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A versatile multimodal chromatography strategy to rapidly purify protein nanostructures assembled in cell lysates. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Protein nanostructures can be created by self-assembling individual protein subunits, which are useful in various fields like biomaterials and tissue engineering but require complicated and time-consuming purification processes.
  • Researchers developed a new purification method using multimodal chromatography (MMC) to efficiently separate functionalized protein nanostructures from bacterial lysates, avoiding the need for prior expression and purification of each component.
  • The study demonstrated that conditions like salt concentration and pH for MMC depend on the specific protein being purified, and additional techniques such as tangential flow filtration and Triton X-114 phase partitioning can enhance purification by removing unwanted substances.

Article Abstract

Background: Protein nanostructures produced through the self-assembly of individual subunits are attractive scaffolds to attach and position functional molecules for applications in biomaterials, metabolic engineering, tissue engineering, and a plethora of nanomaterials. However, the assembly of multicomponent protein nanomaterials is generally a laborious process that requires each protein component to be separately expressed and purified prior to assembly. Moreover, excess components not incorporated into the final assembly must be removed from the solution and thereby necessitate additional processing steps.

Results: We developed an efficient approach to purify functionalized protein nanostructures directly from bacterial lysates through a type of multimodal chromatography (MMC) that combines size-exclusion, hydrophilic interaction, and ion exchange to separate recombinant protein assemblies from excess free subunits and bacterial proteins. We employed the ultrastable filamentous protein gamma-prefoldin as a material scaffold that can be functionalized with a variety of protein domains through SpyTag/SpyCatcher conjugation chemistry. The purification of recombinant gamma-prefoldin filaments from bacterial lysates using MMC was tested across a wide range of salt concentrations and pH, demonstrating that the MMC resin is robust, however the optimal choice of salt species, salt concentration, and pH is likely dependent on the protein nanostructure to be purified. In addition, we show that pre-processing of the samples with tangential flow filtration to remove nucleotides and metabolites improves resin capacity, and that post-processing with Triton X-114 phase partitioning is useful to remove lipids and any remaining lipid-associated protein. Subsequently, functionalized protein filaments were purified from bacterial lysates using MMC and shown to be free of unincorporated subunits. The assembly and purification of protein filaments with varying amounts of functionalization was confirmed using polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, Förster resonance energy transfer, and transmission electron microscopy. Finally, we compared our MMC workflow to anion exchange chromatography with the purification of encapsulin nanocompartments containing a fluorescent protein as a cargo, demonstrating the versatility of the protocol and that the purity of the assembly is comparable to more traditional procedures.

Conclusions: We envision that the use of MMC will increase the throughput of protein nanostructure prototyping as well as enable the upscaling of the bioproduction of protein nanodevices.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9960191PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12951-023-01817-2DOI Listing

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