Large-scale purification of a stable form of recombinant tobacco etch virus protease

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Abstract

Tobacco etch virus NIa proteinase (NIa-Pro has become the enzyme of choice for removing tags and fusion domains from recombinant proteins in vitro. We have designed a mutant NIa-Pro that resists autoproteolytic inactivation and present an efficient method for producing large amounts of this enzyme that is highly pure, active, and stable over time. Histidine-tagged forms of both wild-type and mutant NIa-Pro were overexpressed in E. coli under conditions in which greater than 95% of the protease was in the insoluble fraction after cell lysis. An inclusion body preparation followed by denaturing purification over a single affinity column and protein renaturation yields greater than 12.5 mg enzyme per liter of bacterial cell culture. NIa-Pro purified according to this protocol has been used for quantitative removal of fusion domains from a variety of proteins prepared for crystallization and biochemical analysis.

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Lucast, L. J., Batey, R. T., & Doudna, J. A. (2001). Large-scale purification of a stable form of recombinant tobacco etch virus protease. BioTechniques, 30(3), 544–554. https://doi.org/10.2144/01303st06

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