Article
Practical protocols for production of very high yields of recombinant proteins using Escherichia coli
Article first published online: 16 MAR 2009
DOI: 10.1002/pro.102
Copyright © 2009 The Protein Society
Additional Information
How to Cite
Sivashanmugam, A., Murray, V., Cui, C., Zhang, Y., Wang, J. and Li, Q. (2009), Practical protocols for production of very high yields of recombinant proteins using Escherichia coli. Protein Science, 18: 936–948. doi: 10.1002/pro.102
Publication History
- Issue published online: 21 APR 2009
- Article first published online: 16 MAR 2009
- Accepted manuscript online: 16 MAR 2009 12:00AM EST
- Manuscript Revised: 6 MAR 2009
- Manuscript Accepted: 6 MAR 2009
- Manuscript Received: 18 NOV 2008
Funded by
- US NIH. Grant Numbers: HL76620, HL76435
- AHA Pre-Doctoral Fellowship. Grant Number: AHA 0415059Z
- International HDL Research Award
- Abstract
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- Cited By
Keywords:
- bacterial expression;
- recombinant protein;
- high cell density;
- Escherichia coli;
- expression condition and media
Abstract
The gram-negative bacterium Escherichia coli offers a mean for rapid, high yield, and economical production of recombinant proteins. However, high-level production of functional eukaryotic proteins in E. coli may not be a routine matter, sometimes it is quite challenging. Techniques to optimize heterologous protein overproduction in E. coli have been explored for host strain selection, plasmid copy numbers, promoter selection, mRNA stability, and codon usage, significantly enhancing the yields of the foreign eukaryotic proteins. We have been working on optimizations of bacterial expression conditions and media with a focus on achieving very high cell density for high-level production of eukaryotic proteins. Two high-cell-density bacterial expression methods have been explored, including an autoinduction introduced by Studier (Protein Expr Purif 2005;41:207–234) recently and a high-cell-density IPTG-induction method described in this study, to achieve a cell-density OD600 of 10–20 in the normal laboratory setting using a regular incubator shaker. Several practical protocols have been implemented with these high-cell-density expression methods to ensure a very high yield of recombinant protein production. With our methods and protocols, we routinely obtain 14–25 mg of NMR triple-labeled proteins and 17–34 mg of unlabeled proteins from a 50-mL cell culture for all seven proteins we tested. Such a high protein yield used the same DNA constructs, bacterial strains, and a regular incubator shaker and no fermentor is necessary. More importantly, these methods allow us to consistently obtain such a high yield of recombinant proteins using E. coli expression.

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