Artificial chaperoning of insulin, human carbonic anhydrase and hen egg lysozyme using linear dextrin chains – a sweet route to the native state of globular proteins
Linear dextrins (α-1,4- d-glucopyranoside chains) are known to possess amphiphilic surfaces and solubilize lipophilic compounds. We have assessed the ability of this amphiphilic surface of dextrin to inhibit the self-aggregation and assist the refolding of proteins. Addition of decameric dextrin, or...
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Veröffentlicht in: | FEBS letters 1999-01, Vol.443 (2), p.215-219 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Linear dextrins (α-1,4-
d-glucopyranoside chains) are known to possess amphiphilic surfaces and solubilize lipophilic compounds. We have assessed the ability of this amphiphilic surface of dextrin to inhibit the self-aggregation and assist the refolding of proteins. Addition of decameric dextrin, or dextrin-10, in the renaturation buffer improves the refolding yield of human carbonic anhydrase from its guanidinium chloride-induced denatured state. It is also seen to inhibit the self-aggregation of insulin. The ability of dextrin-10 to interact with cetyltrimethylammonium bromide and postpone its critical micellar concentration allows the use of dextrin-10 as a `detergent stripping agent' in a novel artificial chaperoning process described earlier. The aggregation of human carbonic anhydrase and lysozyme upon refolding is prevented by cetyltrimethylammonium bromide due to the formation of a protein-detergent complex; dextrin-10 strips off the detergent from the complex and allow the proteins to fold, thus increasing the renaturation yield. Dextran-4 (the α-1,6-
d-glucopyranoside chain), which does not exhibit amphiphilic properties, does not help in such artificial chaperoning. |
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ISSN: | 0014-5793 1873-3468 |
DOI: | 10.1016/S0014-5793(98)01720-7 |