A Versatile Strategy for Production of Membrane Proteins with Diverse Topologies: Application to Investigation of Bacterial Homologues of Human Divalent Metal Ion and Nucleoside Transporters
Membrane proteins play key roles in many biological processes, from acquisition of nutrients to neurotransmission, and are targets for more than 50% of current therapeutic drugs. However, their investigation is hampered by difficulties in their production and purification on a scale suitable for str...
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Zusammenfassung: | Membrane proteins play key roles in many biological processes, from acquisition of nutrients
to neurotransmission, and are targets for more than 50% of current therapeutic drugs.
However, their investigation is hampered by difficulties in their production and purification
on a scale suitable for structural studies. In particular, the nature and location of affinity tags
introduced for the purification of recombinant membrane proteins can greatly influence their
expression levels by affecting their membrane insertion. The extent of such effects typically
depends on the transmembrane topologies of the proteins, which for proteins of unknown
structure are usually uncertain. For example, attachment of oligohistidine tags to the periplasmic
termini of membrane proteins often interferes with folding and drastically impairs
expression in Escherichia coli. To circumvent this problem we have employed a novel strategy
to enable the rapid production of constructs bearing a range of different affinity tags
compatible with either cytoplasmic or periplasmic attachment. Tags include conventional
oligohistidine tags compatible with cytoplasmic attachment and, for attachment to proteins
with a periplasmic terminus, either tandem Strep-tag II sequences or oligohistidine tags fused to maltose binding protein and a signal sequence. Inclusion of cleavage sites for TEV
or HRV-3C protease enables tag removal prior to crystallisation trials or a second step of
purification. Together with the use of bioinformatic approaches to identify members of membrane
protein families with topologies favourable to cytoplasmic tagging, this has enabled
us to express and purify multiple bacterial membrane transporters. To illustrate this strategy,
we describe here its use to purify bacterial homologues of human membrane proteins
from the Nramp and ZIP families of divalent metal cation transporters and from the concentrative
nucleoside transporter family. The proteins are expressed in E. coli in a correctly
folded, functional state and can be purified in amounts suitable for structural investigations. |
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DOI: | 10.1371/journal.pone.0143010 |