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1.
NMR studies of post-translationally modified proteins are complicated by the lack of an efficient method to produce isotope enriched recombinant proteins in cultured mammalian cells. We show that reducing the glucose concentration and substituting glutamate for glutamine in serum-free medium increased cell viability while simultaneously increasing recombinant protein yield and the enrichment of non-essential amino acids compared to culture in unmodified, serum-free medium. Adding dichloroacetate, a pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase inhibitor, further improves cell viability, recombinant protein yield, and isotope enrichment. We demonstrate the method by producing partially enriched recombinant Thy1 glycoprotein from Lec1 Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells using U-13C-glucose and 15N-glutamate as labeled precursors. This study suggests that uniformly 15N,13C-labeled recombinant proteins may be produced in cultured mammalian cells starting from a mixture of labeled essential amino acids, glucose, and glutamate.  相似文献   

2.
A cost-effective protocol for uniform 15N and/or13 C isotope labeling of bacterially expressed proteins is presented. Unlike most standard protocols, cells are initially grown in a medium containing nutrients at natural abundance and isotopically labeled nutrients are only supplied at the later stages of growth and during protein expression. This permits the accumulation of a large cell mass without the need to employ expensive isotopically labeled nutrients. The abrupt decrease in oxygen consumption that occurs upon complete exhaustion of essential nutrients is used to precisely time the switch between unlabeled and labeled nutrients. Application of the protocol is demonstrated for wild-type and a mutant of the N-terminal zinc-binding domain of HIV-1 integrase.  相似文献   

3.
An improved expression protocol is proposed for amino acid type-specific [13C], [15N]-isotope labeling of proteins in baculovirus-infected (BV) insect cell cultures. This new protocol modifies the methods published by Gossert et al. (J Biomol NMR 51(4):449–456, 2011) and provides efficient incorporation of isotopically labeled amino acids, with similar yields per L versus unlabeled expression in rich media. Gossert et al. identified the presence of unlabeled amino acids in the yeastolate of the growth medium as a major limitation in isotope labeling using BV-infected insect cells. By reducing the amount of yeastolate in the growth medium ten-fold, a significant improvement in labeling efficiency was demonstrated, while maintaining good protein expression yield. We report an alternate approach to improve isotope labeling efficiency using BV-infected insect cells namely by replacing the yeast extracts in the medium with dialyzed yeast extracts to reduce the amount of low molecular weight peptides and amino acids. We report the residual levels of amino acids in various media formulations and the amino acid consumption during fermentation, as determined by NMR. While direct replacement of yeastolate with dialyzed yeastolate delivered moderately lower isotope labeling efficiencies compared to the use of ten-fold diluted undialized yeastolate, we show that the use of dialyzed yeastolate combined with a ten-fold dilution delivered enhanced isotope labeling efficiency and at least a comparable level of protein expression yield, all at a scale which economizes use of these costly reagents.  相似文献   

4.
Amino acid selective isotope labeling is a useful approach to simplification of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra of large proteins. Cell-free protein synthesis offers essentially unlimited flexibility of labeling patterns but is labor-intensive and expensive. In vivo labeling is simple in principle but generally requires auxotrophic strains, inhibitors of amino acid synthesis, or complex media formulations. We describe a simple procedure for amino acid selective labeling of proteins expressed in prototrophic Escherichia coli strains. Excellent labeling selectivity was achieved for histidine, lysine, methionine, and alanine. Simplicity and robustness of this protocol make it a useful tool for protein NMR.  相似文献   

5.
This study reports the sequence specific chemical shifts assignments for 76 residues of the 94 residues containing monomeric unit of the photosynthetic light-harvesting 2 transmembrane protein complex from Rhodopseudomonas acidophila strain 10050, using Magic Angle Spinning (MAS) NMR in combination with extensive and selective biosynthetic isotope labeling methods. The sequence specific chemical shifts assignment is an essential step for structure determination by MAS NMR. Assignments have been performed on the basis of 2-dimensional proton-driven spin diffusion 13C–13C correlation experiments with mixing times of 20 and 500 ms and band selective 13C–15N correlation spectroscopy on a series of site-specific biosynthetically labeled samples. The decreased line width and the reduced number of correlation signals of the selectively labeled samples with respect to the uniformly labeled samples enable to resolve the narrowly distributed correlation signals of the backbone carbons and nitrogens involved in the long -helical transmembrane segments. Inter-space correlations between nearby residues and between residues and the labeled BChl a cofactors, provided by the 13C–13C correlation experiments using a 500 ms spin diffusion period, are used to arrive at sequence specific chemical shift assignments for many residues in the protein complex. In this way it is demonstrated that MAS NMR methods combined with site-specific biosynthetic isotope labeling can be used for sequence specific assignment of the NMR response of transmembrane proteins.  相似文献   

