Abstract

The recombinant OmpF porin of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis as a model of transmembrane protein of the β-barrel structural family was used to study low growth temperature effect on the structure of the produced inclusion bodies (IBs). This porin showed a very low expression level in E. coli at a growth temperature below optimal 37 °C. The introduction of a N-terminal hexahistidine tag into the mature porin molecule significantly increased the biosynthesis of the protein at low cultivation temperatures. The recombinant His-tagged porin (rOmpF-His) was expressed in E. coli at 30 and 18 °C as inclusion bodies (IB-30 and IB-18). The properties and structural organization of IBs, as well as the structure of rOmpF-His solubilized from the IBs with urea and SDS, were studied using turbidimetry, electron microscopy, dynamic light scattering, optical spectroscopy, and amyloid-specific dyes. IB-18, in comparison with IB-30, has a higher solubility in denaturants, suggesting a difference between IBs in the conformation of the associated polypeptide chains. The spectroscopic analysis revealed that rOmpF-His IBs have a high content of secondary structure with a tertiary-structure elements, including a native-like conformation, the proportion of which in IB-18 is higher than in IB-30. Solubilization of the porin from IBs is accompanied by a modification of its secondary structure. The studied IBs also contain amyloid-like structures. The results obtained in this study expand our knowledge of the structural organization of IBs formed by proteins of different structural classes and also have a contribution into the new approaches development of producing functionally active recombinant membrane proteins.

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