High pressure fosters protein refolding from aggregates at high concentrations

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Abstract

High hydrostatic pressures (1-2 kbar), combined with low, nondenaturing concentrations of guanidine hydrochloride (GdmHCl) foster disaggregation and refolding of denatured and aggregated human growth hormone and lysozyme, and β-lactamase inclusion bodies. One hundred percent recovery of properly folded protein can be obtained by applying pressures of 2 kbar to suspensions containing aggregates of recombinant human growth hormone (up to 8.7 mg/ml) and 0.75 M GdmHCl. Covalently crosslinked, insoluble aggregates of lysozyme could be refolded to native, functional protein at a 70% yield, independent of protein concentration up to 2 mg/ml. Inclusion bodies containing β- lactamase could be refolded at high yields of active protein, even without added GdmHCl.

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St. John, R. J., Carpenter, J. F., & Randolph, T. W. (1999). High pressure fosters protein refolding from aggregates at high concentrations. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 96(23), 13029–13033. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.96.23.13029

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