Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5516124 Protein Expression and Purification 2017 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

•A novel method to produce the CT domain of apoA-I is presented.•ApoLp-III was used a carrier protein, and was removed by cyanogen bromide cleavage.•CT-apoA-I was helical and functional.•CT-apoA-I was effective in solubilizing vesicles and LPS disaggregation.•CT-apoA-I binding to phosphatidylglycerol and low density lipoprotein was impaired.

Human apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) is the most abundant protein in high-density lipoprotein, an anti-atherogenic lipid-protein complex responsible for reverse cholesterol transport. The protein is composed of an N-terminal helix bundle domain, and a small C-terminal (CT) domain. To facilitate study of CT-apoA-I, a novel strategy was employed to produce this small domain in a bacterial expression system. A protein construct was designed of insect apolipophorin III (apoLp-III) and residues 179-243 of apoA-I, with a unique methionine residue positioned between the two proteins and an N-terminal His-tag to facilitate purification. The chimera was expressed in E. coli, purified by Ni-affinity chromatography, and cleaved by cyanogen bromide. SDS-PAGE revealed the presence of three proteins with masses of 7 kDa (CT-apoA-I), 18 kDa (apoLp-III), and a minor 26 kDa band of uncleaved chimera. The digest was reloaded on the Ni-affinity column to bind apoLp-III and uncleaved chimera, while CT-apoA-I was washed from the column and collected. Alternatively, CT-apoA-I was isolated from the digest by reversed-phase HPLC. CT-apoA-I was α-helical, highly effective in solubilizing phospholipid vesicles and disaggregating LPS micelles. However, CT-apoA-I was less active compared to full-length apoA-I in protecting lipolyzed low density lipoproteins from aggregating, and disrupting phosphatidylglycerol bilayer vesicles. Thus the novel expression system produced mg quantities of functional CT-apoA-I, facilitating structural and functional studies of this critical domain of apoA-I.

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