Abstract
Polysaccharide nanogels have been demonstrated to aid the refolding processes of chemically or thermally denatured proteins, a function that is similar to that of natural molecular chaperones. In this study, we examined the possibilities of using the nanogel chaperone system to mediate protein folding in a cell-free (in vitro) protein synthesis system containing transcription/translation factors. High-performance liquid chromatography showed that a polysaccharide nanogel comprising cholesteryl group-bearing pullulan (CHP) trapped unfolded or partially folded green fluorescent protein (GFP) expressed in the cell-free system. The protein release and refolding processes, which are induced by ATP in natural molecular chaperone systems, were also simulated by methyl-β-cyclodextrin (M-β-CD). The CHP nanogels dissociate on complexation with M-β-CD to yield dissociated CHP. Thus, the dissociation of the CHP nanogel–protein complex subsequently allows for the release and folding of GFP. The folding kinetics in the presence of the CHP nanogel and M-β-CD was comparable to that of spontaneous folding in the absence of CHP/M-β-CD, indicating that the CHP nanogels did not affect protein synthesis in the cell-free system, providing correctly folded active proteins.
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Introduction
The folding of proteins synthesized in vivo or in vitro has attracted considerable attention.1, 2, 3 Problems related to protein folding, including protein aggregation and misfolding, are involved in diseases such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and Huntington's, as well as in prion diseases.4, 5, 6, 7 Moreover, the efficient production of a large amount of protein is a major focus of biotechnology and postgenome research fields. However, the folding of proteins synthesized in vitro into the correct active structure has proven to be difficult, because partially folded intermediate proteins are considerably hydrophobic and form aggregation and inclusion bodies. In biological systems, molecular chaperones such as GroEL/ES interact with unfolded nascent proteins and increase the efficiency of correct protein folding.8, 9, 10, 11, 12 Many artificial molecular chaperones have been developed, such as PEG, L-arginine, cyclodextrin derivatives, micelles and other polymers, to prevent protein aggregation and assist in the refolding of proteins synthesized in vitro.13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19
We have already reported that polysaccharide nanogels can function as artificial molecular chaperones.20 For example, nanogels formed with cholesteryl group-bearing pullulan (CHP) can trap heat-denatured proteins21 or chemically denatured proteins (that is, protein-refolding intermediates formed after chemical denaturation by urea or guanidinium hydrochloride).22, 23 The CHP nanogel consists of stable monodisperse nanoparticles (∼30 nm) with ∼4–5 CHP polymers per nanogel and approximately eight non-covalent crosslinking regions that consist of cholesteryl groups.24, 25, 26 The structure of the CHP nanogel is disrupted by the addition of cyclodextrins and the protein complexed with the nanogel is released and folds into its mature form, so that the CHP nanogels and cyclodextrins together function as an artificial chaperone.21 In a direct comparison of artificial and natural chaperone activity, the CHP nanogel system showed a high level of chaperone-like activity that was comparable to that of a natural molecular chaperone (GroEL/ES) system in the refolding of acid-denatured green fluorescent protein (GFP).27 This nanogel system was also effective for refolding the inclusion body of a recombinant protein belonging to the serine protease family.22 Moreover, the CHP nanogels interact with monomers and oligomers of amyloid β-protein (Aβ),28 and the resulting complexes significantly reduce Aβ toxicity in primary cortical cultures and in microglial cell cultures.29
The polysaccharide nanogel has been demonstrated to function as a chaperone in the refolding processes of various proteins. However, it is still challenging to use the nanogel chaperone system to assist in the protein-folding process, because the folding of newly synthesized proteins is different from the refolding of chemically unfolded or heat-denatured proteins. In this study, we investigated the function of a polysaccharide nanogel to chaperone the folding of GFP synthesized in a cell-free (in vitro) protein synthesis system. The cell-free system consists of a minimal set of transcription/translation factors from Escherichia coli.30, 31, 32 However, this system lacks factors mediating protein folding, such as molecular chaperones, and it is difficult to obtain relatively hydrophobic proteins that are correctly folded without forming aggregates. Many additives have been tested, and cotranslation with the natural molecular chaperone GroEL/ES has been tested to increase the efficiency of protein production.33, 34 This study examined the ability of the nanogel to chaperone the folding of GFP expressed in the cell-free system by fluorescence spectroscopy, western blotting and high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC).
