Engineering human MEK-1 for structural studies: A case study of combinatorial domain hunting

Structural biology studies typically require large quantities of pure, soluble protein. Currently the most widely-used method for obtaining such protein involves the use of bioinformatics and experimental methods to design constructs of the target, which are cloned and expressed. Recently an alterna...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of structural biology 2012-02, Vol.177 (2), p.329-334
Hauptverfasser: Meier, Christoph, Brookings, Daniel C., Ceska, Thomas A., Doyle, Carl, Gong, Haiping, McMillan, David, Saville, Giles P., Mushtaq, Adeel, Knight, David, Reich, Stefanie, Pearl, Laurence H., Powell, Keith A., Savva, Renos, Allen, Rodger A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Structural biology studies typically require large quantities of pure, soluble protein. Currently the most widely-used method for obtaining such protein involves the use of bioinformatics and experimental methods to design constructs of the target, which are cloned and expressed. Recently an alternative approach has emerged, which involves random fragmentation of the gene of interest and screening for well-expressing fragments. Here we describe the application of one such fragmentation method, combinatorial domain hunting (CDH), to a target which historically was difficult to express, human MEK-1. We show how CDH was used to identify a fragment which covers the kinase domain of MEK-1 and which expresses and crystallizes significantly better than designed expression constructs, and we report the crystal structure of this fragment which explains some of its superior properties. Gene fragmentation methods, such as CDH, thus hold great promise for tackling difficult-to-express target proteins.
ISSN:1047-8477
1095-8657
DOI:10.1016/j.jsb.2012.01.002