渗透压
衣壳
噬菌体MS2
酶
化学
异源的
酶动力学
生物物理学
生物化学
生物
噬菌体
活动站点
大肠杆菌
基因
作者
Jeff E. Glasgow,Stacy L. Capehart,Matthew B. Francis,Danielle Tullman‐Ercek
出处
期刊:ACS Nano
[American Chemical Society]
日期:2012-09-06
卷期号:6 (10): 8658-8664
被引量:123
摘要
The encapsulation of enzymes in nanometer-sized compartments has the potential to enhance and control enzymatic activity, both in vivo and in vitro. Despite this potential, there is little quantitative data on the effect of encapsulation in a well-defined compartment under varying conditions. To gain more insight into these effects, we have characterized two improved methods for the encapsulation of heterologous molecules inside bacteriophage MS2 viral capsids. First, attaching DNA oligomers to a molecule of interest and incubating it with MS2 coat protein dimers yielded reassembled capsids that packaged the tagged molecules. The addition of a protein-stabilizing osmolyte, trimethylamine-N-oxide, significantly increased the yields of reassembly. Second, we found that expressed proteins with genetically encoded negatively charged peptide tags could also induce capsid reassembly, resulting in high yields of reassembled capsids containing the protein. This second method was used to encapsulate alkaline phosphatase tagged with a 16 amino acid peptide. The purified encapsulated enzyme was found to have the same K(m) value and a slightly lower k(cat) value than the free enzyme, indicating that this method of encapsulation had a minimal effect on enzyme kinetics. This method provides a practical and potentially scalable way of studying the complex effects of encapsulating enzymes in protein-based compartments.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI