Abstract

Recombinant proteins are commonly expressed in eukaryotic expression systems to ensure the formation of disulfide bridges and proper glycosylation. Although many proteins can be expressed easily, some proteins, sub-domains, and mutant protein versions can cause problems. Here, we investigated expression levels of recombinant extracellular, intracellular as well as transmembrane proteins tethered to different polypeptides in mammalian cell lines. Strikingly, fusion of proteins to the prokaryotic maltose-binding protein (MBP) generally enhanced protein production. MBP fusion proteins consistently exhibited the most robust increase in protein production in comparison to commonly used tags, e.g., the Fc, Glutathione S-transferase (GST), SlyD, and serum albumin (ser alb) tag. Moreover, proteins tethered to MBP revealed reduced numbers of dying cells upon transient transfection. In contrast to the Fc tag, MBP is a stable monomer and does not promote protein aggregation. Therefore, the MBP tag does not induce artificial dimerization of tethered proteins and provides a beneficial fusion tag for binding as well as cell adhesion studies. Using MBP we were able to secret a disease causing laminin β2 mutant protein (congenital nephrotic syndrome), which is normally retained in the endoplasmic reticulum. In summary, this study establishes MBP as a versatile expression tag for protein production in eukaryotic expression systems.

Highlights

  • Recombinant expression of extracellular, intracellular as well as transmembrane proteins is essential for biochemical, structural, functional, and therapeutic studies

  • The different expression tags were cloned via XbaI and BamHI into the cloning site

  • The presence of serum albumin reduces cell stress and the high salt wash step allows stringent purification compared to using the His tag [18]

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Summary

Introduction

Recombinant expression of extracellular, intracellular as well as transmembrane proteins is essential for biochemical, structural, functional, and therapeutic studies. Since most proteins require numerous and specific post-translational modifications, eukaryotic expression systems are indispensable to produce recombinant proteins [1]. PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0152386 March 30, 2016

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