Literature DB >> 29441788

Expression, Purification, and Biochemical Characterization of Human Afamin.

Alessandra Altamirano, Andreas Naschberger, Barbara G Fürnrohr, Radka Saldova1, Weston B Struwe1, Patrick M Jennings1, Silvia Millán Martín1, Suzana Malic2, Immanuel Plangger, Stefan Lechner, Reina Pisano, Nicole Peretti, Bernd Linke, Mario M Aguiar, Friedrich Fresser, Andreas Ritsch, Tihana Lenac Rovis2, Christina Goode, Pauline M Rudd1, Klaus Scheffzek, Bernhard Rupp, Hans Dieplinger3.   

Abstract

Afamin is an 87 kDa glycoprotein with five predicted N-glycosylation sites. Afamin's glycan abundance contributes to conformational and chemical inhomogeneity presenting great challenges for molecular structure determination. For the purpose of studying the structure of afamin, various forms of recombinantly expressed human afamin (rhAFM) with different glycosylation patterns were thus created. Wild-type rhAFM and various hypoglycosylated forms were expressed in CHO, CHO-Lec1, and HEK293T cells. Fully nonglycosylated rhAFM was obtained by transfection of point-mutated cDNA to delete all N-glycosylation sites of afamin. Wild-type and hypo/nonglycosylated rhAFM were purified from cell culture supernatants by immobilized metal ion affinity and size exclusion chromatography. Glycan analysis of purified proteins demonstrated differences in micro- and macro-heterogeneity of glycosylation enabling the comparison between hypoglycosylated, wild-type rhAFM, and native plasma afamin. Because antibody fragments can work as artificial chaperones by stabilizing the structure of proteins and consequently enhance the chance for successful crystallization, we incubated a Fab fragment of the monoclonal anti-afamin antibody N14 with human afamin and obtained a stoichiometric complex. Subsequent results showed sufficient expression of various partially or nonglycosylated forms of rhAFM in HEK293T and CHO cells and revealed that glycosylation is not necessary for expression and secretion.

Entities:  

Keywords:  afamin; expression in different cellular models; glycosylation heterogeneity

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Year:  2018        PMID: 29441788     DOI: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.7b00867

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Proteome Res        ISSN: 1535-3893            Impact factor:   4.466


  2 in total

Review 1.  Fatty acid recognition in the Frizzled receptor family.

Authors:  Aaron H Nile; Rami N Hannoush
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2018-12-10       Impact factor: 5.157

2.  Controlled dehydration, structural flexibility and gadolinium MRI contrast compound binding in the human plasma glycoprotein afamin.

Authors:  Andreas Naschberger; Pauline Juyoux; Jill von Velsen; Bernhard Rupp; Matthew W Bowler
Journal:  Acta Crystallogr D Struct Biol       Date:  2019-11-19       Impact factor: 7.652

  2 in total

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