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Purification of recombinant proteins by chemical removal of the affinity tag

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Abstract

The efficient removal of a N-or C-terminal purification tag from a fusion protein is necessary to obtain a protein in a pure and active form, ready for use in human or animal medicine. Current techniques based on enzymatic cleavage are expensive and result in the presence of additional amino acids at either end of the proteins, as well as contaminating proteases in the preparation. Here we evaluate an alternative method to the one-step affinity/protease purification process for large-scale purification. It is based upon the cyanogen bromide (CNBr) cleavage at a single methionine placed in between a histidine tag and aPlasmodium falciparum antigen. The C-terminal segment of the circumsporozoite polypeptide was expressed as a fusion protein with a histidine tag inEscherichia coli purified by Ni-NAT agarose column chromatography and subsequently cleaved by CNBr to obtain a polypeptide without any extraneous amino acids derived from the cleavage site or from the affinity purification tag. Thus, a recombinant protein is produced without the need for further purification, demonstrating that CNBr cleavage is a precise, efficient, and low-cost alternative to enzymatic digestion, and can be applied to large-scale preparations of recombinant proteins.

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Correspondence to Nicolas Fasel.

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Rais-Beghdadi, C., Roggero, M.A., Fasel, N. et al. Purification of recombinant proteins by chemical removal of the affinity tag. Appl Biochem Biotechnol 74, 95–103 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02787176

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02787176

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