Analytical Biochemistry 1988-05-01

On-resin biotinylation of chemically synthesized proteins for one-step purification.

T J Lobl, M R Deibel, A W Yem

Index: Anal. Biochem. 170 , 502, (1988)

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Abstract

A general, convenient, one-step purification procedure for chemically synthesized proteins present in low yields using on-resin biotinylation is reported. The protein, terminally deprotected and neutralized on-resin, is stirred in dimethylformamide and then biotinylated with N-hydroxysuccinimidobiotin (2 mg/mg protein on-resin) for 24 h at 45 degrees C. Following low/high hydrogen fluoride cleavage (J. P. Tam, W. F. Heath, and R. B. Merrifield (1983) J. Amer. Chem. Soc. 105, 6442-6455) the crude cleavage product was applied to an avidin agarose column. The column was washed with phosphate-buffered saline until all unbound materials had been eluted off. Then the biotinylated protein was eluted with 0.1 M glycine HCl, pH 2.0. A pilot experiment with two unrelated peptides on-resin established the experimental conditions for biotinylation. We then demonstrated that the chemically synthesized 153 residue [Asp205]-interleukin-1 beta (117-269), present in less than 1% yield in the crude HF cleavage mixture, could be purified to homogeneity in one step. In addition 70 and 114 residue synthetic fragments, (200-269) and (156-269), were also purified in this manner. Biotinylation on-resin appears to be an attractive method of purifying low yield chemically synthesized proteins and for preparing proteins with biotinyl moieties at specific locations such as the amino terminus.

Related Compounds

Structure Name/CAS No. Articles
Biotin NHS Structure Biotin NHS
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