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1.
The efficiency and high specificity of tobacco etch virus (TEV) protease has made it widely used for cleavage of recombinant fusion proteins. However, the production of TEV protease in E. coli is hampered by low solubility. We have subjected the gene encoding TEV protease to directed evolution to improve the yield of soluble protein. Libraries of mutated genes obtained by error-prone PCR and gene shuffling were introduced into the Gateway cloning system for facilitated transfer between vectors for screening, purification, or other applications. Fluorescence based in vivo solubility screening was carried out by cloning the libraries into a plasmid encoding a C-terminal GFP fusion. Mutant genes giving rise to high GFP fluorescence intensity indicating high levels of soluble TEV-GFP were subsequently transferred to a vector providing a C-terminal histidine tag for expression, purification, and activity tests of mutated TEV. We identified a mutant, TEV(SH), in which three amino acid substitutions result in a five-fold increase in the yield of purified protease with retained activity.  相似文献   

2.
The production of recombinant protein in Escherichia coli is often hampered by low expression levels and low solubility. A variety of methodologies have been developed including protein production at low temperature, and fusion protein expression using soluble protein tags. Here, we present the novel cold-shock vector pCold-GST for high-level expression of soluble proteins in E. coli. This vector is a modified pCold I cold-shock vector that includes the glutathione S-transferase (GST) tag. The pCold-GST expression system developed was applied to 10 proteins that could not be expressed using conventional E. coli expression methodologies, and nine of these proteins were successfully obtained in the soluble fraction. The expression and purification of two unstable protein fragments were also demonstrated by employing a C-terminal hexa-histidine tag for purification purposes. The purified proteins were amenable to NMR analyses. These data suggest that the pCold-GST expression system can be utilized to improve the expression and purification of various proteins.  相似文献   

3.
Zhang A  Gonzalez SM  Cantor EJ  Chong S 《Gene》2001,275(2):241-252
Affinity purification of recombinant proteins has been facilitated by fusion to a modified protein splicing element (intein). The fusion protein expression can be further improved by fusion to a mini-intein, i.e. an intein that lacks an endonuclease domain. We synthesized three mini-inteins using overlapping oligonucleotides to incorporate Escherichia coli optimized codons and allow convenient insertion of an affinity tag between the intein (predicted) N- and C-terminal fragments. After examining the splicing and cleavage activities of the synthesized mini-inteins, we chose the mini-intein most efficient in thiol-induced N-terminal cleavage for constructing a novel intein fusion system. In this system, green fluorescent protein (GFP) was fused to the C-terminus of the affinity-tagged mini-intein whose N-terminus was fused to a target protein. The design of the system allowed easy monitoring of soluble fusion protein expression by following GFP fluorescence, and rapid purification of the target protein through the intein-mediated cleavage reaction. A total of 17 target proteins were tested in this intein-GFP fusion system. Our data demonstrated that the fluorescence of the induced cells could be used to measure soluble expression of the intein fusion proteins and efficient intein cleavage activity. The final yield of the target proteins exhibited a linear relationship with whole cell fluorescence. The intein-GFP system may provide a simple route for monitoring real time soluble protein expression, predicting final product yields, and screening the expression of a large number of recombinant proteins for rapid purification in high throughput applications.  相似文献   

4.
Structural biology places a high demand on proteins both in terms of quality and quantity. Although many protein expression and purification systems have been developed, an efficient and simple system which can be easily adapted is desirable. Here, we report a new system which combines improved expression, solubility screening and purification efficiency. The system is based on two newly constructed vectors, pEHISTEV and pEHISGFPTEV derived from a pET vector. Both vectors generate a construct with an amino-terminal hexahistidine tag (His-tag). In addition, pEHISGFPTEV expresses a protein with an N-terminal His-tagged green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusion to allow rapid quantitation of soluble protein. Both vectors have a tobacco etch virus (TEV) protease cleavage site that allows for production of protein with only two additional N-terminal residues and have the same multiple cloning site which enables parallel cloning. Protein purification is a simple two-stage nickel affinity chromatography based on the His tag removal. A total of seven genes were tested using this system. Expression was optimised using pEHISGFPTEV constructs by monitoring the GFP fluorescence and the soluble target proteins were quantified using spectrophotometric analysis. All the tested proteins were purified with sufficient quantity and quality to attempt structure determination. This system has been proven to be simple and effective for structural biology. The system is easily adapted to include other vectors, tags or fusions and therefore has the potential to be broadly applicable.  相似文献   

