linkers for improved cleavage of fusion proteins with an engineered alpha-lytic protease.
Authors:S Lien  S J Milner  L D Graham  J C Wallace  G L Francis
Institution:Cooperative Research Centre for Tissue Growth and Repair: Department of Biochemistry, University of Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia.
Abstract:Addition of an N-terminal fusion partner can greatly aid the expression and purification of a recombinant protein in Escherichia coli. We investigated two genetically engineered proteases designed to remove the fusion partner after the protein of interest has been expressed. Recombinant human insulin-like growth factor-II (hIGF-II) has been produced from E. coli-derived fusion proteins using a novel enzymatic cleavage system that uses a mutant of alpha-lytic protease. Initially, two potential fusion protein linkers were designed, Pro-Ala-Pro-His (PAPH) and Pro-Ala-Pro-Met (PAPM), and were tested as substrates in the form of synthetic dodecapeptides. Using mass spectrometry and reverse-phase HPLC, the position of cleavage was confirmed and the kinetics of synthetic peptide cleavage were examined. Use of the linkers in hIGF-II fusion proteins produced in E. coli was then evaluated. The fusion proteins constructed consist of the first 11 amino acids of porcine growth hormone linked N-terminally to hIGF-II by six amino acids that include the dipeptide Val-Asn followed by a variable tetrapeptide protease cleavage motif. Mass spectrometry and N-terminal sequencing confirmed that proteolytic cleavage of the fusion proteins had occurred at the predicted sites. Using the fusion proteins as substrates, the cleavage of the rationally designed motifs by the alpha-lytic protease mutant was compared. The fusion protein containing the motif PAPM had a k(cat)/K(M) ratio indicating a 1.6-fold preference over the PAPH fusion protein for cleavage by this enzyme. Furthermore, when hIGF-II fusion proteins containing the designed cleavable linkers were processed with the engineered alpha-lytic protease, they gave greatly improved yields of native hIGF-II compared to an analogous fusion protein cleaved by H64A subtilisin. Comparison of the peptide and protein cleavage studies shows that the efficient proteolysis of the cleavage motifs is an inherent property of the designed sequences and is not determined by secondary or tertiary structure in the fusion proteins.
Keywords:fusion protein  site‐specific cleavage  α‐lytic protease
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