A general system for functional analysis of cDNA-encoded proteins is described. The basic concept involves the expression in Escherichia coli of selected portions of cDNAs in an approach toward the understanding of the function of the corresponding proteins. A selected cDNA is expressed as part of a fusion protein used for immunization to elicit antibodies, and a corresponding fusion protein, having the cDNA-encoded portion in common, for purification of target protein-specific antibodies. This antiserum could be used for functional analysis of the cDNA-encoded protein, e.g., by immunohistology. Two general expression vector systems for E. coli have been constructed, both (i) designed with multiple cloning sites in three different reading frames, (ii) having their protein production controlled by the tightly regulated T7 promoter, and (iii) enabling affinity purification of the expressed target proteins by fusions to IgG-binding domains derived from staphylococcal protein A or a serum albumin-binding protein derived from streptococcal protein G, respectively. This novel system has been evaluated by expressing five cDNAs, isolated from prepubertal mouse testis by a differential cDNA library screening strategy. All five clones could be expressed intracellularly in E. coli as fusion proteins with high production levels, ranging from 4 to 500 mg/liter, and affinity purification yielded essentially full-length products. Characterization of affinity-purified antibodies revealed that there exists no cross-reactivity between the two fusion systems and that such antibodies indeed could be used for immunohistology. The implications for the described system for large-scale functional analysis of cDNA libraries are discussed.
[1]
M. Uhlén,et al.
Engineering proteins to facilitate bioprocessing.
,
1994,
Trends in biotechnology.
[2]
M. Uhlén,et al.
Engineered bacterial receptors in immunology.
,
1993,
Current opinion in immunology.
[3]
G. Wenzel,et al.
In vitro selection
,
1993
.
[4]
M. Uhlén,et al.
Analysis and use of the serum albumin binding domains of streptococcal protein G
,
1988,
Journal of molecular recognition : JMR.
[5]
P. Carter,et al.
Engineering subtilisin BPN′ for site‐specific proteolysis
,
1989,
Proteins.
[6]
K. Okubo,et al.
cDNA analyses in the human genome project.
,
1993,
Gene.