Journal of Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (Oct 2021)

Expression of acid cleavable Asp-Pro linked multimeric AFP peptide in E. coli

  • Murad Mollaev,
  • Artur Zabolotskii,
  • Neonila Gorokhovets,
  • Elena Nikolskaya,
  • Maria Sokol,
  • Andrey Tsedilin,
  • Mariia Mollaeva,
  • Margarita Chirkina,
  • Timofey Kuvaev,
  • Anna Pshenichnikova,
  • Nikita Yabbarov

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s43141-021-00265-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Background Difficult to express peptides are usually produced by co-expression with fusion partners. In this case, a significant mass part of the recombinant product falls on the subsequently removed fusion partner. On the other hand, multimerization of peptides is known to improve its proteolytic stability in E. coli due to the inclusion of body formation, which is sequence specific. Thereby, the peptide itself may serve as a fusion partner and one may produce more than one mole of the desired product per mole of fusion protein. This paper proposes a method for multimeric production of a human alpha-fetoprotein fragment with optimized multimer design and processing. This fragment may further find its application in the cytotoxic drug delivery field or as an inhibitor of endogenous alpha-fetoprotein. Results Multimerization of the extended alpha-fetoprotein receptor-binding peptide improved its stability in E. coli, and pentamer was found to be the largest stable with the highest expression level. As high as 10 aspartate-proline bonds used to separate peptide repeats were easily hydrolyzed in optimized formic acid-based conditions with 100% multimer conversion. The major product was represented by unaltered functional alpha-fetoprotein fragment while most side-products were its formyl-Pro, formyl-Tyr, and formyl-Lys derivatives. Single-step semi-preparative RP-HPLC was enough to separate unaltered peptide from the hydrolysis mixture. Conclusions A recombinant peptide derived from human alpha-fetoprotein can be produced via multimerization with subsequent formic acid hydrolysis and RP-HPLC purification. The reported procedure is characterized by the lower reagent cost in comparison with enzymatic hydrolysis of peptide fusions and solid-phase synthesis. This method may be adopted for different peptide expression, especially with low amino and hydroxy side chain content.

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