Abstract

Proteases are widely used to remove affinity and solubility tags from recombinant proteins to avoid potential interference of these tags with the structure and function of the fusion partner. In recent years, great interest has been seen in use of the human rhinovirus 3C protease owing to its stringent sequence specificity and enhanced activity. Like other proteases, activity of the human rhinovirus 3C protease can be affected in part by the buffer components and additives that are generally employed for purification and stabilization of proteins, hence, necessitate their removal by tedious and time-consuming procedures before proteolysis can occur. To address this issue, we examined the effect of elution buffers used for common affinity based purifications, salt ions, stability/solubility and reducing agents, and detergents on the activity of the human rhinovirus 3C protease using three different fusion proteins at 4°C, a temperature of choice for purification of many proteins. The results show that the human rhinovirus 3C protease performs better at 4°C than the frequently used tobacco etch virus protease and its activity was insensitive to most of the experimental conditions tested. Though number of fusion proteins tested is limited, we expect that these finding will facilitate the use of the human rhinovirus 3C protease in recombinant protein production for pharmaceutical and biotechnological applications.

Highlights

  • Affinity purification and solubility enhancement tags are essential tools that aid in the overexpression and downstream processing of recombinant proteins [1, 2]

  • Knowledge no systematic study has been reported on the activity of human rhinovirus 3C protease (HRV 3C) protease under different experimental conditions; it has been suggested that the activity of HRV 3C protease is comparable to that of tobacco etch virus (TEV) protease [8] and that it has an increased activity 4°C [1, 2]

  • HRV 3C protease cleavable clone was created by modifying pKLD116 [14, 15], which contains a His8-tag, an extended linker (MSTLESSGAASG), maltose binding protein (MBP) and a TEV protease cleavable site upstream from the multiple cloning site

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Summary

Introduction

Affinity purification and solubility enhancement tags are essential tools that aid in the overexpression and downstream processing of recombinant proteins [1, 2]. Cleavage of the target fusion proteins with the HRV 3C or TEV protease releases two major protein bands of ~ 45 kDa (His8-MBP) and ~ 10 kDa (MTD), ~ 45 kDa (His8-MBP) and 14 kDa (beta C1), and ~89 kDa (100K) and ~2 kDa (His8), respectively (Fig 1).

Results
Conclusion
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