Protein Expression and Purification, Vol.65, No.2, 133-139, 2009
Purification and characterization of recombinant human soluble guanylate cyclase produced from baculovirus-infected insect cells
Soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) has been purified from 100 L cell culture infected by baculovirus using the newer and highly effective titerless infected-cells preservation and scale-up (TIPS) method. Successive passage of the enzyme through DEAE, Ni2+-NTA, and POROS Q columns obtained approximately 100 mg of protein. The sGC obtained by this procedure was already about 90% pure and suitable for various studies which include high throughput screening (HTS) and hit follow-up. However, in order to obtain enzyme of greater homogeneity and purity for crystallographic and high precision spectroscopic and kinetic studies of sGC with select stimulators, the sGC solution after the POROS Q step was further purified by GTP-agarose affinity chromatography. This additional step led to the generation of 26 mg of enzyme that was about 99% pure. This highly pure and active enzyme exhibited a M-r = 144,933 by static light scattering supportive of a dimeric structure. It migrated as a two-band protein, each of equal intensity, on SDS-PAGE corresponding to the alpha (M-r similar to 77,000) and beta (M-r similar to 70,000) sGC subunits. It showed an A(430)/A(280) = 1.01, indicating one heme per heterodimer, and a maximum of the Soret band at 430 nm indicative of a penta-coordinated ferrous heme with a histidine as the axial ligand. The Soret band shifted to 398 nm in the presence of an NO donor as expected for the formation of a penta-coordinated nitrosyl-heme complex. Non-stimulated sGC had k(cat)/K-m = 1.7 X 10(-3) s(-1) mu M-1 that increased to 5.8 x 10(-1) s(-1), mu M-1 upon stimulation with an NO donor which represents a 340-fold increase due to stimulation. The novel combination of using the TIPS method for co-expression of a heterodimeric heme-containing enzyme, along with the application of a reproducible ligand affinity purification method, has enabled us to obtain recombinant human sGC of both the quality and quantity needed to study structure-function relationships. (C) 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Keywords:Soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC);Protein purification;3-ethyl-3-(ethylaminoethyl)-1-hydroxy-2-oxo-1-triazene (NOC-12);GTP-agarose