4.7 Article

Multimodal approaches for the improvement of the cellular folding of a recombinant iron regulatory protein in E. coli

Journal

MICROBIAL CELL FACTORIES
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12934-022-01749-w

Keywords

Cellular protein folding; Protein aggregation; Yeast mitochondrial aconitase; Molecular chaperone; Cellular stress; GroEL/ES; Inclusion bodies

Funding

  1. IIT Delhi, Govt. of India

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This study investigates how the modulation of physiological stimuli and process conditions can increase the solubility and activity of recombinant proteins in E. coli cells. The results show that the presence of exogenous molecular chaperones and osmolytes, as well as the modulation of temperature and inducer concentrations, can enhance the folding of soluble aggregates and improve the functional protein molecules in the cells. The co-expression of GroEL/ES not only aids in protein folding, but also reduces cellular stress caused by aggregation-prone recombinant protein expression.
Background: During the recombinant protein expression, most heterologous proteins expressed in E. coli cell factories are generated as insoluble and inactive aggregates, which prohibit E. coli from being employed as an expression host despite its numerous advantages and ease of use. The yeast mitochondrial aconitase protein, which has a tendency to aggregate when expressed in E. coli cells in the absence of heterologous chaperones GroEL/ES was utilised as a model to investigate how the modulation of physiological stimuli in the host cell can increase protein solubility. The presence of folding modulators such as exogenous molecular chaperones or osmolytes, as well as process variables such as incubation temperature, inducer concentrations, growth media are all important for cellular folding and are investigated in this study. This study also investigated how the cell's stress response system activates and protects the proteins from aggregation. Results: The cells exposed to osmolytes plus a pre-induction heat shock showed a substantial increase in recombinant aconitase activity when combined with modulation of process conditions. The concomitant GroEL/ES expression further assists the folding of these soluble aggregates and increases the functional protein molecules in the cytoplasm of the recombinant E. coli cells. Conclusions: The recombinant E. coli cells enduring physiological stress provide a cytosolic environment for the enhancement in the solubility and activity of the recombinant proteins. GroEL/ES-expressing cells not only aided in the folding of recombinant proteins, but also had an effect on the physiology of the expression host. The improvement in the specific growth rate and aconitase production during chaperone GroEL/ES co-expression is attributed to the reduction in overall cellular stress caused by the expression host's aggregation-prone recombinant protein expression.

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