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1.
A tetracycline repressible promoter system designed for Saccharomyces cerevisiae was evaluated for use in Kluyveromyces marxianus. A plasmid was constructed containing the Escherichia coli beta-glucuronidase (gus) gene cloned downstream of the yeast tet-off promoter, the tetR-VP16 activator protein gene, and the URA3 gene for selection. The tet-off promoter-gus construct was integrated into the chromosomal DNA and tested under varying growth conditions in complex medium. The repressors tetracycline and doxycycline were both found to be effective for inhibiting gene expression. Doxycycline levels of 0.5 microg/mL or greater were sufficient to nearly completely suppress Gus synthesis. For most transformants, the induction ratio was approximately 2,000-fold. The tet-off promoter was effective at 30, 37, and 42 degrees C, although the overall Gus activity was highest at 37 degrees C. During exponential growth, little product was formed; expression increased dramatically in late exponential and early stationary phase. The promoter thus shows promise for protein synthesis following cell growth. No inducer is required and the repressor is only needed to prevent expression during the seed culture.  相似文献   

2.
We have studied the effect of solubilising N-terminal fusion proteins on the yield of target protein after removal of the fusion partner and subsequent purification using immobilised metal ion affinity chromatography. We compared the yield of 45 human proteins produced from four different expression vectors: three having an N-terminal solubilising fusion protein (the GB1-domain, thioredoxin, or glutathione S-transferase) followed by a protease cleavage site and a His tag, and one vector having only an N-terminal His tag. We have previously observed a positive effect on solubility for proteins produced as fusion proteins compared to proteins produced with only a His tag in Escherichia coli. We find this effect to be less pronounced when we compare the yields of purified target protein after removal of the solubilising fusion although large target-dependent variations are seen. On average, the GB1+His fusion gives significantly higher final yields of protein than the thioredoxin+His fusion or the His tag, whereas GST+His gives lower yields. We also note a strong correlation between solubility and target protein size, and a correlation between solubility and the presence of peptide fragments that are predicted to be natively disordered.Electronic Supplementary Material Supplementary material is available for this article at and is accessible for authorized users.  相似文献   

3.
The Escherichia coli host system is an advantageous choice for simple and inexpensive recombinant protein production but it still presents bottlenecks at expressing soluble proteins from other organisms. Several efforts have been taken to overcome E. coli limitations, including the use of fusion partners that improve protein expression and solubility. New fusion technologies are emerging to complement the traditional solutions. This work evaluates two novel fusion partners, the Fh8 tag (8 kDa) and the H tag (1 kDa), as solubility enhancing tags in E. coli and their comparison to commonly used fusion partners. A broad range comparison was conducted in a small-scale screening and subsequently scaled-up. Six difficult-to-express target proteins (RVS167, SPO14, YPK1, YPK2, Frutalin and CP12) were fused to eight fusion tags (His, Trx, GST, MBP, NusA, SUMO, H and Fh8). The resulting protein expression and solubility levels were evaluated by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis before and after protein purification and after tag removal. The Fh8 partner improved protein expression and solubility as the well-known Trx, NusA or MBP fusion partners. The H partner did not function as a solubility tag. Cleaved proteins from Fh8 fusions were soluble and obtained in similar or higher amounts than proteins from the cleavage of other partners as Trx, NusA or MBP. The Fh8 fusion tag therefore acts as an effective solubility enhancer, and its low molecular weight potentially gives it an advantage over larger solubility tags by offering a more reliable assessment of the target protein solubility when expressed as a fusion protein.  相似文献   

