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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, December 1998, p. 4891-4896, Vol. 64, No. 12
Molecular Biology
Program1 and
Department of Chemical
Engineering,3 University of Texas, Austin, Texas
78712, and
Department of Cell Culture and Fermentation Research
and Development, Genentech, Inc., South San Francisco, California
940802
Received 25 June 1998/Accepted 1 September 1998
The formation of native disulfide bonds in complex eukaryotic
proteins expressed in Escherichia coli is extremely
inefficient. Tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) is a very important
thrombolytic agent with 17 disulfides, and despite numerous attempts,
its expression in an active form in bacteria has not been reported. To
achieve the production of active tPA in E. coli, we have
investigated the effect of cooverexpressing native (DsbA and DsbC) or
heterologous (rat and yeast protein disulfide isomerases) cysteine
oxidoreductases in the bacterial periplasm. Coexpression of DsbC, an
enzyme which catalyzes disulfide bond isomerization in the periplasm,
was found to dramatically increase the formation of active tPA both in
shake flasks and in fermentors. The active protein was purified with an
overall yield of 25% by using three affinity steps with, in sequence,
lysine-Sepharose, immobilized Erythrina caffra inhibitor, and Zn-Sepharose resins. After purification, approximately 180 µg of
tPA with a specific activity nearly identical to that of the authentic
protein can be obtained per liter of culture in a high-cell-density
fermentation. Thus, heterologous proteins as complex as tPA may be
produced in an active form in bacteria in amounts suitable for
structure-function studies. In addition, these results suggest the
feasibility of commercial production of extremely complex proteins in
E. coli without the need for in vitro refolding.
0099-2240/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Expression of Active Human Tissue-Type Plasminogen
Activator in Escherichia coli
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Chemical Engineering, University of Texas at Austin, College of
Engineering, Austin, TX 78712-1062. Phone: (512) 471-6975. Fax: (512)
471-7963. E-mail: gg{at}che.utexas.edu.
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