Purification of an Intact Human Protein Overexpressed from Its Endogenous Locus via Direct Genome Engineering
Author(s) -
Jihyeon Yu,
Eunju Cho,
Yeon-Gil Choi,
You Kyeong Jeong,
Yongwoo Na,
JongSeo Kim,
SungRae Cho,
JaeSung Woo,
Sangsu Bae
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
acs synthetic biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.156
H-Index - 66
ISSN - 2161-5063
DOI - 10.1021/acssynbio.0c00090
Subject(s) - subcloning , gene , biology , recombinant dna , plasmid , cloning (programming) , human genome , computational biology , genome , protein tag , pseudogene , microbiology and biotechnology , genetics , fusion protein , computer science , programming language
The overproduction and purification of human proteins is a requisite of both basic and medical research. Although many recombinant human proteins have been purified, current protein production methods have several limitations; recombinant proteins are frequently truncated, fail to fold properly, and/or lack appropriate post-translational modifications. In addition, such methods require subcloning of the target gene into relevant plasmids, which can be difficult for long proteins with repeated domains. Here we devised a novel method for target protein production by introduction of a strong promoter for overexpression and an epitope tag for purification in front of the endogenous human gene, in a sense performing molecular cloning directly in the human genome, which does not require cloning of the target gene. As a proof of concept, we successfully purified intact human Reelin protein, which is lengthy (3460 amino acids) and contains repeating domains, and confirmed that it was biologically functional.
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