Production of a thermostable DNA polymerase by site-specific cleavage of a heat-eluted affinity fusion protein.
Protein Expr Purif (1997), Volume 9, Page 125
Abstract:
A novel strategy is described for bacterial expression and affinity purification of a recombinant truncated version of the heat-stable DNA polymerase I from Thermus aquaticus. The DNA polymerase (deltaTaq) was produced as a fusion to a serum albumin binding affinity handle (ABP) derived from streptococcal protein G. Based on the thermostability of the deltaTaq DNA polymerase, affinity-purified ABP-deltaTaq could be heat-eluted from HSA columns by incubation at 85 degrees C. To produce free deltaTaq DNA polymerase, efficient site-specific cleavage of the affinity tag was performed using a recombinant coxsackievirus 3C protease (3Cpro), also produced as an ABP affinity fusion. Thus, an integrated strategy could be devised where both the cleaved ABP affinity tag and the protease fusion could be recovered after site-specific cleavage using HSA-affinity chromatography. The flow-through fraction contained essentially pure deltaTaq DNA polymerase with full enzymatic activity.
Polymerases:
Topics:
Status:
new | topics/pols set | partial results | complete | validated |
Results:
No results available for this paper.