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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., 11 1997, 4313-4320, Vol 63, No. 11
MJ Weickert, M Pagratis, SR Curry and R Blackmore
Accumulation of soluble recombinant hemoglobin (rHb1.1) in Escherichia coli
requires proper protein folding, prosthetic group (heme) addition, and
subunit assembly. This served as a new model system for the study of the
effects of temperature, protein synthesis rates, and protein accumulation
rates on protein solubility in E. coli. Fermentation expression of rHb1.1
at 30 degrees C from cultures containing a medium or high globin gene
dosage (pBR-based or pUC-based plasmids with rHb1.1 genes under the control
of the tac promoter) was compared. A medium gene dosage resulted in rHb1.1
accumulating to approximately 7% of the soluble cell protein, of which 78%
was soluble. A high globin gene dosage resulted in a > or = 3-fold
increase in total globin to 23 to 24% of the soluble cell protein, but 70%
was insoluble. Accumulation of insoluble rHb1.1 began immediately upon
induction. The proportion of rHb1.1 from the high globin gene dosage that
accumulated as insoluble globin was affected by reducing (i) the inducer
concentration and (ii) the temperature. Reducing the inducer concentration
reduced globin synthesis up to eightfold but increased the proportion of
soluble rHb1.1 to 93%. In contrast, total globin protein synthesis was
barely affected by reducing the temperature from 30 to 26 degrees C, while
soluble globin accumulation increased > 2-fold to approximately 15% of
the soluble cell protein. The contrast between the effects of reducing
rates of protein synthesis and accumulation and those of reducing
temperature suggests that lower temperature stabilizes one or more folding
intermediates. We propose a simplified physical model which integrates
protein synthesis, folding, and heme association. This model shows that
temperature-dependent apoglobin stability is the most critical factor in
soluble rHb1.1 accumulation.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
Stabilization of apoglobin by low temperature increases yield of soluble recombinant hemoglobin in Escherichia coli
Somatogen, Inc., Boulder, Colorado 80301, USA. Weickert@AOL.COM
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