6.
Here we report the first application of amino acid-type selective (AATS) isotope labeling of a recombinant protein secreted by Brevibacillus choshinensis for a nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) study. To prepare the 15N-AATS-labeled protein, the transformed B. choshinensis was cultured in 15N-labeled amino acid-containing C.H.L. medium, which is commonly used in the Escherichia coli expression system. The analyses of the 1H-15N heteronuclear single quantum coherence (HSQC) spectra of the secreted proteins with a 15N-labeled amino acid demonstrated that alanine, arginine, asparagine, cysteine, glutamine, histidine, lysine, methionine, and valine are suitable for selective labeling, although acidic and aromatic amino acids are not suitable. The 15N labeling for glycine, isoleucine, leucine, serine, and threonine resulted in scrambling to specific amino acids. These results indicate that the B. choshinensis expression system is an alternative tool for AATS labeling of recombinant proteins, especially secretory proteins, for NMR analyses.  相似文献   

7.
The advantages of the organism Dictyostelium discoideum as an expression host for recombinant glycoproteins have been exploited for the production of an isotopically labeled cell surface protein for NMR structure studies. Growth medium containing [15N]NH4Cl and [13C]glycerol was used to generate isotopically labeled Escherichia coli, which was subsequently introduced to D. discoideum cells in simple Mes buffer. A variety of growth conditions were screened to establish minimal amounts of nitrogen and carbon metabolites for a cost-effective protocol. Following single-step purification by anion-exchange chromatography, 8 mg of uniformly 13C,15N-labeled protein secreted by approximately 1010D. discoideum cells was isolated from 3.3 liters of supernatant. Mass spectrometry showed the recombinant protein of 16 kDa to have incorporated greater than 99.9% isotopic label. The two-dimensional 1H-13C HSQC spectrum confirms 13C labeling of both glycan and amino acid residues of the glycoprotein. All heteronuclear NMR spectra showed a good dispersion of cross-peaks essential for high-quality structure determination.  相似文献   

8.
BackgroundIn-cell NMR is a powerful technique to investigate proteins in living human cells at atomic resolution. Ideally, when studying functional processes involving protein–protein interactions by NMR, only one partner should be isotopically labeled. Here we show that constitutive and transient protein expression can be combined with protein silencing to obtain selective protein labeling in human cells.MethodsWe established a human cell line stably overexpressing the copper binding protein HAH1. A second protein (human superoxide dismutase 1, SOD1) was overexpressed by transient transfection and isotopically labeled. A silencing vector containing shRNA sequences against the HAH1 gene was used to decrease the rate of HAH1 synthesis during the expression of SOD1. The levels of HAH1 mRNA and protein were measured as a function of time following transfection by RT-PCR and Western Blot, and the final cell samples were analyzed by in-cell NMR.ResultsSOD1 was ectopically expressed and labeled in a time window during which HAH1 biosynthesis was strongly decreased by shRNA, thus preventing its labeling. In-cell NMR spectra confirmed that, while both proteins were present, only SOD1 was selectively labeled and could be detected by 1H–15N heteronuclear NMR.Conclusions and general significanceWe showed that controlling protein expression by specifically silencing a stably expressed protein is a useful strategy to obtain selective isotope labeling of only one protein. This approach relies on established techniques thus permitting the investigation of protein–protein interactions by NMR in human cells.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Silkworms serve as promising bioreactors for the production of recombinant proteins, including glycoproteins and membrane proteins, for structural and functional protein analyses. However, lack of methodology for stable isotope labeling has been a major deterrent to using this expression system for nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) structural biology. Here we developed a metabolic isotope labeling technique using commercially available silkworm larvae. The fifth instar larvae were infected with baculoviruses for co-expression of recombinant human immunoglobulin G (IgG) as a test molecule, with calnexin as a chaperone. They were subsequently reared on an artificial diet containing 15N-labeled yeast crude protein extract. We harvested 0.1 mg of IgG from larva with a 15N-enrichment ratio of approximately 80 %. This allowed us to compare NMR spectral data of the Fc fragment cleaved from the silkworm-produced IgG with those of an authentic Fc glycoprotein derived from mammalian cells. Therefore, we successfully demonstrated that our method enables production of isotopically labeled glycoproteins for NMR studies.  相似文献   

