Chaperonin co-expression and chemical modification enables production of active microbial transglutaminase from E. coli cytoplasm

Int J Biol Macromol. 2023 Dec 31;253(Pt 7):127355. doi: 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2023.127355. Epub 2023 Oct 13.

Abstract

Microbial transglutaminase (MTG) is a usable enzyme for biomacromolecule modification. In the present study, a "molecular chaperonin" strategy was developed to produce MTG in E. coli cytoplasm with high expression level and a "small molecule-mediated chemical modification" strategy was adopted to strip propeptide chaperonin efficiently during purification. Propeptide (Pro) was expressed separately as a chaperonin to facilitate MTG expression in E. coli cytoplasm with a yield up to 300 mg or about 9 kU from 1 L fed-batch culture. Furthermore, small molecular chemicals were applied to interfere the interaction between MTG and Pro. Chemical acetylation was identified as a suitable method to strip Pro resulting in pure MTG with high specific activity up to 49.6 U/mg. The purified acetylated MTG was characterized by MS analysis. The deconvoluted mass and Peptide Sequence Tags analysis confirmed acetylation on amino groups of MTG protein. Finally, the applications of obtained MTG were demonstrated via protein polymerization of bovine serum albumin and PEGylation of human interferon-α2b. Our method provides MTG with high purity and specific activity as well as unique merit with masked amino groups thus avoiding self-polymerization and cross-linking between MTG and substrates.

Keywords: Chemical acetylation; Enzymatic PEGylation; Microbial transglutaminase; Propeptide chaperonin.

MeSH terms

  • Escherichia coli* / metabolism
  • Humans
  • Transglutaminases* / chemistry
  • Transglutaminases* / genetics

Substances

  • Transglutaminases