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Current Protocols in Protein Science
Featured Protocol
This Featured
Protocol presents a cutting-edge method excerpted from Current
Protocols in Protein Science UNIT 6.3.
Preparation and Extraction of Insoluble (Inclusion-Body) Proteins
from Escherichia coli
Contributed by Ira Palmer and Paul T. Wingfield
National Institutes of Health
Bethesda, Maryland
High-level
expression of many recombinant proteins in Escherichia coli leads
to the formation of highly aggregated protein commonly referred
to as inclusion bodies (UNITS 5.1 & 6.1). Inclusion bodies
are normally formed in the cytoplasm; alternatively, if a secretion
vector is used, they can form in the periplasmic space.
Inclusion
bodies recovered from cell lysates by low-speed centrifugation
are heavily contaminated with E. coli cell wall and outer membrane
components. The latter are largely removed by selective extraction
with detergents and low concentrations of either urea or guanidine·HCl
to produce so-called washed pellets. These basic steps result
in a significant purification of the recombinant protein, which
usually makes up ~60% of the washed pellet protein. The challenge,
therefore, is not to purify the recombinant-derived protein, but
to solubilize it and then fold it into native and biologically
active protein.
Basic Protocol
1 describes preparation of washed pellets and solubilization of
the protein using guanidine·HCl. The extracted protein, which
is unfolded, is either directly folded as described in UNIT 6.5
or further purified by gel filtration in the presence of guanidine·HCl
as in Basic Protocol 2. A support protocol describes the removal
of guanidine·HCl from column fractions so they can be monitored
by SDS-PAGE (UNIT 10.1).
BASIC PROTOCOL
1
PREPARATION
AND EXTRACTION OF INSOLUBLE (INCLUSION-BODY) PROTEINS FROM ESCHERICHIA
COLI
Bacterial cells
are lysed using a French press, and inclusion bodies in the cell
lysate are pelleted by low-speed centrifugation. The pellet fraction
is washed (preextracted) with urea and Triton X-100 to remove E.
coli membrane and cell wall material. Guanidine·HCl (8 M) and dithiothreitol
(DTT) are used to solubilize the washed pellet protein. Extraction
with the denaturant simultaneously dissociates protein-protein interactions
and unfolds the protein. As a result, the extracted protein consists
(ideally) of unfolded monomers, with sulfhydryl groups (if present)
in the reduced state.
Materials
- E. coli
cells from fermentation (UNIT 5.3) containing the protein of
interest
- Lysis buffer
(see recipe)
- Wash buffer
(see recipe), with and without urea and Triton X-100
- Extraction
buffer (see recipe)
- 250- and
500-ml stainless steel beakers
- 0.22-µm
syringe filters (e.g., Millex from Millipore)
- 20-ml disposable
syringe
- Additional
equipment for breaking cells, homogenizing cells and pellets
and centrifuging at low and high speeds (UNIT 6.2)
Break cells
and prepare clarified lysate
- Place thawed
E. coli cells in a stainless steel beaker. Add 4 ml lysis buffer
per gram wet weight of cells. Keep bacterial cells cool by placing
the beaker on ice in an ice bucket.
- The
cells can be pretreated with lysozyme prior to lysis in
the French press. Lysozyme treatment involves incubating
cells ~20 min at 20° to 25°C in lysis buffer supplemented
with 200 µg/ml lysozyme, with intermittent homogenization
using a tissue grinder. It should be emphasized that this
optional step is carried out before French press breakage
and is not simply an alternative method of cell breakage
(compare the comments made in the annotation to step 4 of
UNIT 6.2). Its purpose is to aid removal of the peptidoglycan
and outer membrane protein contaminants during the washing
steps (steps 6 to 9; for further details see UNIT 6.1 and
Fig. 6.1.5). An example of this approach is given in Basic
Protocol 1 of UNIT 6.5.
- Suspend
cells using a Waring blender and homogenize using the Polytron
tissue-grinder homogenizer until all clumps are disrupted, as
described in UNIT 6.2, step 3.
- Lyse cells
with two passes through the French pressure cell operated at
16,000 to 18,000 lb/in2 (with the high-ratio setting,
pressure gauge readings between 1011 and 1135), chilling the
cell suspension to 4°C after each pass, as described in UNIT
6.2, steps 2 and 4.
- Reduce
the viscosity of the suspension by sonicating 5 min at full
power with 50% duty cycle (on for 5 sec, off for 5 sec) using
an ultrasonic homogenizer, as described in UNIT 6.2, step 5.
- Clarify
the lysed cell suspension by centrifuging 1 hr at 22,000×g (12,000
rpm in a JA-14 rotor in a Beckman J2-21M centrifuge), 4°C.
- Unbroken
cells, large cellular debris, and the inclusion body protein
will be pelleted.
- The
JA-14 rotor uses 250-ml centrifuge bottles. For processing
smaller volumes the Beckman JA-20 rotor (or equivalent)
with 50-ml tubes can be used, at 13,500 rpm (22,000×g).
- The
procedure for dealing with insoluble inclusion-body proteins
now diverges from that for purifying soluble proteins (UNIT
6.2).
Prepare washed
pellets
- Carefully
pour off the supernatant from the pellet. Using a tissue homogenizer,
suspend the pellet with 4 to 6 ml wash buffer per gram wet weight
cells.
- Complete
homogenization of the pellet is important to wash out soluble
proteins and cellular components. Removal of cell wall and
outer membrane material can be improved by increasing the
amount of wash solution to 10 ml per gram cells.
