Literature DB >> 15766867

Protocols for production of selenomethionine-labeled proteins in 2-L polyethylene terephthalate bottles using auto-induction medium.

Hassan K Sreenath1, Craig A Bingman, Blake W Buchan, Kory D Seder, Brendan T Burns, Holalkere V Geetha, Won Bae Jeon, Frank C Vojtik, David J Aceti, Ronnie O Frederick, George N Phillips, Brian G Fox.   

Abstract

Protocols have been developed and applied in the high-throughput production of selenomethionine labeled fusion proteins using the conditional Met auxotroph Escherichia coli B834. The large-scale growth and expression uses a chemically defined auto-induction medium containing 125 mg L(-1) selenomethionine, salts and trace metals, other amino acids including 10 mg L(-1) of methionine, vitamins except vitamin B12, and glucose, glycerol, and alpha-lactose. A schematic for a shaker rack that can hold up to twenty-four 2-L polyethylene terephthalate beverage bottles in a standard laboratory refrigerated floor shaker is provided. The growth cycle from inoculation of the culture bottle through the growth, induction, and expression was timed to take approximately 24 h. Culture growth in the auto-induction medium gave an average final optical density at 600 nm of approximately 6 and an average wet cell mass yield of approximately 14 g from 2 L of culture in greater than 150 expression trials. A simple method for visual scoring of denaturing electrophoresis gels for total protein expression, solubility, and effectiveness of fusion protein proteolysis was developed and applied. For the favorably scored expression trials, the average yield of purified, selenomethionine-labeled target protein obtained after proteolysis of the fusion protein was approximately 30 mg. Analysis by mass spectrometry showed greater than 90% incorporation of selenomethionine over a approximately 8-fold range of selenomethionine concentrations in the growth medium, with higher growth rates observed at the lower selenomethionine concentrations. These protein preparations have been utilized to solve X-ray crystal structures by multiwavelength anomalous diffraction phasing.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15766867     DOI: 10.1016/j.pep.2004.12.022

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Protein Expr Purif        ISSN: 1046-5928            Impact factor:   1.650


  69 in total

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