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Protein stability
Protein stability is another common problem in protein expression. It is also
an important topic in purification, formulation, and storage. Here we will discuss about
protein stability in expression only. Properly folded proteins are usually
stable during expression and purification. Sufficient amount of intact protein
should be obtained. However some proteins appear to be unstable during
expression and purification. Some of them are so unstable that sufficient amount
of protein cannot be obtained. Many factors such as amino acid sequence of the
protein, protein construction, host cell strain, expression and purification
conditions may affect protein stability.
Amino acid sequence of a protein itself may be susceptible to degradation.
Certain amino acids at the N-terminus of a protein can lead the protein to
degradation. These are Arg, Lys, Leu, Phe, Tyr, and Trp residues. Replacing
these amino acids with others can greatly increase the protein half-life (N-end
rule). Many recombinant proteins are expressed with tags or fusion partners.
Amino acid sequences at N-termini of these tags and fusion partners are often
optimized for protein yield and stability. Therefore amino acids at N-terminus
are not a problem in protein stability for these tagged or fusion proteins.
It is reported that regions containing Pro (P), Glu (E), Ser (S), and Thr (T)
termed PEST are prone to degradation. It is generally observed that flexible
hydrophilic sequences with protease cleavage sites are easily degraded. These
sequences may be integral part of a protein. In most cases these sequences
cannot be deleted or mutated. Strategies for improving protein stability are
needed for these proteins.
Strategies to improve protein Stability:
 | Perform expression in special media containing trace
metals, minerals, and vitamins. These chemicals may not be needed for host
cell growth, but they may serve as co-factor, prosthetic groups or ligands for
recombinant proteins. Therefore they may be critical for correct protein
folding and stability. Medium pH should also be balanced near neutral to
improve protein stability. There will be no protein degradation caused by
nutrition exhaustion in our special media. |
 | Induce the protein at lower temperature and/or for shorter
induction time. |
 | Fuse the protein with a tag or fusion partner. A tag can
change the N-terminal sequence of the protein and therefore increase the yield
and stability. In addition to N-terminal sequence change, a relative large
fusion partner can further stabilize the protein compared with that the
protein was expressed alone or with a small tag. |
 | Design the protein construct with intact domain or structure. A
full-length protein, a part of a protein with intact domains, or an intact
domain of a protein can be stably expressed. An integral folding unit of a
protein cannot be truncated. Otherwise it may not be structured and therefore
will not be stable. A domain is often a folding unit. Truncations at either
terminus may disrupt protein folding. A domain of a protein can be determined
by homologous alignment of the protein with other proteins. The more proteins
are used in the alignment, the more accurate boundaries of a domain can be
determined. Including more amino acids at the boundaries is often better than
trimming off some residues. If an intact domain has to be truncated, fusing it
with a large partner such as GST will make it more stable. Small tags such as
his-tag will not improve protein stability in these cases. |
 | Change the host cell strain. Some cell strains are
deficient in some proteases. For example, BL21 lacks cytoplasmic ion and periplasmic ompT proteases. Using these cell strains will lead to enhanced
protein stability. Sometimes simply changing a host strain will increase
recombinant protein stability. |
 | Change the location of expression. Some proteins are not
stable if they are expressed in cytoplasm. When they are expressed in the
periplasmic region, it becomes stable. Periplasmic expression may lead to
correct folding of a protein. Periplasmic region may also lack the protease to
degrade the protein. |
 | Express the protein in cell strains containing
molecular chaperones. Molecular chaperones may facilitate protein folding
and increase it stability |
It is clear that strategies such as using
special media,
cell strains or growth conditions are easy to implement. Making fusion protein,
designing protein construct, and changing expression location will involve DNA
manipulation. In the case that a truncated protein domain is unstable, the
choices may be to re-design the construct and express the protein as an intact
domain or to fuse it with large protein partner.
Examples:
We appreciate your comments or feedbacks at
info@exptec.com.
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