- The
concentration of urea and Triton X-100 in the wash buffer
can be varied. The urea concentration is usually between
1 and 4 M; higher concentrations may result in partial solubilization
of the recombinant proteins. The usual detergent concentration
is 0.5% to 5%. Triton X-100 will not solubilize inclusion
body proteins; it is included to help extract lipid and
membrane-associated proteins.
- Centrifuge
the suspension 30 min at 22,000×g (12,000 rpm in JA-14), 4°C.
Discard supernatant and, using the tissue homogenizer, suspend
the pellet in 4 to 6 ml wash buffer per gram wet weight of cells.
- Repeat
step 7 two more times.
- If
the supernatant is still cloudy or colored, continue washing
the pellet until the supernatant is clear.
- Suspend
the pellet with wash buffer minus the Triton X-100 and urea,
using 4 to 6 ml buffer per gram wet cells. Centrifuge 30 min
at 22,000 x g (12,000 rpm in JA-14), 4°C.
- The
final wash removes excess Triton X-100 from the pellet.
- If
necessary the washed pellets can be stored at -80°C. It
is better to store material at this stage rather than after
the extraction stage (see comments to step 13).
Extract recombinant
protein from washed pellets with guanidine·HCl
- Using the
tissue homogenizer, suspend the pellet with guanidine·HCl-containing
extraction buffer. Use 0.5 to 1.0 ml buffer per gram wet weight
of original cells if the extract will be subjected to gel filtration,
and 2 to 4 ml buffer if the extract will be used in protein
folding procedures. Perform this step at room temperature.
- To
estimate the amount of recombinant protein in the washed
pellets, use the following guidelines. (1) An expression
level of 1% corresponds to ~1 mg recombinant protein per
1 g wet cells. (2) The recovery of highly aggregated recombinant
protein in the washed pellets is ~75% that originally present
in the cells. (3) About 60% of the total washed pellet protein
is recombinant-derived. Thus, if 50 g cells is processed
and the expression level is 5%, the washed pellets contain
~200 mg recombinant protein.
- The
total amount of recombinant-derived protein in washed pellets
can be directly determined by measuring the total protein
concentration or by analyzing the washed pellets via SDS-PAGE
(see Support Protocol and UNIT 10.1) to determine the proportions
of the protein constituents.
- For
gel-filtration purposes, the pellets from 50 g wet weight
E. coli cells are solubilized with 40 to 50 ml extraction
buffer (see Basic Protocol 2); the concentration of recombinant
protein in the extract will be 4 to 5 mg/ml. For direct
protein folding (UNIT 6.5), the pellets are extracted with
100 to 200 ml buffer, and the concentration of recombinant
protein 1 to 2 mg/ml. If the washed pellet is heavily contaminated
with outer cell wall and peptidoglycan material, the extract
must be diluted further with extraction buffer (usually
1:1 to 1:3) to reduce the viscosity before it can be used
for chromatography.
- Centrifuge
the suspension 1 hr at 100,000×g (30,000 rpm in Ti45 rotor in
a Beckman Optima XL-90 ultracentrifuge), 4°C.
- For
volumes <250 ml the Beckman 70Ti rotor (capacity 6× 39
ml) can be used at 32,000 rpm (~100,000×g).
- Carefully
pour off the supernatant from the pellet. Filter the supernatant
through a 0.22-µm syringe filter attached to a 20-ml disposable
syringe.
- The
filter removes unpelleted large cell wall debris that will
clog most chromatography columns.
- Use the
clarified inclusion body extract for preparing folded protein
(UNIT 6.5) or purify further by gel filtration (see Basic Protocol
2).
- The
extract can be stored at -80°C until required. Freeze in
plastic (or polyethylene) containers rather than glass.
Divide sample into 10- to 20-ml aliquots instead of freezing
in one large lot and fill containers to only 50% to 75%
capacity.
Table
6.3.1. Gel-Filtration Matrices Suitable for Use with Solutions
Containing Guanidine Hydrochloride
| Matrixa |
Mass
range (kDa)
|
|
Native
proteins
|
Unfolded
proteinsb
|
Reference
|
|
| Sepharose
L-6B |
10-4,000
|
1-80
|
Mann
and Fish (1972)
|
| Bio-Gel
A-5m |
10-5,000
|
1-80
|
Mann
and Fish (1972)
|
| Sepharose
CL-4B |
60-20,000
|
10-300
|
Mann
and Fish (1972)
|
| Sephacryl
S-100 HR |
1-100
|
<1-30c
|
--
|
| Sephacryl
S-200 HR |
5-250
|
1-50
|
Belew
et al. (1978)
|
| Sephacryl
S-300 HR |
10-1,500
|
1-100c
|
--
|
| Sephacryl
S-400 HR |
20-8,000
|
1->100c
|
--
|
| Superdex
75 |
3-70
|
<1-25
|
I.P.
and P.T.W. (unpub. observ.)
|
| Superdex
200 |
10-600
|
<1-80
|
I.P.
and P.T.W. (unpub. observ.)
|
aAll
resins are from Pharmacia Biotech except Bio-Gel A 5m, which
is from Bio-Rad. The Sepharose and Bio-Gel matrices are normally
run under low pressure; all other resins can be run under low
or medium pressure. Medium pressure is achieved using one of
the chromatography pumps indicated in Basic Protocol 2; the
pumps are normally included in the Pharmacia Biotech FPLC or
BioPilot systems.
bData
on the fractionation range in the unfolded state refer to
proteins unfolded with guanidine·HCI; however, the guidelines
also apply to proteins unfolded and eluted with urea (assuming
they are random coils).
cEstimates
based on fractionation range for native proteins.
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