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1.
Heparin binding by the HIV-1 tat protein transduction domain   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
The protein transduction domain from the HIV-1 tat protein (termed PTD-tat) has been fused to the C-terminus of a model cargo protein, the IgG binding domain of streptococcal protein G. We demonstrate that PG-Ctat (PTD-tat fused to the C-terminus of protein G) binds to a heparin affinity column. PG-Ctat binds with relatively high affinity, as shown by its elution at 1.6 M NaCl. The heparin binding properties of PTD-tat are consistent with the idea that heparan sulfate, an analog of heparin found at the cell surface, plays a role in the translocation of PTD-tat fusions. We suggest that the heparin-binding properties of PTD-tat can be exploited for purification of PTD-tat fusions in the absence of affinity tags.  相似文献   

2.
Aequorin fusion proteins have been used extensively in intracellular Ca2+ measurements and in the development of binding assays. Gene fusions to aequorin for production of fusion proteins have been so far limited to its N-terminus, as previous studies have indicated that aequorin loses its activity upon modification of its C-terminus. To further investigate this, two model peptides, an octapeptide (DTLDDDDL), and leu-enkephalin (TGGFL), an opioid peptide, were fused to the C-terminus of a cysteine-free mutant of aequorin through genetic engineering. The octapeptide was also fused to the N-terminus of the aequorin-leu-enkephalin fusion protein, which enables its affinity purification. Contrary to reports of earlier studies, we found that aequorin retains its bioluminescence activity after modification of the C-terminus. The half-life of light emission and the calibration curves obtained with the fusion proteins were comparable to those of the cysteine-free mutant of aequorin. Dose-response curves for the octapeptide were generated using two aequorin-octapeptide fusion proteins with the octapeptide fused to the N-terminus in one case, and to the C-terminus in the other. Similar detection limits for the octapeptide were obtained using both fusion proteins. The C-terminal fusion system has advantages in cases where antibodies recognize only the C-terminus of the peptide, as well as in cases where the functionality of the peptide lies in its C-terminus. The purification is also simplified as the affinity tag can be engineered at one terminus and the peptide of interest at the other.  相似文献   

3.
Many polypeptides overexpressed in bacteria are produced misfolded and accumulate as solid structures called inclusion bodies. Inclusion-body-prone proteins have often been reported to escape precipitation when fused to maltose-binding protein (MBP). Here, we have examined the case of HPV 16 oncoprotein E6. The unfused sequence of E6 is overexpressed as inclusion bodies in bacteria. By contrast, fusions of E6 to the C-terminus of MBP are produced soluble. We have analyzed preparations of soluble MBP-E6 fusions by using three independent approaches: dynamic light scattering, lateral turbidimetry, and sandwich ELISA. All three methods showed that MBP-E6 preparations contain highly aggregated material. The behavior of these soluble aggregates under denaturating conditions suggests that they are formed by agglomeration of misfolded E6 moieties. However, precipitation is prevented by the presence of the folded and highly soluble MBP moieties, which maintain the aggregates in solution. Therefore, the fact that a protein or protein domain is produced soluble when fused to the C-terminus of a carrier protein does not guarantee that the protein of interest is properly folded and active. We suggest that aggregation of fusion proteins should be systematically assayed, especially when these fusions are to be used for binding measurements or activity tests.  相似文献   

4.
Recombinant proteins are commonly expressed in fusion with an affinity tag to facilitate purification. We have in the present study evaluated the possible use of the human glutaredoxin 2 (Grx2) as an affinity tag for purification of heterologous proteins. Grx2 is a glutathione binding protein and we have shown in the present study that the protein can be purified from crude bacterial extracts by a one-step affinity chromatography on glutathione-Sepharose. We further showed that short peptides could be fused to either the N- or C-terminus of Grx2 without affecting its ability to bind to the glutathione column. However, when Grx2 was fused to either the 27 kDa green fluorescent protein or the 116 kDa beta-galactosidase, the fusion proteins lost their ability to bind glutathione-Sepharose. Insertion of linker sequences between the Grx2 and the fusion protein did not restore binding to the column. In summary, our findings suggest that Grx2 may be used as an affinity tag for purification of short peptides and possibly also certain proteins that do not interfere with the binding to glutathione-Sepharose. However, the failure of purifying either green fluorescent protein or beta-galactosidase fused to Grx2 suggests that the use of Grx2 as an affinity tag for recombinant protein purification is limited.  相似文献   