5.
The production of recombinant membrane proteins for structural and functional studies remains technically challenging due to low levels of expression and the inherent instability of many membrane proteins once solubilized in detergents. A protocol is described that combines ligation independent cloning of membrane proteins as GFP fusions with expression in Escherichia coli detected by GFP fluorescence. This enables the construction and expression screening of multiple membrane protein/variants to identify candidates suitable for further investment of time and effort. The GFP reporter is used in a primary screen of expression by visualizing GFP fluorescence following SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). Membrane proteins that show both a high expression level with minimum degradation as indicated by the absence of free GFP, are selected for a secondary screen. These constructs are scaled and a total membrane fraction prepared and solubilized in four different detergents. Following ultracentrifugation to remove detergent-insoluble material, lysates are analyzed by fluorescence detection size exclusion chromatography (FSEC). Monitoring the size exclusion profile by GFP fluorescence provides information about the mono-dispersity and integrity of the membrane proteins in different detergents. Protein: detergent combinations that elute with a symmetrical peak with little or no free GFP and minimum aggregation are candidates for subsequent purification. Using the above methodology, the heterologous expression in E. coli of SED (shape, elongation, division, and sporulation) proteins from 47 different species of bacteria was analyzed. These proteins typically have ten transmembrane domains and are essential for cell division. The results show that the production of the SEDs orthologues in E. coli was highly variable with respect to the expression levels and integrity of the GFP fusion proteins. The experiment identified a subset for further investigation.  相似文献   

6.
A simple and reliable method of protein stability assessment is desirable for high throughput expression screening of recombinant proteins. Here we described an assay termed thermal precipitation fluorescence (TPF) which can be used to compare thermal stabilities of recombinant protein samples directly from cell lysate supernatants. In this assay, target membrane proteins are expressed as recombinant fusions with a green fluorescence protein tag and solubilized with detergent, and the fluorescence signals are used to report the quantity of the fusion proteins in the soluble fraction of the cell lysate. After applying a heat shock, insoluble protein aggregates are removed by centrifugation. Subsequently, the amount of remaining protein in the supernatant is quantified by in-gel fluorescence analysis and compared to samples without a heat shock treatment. Over 60 recombinant membrane proteins from Escherichia coli were subject to this screening in the presence and absence of a few commonly used detergents, and the results were analyzed. Because no sophisticated protein purification is required, this TPF technique is suitable to high throughput expression screening of recombinant membrane proteins as well as soluble ones and can be used to prioritize target proteins based on their thermal stabilities for subsequent large scale expression and structural studies.  相似文献   

7.
This study presents cloning and expression of Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae Apx I toxin in Escherichia coli expression system to produce fusion protein for the subsequent immunological studies. The gene coding Apx I toxin was amplified from the A. pleuropneumoniae serotype 10 DNA using polymerase chain reaction and cloned to vector under the control of strong, inducible T7 promoter. The presence of insert was confirmed by PCR screening and sequencing after the propagation of recombinant DNA in E. coli cells. The gene coding A. pleuropneumoniae Apx I toxin was extended with a segment to encode a polyhistidine tag linked to its C-terminal sequence allowing a one-step affinity purification of the complex with Ni-NTA resin. Expression of the Apx I coding sequence in E. coli resulted in the formation of insoluble inclusion bodies purified according to a standard purification protocol. The ease of this expression system, the powerful single-step purification and low costs make it possible to produce Apx I in large amounts to further study the role of Apx I in physiological processes.  相似文献   

8.
Many mammalian proteins are multifunctional proteins with biological activities whose characterization often requires in vitro studies. However, these studies depend on generation of sufficient quantities of recombinant protein and many mammalian proteins cannot be easily expressed and purified as full-length products. One example is the Wilm's tumor gene product, WT1, which has proven difficult to express as a full-length purified recombinant protein using standard approaches. To facilitate expression of full-length WT1 we have developed approaches that optimized its expression and purification in Escherichia coli and mammalian cells. First, using a bicistronic vector system, we successfully expressed and purified WT1 containing a C-terminal tandem affinity tag in 293T cells. Second, using a specific strain of E. coli transformed with a modified GST vector, we successfully expressed and purified N-terminal GST tagged and C-terminal 2x FLAG tagged full-length human WT1. The benefits of these approaches include: (1) two-step affinity purification to allow high quality of protein purification, (2) large soluble tags that can be used for a first affinity purification step, but then conveniently removed with the highly site-specific TEV protease, and (3) the use of non-denaturing purification and elution conditions that are predicted to preserve native protein conformation and function.  相似文献   

