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Systems-level analysis of protein quality in inclusion body-forming Escherichia coli cells

Abstract:
Recombinant proteins produced in Escherichia coli often aggregate as amorphous masses of insoluble material known as inclusion bodies. Being quite homogeneous in their composition, inclusion bodies display amyloid-like properties such as sequence-dependent protein-protein interactions, seeding-driven deposition of their components and β-sheet intermolecular architecture. However, inclusion bodies formed by different proteins and enzymes also show important extents of native-like secondary structure and include significant proportions of properly folded, functional protein, which makes them suitable to be used in catalytic processes. Inclusion bodies are formed as a result of the incapability of the quality control cell system to cope with the non physiological amounts of misfolding-prone proteins produced upon recombinant gene expression. Multiple cellular proteins involved in the quality control, namely chaperones and proteases, participate in their formation and co-ordinately determine the amount of aggregated protein, the size of aggregates and the main structural and functional properties of the embedded polypeptides, such as their inner molecular organization. © 2009 Springer Netherlands.

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Publisher copy:
10.1007/978-1-4020-9394-4_15

Authors


Publisher:
Springer Netherlands
Host title:
Systems Biology and Biotechnology of Escherichia coli
Pages:
295-326
Publication date:
2009-01-01
DOI:
ISBN:
9781402093937


Pubs id:
pubs:466713
UUID:
uuid:1b2c9d6a-4ec2-4997-bff1-46b93426a67e
Local pid:
pubs:466713
Source identifiers:
466713
Deposit date:
2014-07-11
ARK identifier:

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