11.
It was attempted to examine whether or not isotope labeling may possibly affect an oligonuclear metal-thiolate cluster. Cu-metallothioneins are known to contain strongly distorted Cu-thiolate clusters and seemed appropriate for this study. Thus, yeast 13C-and 15N-Cu-metallothioneins were isolated from Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells grown in a minimal synthetic medium and some physicochemical parameters were compared with those of the unlabeled Cu-thionein. Surprisingly, the 13C- and 15N- labeled Cu7-thioneins are distinctly different in their characteristic spectroscopic properties. The electronic absorption was blue-shifted while both luminescence emission and chiroptic features display a distinct red shift with markedly diminished intensities, respectively. Contrary to common knowledge that isotope labeling does not affect the molecular architecture of a protein the present results support such a phenomenon. Attributable to the fortunate happenstance that there is a strongly distorted structural situation in the oligonuclear Cu-thiolate cluster this isotope effect came to light.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Structural studies of biomolecules using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) rely on the availability of samples enriched in (13)C and (15)N isotopes. While (13)C/(15)N-labeled proteins are generally obtained by overexpression in transformed Escherichia coli cells cultured in the presence of an expensive mixture of labeled precursors, those of the photoautotrophic cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 can be uniformly labeled by growing them in medium containing Na(15)NO(3) and NaH(13)CO(3) as the sole nitrogen and carbon sources. We report here a novel vector-host system suitable for the efficient preparation of uniformly (13)C/(15)N-labeled proteins in Anabaena sp. PCC 7120. The 24-kDa N-terminal domain of the E. coli gyrase B subunit, used as a test protein, was cloned into the pRL25C shuttle vector under the control of the tac promoter. The transformed Anabaena cells were grown in the presence of the labeled mineral salts and culture conditions were optimized to obtain over 90% of (13)C and (15)N enrichment in the constitutively expressed 24-kDa polypeptide. The yield of purified 24-kDa protein after dual isotope labeling under anaerobic conditions was similar to that obtained with E. coli cells bearing a comparable expression vector and cultured in parallel in a commercially available labeling medium. Furthermore, as probed by NMR spectroscopy and mass spectrometry, the 24-kDa N-terminal domain expressed in Anabaena was identical to the E. coli sample, demonstrating that it was of sufficient quality for 3D-structure determination. Because the Anabaena system was far more advantageous taking into consideration the expense for the labels that were necessary, these results indicate that Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 is an economic alternative for the (13)C/(15)N-labeling of soluble recombinant proteins destined for structural studies.  相似文献   

14.
Several techniques based on stable isotope labeling are used for quantitative MS. These include stable isotope metabolic labeling methods for cells in culture as well as live organisms with the assumption that the stable isotope has no effect on the proteome. Here, we investigate the 15N isotope effect on Escherichia coli cultures that were grown in either unlabeled (14N) or 15N‐labeled media by LC‐ESI‐MS/MS‐based relative protein quantification. Consistent protein expression level differences and altered growth rates were observed between 14N and 15N‐labeled cultures. Furthermore, targeted metabolite analyses revealed altered metabolite levels between 14N and 15N‐labeled bacteria. Our data demonstrate for the first time that the introduction of the 15N isotope affects protein and metabolite levels in E. coli and underline the importance of implementing controls for unbiased protein quantification using stable isotope labeling techniques.  相似文献   

