An Improved Protein Bioreactor
Efficient Product Isolation During in vitro Protein Biosynthesis Via Affinity Tag*
Thorsten Lamla,
Wolfgang Stiege and
Volker A. Erdmann
From the Institut für Biochemie, Freie Universität Berlin, Thielallee 63, D-14195 Berlin, Germany
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ABSTRACT
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In vitro protein biosynthesis became a powerful technology for biochemical research. Beside the determination of structure and function in vitro selection of proteins is also of great interest. In most cases the use of a synthesized protein for further applications depends on its purity. For this purpose the in vitro production and purification of proteins with short affinity tails was established. A cell-free protein synthesis system was employed to produce bovine heart fatty acid-binding protein and bacterial chloramphenicol acetyltransferase with and without fusion of the Strep-tag affinity peptide. The quantitative removal of fusion protein during cell-free synthesis from a batch reaction and a semicontinuous flow cell-free reactor were achieved. No significant influence of the Strep-tag and the conditions during the affinity chromatography on maturation or activity of the proteins were observed. The product removal from the continuous flow cell-free reactor is still an only partially solved problem, because the use of ultrafiltration membranes has some limitations. The results document that it should be possible to avoid these limitations by introducing an affinity system.
The potentials of the in vitro protein biosynthesis system include not only the production of proteins but also the synthesis of cytotoxic, regulatory, or unstable proteins that cannot be expressed in living cells (1). Other advantages are the site-directed isotope labeling, as well as the incorporation of unnatural amino acids, and the direct expression of PCR products (reviewed in Ref. 2). The expression PCR can be used for revealing the products of the newly found genes or for producing and analyzing proteins carrying engineered or random mutations.
Different versions of cell-free protein synthesis systems derived from rabbit reticulocyte lysates, wheat germ, or Escherichia coli are used currently. For the production in a preparative scale the CFCF1 reactors (1, 3) and dialysis cells (4) have been established, because their yields are superior to those of a batch system. The continuous product removal from the CFCF reactor is still an only partially solved problem. The employment of ultrafiltration membranes has the limitations that the proteins may not pass through or might interact with the membrane. In addition it may well happen that some translation components during the reaction get lost. However, the use of a synthesized protein for further applications like crystallization or NMR studies depends to a great extent upon its purity. For this purpose, the recombinant production and purification of proteins with short affinity tails have gained widespread application in biotechnology (5). One of these short affinity tags termed Strep-tag (in this work Strep-tag I) is a nine-amino acid peptide (AWRHPQFGG) with intrinsic streptavidin binding activity (Kd
10-5 M) (6). It was shown that Strep-tag I allows single-step protein purification from bacterial expression systems (7), but its fusion to recombinant proteins is restricted to the C terminus. Another variant, designated Strep-tag II, was introduced (8) that did not show this limitation. This octapeptide (WSHPQFEK) possesses a binding affinity toward streptavidin and an even higher one toward a streptavidin mutant (Kd
10-6 M) named StrepTactin (9). One advantage of the Strep-tag system is the elution of the bound fusion protein from the affinity matrix in the native state under very mild buffer conditions with a specific competitor.
Here we report the feasibility and the compatibility of the Strep-tag affinity purification with our cell-free protein biosynthesis system, because in most cases, further analyses require a purified protein. In addition, the limitations caused by ultrafiltration membranes during product removal from a CFCF reactor should be overcome employing the affinity system described here.
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EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
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Construction of Plasmids
Standard methods for molecular biology were used (10). The plasmids pHMFA, pFA+CStII, and pFA+NStII (11) contain the sequence for the 5' untranslated region of phage T7 gene 10 followed by the coding sequence for FABP and the T7 transcription terminator 150 bp downstream of the coding sequence. The pFA+CStII and the pFA+NStII additionally have 30 bp encoding a two-amino acid linker and the Strep-tag II at the C terminus and the N terminus of the protein, respectively.
The plasmid pCAT coding for CAT and containing all elements necessary for efficient in vitro transcription/translation was constructed in two steps. First, the NcoI/BamHI fragment of pCAT3 (Promega) was inserted into pET-3d. Second, the SphI/EcoRI fragment of this modified pET-3d was cloned into the pUC 19 vector.