9.
A hexa-histidine (6 x His) sequence was inserted into a surface loop of the green fluorescent protein (GFP) to develop a dual functional GFP useful for both monitoring and purification of recombinant proteins. Two variants (GFP172 and GFP157), differentiated by the site of insertion of the 6xHis sequence, were developed and compared with a control variant (GFPHis) having the 6xHis sequence at its C-terminus. The variants were produced in Escherichia coli and purified using immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC). The purification efficiencies by IMAC for all variants were found to be comparable. Purified GFP172 and GFP157 variants retained approximately 60% of the fluorescence compared to that of GFPHis. The reduction in the fluorescence intensity associated with GFP172 and GFP157 was attributed to the lower percentage of fluorescent GFP molecules in these variants. Nonetheless, the rates of fluorescence acquisition were found to be similar for all functional variants. Protein misfolding at an elevated temperature (37 degrees C) was found to be less profound for GFP172 than for GFP157. The dual functional properties of GFP172 were tested with maltose binding protein (MBP) as the fusion partner. The MBP-GFP172 fusion protein remained fluorescent and was purified from E. coli lysate as well as from spiked tobacco leaf extracts in a single-step IMAC. For the latter, a recovery yield of approximately 75% was achieved and MBP-GFP172 was found to coelute with a degraded product of the fusion protein at a ratio of about 4:1. The primary advantage of the chimeric GFP tag having an internal hexa-histidine sequence is that such a tag allows maximum flexibility for protein or peptide fusions since both N- and C-terminal ends of the GFP are available for fusion.  相似文献   

10.
Cellular protein delivery is an emerging technique, by which exogenous recombinant proteins are delivered into mammalian cells across the membrane. We have developed an E. coli expression vector suited for protein cellular delivery experiments. The plasmid is designed to generate a C-terminal fusion with the 12 amino acid HIV-Tat peptide as a protein transduction domain (PTD), whereas the protein N-terminus is fused to an 17-residue peptide lanthanide-binding tag (LBT). LBT is used for both purification by affinity chromatography and fluorescent detection with Tb(3+) as a coordinating metal. We have employed the TA-cloning site between the two tags, LBT and PTD, according to the PRESAT-vector methodology [N. Goda, T. Tenno, H. Takasu, H. Hiroaki, M. Shirakawa, The PRESAT-vector: asymmetric T-vector for high-throughput screening of soluble protein domains for structural proteomics, Protein Sci. 13 (2004) 652-658], which facilitates unidirectional cloning of any PCR-amplified DNA fragments corresponding to the protein of interest. A simple three-step protocol consisting of affinity purification of LBT/PTD dual-tagged proteins has also been developed, in which the proteins are purified by heparin-, then immobilized Ni(2+)-, and then heparin-affinity chromatography, in this order. The purified protein is ready for protein delivery experiment, and the delivered protein is visible by fluorescent microscopy. Our LBT/PTD dual-tagged PRESAT-vector provides a powerful research tool for exploring cellular functions of proteins in the post-genomic era.  相似文献   

11.
Affinity tags as fusions to the N- or C-terminal part of proteins are valuable tools to facilitate the production and purification of proteins. In many cases, there may be the necessity to remove the tag after protein preparation to regain activity. Removal of the tag is accomplished by insertion of a unique amino acid sequence that is recognized and cleaved by a site specific protease. Here, we report the construction of an expression vector set that combines N- or C-terminal fusion to either a hexahistidine tag or Streptag with the possibility of tag removal by factor Xa or recombinant tobacco etch virus protease (rTEV), respectively. The vector set offers the option to produce different variants of the protein of interest by cloning the corresponding gene into four different Escherichia coli expression vectors. Either immobilized metal affinity chromatography or streptactin affinity chromatography can be used for the one-step purification. Furthermore, we show the successful application of the expression vector for C-terminal hexahistidine tagging. The expression and purification of His-tagged L-2-hydroxyisocaproate dehydrogenase yields fully active enzyme. The tag removal is here accomplished by a derivative of rTEV.  相似文献   

