| Literature DB >> 16156893 |
Elena García-Fruitós1, Nuria González-Montalbán, Montse Morell, Andrea Vera, Rosa María Ferraz, Anna Arís, Salvador Ventura, Antonio Villaverde.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many enzymes of industrial interest are not in the market since they are bio-produced as bacterial inclusion bodies, believed to be biologically inert aggregates of insoluble protein.Entities:
Year: 2005 PMID: 16156893 PMCID: PMC1224866 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2859-4-27
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Cell Fact ISSN: 1475-2859 Impact factor: 5.328
Enzymatic activity or fluorescence of inclusion bodies produced in E. coli
| Construct name | Reference | Functional protein | Fraction of inclusion body protein (range, %) a | Aggregating domain or protein (all in the N-terminal position) | Specific activity or emission b (enzymatic units/mg or fluorescence units/mg) | Activity of the inclusion body fraction relative to that of soluble protein (%) c | |
| Soluble protein | Inclusion bodies | ||||||
| VP1LAC | This work and [9] | 35.6–45.9 | FMDV VP1 capsid protein | 698.3 ± 153.0 | 1162.5 ± 256.0 | 166.4 | |
| hDHFR | [25] | Human dihydrofolate reductase | 28.4–36.8 | none | 8.0 10-2 ± 2.6 10-2 | 4.7 10-3 ± 0.9 10-3 | 5.9 |
| VP1GFP | This work | Green fluorescent protein | 82.5–88.4 | FMDV VP1 capsid protein | 359.5 ± 66.0 | 70.4 ± 10.1 | 19.5 |
| Aβ42(F19D)-BFP | [26] | Blue fluorescent protein | 61.4–65.3 | Aβ42(F19D) | 118.1 ± 10.2 | 36.3 ± 2.2 | 30.7 |
a The percentage of protein found in inclusion bodies relative to the total intracellular amount of recombinant protein. Values were determined from different samples taken at 3 and 5 h after triggering recombinant gene expression.
b These values were determined in samples taken between 3 and 5 h after triggering recombinant gene expression.
c Specific activity or fluorescence emission of inclusion bodies relative to the values determined for the soluble counterpart fraction. Protein amounts were determined by Western blot analysis as described and enzymatic assays performed by conventional procedures. Excitation wavelengths were 450 nm for VP1GFP and 360 nm for Aβ42(F19D)-BFP.
Figure 1FTIR spectra of inclusion bodies formed by either VP1LAC (black), hDHFR (green), VP1GFP (red) or Aβ42(F19D)-BFP (blue) in the amide I region [9]. The asterisk labels the peak indicative of extended inter-molecular β-sheet structures in bacterial inclusion bodies.
Figure 2Optical micrographs of Aβ42(F19D)-BFP (top) and VP1GFP (bottom) inclusion bodies by phase contrast (left) and fluorescent microscopy (right).
Figure 3A) Product formed by soluble (black symbols) or inclusion body (red symbols) VP1LAC through ONPG hydrolysis as determined at 414 nm. Very coincident results have been obtained by using CPRG as alternative substrate (see the small panel), whose hydrolysis product was determined at 540 nm. B) Conversion of NADPH into NADP+ associated to tetrahydrofolate formation mediated by soluble (black symbols, left scale) and inclusion body (red symbols, right scale) hDHFR. Absorbance was determined at 340 nm.