Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2021181 | Protein Expression and Purification | 2008 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
The causative agent of malaria, Plasmodium falciparum posses a single aquaglyceroporin (PfAQP) which represents a potential drug target for treatment of the disease. PfAQP is localized to the parasite membrane to transport water, glycerol, ammonia and possibly glycolytic intermediates. In order to enable design of inhibitors we set out to determine the 3D structure of PfAQP, where the first bottleneck to overcome is achieving high enough yield of recombinant protein. The wild type PfAQP gene was expressed to low or undetectable levels in the expression hosts, Escherichia coli and Pichia pastoris, which was assumed to be due to different genomic AÂ +Â T content and different codon usage. Thus, two codon-optimized PfAQP genes were generated. The Opt-PfAQP for E. coli still did not result in high production yields, possibly due to folding problems. However, PfAQP optimized for P. pastoris was successfully expressed in P. pastoris for production and in Saccharomyces cerevisiae for functional studies. In S. cerevisiae, PfAQP mediated glycerol transport but unexpectedly water transport could not be confirmed. Following high-level membrane-localized expression in P. pastoris (estimated to 64Â mg PfAQP per liter cell culture) PfAQP was purified to homogeneity (18Â mg/L) and initial attempts at crystallization of the protein yielded several different forms.
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Authors
Kristina Hedfalk, Nina Pettersson, Fredrik Ãberg, Stefan Hohmann, Euan Gordon,