Protein Expression and Purification, Vol.21, No.3, 417-423, 2001
A family 2a carbohydrate-binding module suitable as an affinity tag for proteins produced in Pichia pastoris
The family 2a carbohydrate-binding module (CBM), Ce15ACBM2a, from the C-terminus of Ce15A from Cellulomonas fimi, and Xyn10ACBM2a, the family 2a CBM from the C-terminus of Xyn10A from C. fimi, were compared as fusion partners for proteins produced in the methylotrophic yeast Pichia pastoris. G;ene fusions of murine stem-cell factor (SCF) with both CBMs were expressed in P. pastoris. The secreted SCF-Xyn10ACBM2a polypeptides were highly glycosylated and bound poorly to cellulose. In contrast, fusion of SCF to Ce15ACBM2a, which lacks potential N-linked glycosylation sites, resulted in the production of polypeptides which bound tightly to cellulose. Cloning and expression of these CBM2a in P. pastoris without a fusion partner confirmed that N-linked glycosylation at several sites was responsible for the poor cellulose binding. The nonglycosylated CBMs produced in E. coli had very similar cellulose-binding properties.
Keywords:cellulose-binding domain;carbohydrate-binding module;stem-cell factor;glycosylation;Pichia pastoris