12.
Membrane proteins represent a significant fraction of all genomes and play key roles in many aspects of biology, but their structural analysis has been hampered by difficulties in large-scale production and crystallisation. To overcome the first of these hurdles, we present here a systematic approach for expression and affinity-tagging which takes into account transmembrane topology. Using a set of bacterial transporters with known topologies, we tested the efficacy of a panel of conventional and Gateway recombinational cloning vectors designed for protein expression under the control of the tac promoter, and for the addition of differing N- and C-terminal affinity tags. For transporters in which both termini are cytoplasmic, C-terminal oligohistidine tagging by recombinational cloning typically yielded functional protein at levels equivalent to or greater than those achieved by conventional cloning. In contrast, it was not effective for examples of the substantial minority of proteins that have one or both termini located on the periplasmic side of the membrane, possibly because of impairment of membrane insertion by the tag and/or att-site-encoded sequences. However, fusion either of an oligohistidine tag to cytoplasmic (but not periplasmic) termini, or of a Strep-tag II peptide to periplasmic termini using conventional cloning vectors did not interfere with membrane insertion, enabling high-level expression of such proteins. In conjunction with use of a C-terminal Lumio fluorescence tag, which we found to be compatible with both periplasmic and cytoplasmic locations, these findings offer a system for strategic planning of construct design for high throughput expression of membrane proteins for structural genomics projects.  相似文献   

13.
We cloned and sequenced the murC gene from Pseudomonas aeruginosa encoding a protein of 53 kDa. Multiple alignments with 20 MurC peptide sequences from different bacteria confirmed the presence of highly conserved regions having sequence identities ranging from 22-97% including conserved motifs for ATP-binding and the active site of the enzyme. Genetic complementation was done in Escherichia coli (murCts) suppressing the lethal phenotype. The murC gene was subcloned into the expression vector pET30a and overexpressed in E. coli BL21(lambdaDE3). Three PCR cloning strategies were used to obtain the three recombinant plasmids for expression of the native MurC, MurC His-tagged at N-terminal and at C-terminal, respectively. MurC His-tagged at C-terminal was chosen for large scale production and protein purification in the soluble form. The purification was done in a single chromatographic step on an affinity nickel column and obtained in mg quantities at 95% homogeneity. MurC protein was used to produce monoclonal antibodies for epitope mapping and for assay development in high throughput screenings. Detailed studies of MurC and other genes of the bacterial cell cycle will provide the reagents and strain constructs for high throughput screening and for design of novel antibacterials.  相似文献   

14.
Membrane proteins represent a significant fraction of all genomes and play key roles in many aspects of biology, but their structural analysis has been hampered by difficulties in large-scale production and crystallisation. To overcome the first of these hurdles, we present here a systematic approach for expression and affinity-tagging which takes into account transmembrane topology. Using a set of bacterial transporters with known topologies, we tested the efficacy of a panel of conventional and Gateway? recombinational cloning vectors designed for protein expression under the control of the tac promoter, and for the addition of differing N- and C-terminal affinity tags. For transporters in which both termini are cytoplasmic, C-terminal oligohistidine tagging by recombinational cloning typically yielded functional protein at levels equivalent to or greater than those achieved by conventional cloning. In contrast, it was not effective for examples of the substantial minority of proteins that have one or both termini located on the periplasmic side of the membrane, possibly because of impairment of membrane insertion by the tag and/or att-site-encoded sequences. However, fusion either of an oligohistidine tag to cytoplasmic (but not periplasmic) termini, or of a Strep-tag II peptide to periplasmic termini using conventional cloning vectors did not interfere with membrane insertion, enabling high-level expression of such proteins. In conjunction with use of a C-terminal Lumio? fluorescence tag, which we found to be compatible with both periplasmic and cytoplasmic locations, these findings offer a system for strategic planning of construct design for high throughput expression of membrane proteins for structural genomics projects.  相似文献   

15.
We have developed and evaluated a highly parallel protein expression and purification system using ORFs derived from the pathogenic bacterium Streptococcus pneumoniae as a representative test case in conjunction with the Gateway cloning technology. Establishing high throughput protein production capability is essential for genome-wide characterization of protein function. In this study, we focused on protein expression and purification outcomes generated from an expression vector which encodes an NH(2)-terminal hexa-histidine tag and a COOH-terminal S-tag. Purified recombinant proteins were validated by SDS-PAGE, followed by in-gel digestion and identification by MALDI-TOF/TOF analysis. Starting with 1360 sequence-validated destination clones we examined correlation analyses of expression and solubility of a wide variety of recombinant proteins. In total, 428 purified proteins (31%) were recovered in soluble form. We describe a semi-quantitative scoring method using an S-tag assay to improve the throughput and efficiency of expression and solubility studies for recombinant proteins. Given a relatively large dataset derived from proteins representing all functional groups in a microbial genome we correlated various protein characteristics as they relate to protein expression outcomes.  相似文献   

