Abstract
Producing soluble proteins in Escherichia coli is still a major
bottleneck for structural proteomics. Therefore, screening for
soluble expression on a small scale is an attractive way of
identifying constructs that are likely to be amenable to
structural analysis. Avariety of expression-screening methods
have been developed within the Structural Proteomics In
Europe (SPINE) consortium and to assist the further
refinement of such approaches, eight laboratories participating
in the network have benchmarked their protocols. For
this study, the solubility profiles of a common set of 96 His6-
tagged proteins were assessed by expression screening in
E. coli. The level of soluble expression for each target was
scored according to estimated protein yield. By reference to a
subset of the proteins, it is demonstrated that the small-scale
result can provide a useful indicator of the amount of soluble
protein likely to be produced on a large scale (i.e. sufficient for
structural studies). In general, there was agreement between
the different groups as to which targets were not soluble and
which were the most soluble. However, for a large number of
the targets there were wide discrepancies in the results
reported from the different screening methods, which is
correlated with variations in the procedures and the range of
parameters explored. Given finite resources, it appears that
the question of how to most effectively explore ‘expression
space’ is similar to several other multi-parameter problems
faced by crystallographers, such as crystallization.
Original language | Undefined/Unknown |
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Pages (from-to) | 1218-1226 |
Number of pages | 8 |
Journal | Acta crystallographica. Section D, biological crystallography |
Volume | 62 |
Issue number | 10 |
Publication status | Published - 2006 |
Bibliographical note
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