5.
It is difficult to imagine any strategy for high-throughput protein expression and purification that does not involve genetically engineered affinity tags. Because of its ability to enhance the solubility and promote the proper folding of its fusion partners, Escherichia coli maltose-binding protein (MBP) is a particularly useful affinity tag. However, not all MBP fusion proteins bind efficiently to amylose resin, and even when they do it is usually not possible to obtain a sample of adequate purity after a single affinity step. To address this problem, we endeavored to incorporate supplemental affinity tags within the framework of an MBP fusion protein. We show that both the nature of the supplemental tags and their location can influence the ability of MBP to promote the solubility of its fusion partners. The most promising configurations for high-throughput protein expression and purification appear to be a fusion protein with a biotin acceptor peptide (BAP) on the N-terminus of MBP and/or a hexahistidine tag (His-tag) on the C-terminus of the passenger protein. Abbreviatoins: BAP, biotin acceptor peptide; EDTA, ethelenediaminetetraacetic acid; IPTG, isopropyl--d-thiogalactopyranoside; MBP, E. coli maltose-binding protein; GFP; green fluorescent protein; Ni-NTA, nickel-nitrilotriacetic acid; ORF, open reading frame; PCR; polymerase chain reaction; R5, polyarginine tag; SDS-PAGE, sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; TEV, tobacco etch virus; WT, wild-type  相似文献   

6.
Obtaining enough membrane protein in native or native-like status is still a challenge in membrane protein structure biology. Maltose binding protein (MBP) has been widely used as a fusion partner in improving membrane protein production. In the present work, a systematic assessment on the application of mature MBP (mMBP) for membrane protein overexpression and purification was performed on 42 membrane proteins, most of which showed no or poor expression level in membrane fraction fused with an N-terminal Histag. It was found that most of the small membrane proteins were overexpressed in the native membrane of Escherichia coli when using mMBP. In addition, the proteolysis of the fusions were performed on the membrane without solubilization with detergents, leading to the development of an efficient protocol to directly purify the target membrane proteins from the membrane fraction through a one-step affinity chromatography. Our results indicated that mMBP is an excellent fusion partner for overexpression, membrane targeting and purification of small membrane proteins. The present expression and purification method may be a good solution for the large scale preparation of small membrane proteins in structural and functional studies.  相似文献   

7.
Protein-fusion constructs have been used with great success for enhancing expression of soluble recombinant protein and as tags for affinity purification. Unfortunately the most popular tags, such as GST and MBP, are large, which hinders direct NMR studies of the fusion proteins. Cleavage of the fusion proteins often re-introduces problems with solubility and stability. Here we describe the use of N-terminally fused protein G (B1 domain) as a non-cleavable solubility-enhancement tag (SET) for structure determination of a dimeric protein complex. The SET enhances the solubility and stability of the fusion product dramatically while not interacting directly with the protein of interest. This approach can be used for structural characterization of poorly behaving protein systems, and would be especially useful for structural genomics studies.  相似文献   

