Salt-Dependent Aggregation and Assembly of E coli-Expressed Ferritin

Dose Response. 2016 Feb 26;14(1):1559325816632102. doi: 10.1177/1559325816632102. eCollection 2016 Jan-Mar.

Abstract

Ferritin, with the primary function of iron storage, is a nearly ubiquitous protein found in most living organisms. Our recent investigations suggest that ferritin can assemble nanoparticles. So we use ferritin as a novel type of delivery vehicle for recombinant epitope vaccines. And, we found that ferritin form nonnative aggregates depended sensitively on NaCl concentrations. Here, we report that ferritin is an ion-sensitive protein and has the attribute of salt-dependent aggregation. Our results indicate that recombinant ferritin can be released as a soluble form from Escherichia coli at low NaCl concentrations (≤50 mmol/L). Moreover, this result affords us to confirm a proper self-assembling solution for soluble ferritin or other ferritin-based fusion proteins to assemble nanoparticles.

Keywords: aggregation; ferritin; nanoparticles; salt-dependent; self-assembling.