Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10844051 | Protein Expression and Purification | 2005 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Cyclomaltodextrinases are multidomain and often dimeric proteins from the α-amylase family (glycoside hydrolase family 13) which frequently have been very difficult to express in active form in Escherichia coli. To express the soluble form of this type of proteins in larger quantities the expression has to be optimized. We have used and combined two strategies to increase the yield of soluble recombinant cyclomaltodextrinase expressed from a gene originating from the thermophilic Gram-positive bacterium Anoxybacillus flavithermus. One strategy involved tuning of the inducer concentration while the other involved fusion of the gene encoding the target protein to the gene encoding the solubility-enhancing protein NusA. The enzyme activity could be increased 6-7 times solely by finely tuning the IPTG concentration, but the activity level was very sensitive to the amount of inducer applied. Hence, the IPTG concentration may have to be optimized for every protein under the conditions used. The fusion protein-strategy gave a slightly lower total activity but the level of soluble recombinant protein obtained was in this case significantly less sensitive to the inducer concentration applied. Moreover, the activity could be increased about 2-fold by cleaving off the solubility-tag (NusA) by enterokinase.
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Authors
Pernilla Turner, Olle Holst, Eva Nordberg Karlsson,