Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology (Dec 2014)

The induction of recombinant protein bodies in different subcellular compartments reveals a cryptic plastid-targeting signal in the 27 kD γ-zein sequence

  • Anna eHofbauer,
  • Jenny ePeters,
  • Elsa eArcalis,
  • Thomas eRademacher,
  • Johannes eLampel,
  • Francois eEudes,
  • Alessandro eVitale,
  • Eva eStoger

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fbioe.2014.00067
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2

Abstract

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Naturally-occurring storage proteins such as zeins are used as fusion partners for recombinant proteins because they induce the formation of ectopic storage organelles known as protein bodies (PBs) where the proteins are stabilized by intermolecular interactions and the formation of disulfide bonds. Endogenous PBs are derived from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Here we have used different targeting sequences to determine whether ectopic PBs composed of the N-terminal portion of mature 27 kD γ-zein added to a fluorescent protein could be induced to form elsewhere in the cell. The addition of a transit peptide for targeting to plastids causes PB formation in the stroma, whereas in the absence of any added targeting sequence PBs were typically associated with the plastid envelope, revealing the presence of a cryptic plastid targeting signal within the γ-zein cysteine-rich domain. The subcellular localization of the PBs influences their morphology and the solubility of the stored recombinant fusion protein. Our results indicate that the biogenesis and budding of PBs does not require ER-specific factors and therefore confirm that γ-zein is a versatile fusion partner for recombinant proteins offering unique opportunities for the accumulation and bioencapsulation of recombinant proteins in different subcellular compartments.

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