8.
A gene fusion approach to simplify protein immobilization and purification is described. A gene encoding the protein of interest is fused to a gene fragment encoding the affinity peptide Ala-His-Gly-His-Arg-Pro. The expressed fusion proteins can be purified using immobilized metal affinity chromatography. A vector, designed to ensure obligate head-to-tail polymerization of oligonucleotide linkers was constructed by in vitro mutagenesis. A linker encoding the affinity peptide, was synthesized and polymerized to two, four and eight copies. These linkers were fused to the 3' end of a structural gene encoding a two-domain protein A molecule, ZZ, and to the 5' end of a gene encoding beta-galactosidase. Fusion proteins, of both types, with zero or two copies of the linker showed little or no binding to immobilized Zn2+, while a relatively strong interaction could be observed for the fusions based on four or eight copies of the linker. Using a pH gradient, the ZZ fusions were found to be eluted from the resin at different pHs depending on the number of the affinity peptide. These results demonstrate that genetic engineering can be used to facilitate purification and immobilization of proteins to immobilized Zn2+ and that the multiplicity of the affinity peptide is an important factor determining the binding characteristics.  相似文献   

9.
We developed a protocol for the fast purification of small proteins and peptides using heat incubation as the first purification step. The proteins are expressed from a new bacterial expression vector (pETM-90) fused to the C-terminus of thermostable Ftr from Methanopyrus kandleri. The vector further contains a 6xHis-tag to allow immobilised metal ion affinity purification and a TEV protease cleavage site to enable the removal of the His-tag and fusion partner. Heat incubation induces the specific denaturation and precipitation of the Escherichia coli proteins but not of the thermostable fusion protein. Using the fusion construct and the heat incubation protocol a number of fusion proteins were purified to near homogeneity. The thermostability was ensured when Ftr had a molecular weight higher than twice the target protein. The obtained purification yields were similar and, in some cases, even higher than the ones obtained by affinity purification with the same Ftr-fusion proteins or the same target proteins fused to other often used partners such as NusA, GST, or DsbA. The protocol does not depend on a specific thermostable protein as was shown by the exchange of Ftr for M. kandleri Mtd. Purification by heat incubation is a fast and inexpensive alternative to chromatographic techniques, particularly suitable for the production of antigenic sequences for which the loss of native structure is not detrimental. We proved that it can be easily automated.  相似文献   

10.
N- or C-terminal fusions of red-fluorescent protein (RFP) with various fungal cellulose-binding domains (CBDs) belonging to carbohydrate binding module (CBM) family 1 were expressed in a Pichia pastoris expression system, and the resulting fusion proteins were used to examine the feasibility of large-scale affinity purification of CBD-tagged proteins on cellulose columns. We found that RFP fused with CBD from Trichoderma reesei CBHI (CBD(Tr)(CBHI)) was expressed at up to 1.2g/l in the culture filtrate, which could be directly injected into the cellulose column. The fusion protein was tightly adsorbed on the cellulose column in the presence of a sufficient amount of ammonium sulfate and was efficiently eluted with pure water. Bovine serum albumin (BSA) was not captured under these conditions, whereas both BSA and the fusion protein were adsorbed on a phenyl column, indicating that the cellulose column can be used for the purification of not only hydrophilic proteins but also for hydrophobic proteins. Recovery of various fusion proteins exceeded 80%. Our results indicate that protein purification by expression of a target protein as a fusion with a fungal family 1 CBD tag in a yeast expression system, followed by affinity purification on a cellulose column, is simple, effective and easily scalable.  相似文献   

11.
Fusion tags are commonly employed to enhance target protein expression, improve their folding and solubility, and reduce protein degradation in expression of recombinant proteins. Ubiquitin (Ub) and SUMO are highly conserved small proteins in eukaryotes, and frequently used as fusion tags in prokaryotic expression. ThiS, a smaller sulfur-carrier protein involved in thiamin synthesis, is conserved among most prokaryotic species. The structural similarity between ThiS and Ub provoked us into expecting that the former could be used as a fusion tag. Hence, ThiS was fused to insulin A and B chains, murine Ribonuclease Inhibitor (mRI) and EGFP, respectively. When induced in Escherichia coli, ThiS-fused insulin A and B chains were overexpressed in inclusion bodies, and to higher levels in comparison to the same proteins fused with Ub. On the contrast, ThiS fusion of mRI, an unstable protein, resulted in enhanced degradation that was not alleviated in protease-deficient strains. While the degradation of Ub- and SUMO-fused mRI was less and seemed protease-dependent. Enhanced degradation of mRI did not occur for the fusions with half-molecules of ThiS. When ThiS-tag was fused to the C-terminus of EGFP, higher expression, predominantly in inclusion bodies, was observed again. It was further found that ThiS fusion of EGFP significantly retarded its refolding process. These results indicated that prokaryotic ThiS is able to promote the expression of target proteins in E. coli, but enhanced degradation may occur in case of unstable targets. Unlike eukaryotic Ub-based tags usually increase the solubility and folding of proteins, ThiS fusion enhances the expression by augmenting the formation of inclusion bodies, probably through retardation of the folding of target proteins.  相似文献   

