Production and Purification of Single Chain Human Insulin Precursors with Various Fusion Peptides

  • Cho, Chung-Woo (Faculty of Engineering, Keimyung University) ;
  • Park, Sun-Ho (Faculty of Engineering, Keimyung University and Biotechnology Research Institute, Bicosys Co., Ltd.) ;
  • Nam, Doo-Hyun (College of Pharmacy, Yeungnam University)
  • Published : 2001.03.01

Abstract

For the production and purification of a single chain human insulin precursor, four types of fusion peptides $\beta$-galactosidase (LacZ), maltose binding protein (MBP), glutathione-S-transferase (GST), and (His)(sub)6-tagged sequence (HTS) were investigated. Recombinant E. coli harboring hybrid genes was cultivated at 37$\^{C}$ for 1h, and gene induction occurred when 0.2mM of isopropyl-D-thiogalactoside (IPTG) was added to the culture broth, except for E. coli BL21 (DE3) pLysS harboring a pET-BA cultivation with 1.0mM IPTG, followed by a longer than 4h batch fermentation respectively. DEAE-Sphacel and Sephadex G-200 gel filtration chromatography, amylose affinity chromatography, glutathione-sepharose 4B affinity chromatography, and a nickel chelating affinity chromatography system as a kind of immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography (IMAC) were all employed for the purification of a single chain human insulin precursor. The recovery yields of the HTS-fused, GST-fused, MBP-fused, and LacZ-fused single chain human insulin precursors resulted in 47%, 20%, 20%, and 18% as the total protein amounts respectively. These results show that a higher recovery yield of the finally purified recombinant peptides was achieved when affinity column chromatography was employed and when the fused peptide had a smaller molecular weight. In addition the pET expression system gave the highest productivity of a fused insulin precursor due to a two-step regulation of the gene expression, and the HTS-fused system provided the highest recovery of a fused insulin precursor based on a simple and specific separation using the IMAC technique.

Keywords

References

  1. Biochem. J. v.329 Human insulin production from a novel mini-proinsulin which has high receptor-binding activity Chang S.G.;D.Y. Kim;K.D. Choi;J.M. Shin;H.C. Shin
  2. Biotechnol. Bioprocess Eng. v.2 Optimization of fusion proinsulin production by high cell-density fermentation of recombinant E. coli Bae C.S.;M.S. Hong;S.G. Chang;D.Y. Kim;H.C. SHin
  3. Biotechnol. Prog. v.8 Recombinant human Insulin Michael R.L.;K.L. Kohlmann
  4. J. Diabetes v.43 [Lys(B28), Pro(B29)]-Human insulin;A rapidly absorbed analogue of human insulin Daniel C.H.;R.R. Browsher;R.L. Brunelle;J.R. Woodworth
  5. Biotechnol. Bioeng. v.48 Computer-aided process analysis and economic evaluation for biosynthetic human insulin production-A case study Demetri P.;E. Sapidou;J. Caladranis
  6. Biotechnol. Bioprocess Eng. v.1 Fermentation and purification of LacZ-fused single chain insulin precursor for (B30-Homoserin) human insulin Lee S.Y.;J.H. Ko;M.H. Choi;D.H. Nam
  7. Biotechnol. Bioeng. v.38 Effect of chemically-induced, cloned gene expression in E. coli. Wood T.K.;S.W. Peretti
  8. Biotechnol. Bioeng. v.40 Over expression of cloned genes using recombinant E. coli regulated by a T7 promoter. 1. Batch cultures and kinetic modeling Miao F.;D.S. Kompala
  9. Arch. Pharm. Res. v.16 Design and cloning of the a novel insulin analogue, (B30-homoserine) human insulin Nam D.H.;J.H. Ko;S.Y. Lee
  10. M. S. Thesis Expression and purification of B30-homoserine human insulin analogue in Escherichia coli Kim S.W.
  11. M. S. Thesis Fermentation of recombinant insulin analogue in Escherichia coli and its purification by affinity chromatography Lee J.S.
  12. Biotechnol. Bioprocess Eng. v.4 Physiological and environmental effects on metabolic flux change caused by heterologous gene expression in Escherichia coli Kim J.Y.;D.D.Y. Ryu
  13. Biochem. J. v.240 The purification of eucaryotic polypeptides synthesized in Escherichia coli Marston F.A.O.
  14. A Practical Approach. v.3 DNA Cloning Marston F.A.O.;D.M. Glover(ed.)
  15. Protein methods Daniel M.B.;S.J. Edelstein
  16. Anal. Biochem. v.72 A rapid and sensitive methods for the quantization of microgram quantities of protein utilizing the principle of protein-dye binding Bradford M.M.
  17. Biotechnol. appl. Biochem. v.29 Immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography on Co²+-carboxy-methylaspartate-agarose superflow, as demonstrate by one-step purification of lactate dehydrogenase from chicken breast muscle Grigoriy C.;J. Hopp;P. Nelson
  18. Anal. Biochem. v.259 Tandem immobilized metal-ion affinity chromatography/immunoaffinity purification of His-tagged proteins-evaluation of two anti-His-tag monoclonal antibodies Muler K.M.;K.M. Arndt;K. Bauer;A. Plukthun
  19. Biotechnol. Prog. v.12 Immobilized metal affinity chromatography: displacer characteristics of traditional mobile phase modifiers Vunnum S.;S. Gallant;S. Cramer
  20. J. Ferment. Bioeng. v.75 Insecticide production by recombinant B. subtilus 1A96 in fed-batch culture with control of glucose concentration Cayuela C.;K. Kai;S. Iijima;T. Kobayashi