Lactococcus lactis provides an efficient platform for production of disulfide-rich recombinant proteins from Plasmodium falciparum

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Lactococcus lactis provides an efficient platform for production of disulfide-rich recombinant proteins from Plasmodium falciparum. / Singh, Susheel K; Tiendrebeogo, Régis Wendpayangde; Chourasia, Bishwanath Kumar; Kana, Ikhlaq Hussain; Singh, Subhash; Theisen, Michael.

In: Microbial Cell Factories, Vol. 17, 55, 2018.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Singh, SK, Tiendrebeogo, RW, Chourasia, BK, Kana, IH, Singh, S & Theisen, M 2018, 'Lactococcus lactis provides an efficient platform for production of disulfide-rich recombinant proteins from Plasmodium falciparum', Microbial Cell Factories, vol. 17, 55. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12934-018-0902-2

APA

Singh, S. K., Tiendrebeogo, R. W., Chourasia, B. K., Kana, I. H., Singh, S., & Theisen, M. (2018). Lactococcus lactis provides an efficient platform for production of disulfide-rich recombinant proteins from Plasmodium falciparum. Microbial Cell Factories, 17, [55]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12934-018-0902-2

Vancouver

Singh SK, Tiendrebeogo RW, Chourasia BK, Kana IH, Singh S, Theisen M. Lactococcus lactis provides an efficient platform for production of disulfide-rich recombinant proteins from Plasmodium falciparum. Microbial Cell Factories. 2018;17. 55. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12934-018-0902-2

Author

Singh, Susheel K ; Tiendrebeogo, Régis Wendpayangde ; Chourasia, Bishwanath Kumar ; Kana, Ikhlaq Hussain ; Singh, Subhash ; Theisen, Michael. / Lactococcus lactis provides an efficient platform for production of disulfide-rich recombinant proteins from Plasmodium falciparum. In: Microbial Cell Factories. 2018 ; Vol. 17.

Bibtex

@article{02eabcc6e3fd4b5cbee8dbbd5d5fe562,
title = "Lactococcus lactis provides an efficient platform for production of disulfide-rich recombinant proteins from Plasmodium falciparum",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: The production of recombinant proteins with proper conformation, appropriate post-translational modifications in an easily scalable and cost-effective system is challenging. Lactococcus lactis has recently been identified as an efficient Gram positive cell factory for the production of recombinant protein. We and others have used this expression host for the production of selected malaria vaccine candidates. The safety of this production system has been confirmed in multiple clinical trials. Here we have explored L. lactis cell factories for the production of 31 representative Plasmodium falciparum antigens with varying sizes (ranging from 9 to 90 kDa) and varying degree of predicted structural complexities including eleven antigens with multiple predicted structural disulfide bonds, those which are considered difficult-to-produce proteins.RESULTS: Of the 31 recombinant constructs attempted in the L. lactis expression system, the initial expression efficiency was 55% with 17 out of 31 recombinant gene constructs producing high levels of secreted recombinant protein. The majority of the constructs which failed to produce a recombinant protein were found to consist of multiple intra-molecular disulfide-bonds. We found that these disulfide-rich constructs could be produced in high yields when genetically fused to an intrinsically disorder protein domain (GLURP-R0). By exploiting the distinct biophysical and structural properties of the intrinsically disordered protein region we developed a simple heat-based strategy for fast purification of the disulfide-rich protein domains in yields ranging from 1 to 40 mg/l.CONCLUSIONS: A novel procedure for the production and purification of disulfide-rich recombinant proteins in L. lactis is described.",
author = "Singh, {Susheel K} and Tiendrebeogo, {R{\'e}gis Wendpayangde} and Chourasia, {Bishwanath Kumar} and Kana, {Ikhlaq Hussain} and Subhash Singh and Michael Theisen",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1186/s12934-018-0902-2",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
journal = "Microbial Cell",
issn = "1475-2859",
publisher = "BioMed Central",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Lactococcus lactis provides an efficient platform for production of disulfide-rich recombinant proteins from Plasmodium falciparum

AU - Singh, Susheel K

AU - Tiendrebeogo, Régis Wendpayangde

AU - Chourasia, Bishwanath Kumar

AU - Kana, Ikhlaq Hussain

AU - Singh, Subhash

AU - Theisen, Michael

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - BACKGROUND: The production of recombinant proteins with proper conformation, appropriate post-translational modifications in an easily scalable and cost-effective system is challenging. Lactococcus lactis has recently been identified as an efficient Gram positive cell factory for the production of recombinant protein. We and others have used this expression host for the production of selected malaria vaccine candidates. The safety of this production system has been confirmed in multiple clinical trials. Here we have explored L. lactis cell factories for the production of 31 representative Plasmodium falciparum antigens with varying sizes (ranging from 9 to 90 kDa) and varying degree of predicted structural complexities including eleven antigens with multiple predicted structural disulfide bonds, those which are considered difficult-to-produce proteins.RESULTS: Of the 31 recombinant constructs attempted in the L. lactis expression system, the initial expression efficiency was 55% with 17 out of 31 recombinant gene constructs producing high levels of secreted recombinant protein. The majority of the constructs which failed to produce a recombinant protein were found to consist of multiple intra-molecular disulfide-bonds. We found that these disulfide-rich constructs could be produced in high yields when genetically fused to an intrinsically disorder protein domain (GLURP-R0). By exploiting the distinct biophysical and structural properties of the intrinsically disordered protein region we developed a simple heat-based strategy for fast purification of the disulfide-rich protein domains in yields ranging from 1 to 40 mg/l.CONCLUSIONS: A novel procedure for the production and purification of disulfide-rich recombinant proteins in L. lactis is described.

AB - BACKGROUND: The production of recombinant proteins with proper conformation, appropriate post-translational modifications in an easily scalable and cost-effective system is challenging. Lactococcus lactis has recently been identified as an efficient Gram positive cell factory for the production of recombinant protein. We and others have used this expression host for the production of selected malaria vaccine candidates. The safety of this production system has been confirmed in multiple clinical trials. Here we have explored L. lactis cell factories for the production of 31 representative Plasmodium falciparum antigens with varying sizes (ranging from 9 to 90 kDa) and varying degree of predicted structural complexities including eleven antigens with multiple predicted structural disulfide bonds, those which are considered difficult-to-produce proteins.RESULTS: Of the 31 recombinant constructs attempted in the L. lactis expression system, the initial expression efficiency was 55% with 17 out of 31 recombinant gene constructs producing high levels of secreted recombinant protein. The majority of the constructs which failed to produce a recombinant protein were found to consist of multiple intra-molecular disulfide-bonds. We found that these disulfide-rich constructs could be produced in high yields when genetically fused to an intrinsically disorder protein domain (GLURP-R0). By exploiting the distinct biophysical and structural properties of the intrinsically disordered protein region we developed a simple heat-based strategy for fast purification of the disulfide-rich protein domains in yields ranging from 1 to 40 mg/l.CONCLUSIONS: A novel procedure for the production and purification of disulfide-rich recombinant proteins in L. lactis is described.

U2 - 10.1186/s12934-018-0902-2

DO - 10.1186/s12934-018-0902-2

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 29618355

VL - 17

JO - Microbial Cell

JF - Microbial Cell

SN - 1475-2859

M1 - 55

ER -

ID: 199300265