Direct capture and selective elution of a secreted polyglutamate-tagged nanobody using bare magnetic nanoparticles

Biotechnol J. 2022 May;17(5):e2100577. doi: 10.1002/biot.202100577. Epub 2022 Feb 5.

Abstract

Background: The secretion and direct capture of proteins from the extracellular medium is a promising approach for purification, thus enabling integrated bioprocesses.

Major results: We demonstrate the secretion of a nanobody (VHH) to the extracellular medium (EM) and its direct capture by bare, non-functionalized magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs). An ompA signal peptide for periplasmic localization, a polyglutamate-tag (E8 ) for selective MNP binding, and a factor Xa protease cleavage site were fused N-terminally to the nanobody. The extracellular production of the E8 -VHH (36 mg L-1 ) was enabled using a growth-decoupled Escherichia coli-based expression system. The direct binding of E8 -VHH to the bare magnetic nanoparticles was possible and could be drastically improved up to a yield of 88% by adding polyethylene glycol (PEG). The selectivity of the polyglutamate-tag enabled a selective elution of the E8 -VHH from the bare MNPs while raising the concentration factor (5x) and purification factor (4x) significantly.

Conclusion: Our studies clearly show that the unique combination of a growth-decoupled E. coli secretion system, the polyglutamate affinity tag, non-functionalized magnetic nanoparticles, and affinity magnetic precipitation is an innovative and novel way to capture and concentrate nanobodies.

Keywords: PEG; affinity peptide tag; downstream processing; magnetic iron oxide nanoparticles; secretion.

MeSH terms

  • Escherichia coli / genetics
  • Escherichia coli / metabolism
  • Magnetics
  • Magnetite Nanoparticles*
  • Polyglutamic Acid / metabolism
  • Single-Domain Antibodies*

Substances

  • Magnetite Nanoparticles
  • Single-Domain Antibodies
  • Polyglutamic Acid