4.
N-terminal fusion tags that enhance translation initiation or protein solubility are often used to facilitate protein overexpression. As the optimal tag for a given target protein cannot be predicted a priori, valuable time can be lost in cloning and manipulating the corresponding gene to generate different fusion constructs for expression analysis. We have developed a cell-free strategy that consolidates these steps, enabling the utility of a panel of nine fusion-tags to be determined within one to two days. This approach exploits the fact that PCR-amplified DNA can be used as a template for cell-free protein synthesis. Overlap/extension PCR using the TEV protease site as the overlap region allows the fusion of different T7 promoter (T7p)-tag-TEV DNA fragments with a TEV-gene-T7 terminator (T7ter) fragment. For tag sequences where the TEV site is not compatible, a short C?G? repeat (CGr) sequence can be used as the overlap region. The resulting T7p-tag-TEV-gene-T7ter constructs are then used as templates for PCR-directed cell-free protein synthesis to identify which tag-TEV-gene fusion protein produces the highest amount of soluble protein. We have successfully applied this approach to the overexpression of the Adiponectin hypervariable domain (AHD). Five of the nine N-terminal fusion tags tested enabled the synthesis of soluble recombinant protein. The best of these was the Peptidyl-prolylcis-trans isomerise B (PpiB) fusion tag which produces 1mg/ml amounts of soluble fusion protein. PpiB is an example of a new class of fusion tag known as the "stress-responsive proteins". Our results suggest that this cell-free fusion-tag expression screen facilitates the rapid identification of suitable fusion-tags that overcome issues such as poor expression and insolubility, often encountered using conventional approaches.  相似文献   

5.
C M Sorenson  P A Hart    J Ross 《Nucleic acids research》1991,19(16):4459-4465
Most host mRNAs are degraded soon after infection of cells with herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1). This early shutoff or early destabilization response is induced by a virion component, the virion host shutoff (vhs) protein. HSV-1 mutants, vhs1 and vhs-delta Sma, which produce defective or inactive vhs protein, fail to induce early shutoff. We have used an in vitro mRNA decay system to analyze the destabilization process. Polysomes from uninfected human erythroleukemia cells, used as a source of target mRNAs, were mixed with polysomes or with post-polysomal supernatant (S130) from HSV-1- or mock-infected murine erythroleukemia cells. Normally stable gamma-globin mRNA was destabilized by approximately 15-fold with S130 from wild-type virus-infected cells but was not destabilized with S130 from mock-infected cells or from cells infected with either of the two HSV mutants. The virus-induced destabilizing activity had no significant effect on the in vitro half-lives of two normally unstable mRNAs, histone and c-myc. No destabilizing activity was detected in polysomes from infected cells. We conclude that a virus-induced destabilizer activity can function in vitro, is located in the S130 of infected cells, and accelerates the decay rates of some, but not all, polysome-associated host mRNAs.  相似文献   

6.
《Gene》1998,221(1):59-68
A series of vectors is described which enables the episomal expression of proteins fused to different tag sequences in Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Proteins can be expressed with their amino termini fused to GFP/EGFP, three copies of the HA or Pk epitopes or a combined tag which contains two copies of the myc epitope and six histidine residues (MH). Fusion of the carboxyl terminus of a protein to a tag is possible with GFP/EGFP or Pk. Expression of the fusion proteins is controlled by the medium strength mutant version of the regulatable nmt1 promoter.  相似文献   

7.
We introduce a new method for purifying recombinant proteins expressed in bacteria using a highly specific, inducible, self-cleaving protease tag. This tag is comprised of the Vibrio cholerae MARTX toxin cysteine protease domain (CPD), an autoprocessing enzyme that cleaves exclusively after a leucine residue within the target protein-CPD junction. Importantly, V. cholerae CPD is specifically activated by inositol hexakisphosphate (InsP6), a eukaryotic-specific small molecule that is absent from the bacterial cytosol. As a result, when His6-tagged CPD is fused to the C-terminus of target proteins and expressed in Escherichia coli, the full-length fusion protein can be purified from bacterial lysates using metal ion affinity chromatography. Subsequent addition of InsP6 to the immobilized fusion protein induces CPD-mediated cleavage at the target protein-CPD junction, releasing untagged target protein into the supernatant. This method condenses affinity chromatography and fusion tag cleavage into a single step, obviating the need for exogenous protease addition to remove the fusion tag(s) and increasing the efficiency of tag separation. Furthermore, in addition to being timesaving, versatile, and inexpensive, our results indicate that the CPD purification system can enhance the expression, integrity, and solubility of intractable proteins from diverse organisms.  相似文献   

