UGA Read-Through Artifacts—When Popular Gene Expression Systems Need a pATCH
Author(s) -
Gavin MacBeath,
Peter Kast
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
biotechniques
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.617
H-Index - 131
eISSN - 1940-9818
pISSN - 0736-6205
DOI - 10.2144/98245st02
Subject(s) - stop codon , translation (biology) , gene , eukaryotic translation , computational biology , sequence (biology) , biology , release factor , codon usage bias , escherichia coli , genetics , suppressor , microbiology and biotechnology , messenger rna , transfer rna , rna , genome
pET and similar vectors are widely used for efficient gene expression in Escherichia coli and subsequent protein purification, often by means of a C-terminal histidine (His) tag. We found that the TGA translation termination signal following the His-tag sequence in pET constructs gives rise to a significant fraction of read-through protein extended by 21 amino acids. Mass spectrometry indicated that tryptophan is inserted at the UGA (opal) stop codon in the examined non-opal suppressor strains; no evidence for translational frameshifting was detected. We have shown that the problem of obtaining heterogeneous protein preparations can easily be corrected. Plasmid pATCH1 provides a replacement sequence for the inefficient stop signal and can be used to repair both pET vectors and existing pET-based expression constructs. Our observation illustrates the largely ignored fact that a UGA codon is the worst choice for proper translation termination in efficient overexpression vectors.
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