Expression of an Olfactory Receptor in<i>Escherichia</i><i>coli</i>: Purification, Reconstitution, and Ligand Binding
Biochemistry 35(50): 16077-16084
Article 1996 English
Authors
HK
H. Kiefer
JK
Jürgen Krieger
JO
John D. Olszewski
Abstract
1 min read
An olfactory receptor has been expressed in bacterial cells as a fusion protein with glutathione S-transferase (GST). Overexpression of receptor protein yielding about 10% of the cell protein was achieved with mutants lacking the N-terminus and the first transmembrane region or with mutants carrying three positively charged residues in the first intracellular loop. The overexpressed fusion protein accumulated in inclusion bodies and could be solubilized in detergent. It was purified by metal chelation chromatography based on a C-terminal 6-histidine tag, and the GST portion was removed after proteolytic cleavage. The purified receptor was reconstituted into lipid vesicles and specific binding of odor ligands was shown by photoaffinity labeling and tryptophan fluorescence measurements. Thus, for the first time, an odorant receptor/ligand pair becomes available in large amounts for biophysical and screening studies.
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.