Materials and methods
Materials
CHP substituted with 1.2 cholesteryl groups per 100 glucose units of the parent pullulan (molecular weight 100 000) was obtained using the previously described method.24 All reagents were commercially available with guaranteed purity and were used without further purification. The cell-free protein synthesis kit (E. coli S30 Extract System for circular DNA), which enables protein expression from supercoiled DNA containing natural E. coli promoters (such as lac or tac), was purchased from Promega (Madison, WI, USA). Rabbit anti-GFP antibody (Living Colors A.v. Peptide Antibody) was purchased from BD Biosciences (San Jose, CA, USA). Biotinylated goat antirabbit IgG antibody, biotinylated alkaline phosphatase, streptavidin and alkaline phosphatase color-developing buffer were purchased from Bio-Rad (Hercules, CA, USA). The expression plasmids used in this study (pQBI T7) were purchased from Takara Bio (Shiga, Japan).
Preparation of polysaccharide nanogels
CHP was suspended and swollen in MilliQ water (Millipore, Bedford, MA, USA) or buffer by stirring for 12 h at 25 °C to form a turbid suspension. The suspension was then sonicated with a probe-type sonicator (SONIFIER 250, BRANSON Japan, Tokyo, Japan; Tip diameter 2 mm) at 40 W for 10 min under cooling with ice and filtered through three different types of membrane filters (pore sizes 1.2, 0.45, 0.22 μm; Super Acrodisc 25, Gelman Sciences) to remove dust or metallic particles shed from the titanium transducer tip. A clear aqueous nanogel suspension was obtained.
Cell-free protein synthesis of GFP
Cell-free protein synthesis was performed according to the manufacturer's instructions. The 100 μl reactions were carried out in a 96-well plate. In brief, 20 μl of the E. coli S30-reconstituted reaction mixture without amino acids, 15 μl of the S30 extract for circular DNA and 5.0 μl of the amino-acid mixture solution were gently mixed in a centrifuge tube and incubated at 37 °C. The solution was transferred to a 96-well plate, which contained 50 μl of nanogel solution (8.0 mg ml−1), and the plate was then vortexed gently at 37 °C. Finally, 8 μl of 0.5 μg μl−1 of template DNA (pQBI T7) was added to the solution and the plate was then vortexed gently at 37 °C. The synthesized GFP was analyzed by fluorescence measurement (Wallac Arvo Sx-1420 multilabel counter, Perkin Elmer Life Sciences, Boston, MA, USA), SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and western blotting.
Analysis of cell-free synthesized GFP
The cell-free synthesized GFP molecules were analyzed by western blotting on an SDS-PAGE gel. A volume of 100 μl of the reaction mixture was transferred to a microcentrifuge tube and mixed with 400 μl of acetone in the centrifuge tube and placed on ice for 15 min. The acetone precipitate was collected by centrifugation at 12 000 × g for 5 min. The resulting pellet was dried for 1 h under a vacuum. Next, 20 μl of SDS-PAGE sample buffer was added to the pellet and heated at 100 °C for 10 min. A small aliquot (15 μl) of the sample was loaded onto 5–20% gradient SDS-PAGE (PAGEL, ATTO, Tokyo, Japan) and electrophoresed (AE-6655, ATTO) for about 75 min at 20 mA. The separated proteins were transferred onto a polyvinylidene difluoride membrane (AE-6665, ATTO) under a constant current of 144 mA. After transfer, the membrane was blocked for 1 h at room temperature with 0.5% non-fat dried milk in Tris-buffered saline containing Tween-20 (20 mM Tris-HCl, 500 mM NaCl, 0.1% Tween-20, pH 7.5) and then incubated with rabbit anti-GFP IgG (BD Bioscience, San Diego, CA, USA) for 1.5 h at room temperature, followed by incubation with biotinylated goat antirabbit antibody (Bio-Rad, Richmond, CA, USA) for 1.5 h at room temperature. Finally, the membrane was incubated with the streptavidin–alkaline phosphatase complex (Bio-Rad) for 1.5 h at room temperature. The GFP band was visualized after treatment with NBT/BCIP substrate (Bio-Rad) for 30 min at room temperature.
