Expression of plant proteins in baculoviral and bacterial systems

被引:1
|
作者
Kunze, R
Fusswinkel, H
Feldmar, S
机构
[1] Institute of Genetics, University of Cologne
来源
关键词
D O I
10.1016/S0091-679X(08)61051-1
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
This chapter discusses the expression of plant proteins in baculoviral and bacterial systems. Escherichia coli (E. coli) are widely used for the expression of heterologous proteins. The advantages of E. coli are the ease of handling, speed, low cost, high yields, and the choice of a variety of versatile vector/strain systems. Potential disadvantages of E. coli are the lack of eukaryote-specific protein modifications and the phenomenon that heterologous proteins frequently do not fold correctly, particularly at high expression levels, and accumulate in insoluble form. Many functionally different plant proteins have been expressed in the T7 system. A number of them were soluble and similar, if not identical, to the authentic protein. However, there are only a few reports concerning the successful renaturation of aggregated, inactive plant proteins. Potential advantages of baculovirus include the strength of the polyhedrin promoter that is used to transcribe the gene of interest, the capability of the infected insect cells to accomplish most eukaryotic post-translational protein modifications, and the biological safety of the vector system, as the virus cannot replicate or express its DNA in mammalian cells. However, compared with E. coli, in the baculovirus system the work is much slower and more laborious, equipment for cell culture work is required, and media and other materials are expensive. Therefore, the baculovirus system usually is the expression system of choice if the protein of interest expressed in E. coli is not functional. © 1995, Academic Press, Inc.
引用
收藏
页码:461 / 479
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Bacterial Photosensory Proteins and Their Role in Plant-pathogen Interactions
    Kraiselburd, Ivana
    Moyano, Laura
    Carrau, Analia
    Tano, Josefina
    Orellano, Elena G.
    PHOTOCHEMISTRY AND PHOTOBIOLOGY, 2017, 93 (03) : 666 - 674
  • [42] HOMOLOGOUS PLANT AND BACTERIAL PROTEINS CHAPERONE OLIGOMERIC PROTEIN ASSEMBLY
    HEMMINGSEN, SM
    WOOLFORD, C
    VANDERVIES, SM
    TILLY, K
    DENNIS, DT
    GEORGOPOULOS, CP
    HENDRIX, RW
    ELLIS, RJ
    NATURE, 1988, 333 (6171) : 330 - 334
  • [43] How bacterial pathogen effector proteins manipulate the plant cell
    Bonas, U.
    FEBS JOURNAL, 2011, 278 : 65 - 65
  • [44] Plant immunity: a lesson from pathogenic bacterial effector proteins
    Cui, Haitao
    Xiang, Tingting
    Zhou, Jian-Min
    CELLULAR MICROBIOLOGY, 2009, 11 (10) : 1453 - 1461
  • [45] Electromagnetic field affects bacterial intracellular proteins expression and bacterial envelope permeability
    Ramadan, Wiam
    Jebai, Fatima
    Joumaa, Wissam H.
    FASEB JOURNAL, 2011, 25
  • [46] Optimized bacterial expression of myocilin proteins and functional comparison of bacterial and eukaryotic myocilins
    Park, B
    Shen, X
    Fautsch, MP
    Tibudan, M
    Johnson, DH
    Yue, BYJT
    INVESTIGATIVE OPHTHALMOLOGY & VISUAL SCIENCE, 2005, 46
  • [47] Optimized bacterial expression of myocilin proteins and functional comparison of bacterial and eukaryotic myocilins
    Park, Bum-Chan
    Shen, Xiang
    Fautsch, Michael P.
    Tibudan, Martin
    Johnson, Douglas H.
    Yue, Beatrice Y. J. T.
    MOLECULAR VISION, 2006, 12 (94): : 832 - 840
  • [48] HOST STRAIN SELECTION FOR BACTERIAL EXPRESSION OF TOXIC PROTEINS
    CHEN, E
    RETROVIRAL PROTEASES, 1994, 241 : 29 - 46
  • [49] EXPRESSION OF FOREIGN ANTIGENIC DETERMINANTS ON BACTERIAL ENVELOPE PROTEINS
    HOFNUNG, M
    ANTONIE VAN LEEUWENHOEK JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGY, 1988, 54 (05): : 441 - 445
  • [50] An optimized system for expression and purification of secreted bacterial proteins
    Geisbrecht, BV
    Bouyain, S
    Pop, M
    PROTEIN EXPRESSION AND PURIFICATION, 2006, 46 (01) : 23 - 32