8.
Determination of protein function requires tools that allow its detection and/or purification. As generation of specific antibodies often is laborious and insufficient, protein tagging using epitopes that are recognized by commercially available antibodies and matrices appears more promising. Also, proper spatial and temporal expression of tagged proteins is required to prevent falsification of results. We developed a new series of binary Gateway cloning vectors named pAUL1-20 for C- and N-terminal in-frame fusion of proteins to four different tags: a single (i) HA epitope and (ii) Strep-tagIII, (iii) both epitopes combined to a double tag, and (iv) a triple tag consisting of the double tag extended by a Protein A tag possessing a 3C protease cleavage site. Expression can be driven by either the 35 S CaMV promoter or, for C-terminal fusions, promoters from genes encoding the chloroplast biogenesis factors HCF107, HCF136, or HCF173. Fusions of the four promoters to the GUS gene showed that endogenous promoter sequences are functional and drive expression more moderately and consistently throughout different transgenic lines when compared to the 35 S CaMV promoter. By testing complementation of mutations affected in chloroplast biogenesis factors HCF107 and HCF208, we found that the effect of different promoters and tags on protein function strongly depends on the protein itself. Single-step and tandem affinity purification of HCF208 via different tags confirmed the integrity of the cloned tags.  相似文献   

9.
We developed various binary vectors that can be used for expressing a foreign gene in rice. Vectors pGA3426, pGA3436, and pGA3626 are intended for overexpression of a gene using the maize Ubiquitin promoter, whereas pGA3780 is for rather mild expression of a gene using the rice Actin1 promoter. Vector pGA3777 is for expressing two genes simultaneously. We also developed binary vectors for expressing a fusion protein with a tag. Four vectors (pGA3427, pGA3428, pGA3429, and pGA3438) are for protein tags with sGFP, HA, His, and Myc, respectively. Vector pGA3383 is for analyzing promoter activity using the GUS reporter. In this vector, multiple cloning sites in front of GUS can be utilized for accepting a promoter fragment. We also generated transient expression vectors for studying the subcellular localization of a protein. Vectors pGA3452, pGA3651, and pGA3652 are for GFP fusion; pGA3574 for RFP fusion; pGA3697 for Myc tag; and pGA3698 for HA tag. In addition, we generated pGA3506, pGA3516, pGA3592, and pGA3593 for facilitating the subcloning of full-length cDNA clones into our binary vectors.  相似文献   

10.
Coupled with over-expression in host organisms, fusion protein systems afford economical methods to obtain large quantities of target proteins in a fast and efficient manner. Some proteases used for these purposes cleave C-terminal to their recognition sequences and do not leave extra amino acids on the target. However, they are often inefficient and are frequently promiscuous, resulting in non-specific cleavages of the target protein. To address these issues, we created a fusion protein system that utilizes a highly efficient enzyme and leaves no residual amino acids on the target protein after removal of the affinity tag. We designed a glutathione S-transferase (GST)-fusion protein vector with a caspase-3 consensus cleavage sequence located between the N-terminal GST tag and a target protein. We show that the enzyme efficiently cleaves the fusion protein without leaving excess amino acids on the target protein. In addition, we used an engineered caspase-3 enzyme that is highly stable, has increased activity relative to the wild-type enzyme, and contains a poly-histidine tag that allows for efficient removal of the enzyme after cleavage of the fusion protein. Although we have developed this system using a GST tag, the system is amenable to any commercially available affinity tag.  相似文献   

11.
A persistent problem in heterologous protein production is insolubility of the target protein when expressed to high level in the host cell. A widely employed strategy for overcoming this problem is the use of fusion tags. The best fusion tags promote solubility, may function as purification handles and either do not interfere with downstream applications or may be removed from the passenger protein preparation. A novel fusion tag is identified that meets these criteria. This fusion tag is a monomeric mutant of the Ocr protein (0.3 gene product) of bacteriophage T7. This fusion tag displays solubilizing activity with a variety of different passenger proteins. We show that it may be used as a purification handle similar to other fusion tags. Its small size and compact structure are compatible with its use in downstream applications of the passenger protein or it may be removed and purified away from the passenger protein. The use of monomeric Ocr (Mocr) as a complement to other fusion tags such as maltose-binding protein will provide greater flexibility in protein production and processing for a wide variety of protein applications.  相似文献   

