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  • Title: Sup35p yeast prion-like protein as an adapter for production of the Gag-p55 antigen of HIV-1 and the L-chain of botulinum neurotoxin in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
    Author: Ivanov PA, Lewitin EI, Shevelev BI, Fominov GV, Wojciechowska JA, Asadi Mobarhan AH, Vertie YV, Yankovsky NK, Shevelev AB.
    Journal: Res Microbiol; 2001; 152(1):27-35. PubMed ID: 11281322.
    Abstract:
    Effective expression of the HIV-1 core protein Gag-p55 was obtained in Saccharomyces cerevisiae under control of the inducible UASgal/CYC1 promoter as a translational fusion with the prion-forming NM domain of the translation terminator Sup35p (eRF3) of S. cerevisiae. where only poor expression of the original-type Gag-p55 was observed. A deletion within the Sup35NM prion-forming domain altering Sup35-associated [PSI] inheritance did not compromise expression of the Sup35NM Gag-p55 fusion protein. Therefore, either the mechanism of this phenomenon is not directly related to the effect of Sup35p prion-formation or the modified protein maintains residual prion-forming abilities. The recombinant Sup35p-Gag-p55 protein was quite stable under boiling in an alkali/sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) solution and completely retained its antigenic properties. Moreover, 10-min boiling of the native yeast cells in this solution allowed immediate inhibition of lysosomal and other yeast proteases, responsible for autolysis of many natural and recombinant proteins. The use of this method of preliminary enrichment for the recombinant fusion protein Sup35p-Gag-p55 with the SDS-alkaline extraction could be useful for yeast heterologous expression and purification of other of insoluble and unstable proteins. A translational fusion with the NM domain of Sup35p was also used to produce another poorly soluble protein, the L-chain of botulinum exotoxin A, in S. cerevisiae. When the Sup35p fragment was removed from the recombinant construct encoding a fused Sup35/BoNT protein, a dramatic drop in both transformation efficiency and growth rate of transformants was shown.
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