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      Intein-mediated expression of cecropin in Escherichia coli

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          Abstract

          Different strategies have been used to overcome the difficulties to produce antimicrobial peptides. Here we used Intein Mediated Purification with an Affinity Chitin-binding Tag (IMPACT-System, New England Biolabs) for the expression of the antimicrobial peptide cecropin to reduce its sensitivity to intracellular proteases and use its inducible self-cleaving capability to remove the carrier. Cecropin was cloned into suitable expression vector pTYB11, and expression induced by IPTG in Escherichia coli ER2566. The use of 22ºC induction allowed the expression of cecropin with its intein carrier in soluble form. Cell extracts were purified by chitin affinity chromatography and intein-mediated splicing of the target protein was achieved by thiol addition, obtaining a final yield of 2.5 mg cecropin/l. Cecropin cleaved from the intein had its proper biologically active form, showing a micromolar antimicrobial activity against Vibrio ordalii, Vibrio alginolyticus and Escherichia coli.

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          Most cited references44

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          Antimicrobial peptides of multicellular organisms.

          Multicellular organisms live, by and large, harmoniously with microbes. The cornea of the eye of an animal is almost always free of signs of infection. The insect flourishes without lymphocytes or antibodies. A plant seed germinates successfully in the midst of soil microbes. How is this accomplished? Both animals and plants possess potent, broad-spectrum antimicrobial peptides, which they use to fend off a wide range of microbes, including bacteria, fungi, viruses and protozoa. What sorts of molecules are they? How are they employed by animals in their defence? As our need for new antibiotics becomes more pressing, could we design anti-infective drugs based on the design principles these molecules teach us?
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            Making the most of affinity tags.

            D Waugh (2005)
            Proteins do not naturally lend themselves to high-throughput analysis because of their diverse physiochemical properties. Consequently, affinity tags have become indispensable tools for structural and functional proteomics initiatives. Although originally developed to facilitate the detection and purification of recombinant proteins, in recent years it has become clear that affinity tags can have a positive impact on the yield, solubility and even the folding of their fusion partners. However, no single affinity tag is optimal with respect to all of these parameters; each has its strengths and weaknesses. Therefore, combinatorial tagging might be the only way to harness the full potential of affinity tags in a high-throughput setting.
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              Multifunctional host defense peptides: intracellular-targeting antimicrobial peptides.

              There is widespread acceptance that cationic antimicrobial peptides, apart from their membrane-permeabilizing/disrupting properties, also operate through interactions with intracellular targets, or disruption of key cellular processes. Examples of intracellular activity include inhibition of DNA and protein synthesis, inhibition of chaperone-assisted protein folding and enzymatic activity, and inhibition of cytoplasmic membrane septum formation and cell wall synthesis. The purpose of this minireview is to question some widely held views about intracellular-targeting antimicrobial peptides. In particular, I focus on the relative contributions of intracellular targeting and membrane disruption to the overall killing strategy of antimicrobial peptides, as well as on mechanisms whereby some peptides are able to translocate spontaneously across the plasma membrane. Currently, there are no more than three peptides that have been convincingly demonstrated to enter microbial cells without the involvement of stereospecific interactions with a receptor/docking molecule and, once in the cell, to interfere with cellular functions. From the limited data currently available, it seems unlikely that this property, which is isolated in particular peptide families, is also shared by the hundreds of naturally occurring antimicrobial peptides that differ in length, amino acid composition, sequence, hydrophobicity, amphipathicity, and membrane-bound conformation. Microbial cell entry and/or membrane damage associated with membrane phase/transient pore or long-lived transitions could be a feature common to intracellular-targeting antimicrobial peptides and mammalian cell-penetrating peptides that have an overrepresentation of one or two amino acids, i.e. Trp and Pro, His, or Arg. Differences in membrane lipid composition, as well as differential lipid recruitment by peptides, may provide a basis for microbial cell killing on one hand, and mammalian cell passage on the other.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                ejb
                Electronic Journal of Biotechnology
                Electron. J. Biotechnol.
                Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso (Valparaíso, , Chile )
                0717-3458
                March 2012
                : 15
                : 2
                : 3
                Affiliations
                [03] Valparaíso orgnamePontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso orgdiv1Facultad Ciencias orgdiv2Instituto de Biología Chile
                [01] Valparaíso orgnamePontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso orgdiv1Escuela de Ingeniería Bioquímica orgdiv2Laboratorio de Biología Molecular Chile
                [02] Udine orgnameUniversita di Udine orgdiv1Dipartimento di Scienze Agrarie e Ambientali Italy
                Article
                S0717-34582012000200003 S0717-3458(12)01500203
                10.2225/vol15-issue2-fulltext-2
                ad3e552b-7940-4377-a639-44183c6a57ce

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 44, Pages: 1
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                SciELO Chile

                Categories
                RESEARCH ARTICLES

                antimicrobial,cecropin,fusion,intein,peptide,soluble
                antimicrobial, cecropin, fusion, intein, peptide, soluble

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