HPLC
HPLC was used to examine the interaction between synthesized GFP and CHP nanogels. The reaction mixture was passed through a 0.22-μm filter (Ekicrodisc 3, Gelman Sciences, Ann Arbor, MI, USA). The solution (100 μl) was applied to the column (TSK-Gel-G4000SWXL column, Tosoh, Tokyo, Japan) for HPLC and the fractions were collected every 1 ml. The HPLC system consisted of a CCPS dual pump (Tosoh), an SD-8022 degasser (Tosoh), a CO-8020 column oven (Tosoh), an RI-8020 R.I. detector (Tosoh), a UV-8020 UV detector (Tosoh) and an FP-2025 fluorescence detector (JASCO, Tokyo, Japan). The elution buffer contained 100 mM MOPS, 5 mM Mg (CH3COO)2 4 H2O, 5 mM DTT and 50 mM MOPS-KOH (pH 7.0). The flow rate was 0.5 ml min−1.
Results and Discussion
Cell-free synthesis of GFP in the presence of nanogels
The effect of CHP nanogels on the cell-free synthesis of GFP was investigated using SDS-PAGE and western blotting (Figure 1). Similar amounts of GFP were expressed when the cell-free synthesis was performed without (lane 3) or with (lane 5) CHP nanogels. Meanwhile, GFP was not expressed in a negative control experiment without the DNA-GFP control vector and with CHP nanogels (lane 4). These results indicate that GFP was effectively produced in the cell-free system, even in the presence of a relatively high concentration of CHP nanogels (4 mg ml−1).
The elemental stages of gene expression are generally considered as (i) transcription, (ii) translation and (iii) post-translation protein folding.35 The amount of GFP evaluated by western blotting reflects the net expression of synthesized protein (that is, steps (i) and (ii)). To investigate the effect of CHP nanogels on the downstream processes (that is, step (iii)), the formation of correctly folded, mature GFP was analyzed by fluorescence spectroscopy, as shown in Figure 2. The relative fluorescence intensity of GFP decreased as the CHP nanogel concentration increased, indicating that CHP nanogels inhibit posttranslational folding of the synthesized GFP peptide in the cell-free translation system.
Interaction between nanogels and GFP in the cell-free system
CHP nanogels inhibited the folding of newly synthesized GFP in the cell-free system, whereas the upstream transcription and translation processes were not affected. Our previous results indicate that CHP nanogels can selectively trap unfolded proteins or refolding intermediates21, 22, 23 that expose relatively hydrophobic domains to the aqueous solution. Thus, one hypothesis to explain the inhibition of GFP folding is that the unfolded or partially folded GFP peptides become trapped in the hydrogel matrix of CHP nanogels. Therefore, to clarify the interaction between CHP nanogels and GFP in the cell-free synthesis system, the solution collected after the expression of GFP in the presence of CHP nanogels was analyzed by HPLC.
Figure 3a shows the chromatogram for CHP nanogels and GFP detected by the refractive index and fluorescence, respectively. The CHP nanogels were eluted at ∼18 min, whereas GFP was eluted at ∼28 min. The solution collected after GFP expression in the presence of CHP nanogels was applied to the column under this condition. Thereafter, fractions were collected every 2 min and analyzed by western blotting (Figure 3b). The fraction collected between 14 and 22 min (fractions 7–11), corresponding to the elution time of CHP nanogels, showed relatively strong bands for GFP. In contrast, the fraction collected between 25 and 38 min (fractions 13–18), corresponding to the elution of native GFP, showed no GFP band. This observation means that the synthesized GFP complexed with CHP nanogels in the unfolded or partially folded state, as the complexed GFP with CHP nanogels showed no fluorescence. The complexation behavior is similar to that of the molecular chaperone (GroEL/ES), which can selectively trap denatured proteins more effectively than native proteins.
Cyclodextrin-induced release of GFP from nanogels and subsequent folding
Protein release and refolding, which are induced by ATP in natural molecular chaperone systems, were induced in the nanogel system using cyclodextrin. The main driving force of the formation of nanogels is the association of CHP hydrophobic cholesteryl groups in water. Cyclodextrins can solubilize hydrophobic compounds in water by incorporating the compounds into their hydrophobic cavities. CHP nanogels dissociate on complexation with β-cyclodextrin (β-CD) to yield a dissociated CHP–CD complex,36, 37 because the cholesteryl group is a suitable guest for β-CD.38 Thus, the dissociation of the CHP nanogel–protein complex allows for the release and renaturation of proteins. In a previous study, we showed that the acid-denatured GFP that complexed with CHP nanogels was released and refolded by the addition of β-CD.26 On the basis of these results, we examined the release of GFP from the CHP nanogel in the presence of β-CD using the current cell-free system.
