4.6 Article

Hydrogel polymer appears to mimic the performance of the GroEL/GroES molecular chaperone machine

Journal

ORGANIC & BIOMOLECULAR CHEMISTRY
Volume 4, Issue 13, Pages 2568-2574

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/b603915d

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Controlled protein folding/refolding remains a substantial challenge to the biotechnology industry. Robust and adaptable artificial polymer molecular chaperones could make important contributions towards solving this problem. Taking inspiration from the mechanism of the GroEL/GroES molecular chaperone machine, we report the preparation and testing of a selection of cross-linked thermo-responsive hydrogels, one of which is shown to assist quantitative refolding of a stringent unfolded protein substrate (mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase [mMDH]) during temperature cycling between hydrophobic and hydrophilic states. To our knowledge, this is the first hydrogel-only artificial polymer molecular chaperone to be derived, which is also potentially a generic artificial polymer molecular chaperone for use in a folding bioreactor.

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