Cloning, Expression, and Assembly of Sericin-like Protein
Article 2003 en
Authors
JH
Jia Huang
RV
Regina Valluzzi
EB
Elisabetta Bini
Abstract
1 min read
Recombinant sericin proteins of different molecular masses (17.4, 31.9, and 46.5 kDa), based on the 38-amino acid repetitive motif of native sericin, were cloned, expressed, and purified. The recombinant sericin self-assembled during dialysis (starting concentration of 2.5 mg/ml) forming twisted fibers. Circular dichroism and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy studies demonstrated protein conformational transitions occurred from random coil to beta-sheets during the dialysis. Congo red-stained recombinant sericin fibrils exhibited apple-green birefringence, indicating long-range order in the array of beta-sheets. Biosynthetic sericin has a high content of polar amino acids (e.g. > 40 mol % serine), leading to a beta-sheet conformation formed by hydrogen bonding via polar zipper interactions. Analysis of recombinant sericin sequence using Mandel-Gutfreund's (Mandel-Gutfreund, Y., and Gregoret, L. M. (2002) J. Mol. Biol. 323, 453-461) definition of polar and non-polar amino acids showed that the hydrophobicity pattern resembles the most frequent pattern of amyloidogenic proteins, polar amino acid aggregates (PPPPP). Many beta-proteins and peptides are designed to study amyloidogenesis using a polar/non-polar alternating pattern (PNPNPN). Sericin-like proteins or peptides provide an alternative model in terms of hydrophobicity pattern with which to explore questions related to beta-sheet formation and amyloidogenesis. The glue-like property of sericin is attributed to the hydrogen bonding between serine residues of sericin with serine residues in the fibroin structural components of silk fiber.
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