Title of article :
Genetic Engineering Strategies for Purification of Recombinant Proteins from Canola by Anion Exchange Chromatography; An Example of beta-Glucuronidase
Author/Authors :
Zhang، Chenming نويسنده , , Love، Robert T. نويسنده , , Jilka، Joseph M. نويسنده , , Glatz، Charles E. نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Abstract :
The elution behavior of native canola proteins from different anion-exchange resins was determined. The elution profiles showed the potential for simplified recovery of acidic recombinant proteins from canola. When Q-sepharose fast flow was used, there were three optimal salt elution points at which a recombinant protein would have minimal contamination with native proteins. The feasibility of exploiting this advantage was examined for recovery of the acidic protein ^-glucuronidase (GUS/ GUSDO from the Escherichia coli gene) along with three polyaspartate fusions to the wild-type GUS. The fusions contained 5 (GUSD5), 10 (GUSDIO), or 15 (GUSD15) aspartic acids fused to the C-terminus and were chosen to extend the elution time. The three fusions and the wild-type enzyme were produced in E, coli, purified, and added to canola extracts before chromatography. The equivalence of this spiking experiment to that of extracting a recombinant protein from transgenic canola was determined in a control experiment using transgenic canola expressing the wild-type enzyme. Behavior in the transgenic and spiked experiments was equivalent. GUSDO eluted at the earliest optimal elution point; the addition of polyaspartate tails resulted in longer retention times and better selective recovery. If one assumes binding through a single fusion (the protein is a tetramer), there is a nearly linear shift in elution within the salt gradient of 17 mM per added charge up to 10, with a reduced increment from 10 to 15. The fusions and their enzymatic activity proved very stable in the canola extracts through 7 days in cold storage, providing flexibility in process scheduling.
Journal title :
BIOTECHNOLOGY PROGRESS
Journal title :
BIOTECHNOLOGY PROGRESS