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Controllable protein cleavages through intein fragment complementation
Author(s) -
Volkmann Gerrit,
Sun Wenchang,
Liu XiangQin
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
protein science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.353
H-Index - 175
eISSN - 1469-896X
pISSN - 0961-8368
DOI - 10.1002/pro.249
Subject(s) - intein , cleavage (geology) , complementation , recombinant dna , protein engineering , protein splicing , chemistry , protein tag , biochemistry , stereochemistry , biology , fusion protein , enzyme , gene , rna splicing , paleontology , rna , fracture (geology) , phenotype
Intein‐based protein cleavages, if carried out in a controllable way, can be useful tools of recombinant protein purification, ligation, and cyclization. However, existing methods using contiguous inteins were often complicated by spontaneous cleavages, which could severely reduce the yield of the desired protein product. Here we demonstrate a new method of controllable cleavages without any spontaneous cleavage, using an artificial S1 split‐intein consisting of an 11‐aa N‐intein (I N ) and a 144‐aa C‐intein (I C ). In a C‐cleavage design, the I C sequence was embedded in a recombinant precursor protein, and the small I N was used as a synthetic peptide to trigger a cleavage at the C‐terminus of I C . In an N‐cleavage design, the short I N sequence was embedded in a recombinant precursor protein, and the separately produced I C protein was used to catalyze a cleavage at the N‐terminus of I N . These N‐ and C‐cleavages showed >95% efficiency, and both successfully avoided any spontaneous cleavage during expression and purification of the precursor proteins. The N‐cleavage design also revealed an unexpected and interesting structural flexibility of the I C protein. These findings significantly expand the effectiveness of intein‐based protein cleavages, and they also reveal important insights of intein structural flexibility and fragment complementation.

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