The plasmid pCAT served as template for the construction of PCR products with a Strep-tag I and II at the end of the coding sequence. The forward primer was complementary to the T7 promoter and identical for both products. The reverse primers for introducing the Strep-tag I with linker and XbaI restriction site were ST1 (5'-GCTC- GGCCGTCTAGATTAACCACCGAACTGCGGGTGACGCCAAGCAG- CGCTCGCCCCGCCCTGCCACTCATCGCAGTA-3') and ST2 (5'-GC- TCGGCCGTCTAGATTATTTTTCGAACTGCGGGTGGCTCCAAGCG- CTCGCCCCGCCCTGCCACTCATCGCAGTA-3'), which introduce the Strep-tag II with linker and XbaI restriction site. PCR was performed using Pfu DNA polymerase (Stratagene) according to the suppliers recommendations. The PCR products were digested with XbaI, and the XbaI/XbaI fragments were subsequently cloned into the adequate digested pCAT vector. The two additional plasmids coding for CAT with C-terminal Strep-tag I and II were termed pCAT+StI and pCAT+StII, respectively.
Coupled in Vitro Transcription/Translation
The coupled in vitro transcription/translation reaction is based on an E. coli S30 lysate (strain D10) and was performed as described (12) with several modifications. The coupled transcription/translation reaction was carried out for 90 min at 37 °C and contained the following components: 50 mM HEPES-KOH (pH 7.6), 70 mM KOAc, 30 mM NH4Cl, 14 mM MgCl2, 0.1 mM EDTA, 5 mM dithiothreitol, 0.02% NaN3, 0.2 mM L-[14C]leucine (25 dpm/pmol; Amersham Biosciences), 0.4 mM each amino acid (leucine omitted), 1 mM each of ATP and GTP, 0.5 mM each of CTP and UTP, 30 mM phosphoenolpyruvate, 10 mM acetyl phosphate (13), 8 µg/ml pyruvate kinase (Roche Molecular Biochemicals), 4% polyethylene glycol 2000, 20 µg/ml rifampicin, 0.1 mg/ml total E. coli tRNA, 0.1 mM folinic acid, 100 units/ml RNase inhibitor (Promega), 2 µg/ml aprotinin (Roche Molecular Biochemicals), 1 µg/ml leupeptin (Roche Molecular Biochemicals), 1 µg/ml pepstatin (Roche Molecular Biochemicals), 30% (v/v) S30, 500 units/ml T7 phage RNA polymerase (Stratagene), 0.52 nM of a covalently closed plasmid.
Analysis of the Synthesized Protein
The incorporation of L-[14C]leucine into the synthesized proteins was determined by liquid scintillation counting of the trichloroacetic acid-insoluble material as described (14). The reaction products were also analyzed by denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) (15) followed by an autoradiography with a Storm 840 PhosphorImager (Amersham Biosciences).
CAT Assay
The activity from in vitro-synthesized CAT was detected with the FAST CAT® (deoxy) chloramphenicol acetyltransferase assay kit according to the manufacturers protocol (Molecular Probes) with some modifications. The supernatant of a coupled transcription/translation reaction after centrifugation at 15,000 x g for 5 min was diluted 500-fold with a buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.8), 2 mM dithiothreitol, 0.03% bovine serum albumin), and between 1 and 17 µl were used in a total volume of 24 µl (same buffer). For the enzymatic analysis 4 µl of each solution, the FAST CAT® substrate and the 9 mM acetyl-CoA, were added. The reaction was stopped by extraction with 400 µl of ice-cold ethyl acetate. After a short centrifugation the top 300 µl of ethyl acetate was transferred to a clean tube, the solvent was evaporated, the dry sample was dissolved in 20 µl of ethyl acetate, and finally, 3 µl of this solution was analyzed after thin layer chromatography with a Storm 840 FluoroImager (Amersham Biosciences).
Strep-tag Affinity Purification
Isolation after in Vitro Protein Biosynthesis
Purification of the Strep-tag fusion proteins was done by affinity chromatography according to the manufacturers protocol (Institut für Bioanalytik, Göttingen, Germany) except that the volume of the affinity column was reduced to 230 µl to purify 150 µl of the reaction mixture. The wash and elution volumes were 230 and 130 µl, respectively. Reaction mixtures were shortly centrifuged after coupled transcription/translation and subjected to the column. The isolated fractions were analyzed by trichloroacetic acid precipitation and by an autoradiography after SDS-PAGE as described.