12.
《Gene》1997,192(2):271-281
A novel protein purification system has been developed which enables purification of free recombinant proteins in a single chromatographic step. The system utilizes a modified protein splicing element (intein) from Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Sce VMA intein) in conjunction with a chitin-binding domain (CBD) from Bacillus circulans as an affinity tag. The concept is based on the observation that the modified Sce VMA intein can be induced to undergo a self-cleavage reaction at its N-terminal peptide linkage by 1,4-dithiothreitol (DTT), β-mercaptoethanol (β-ME) or cysteine at low temperatures and over a broad pH range. A target protein is cloned in-frame with the N-terminus of the intein-CBD fusion, and the stable fusion protein is purified by adsorption onto a chitin column. The immobilized fusion protein is then induced to undergo self-cleavage under mild conditions, resulting in the release of the target protein while the intein-CBD fusion remains bound to the column. No exogenous proteolytic cleavage is needed. Furthermore, using this procedure, the purified free target protein can be specifically labeled at its C-terminus.  相似文献   

13.
A multiple vector system for the intracellular high-level production of affinity tagged recombinant proteins in Bacillus megaterium was developed. The N- and C-terminal fusion of a protein of interest to a Strep II and a His(6)-tag is possible. Corresponding genes are expressed under the control of a xylose-inducible promoter in a xylose isomerase deficient host strain. The exemplatory protein production of green fluorescent protein (GFP) showed differences in produced and recovered protein amounts in dependence of the employed affinity tag and its N- or C-terminal location. Up to 9 mg GFP per liter shake flask culture were purified using one-step affinity chromatography. Integration of a protease cleavage site into the recombinant fusion protein allowed tag removal via tobacco etch virus (TEV) protease or Factor Xa treatment and a second affinity chromatographic step. Up to 274 mg/L culture were produced at 52 g CDW/L using a glucose limited fedbatch cultivation. GFP production and viability of the production host were followed by flow cytometry.  相似文献   

14.
The lipase Lip2 of the edible basidiomycete, Pleurotus sapidus, is an extracellular enzyme capable of hydrolysing xanthophyll esters with high efficiency. The gene encoding Lip2 was expressed in Escherichia coli TOP10 using the gene III signal sequence to accumulate proteins in the periplasmatic space. The heterologous expression under control of the araBAD promoter led to the high level production of recombinant protein, mainly as inclusion bodies, but partially in a soluble and active form. A fusion with a C-terminal His tag was used for purification and immunochemical detection of the target protein. This is the first example of a heterologous expression and periplasmatic accumulation of a catalytically active lipase from a basidiomycete fungus.  相似文献   

15.
Recombinant protein expression in insect cells varies greatly from protein to protein. A fusion tag that is not only a tool for detection and purification, but also enhances expression and/or solubility would greatly facilitate both structure/function studies and therapeutic protein production. We have shown that fusion of SUMO (small ubiquitin-related modifier) to several test proteins leads to enhanced expression levels in Escherichia coli. In eukaryotic expression systems, however, the SUMO tag could be cleaved by endogenous desumoylase. In order to adapt SUMO-fusion technology to these systems, we have developed an alternative SUMO-derived tag, designated SUMOstar, which is not processed by native SUMO proteases. In the present study, we tested the SUMOstar tag in a baculovirus/insect cell system with several proteins, i.e. mouse UBP43, human tryptase beta II, USP4, USP15, and GFP. Our results demonstrate that fusion to SUMOstar enhanced protein expression levels at least 4-fold compared to either the native or His(6)-tagged proteins. We isolated active SUMOstar tagged UBP43, USP4, USP15, and GFP. Tryptase was active following cleavage with a SUMOstar specific protease. The SUMOstar system will make significant impact in difficult-to-express proteins and especially to those proteins that require the native N-terminal residue for function.  相似文献   

16.
Tumor-targeted vectors with controllable expression of therapeutic genes and specific antitumor antibodies are promising tools for the reduction of malignant tumors. Here we describe a new plasmid for the eukaryotic expression of an anti-HER2/neu mini-antibody-barnase fusion protein (4D5 scFv-barnase-His(5)) with an NH(2)-terminal leader peptide. The 4D5 scFv-barnase-His(5) gene was placed downstream of the tetracycline responsive-element minimal promoter in the vector using the Tet-Off gene-expression system. The Bacillus amyloliquefaciens ribonuclease barnase is toxic for the host cells. To overcome this problem, barstar gene under its own minimal cytomegalovirus promoter was used in designed vector. Barstar inhibits the background level of barnase in the cells in the presence of tetracycline in culture medium. The HEK 293T cells were transfected with the designed vector, and the 4D5 scFv-barnase-His(5) fusion protein was identified by anti-barnase antibodies in cell culture medium and after purification from cell lysates using metal-affinity chromatography. The overexpression of the anti-HER2/neu mini-antibody-barnase fusion protein decreased the intensity of fluorescence of HEK 293T cells co-transfected with the generated plasmid and a plasmid containing the gene of enhanced green fluorescent protein (pEGFP-N1), in comparison with the intensity of fluorescence of HEK 293T cells transfected with pEGFP-N1, in the absence of tetracycline in the medium. The effect of the 4D5 scFv-barnase-His(5) on EGFP fluorescence indicates that the introduced barnase functions as a ribonuclease inside the cells. The anti-HER2/neu mini-antibody could be used to deliver barnase to HER2/neu-positive cells and provide its penetration into the target cells, as HER2/neu is a ligand-internalizing receptor. This expression vector has potential applications to both gene and antibody therapies of cancer.  相似文献   