12.
A plasmid vector has been constructed that directs the synthesis of high levels (approximately 2% of total cellular protein) of fusions between a target protein and maltose-binding protein (MBP) in Escherichia coli. The MBP domain is used to purify the fusion protein in a one step procedure by affinity chromatography to crosslinked amylose resin. The fusion protein contains the recognition sequence (Ile-Glu-Gly-Arg) for blood coagulation factor Xa protease between the two domains. Cleavage by factor Xa separates the two domains and the target protein domain can then be purified away from the MBP domain by repeating the affinity chromatography step. A prokaryotic (beta-galactosidase) and a eukaryotic (paramyosin) protein have been successfully purified by this method.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Recombinant protein purification with affinity tags is a widely employed technique. One of the most common tags used for protein purification is the histidine tag (Histag). In this work, we use a tandem starch-binding domain (SBDtag) as a tag for protein purification. Four proteins from different sources were fused to the SBDtag, and the resulting fusion proteins were purified by affinity chromatography using the Histag or the SBDtag. The results showed that the SBDtag is superior to the Histag for protein purification. The efficient adsorption of the fusion proteins to raw corn starch was also demonstrated, and two fusions were selected to test purification directly using raw starch from rice, corn, potato, and barley. The two fusion proteins were successfully recovered from crude bacterial extract using raw starch, thus demonstrating that the SBDtag can be used as an efficient affinity tag for recombinant protein purification on an inexpensive matrix.  相似文献   

15.
After affinity purification on immobilized glutathione, insect-cell-derived glutathione S-transferase (GST) fusion proteins contain variable amounts of protein contaminants of about 23-24 kDa. We have isolated these glutathione-binding proteins from the widely used Sf9 and Hi5 insect cell lines and characterized them by LC-MS and N-terminal sequencing. Based on the observation that these proteins have higher affinity for glutathione than GST fusions, we have found that by using differential elution conditions the amount of such contaminants in GST fusion preparations can be strongly reduced directly during the affinity purification step. The main interest of these results is that they are not restricted to a specific construct, but rather they seem to apply to various insect-cell-derived GST fusions.  相似文献   

16.
Many proteins that accumulate in the form of insoluble aggregates when they are overproduced in Escherichia coli can be rendered soluble by fusing them to E. coli maltose binding protein (MBP), and this will often enable them to fold in to their biologically active conformations. Yet, although it is an excellent solubility enhancer, MBP is not a particularly good affinity tag for protein purification. To compensate for this shortcoming, we have engineered and successfully tested Gateway destination vectors for the production of dual His6MBP-tagged fusion proteins in the cytoplasm and periplasm of E. coli. The MBP moiety improves the yield and solubility of its fusion partners while the hexahistidine tag (His-tag) serves to facilitate their purification. The availability of a vector that targets His6MBP fusion proteins to the periplasm expands the utility of this dual tagging approach to include proteins that contain disulfide bonds or are toxic in the bacterial cytoplasm.  相似文献   

