Sandwiched-fusion strategy facilitates recombinant production of small labile proteins.
Huang. Lin L; Qu. Xiaozhan X; Chen. Yao Y; Xu. Weiya W; Huang. Chengdong C
Key Findings
- The sandwiched‑fusion tag system shields small peptides from proteolytic degradation during E. coli expression
- Using this method the authors successfully produced pure humanin and other mitochondrial peptides that were previously impossible to obtain
- The resulting proteins were correctly folded and biologically active, as shown by NMR and interaction studies
Practical Outcomes
- Biohackers can adopt the sandwiched‑fusion strategy to produce humanin and similar peptides in their own labs, cutting costs and increasing supply. The approach requires standard molecular‑biology tools (cloning tags, E. coli expression, purification) and yields functional peptide for self‑experimentation.
Summary
The paper introduces a simple trick for making tiny, fragile proteins like humanin in bacteria: you sandwich the peptide between two protective tags, which stops it from being chopped up, letting you harvest a good amount of pure, active protein.
Abstract
Efficient production of large quantities of soluble, properly folded proteins is of high demand in modern structural and functional genomics. Despite much advancement toward improving recombinant protein expression, many eukaryotic proteins especially small peptides often fail to be recovered due to rapid proteolytic degradation. Here we show that the sandwiched-fusion strategy, which is based on two protein tags incorporated both at the amino- and carboxyl-terminus of target protein, could be employed to overcome this obstacle. We have exploited this strategy on heterologous expression in Escherichia coli of eight small degradation-prone eukaryotic proteins, whose successful recombinant productions have yet to be achieved. These include seven mitochondria-derived peptides (MDPS), a class of unique metabolic regulators of human body, and a labile mosquito transcription factor, Guy1. We show here that the sandwiched-fusion strategy, which provides robust protection against proteolysis, affords an economical method to obtain large quantities of pure five MDPs and the transcription factor Guy1, in sharp contrast to otherwise unsuccessful recovery using the traditional amino-fusion method. Further biophysical characterization and interaction studies by NMR spectroscopy confirmed that the proteins produced by this novel approach are properly folded into their biologically active structures. We anticipate this strategy could be widely utilized in production of other labile protein systems.
Study Information
pubmed
2021
2021-01-29T00:00:00.000Z
10.1002/pro.4024
3
36