16.
Low expression and instability during isolation are major obstacles preventing adequate structure‐function characterization of membrane proteins (MPs). To increase the likelihood of generating large quantities of protein, C‐terminally fused green fluorescent protein (GFP) is commonly used as a reporter for monitoring expression and evaluating purification. This technique has mainly been restricted to MPs with intracellular C‐termini (Cin) due to GFP's inability to fluoresce in the Escherichia coli periplasm. With the aid of Glycophorin A, a single transmembrane spanning protein, we developed a method to convert MPs with extracellular C‐termini (Cout) to Cin ones providing a conduit for implementing GFP reporting. We tested this method on eleven MPs with predicted Cout topology resulting in high level expression. For nine of the eleven MPs, a stable, monodisperse protein‐detergent complex was identified using an extended fluorescence‐detection size exclusion chromatography procedure that monitors protein stability over time, a critical parameter affecting the success of structure‐function studies. Five MPs were successfully cleaved from the GFP tag by site‐specific proteolysis and purified to homogeneity. To address the challenge of inefficient proteolysis, we explored expression and purification conditions in the absence of the fusion tag. Contrary to previous studies, optimal expression conditions established with the fusion were not directly transferable for overexpression in the absence of the GFP tag. These studies establish a broadly applicable method for GFP screening of MPs with Cout topology, yielding sufficient protein suitable for structure‐function studies and are superior to expression and purification in the absence GFP fusion tagging.  相似文献   

17.
We have constructed a dual expression vector for the production of recombinant proteins in both Escherichia coli and insect cells. In this vector, the baculoviral polyhedrin promoter was positioned upstream of the bacteriophage T7 promoter and the lac operator. This vector, designated pBEV, was specifically designed to exploit the advantages that both hosts would provide. This vector also facilitates one-stop cloning, thereby simplifying the expression process for automation, and the development of a high-throughput method for protein expression. Utilizing the multi-system vector pBEV, a high-throughput process was developed with expression in deep-well blocks and purification in micro-titer plates enabling the identification of expression and solubility in both E. coli and insect cells. In this study, using pBEV, we have successfully expressed and purified multiple human kinases produced in E. coli and insect cells. Our results validate expression screening as a strategy to rapidly triage proteins identifying the optimum expression system and conditions for production.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Affinity tags as fusions to the N- or C-terminal part of proteins are valuable tools to facilitate the production and purification of proteins. In many cases, there may be the necessity to remove the tag after protein preparation to regain activity. Removal of the tag is accomplished by insertion of a unique amino acid sequence that is recognized and cleaved by a site specific protease. Here, we report the construction of an expression vector set that combines N- or C-terminal fusion to either a hexahistidine tag or Streptag with the possibility of tag removal by factor Xa or recombinant tobacco etch virus protease (rTEV), respectively. The vector set offers the option to produce different variants of the protein of interest by cloning the corresponding gene into four different Escherichia coli expression vectors. Either immobilized metal affinity chromatography or streptactin affinity chromatography can be used for the one-step purification. Furthermore, we show the successful application of the expression vector for C-terminal hexahistidine tagging. The expression and purification of His-tagged L-2-hydroxyisocaproate dehydrogenase yields fully active enzyme. The tag removal is here accomplished by a derivative of rTEV.  相似文献   

20.
By applying a directed evolution methodology specific enzymatic characteristics can be enhanced, but to select mutants of interest from a large mutant bank, this approach requires high throughput screening and facile selection. To facilitate such primary screening of enhanced clones, an expression system was tested that uses a green fluorescent protein (GFP) tag from Aequorea victoria linked to the enzyme of interest. As GFP’s fluorescence is readily measured, and as there is a 1:1 molar correlation between the target protein and GFP, the concept proposed was to determine whether GFP could facilitate primary screening of error-prone PCR (EPP) clones. For this purpose a thermostable β-glucosidase (BglA) from Fervidobacterium sp. was used as a model enzyme. A vector expressing the chimeric protein BglA-GFP-6XHis was constructed and the fusion protein purified and characterized. When compared to the native proteins, the components of the fusion displayed modified characteristics, such as enhanced GFP thermostability and a higher BglA optimum temperature. Clones carrying mutant BglA proteins obtained by EPP, were screened based on the BglA/GFP activity ratio. Purified tagged enzymes from selected clones resulted in modified substrate specificity.  相似文献   

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