Figure 4 shows the fluorescence intensity of GFP released from CHP nanogels by adding various concentrations of methyl-β-cyclodextrin (M-β-CD) after expression in the cell-free system. The fluorescence intensity corresponds to the ratio of correctly folded GFP after translation. GFP was synthesized in the presence of 4.0 mg ml−1 CHP nanogels at 37 °C for 6.5 h. Thereafter, various concentrations of M-β-CD were added to the solutions and incubated for 12 h at 37 °C. The relative fluorescence intensity increased with increasing M-β-CD concentration. In the presence of 4.0 mM M-β-CD, which is sufficient to dissociate CHP (4.0 mg ml−1), the relative fluorescence intensity was recovered to nearly 100%. Figure 5 shows the relative fluorescence intensity as an indicator of the folding efficiency of GFP as a function of CHP nanogel concentration. In the presence of a low concentration of CHP nanogels (0.036–0.063 mg ml−1), the relative fluorescence intensity of GFP reached almost 100%. Moderate concentrations of CHP nanogels (0.125–2.0 mg ml−1) elicited the most efficient protein folding, whereas a relatively high (4.0 mg ml−1) concentration decreased folding efficiency. These results indicate that CHP nanogels formed a complex with unfolded or partially folded proteins and that the protein was released in its native form by the addition of M-β-CD (Figure 6), although the fact that moderate concentrations of CHP nanogels were the most effective for folding cannot simply be explained by the complexation between the CHP nanogel and GFP.
The refolding kinetics of expressed GFP after the addition of M-β-CD was examined by monitoring the relative fluorescence intensity of GFP, as shown in Figure 7. When M-β-CD was added to the expressed solution containing CHP nanogels, the relative fluorescence intensity increased gradually, but refolding did not take place in the absence of M-β-CD. The folding curves showed a good fit with a single exponential function. The CHP–M-β-CD-assisted folding curve of GFP seems to be comparable to the spontaneous folding curve without CHP or M-β-CD. The half-life values (t1/2) for the total reaction determined from these curves were 39 and 42 min for CHP–M-β-CD-assisted folding and spontaneous folding, respectively. Chromophore formation of GFP, which occurs with complete folding, requires three discrete physical processes, that is, the formation of three-dimensional metastable structures, chromophore cyclization and oxidation into a fluorescent molecule.39, 40, 41 The formation of three-dimensional metastable structures before chromophore modification occurred at t1/2=∼10 min. Thereafter, an intermediate step including cyclization of the tripeptide chromophore motif occurred at t1/2=∼3 min. Finally, the relatively slow chromophore formation process involving oxidation of the cyclic chromophore took place at t1/2=∼80 min. These kinetic parameters indicate that the oxidation step is the rate-determining step of protein folding. In addition, M-β-CD-mediated dissociation from CHP was completed within several minutes. Considering these results, the similarity of the folding kinetics in the CHP-mediated and spontaneous systems indicates that CHP nanogels form complexes with GFP in a relatively early stage of the folding process, at least before chromophore cyclization.
In summary, this work demonstrated the ability of a polysaccharide nanogel to function as a chaperone for the folding of newly synthesized GFP in a cell-free system, although the folding was not accelerated in this system. GFP was expressed and folded in its active form, even in the presence of transcription/translation factors, which could affect the function of the nanogel. The mechanism of folding with nanogels seems to be similar to that previously documented20 for artificial chaperone-assisted refolding from chemically and thermally denatured proteins. Although this technology is still under development, we believe that the cell-free protein synthesis system using nanogels and cyclodextrins will become a powerful tool that enables high expression levels of unstable proteins that easily form aggregates.
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This work was supported by Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research from the Japanese government (nos. 20240047 and 18GS0421).
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Sasaki, Y., Nomura, Y., Sawada, Si. et al. Polysaccharide nanogel–cyclodextrin system as an artificial chaperone for in vitro protein synthesis of green fluorescent protein. Polym J 42, 823–828 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1038/pj.2010.73
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/pj.2010.73
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