17.
Heparinase I (HepA) was originally isolated from Flavobacterium heparinum (F. heparinum) and specifically cleaves heparin/heparan sulfate in a site-dependent manner, showing great promise for producing low molecular weight heparin (LMWH). However, expressing recombinant HepA is extremely difficult in Escherichia coli because it suffers from low yields, insufficient purity and insolubility. In this paper, we systematically cloned and fused the HepA gene to the C-terminus of five soluble partners, including translation initiation factor 2 domain I (IF2), glutathione S-transferase (GST), maltose-binding protein (MBP), small ubiquitin modifying protein (SUMO) and N-utilization substance A (NusA), to screen for their abilities to improve the solubility of recombinant HepA when expressed in E. coli. A convenient two-step immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC) method was utilized to purify these fused HepA hybrids. We show that, except for NusA, the fusion partners dramatically improved the soluble expression of recombinant HepA, with IF2-HepA and SUMO-HepA creating almost completely soluble HepA (98% and 94% of expressed HepA fusions are soluble, respectively), which is the highest yield rate published to the best of our knowledge. Moreover, all of the fusion proteins show comparable biological activity to their unfused counterparts and could be used directly without removing the fusion tags. Together, our results provide a viable option to produce large amounts of soluble and active recombinant HepA for manufacturing.  相似文献   

18.
Escherichia coli maltose binding protein (MBP) is commonly used to promote the solubility of its fusion partners. To investigate the mechanism of solubility enhancement by MBP, we compared the properties of MBP fusion proteins refolded in vitro with those of the corresponding fusion proteins purified under native conditions. We fused five aggregation-prone passenger proteins to 3 different N-terminal tags: His6-MBP, His6-GST and His6. After purifying the 15 fusion proteins under denaturing conditions and refolding them by rapid dilution, we recovered far more of the soluble MBP fusion proteins than their GST- or His-tagged counterparts. Hence, we can reproduce the solubilizing activity of MBP in a simple in vitro system, indicating that no additional factors are required to mediate this effect. We assayed both the soluble fusion proteins and their TEV protease digestion products (i.e., with the N-terminal tag removed) for biological activity. Little or no activity was detected for some fusion proteins whereas others were quite active. When the MBP fusions proteins were purified from E. coli under native conditions they were all substantially active. These results indicate that the ability of MBP to promote the solubility of its fusion partners in vitro sometimes, but not always, results in their proper folding. We show that the folding of some passenger proteins is mediated by endogenous chaperones in vivo. Hence, MBP serves as a passive participant in the folding process; passenger proteins either fold spontaneously or with the assistance of chaperones.  相似文献   

19.
A recombinant gene for BPTI (bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor) is expressed in Escherichia coli using a MBP (maltose-binding protein) fusion vector. BPTI is fused through an FXa (blood coagulation factor Xa protease) target sequence (Ile-Glu-Gly-Arg) to the C-terminus of MBP. The MBP moiety of the hybrid protein enables purification in one step utilizing MBP's affinity to cross-linked amylose, and the FXa target sequence allows specific cleavage of the hybrid protein. Effective FXa cleavage is achieved by spacing the FXa target sequence and Arg-1 of the BPTI sequence with four residues (Met-Glu-Ala-Glu). The resulting N-terminal extended BPTI is readily converted to the wild-type sequence by trimming with cathepsin C exopeptidase, for the activity of which the spacing tetrapeptide is optimized. FXa cleavage is prohibited when the target sequence is placed next to Arg-1. In this construction, off-target cleavage at a somewhat homologous sequence (Val-Pro-Gly-Arg) results in five- or six-residue extended BPTI, indicating new details of the FXa specificity. The yield of highly purified recombinant BPTI is 3-6 mg/liter of culture, making the MBP-BPTI expression system convenient for the production of sufficient amounts of protein for NMR studies. 1H NMR is used to analyze the N-extended BPTI analogues.  相似文献   

20.
C di Guan  P Li  P D Riggs  H Inouye 《Gene》1988,67(1):21-30
Vectors were constructed that allow foreign peptides to be expressed in Escherichia coli as fusion proteins. The peptides are fused to the C terminus of maltose-binding protein (MBP), which allows them to be purified by the MBP's affinity to cross-linked amylose (starch). The fusion protein can be directed to the periplasm by including the leader sequence from the phoA gene on the vector.  相似文献   

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