Abstract

The preparation of purified soluble proteins for biochemical studies is essential and the solubility of a protein of interest in various media is central to this process. Selectively altering the solubility of a protein is a rapid and economical step in protein purification and is based on exploiting the inherent physicochemical properties of a polypeptide. Precipitation of proteins, released from cells upon lysis, is often used to concentrate a protein of interest before further purification steps (e.g., ion exchange chromatography, size exclusion chromatographyetc).Recombinant proteins may be expressed in host cells as insolubleinclusion bodies due to various influences during overexpression. Such inclusion bodies can often be solubilized to be reconstituted as functional, correctly folded proteins.In this chapter, we examine strategies for extraction/precipitation/solubilization of proteins for protein purification. We also present bioinformatic tools to aid in understanding a protein's propensity to aggregate/solubilize that will be a useful starting point for the development of protein extraction, precipitation, and selective re-solubilization procedures.

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