15.
Partly biosynthetic site-directed isotopically 13C enriched photosynthetic light-harvesting 2(LH2) complexes have been prepared from Rhodopseudomonas acidophila strain 10050 by using chemically labeled [1,2,3,4–13C], [1,4–13C] and [2,3–13C] succinic acid as a precursor in the growth medium. Two-dimensional proton driven spin diffusion (PDSD) solid state NMR correlation spectroscopy has been used to trace each individual 13C isotope from the labeled succinic acid precursor to its destination into the protein and into the embedded major light-absorbing bacteriochlorophyll cofactors. For both the residues of the protein and for the cofactors distinct labeling patterns have been deduced, for protein complexes prepared from [1,4–13C]-succinic acid or [2,3–13C]-succinic labeled media. All residues, except isoleucine and leucine, have been labeled almost homogeneously by the succinic acid precursor. Carbonyl carbons in the protein backbone were labeled by [1,4–13C]-succinic acid, while the C and C carbons of the residues were labeled by [2,3 13C]-succinic acid. Leucine and isoleucine residues were labeled using a uniformly labeled amino acid mixture in the medium. The pattern labeling yields an increase of the resolution and less spectral crowding. The partial labeling technique in combination with conventional solid state NMR methods at ultra high magnetic fields provides an attractive route to resolve chemical shifts for -helical transmembrane protein structures.  相似文献   

16.
Isotope labeling of recombinant proteins is a prerequisite for application of nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR) for the characterization of the three-dimensional structures and dynamics of proteins. Overexpression of isotopically labeled proteins in bacterial or yeast host organisms has several drawbacks. In this work, we tested whether the recently described eukaryotic protein expression system based on the protozoa Leishmania tarentolae could be used for production of amino acid specific (15)N-labeled recombinant proteins. Using synthetic growth medium we were able to express in L. tarentolae and purify to homogeneity (15)N-valine labeled Enchanced Green Fluorescent Protein (EGFP) with the final yield of 5.7 mg/liter of suspension culture. NMR study of isolated EGFP illustrated the success of the labeling procedure allowing identification of all 18 valine residues of the protein in the HSQC spectrum. Our results demonstrate the suitability of the L. tarentolae expression system for production of isotopically labeled proteins.  相似文献   

17.
The salmonella phage P22 c2 repressor was produced with 90% 15N isotope labeling of all leucines, using the expression system E. coli W3110 lac I Q/pTP 125. The N-terminal DNA-binding domain 1–76 was obtained by chymotrypsin cleavage. Its characterization by biochemical techniques, mass spectrometry, and one- and two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) showed that highly residue-selective isotope labeling was achieved with the minimal growth medium used. The ability to obtain such isotope labeling opens new avenues for NMR studies of protein-DNA interactions in the P22 operator system.  相似文献   

18.
Generating sufficient quantities of labeled proteins represents a bottleneck in protein structure determination. A simple protocol for producing heavy isotope as well as selenomethionine (Se-Met)-labeled proteins was developed using T7-based Escherichia coli expression systems. The protocol is applicable for generation of single-, double-, and triple-labeled proteins (15N, 13C, and 2H) in shaker flask cultures. Label incorporation into the target protein reached 99% and 97% for 15N and 13C, respectively, and 75% of (non-exchangeable) hydrogen for 2H labeling. The expression yields and final cell densities (OD600 ∼16) were the same as for the production of non-labeled protein. This protocol is also applicable for Se-Met labeling, leading to Se-Met incorporation into the target protein of 70% or 90% using prototrophic or methionine auxotrophic E. coli strains, respectively.  相似文献   

19.
HIV-1 protease (PR) has been extensively studied due to its importance as a target in AIDS therapy. The enzyme can be obtained via expression of its cloned gene in an appropriate system, or via chemical synthesis. We required a reliable source of fluorine-labeled HIV-1 protease for NMR studies. As our attempts to incorporate a labeling step in overexpression experiments in E. coli failed, we turned to chemical synthesis. Herein is described the first chemical synthesis of an active, 99 amino acid residue HIV-1 encoded protease using Fmoc-chemistry on a total PEG-based resin (CM resin), and labeled with 19F at the Phe residue. Also reported here are NMR studies of the labeled synthetic protein with a synthetic dimerization inhibitor.  相似文献   

20.
The T7 RNA polymerase system for selective protein labeling, previously optimized for the time of introducing the 15N amino acid relative to the inducer (IPTG) and host polymerase inhibitor (rifampicin), was further improved by the use of a special growth medium enriched in particular amino acids and by administration of an aminotransferase inhibitor (α-aminooxyacetic acid); the latter prevented isotope redistribution (as required by NMR studies) even with readily metabolized leucine. The approach is shown to be successful for selective labeling of barstar with [15N]Trp and [15N]Leu; it can be used with any proteins expressed in the T7 system.  相似文献   

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