17.
In proteomics research, generation of recombinant proteins in their native, soluble form with large quantity is often a challenging task. To tackle the expression difficulties, different expression vectors with distinct affinity fusion tags, i.e. pET-43.1a (N-utilization substance A tag), pMAL-cRI (maltose binding protein tag) (MBP tag), pGEX-4T-2 (glutathione S-transferase tag), and pET-15b (hexahistidine tag) were compared for their effects on the productivity and solubility, which were assessed by SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting, of the integrin betaA domain. The incubation temperatures were tested for its effects on these parameters. Our data suggested that MBP tag enhanced the yield and solubility of the betaA domain protein, which can also be recognized using an anti-CD18 antibody, at room temperature incubation. Thus, the nature of fusion partner chosen for expression in bacteria and its incubation temperature would significantly affect the yield and solubility of the recombinant target protein.  相似文献   

18.
We describe a generic protocol for the overproduction and purification of recombinant proteins in Escherichia coli. The strategy utilizes a dual His6-maltose binding protein (HisMBP) affinity tag that can be removed from the target protein by digestion of the fusion protein at a designed site by tobacco etch virus protease. The MBP moiety serves to enhance the solubility and promote the proper folding of its fusion partners, and the polyhistidine tag facilitates its purification to homogeneity. This protocol is divided into three stages, each of which takes approximately 1 week to complete: (i) construction of a HisMBP fusion vector; (ii) a pilot experiment to assess the yield and solubility of the target protein; and (iii) the large-scale production and purification of the target protein.  相似文献   

19.
We determined whether the cocultivation of yeast cells displaying a ZZ-domain and secreting an Fc fusion protein can be a novel tool for the recovery of secreted recombinant proteins. The ZZ-domain from Staphylococcus aureus protein A was displayed on the cell surface of Saccharomyces cerevisiae under the control of the GAL1 promoter. Strain S. cerevisiae BY4742 cells displaying the ZZ-domain on their surface were used for cocultivation with cells that produce a target protein fused to the Fc fragment as an affinity tag. The enhanced green fluorescent protein or Rhizopus oryzae lipase was genetically fused to the N and C termini of the Fc fragment of human immunoglobulin G, respectively. Through analysis by fluorescence-activated cell sorting and enzymatic assay, it was demonstrated that these fusion proteins are successfully produced in the medium and recovered by affinity binding with the cell surface displaying the ZZ-domain. These results suggest that the ZZ-domain-displaying cell and Fc fusion protein-secreting cell can be applied to use in synergistic process of production and recovery of secreted recombinant proteins.  相似文献   

20.
Existing protein tagging and detection methods are powerful but have drawbacks. Split protein tags can perturb protein solubility or may not work in living cells. Green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusions can misfold or exhibit altered processing. Fluorogenic biarsenical FLaSH or ReASH substrates overcome many of these limitations but require a polycysteine tag motif, a reducing environment and cell transfection or permeabilization. An ideal protein tag would be genetically encoded, would work both in vivo and in vitro, would provide a sensitive analytical signal and would not require external chemical reagents or substrates. One way to accomplish this might be with a split GFP, but the GFP fragments reported thus far are large and fold poorly, require chemical ligation or fused interacting partners to force their association, or require coexpression or co-refolding to produce detectable folded and fluorescent GFP. We have engineered soluble, self-associating fragments of GFP that can be used to tag and detect either soluble or insoluble proteins in living cells or cell lysates. The split GFP system is simple and does not change fusion protein solubility.  相似文献   

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