Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2022010 | Protein Expression and Purification | 2007 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
α1-Microglobulin, a 26 kDa lipocalin present in plasma and tissues, carries a set of unknown chromophores, bound to C34, K92, K118 and K130, which cause its charge and size heterogeneity. In man, the protein is found in two forms, full length and lacking the C-terminal tetrapeptide LIPR (t-α1-microglobulin), both which are heme-binding and the latter with heme-degrading properties. We report cloning and overexpression of full length α1-microglobulin (wt protein), t-α1-microglobulin (wtâ³LIPR) and the mutants C34S, K(92,118,130)T and C34S/K(92,118,130)T, the latter subsequently abbreviated as K(3)T and C34S/K(3)T, in Escherichia coli. After purification and refolding from inclusion bodies, all proteins were correctly folded as determined by far-UV circular dichroism and radioimmunoassay. As revealed by gel filtration, recombinant α1-microglobulins had lower tendencies to form dimers than human plasma or urine analogues. All α1-microglobulin forms displayed higher amounts of the chromophore than bovine serum albumin but significantly lower than the human urine or plasma counterparts. Differences in the absorbance and fluorescence profiles are consistent with a model where the chromophore is formed by a series of reactions with heme or other chromophore precursors and where C34 is essential for binding of the ligand, K92, K118 and K130 are involved in transformation into the chromophore and LIPR inhibits the latter reaction.
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Authors
Anna Kwasek, Peter Osmark, Maria Allhorn, Annika Lindqvist, Bo Ã
kerström, Zygmunt Wasylewski,