Chimeric ribonuclease as a source of human adapter protein for targeted drug delivery.
Open Access
- 1 October 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Protein Engineering, Design and Selection
- Vol. 16 (10) , 771-775
- https://doi.org/10.1093/protein/gzg097
Abstract
Assembled modular complexes for targeted drug delivery can be based on strong non-covalent interactions between a cargo module containing an adapter protein and a docking tag fused to a targeting protein. We have recently constructed a completely humanized adapter/docking tag system based on interactions between 15 amino acid (Hu-tag) and 110 amino acid (HuS) fragments of human ribonuclease I (RNase I). Although recombinant HuS can be expressed and refolded into a functionally active form, the purification procedure is cumbersome and expensive, and more importantly, it yields a significant proportion of improperly folded proteins. Here we describe engineering, high-yield expression, and purification of a chimeric bovine/human RNase (BH-RNase) comprising 1-29 N-terminal amino acids of bovine ribonuclease A and 30-127 amino acids of human RNase I. Unlike RNase I, the chimeric BH-RNase can be cleaved by either subtilisin or proteinase K between A20 and S21, providing a functionally active HuS. The HuS obtained from chimeric BH-RNase differs from wild-type HuS by an N24T substitution; therefore, we have reverted this substitution by mutating N24 to T24 in BH-RNase. This BH-RNase mutant can also be cleaved by subtilisin or proteinase K yielding wild-type HuS. The affinity of HuS obtained from BH-RNase to Hu-tag is approximately five times higher than that for recombinant HuS, reflecting a higher percentage of properly folded proteins.Keywords
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