| Literature DB >> 29129910 |
Siddharth Deshpande1,2,3, Nihar D Masurkar1,2, Vallerinteavide Mavelli Girish1,2, Malan Desai1,2, Goutam Chakraborty1,2, Juliana M Chan4,5, Chester L Drum6,7,8,9.
Abstract
The expression and stabilization of recombinant proteins is fundamental to basic and applied biology. Here we have engineered a thermostable protein nanoparticle (tES) to improve both expression and stabilization of recombinant proteins using this technology. tES provides steric accommodation and charge complementation to green fluorescent protein (GFPuv), horseradish peroxidase (HRPc), and Renilla luciferase (rLuc), improving the yields of functional in vitro folding by ~100-fold. Encapsulated enzymes retain the ability to metabolize small-molecule substrates, presumably via four 4.5-nm pores present in the tES shell. GFPuv exhibits no spectral shifts in fluorescence compared to a nonencapsulated control. Thermolabile proteins internalized by tES are resistant to thermal, organic, chaotropic, and proteolytic denaturation and can be released from the tES assembly with mild pH titration followed by proteolysis.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29129910 PMCID: PMC5682286 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-017-01585-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Engineering of six thermostable exoshell variants. a Overview of the encapsulation process, as generated using PyMOL v1.8.6.0. b Schematic of terminologies. (i) POI, protein of interest; (ii) thermostable exoshell-POI (tES-POI), POI fused to the C-terminus of a tES subunit; (iii) POI expressed in the presence of a tES shell but without encapsulation; (iv–vi) coexpression of tES-POI with tES(+), tES(−), and tES(+/−) shells; and (vii) tES(+)F116H, pH-titratable subunits. c Dynamic light scattering of tES variants. Mutation of F116 to H resulted in a pH-titratable assembly and dissociation. The results are expressed as means ± standard deviation (SD) (n = 3)
Fig. 2Effects of tES variants on the functional yield of internalized peptides. a Effect of different molar ratios of tES(+) subunits to tES-GFPuv on GFPuv activity using in vitro folding. b Functional analysis of the in vitro-folded GFPuv, HRPc, and rLuc in the presence and absence of tES by measurement of fluorescence, absorbance, and luminescence, respectively. c Analysis of GFPuv, HRPc, and rLuc under a combination of coexpression conditions measured by fluorescence, absorbance, and luminescence, respectively (details in Fig. 1b). All experiments were performed in triplicates. Error bars represent means ± standard deviation (SD)
Fig. 3Effect of tES on the stability of the encapsulated POI and the release of the POI with mild pH titration. a POI is stable in the dialysis buffer with and without encapsulation. The presence of tES enhanced the stability of tES-POI in b 0.4% trypsin, c 20% methanol, d 8 M urea, and e 30% acetonitrile. f tES(+)F116H/tES-POI is resistant to 15 min of thermal denaturation. g tES(+)F116H/tES-rLuc is highly resistant to repeated thermocycling (80 °C × 5 min × 10 cycles) showing a three order-of-magnitude higher activity compared with rLuc. h Recovery of active proteins from the tES. tES(+)F116H/tES-GFPuv, tES(+)F116H/tES-HRPc, and tES(+)F116H/tES-rLuc were subjected to pH 5.8 which resulted in the cage break and release of tES-POI. The released tES-POI (MW of tES-GFP [46 kDa], tES-HRPc [53 kDa], and tES-rLuc [55 kDa]) was proteolyzed by FXa/TEV to separate GFPuv (27 kDa), HRPc (34 kDa), and rLuc (36 kDa) from the tES subunit (19 kDa). The separated POIs were detected on the western blot using c-Myc antibody targeted to the c-Myc epitope downstream of POIs. i–k Size-exclusion chromatography of tES(+)F116H/tES-GFPuv, tES(+)F116H/tES-HRPc, and tES(+)F116H/tES-rLuc at pH values of 8.0 (upper panels) and 5.8 (lower panels). Each fraction was analyzed for GFPuv, HRPc, and rLuc activity and the data were overlaid on the respective chromatogram. All experiments were performed in triplicates and error bars represent means ± standard deviation (SD)