Removal of Fusion Protein from a Batch System during in Vitro Protein Synthesis
After the affinity matrix (50 µl) was equilibrated with translation buffer (50 mM HEPES-KOH (pH 7.6), 70 mM KOAc, 30 mM NH4Cl, 10 mM MgCl2, 0.1 mM EDTA (pH 8.0), 0.002% NaN3) the reaction mixture (150 µl) for the coupled transcription/translation was added. The coupled reaction was carried out with gentle shaking to prevent settling of the matrix. The matrix was collected by centrifugation for 1 min at 220 x g after protein synthesis and between the purification steps. After removing the supernatant the matrix was washed three times with 100 µl of washing buffer (100 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 150 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA) followed by elution of the fusion protein with 4x 100 µl of elution buffer (washing buffer with 2.5 mM desthiobiotin).
Removal of Fusion Protein from an SFCF Reactor during Synthesis
A coupled transcription/translation using an SFCF reactor (Fig. 1) was performed for 20 h at 30 °C. The volume of the reaction chamber was 750 µl, and in addition to the affinity column and the connecting hoses, the total volume of reaction mixture was 2150 µl. 6 ml of feeding buffer were used, consisting of translation buffer with 5 mM dithiothreitol, 4 mM MgCl2, 0.02% NaN3, 0.1 mM folinic acid, 0.4 mM L-[14C]leucine (0.75 dpm/pmol; Amersham Biosciences), 0.4 mM each of the other 19 amino acids, 1 mM each of ATP and GTP, 0.5 mM each of CTP and UTP, 30 mM phosphoenolpyruvate (Roche Molecular Biochemicals), 10 mM acetyl phosphate (Sigma). During protein synthesis the reaction mixture was pumped continuously from the reaction chamber onto the affinity column, which was filled with 530 µl of StrepTactin-Sepharose, and sent back into the reactor. To isolate the product the column was washed three times with 800 µl of washing buffer followed by elution of the fusion protein with 6x 400 µl of elution buffer. The isolated fractions were analyzed as described.

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FIG. 1. Schematic drawing of the standard dialysis reactor used for product removal during protein synthesis.
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RESULTS
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Affinity Purification of Cell-free Synthesized Strep-tag Fusion Proteins
The necessity to establish a one-step purification system for in vitro-synthesized proteins is quite apparent. In this study we have compared the quality and compatibility of the Strep-tag purification with our cell-free protein synthesis system. Therefore, we fused the two Strep-tag versions I and II to the C terminus of the CAT gene and Strep-tag II to the FABP gene by PCR methods and cloned them into plasmids containing all elements for an efficient in vitro transcription/translation. We have chosen these two genes, because FABP is a well known standard in our laboratory, and CAT reveals the influence of the Strep-tag on the activity of the fused protein on the basis of its enzymatic activity (16). It was not known whether the additional 33 and 30 bp encoding the Strep-tag I and II, respectively, would influence the in vitro expression of the new genes, if the fused peptide would disturb the native structure of the proteins, and if the tag would be accessible for affinity chromatography.
The newly constructed and in vitro-synthesized fusion proteins showed, with regard to the amount of product, no significant difference when compared with the constructs without Strep-tag. The yields with CAT were 190 µg/ml, with the Strep-tag I 191 µg/ml and with the Strep-tag II 184 µg/ml. The amount of FABP was 228 µg/ml, with the C-terminal Strep-tag II 232 µg/ml and with the N-terminal Strep-tag II 201 µg/ml. The recombinant proteins were subjected to affinity chromatography. Between 70 and 87% of the fusion protein used for affinity purification were recovered from the column, and between 60 and 82% could be isolated as pure product in the elution fractions as calculated by trichloroacetic acid precipitation of the different fractions (summarized in Table I). The quality of the chromatography products is shown in the case of FABP-Strep-tag II in the Coomassie stain (Fig. 2A) and in the autoradiogram of the protein gel (Fig. 2B). The purified product was isolated predominantly within one elution fraction visible in the Coomassie-stained gel as one band. We conclude that the fused Strep-tag does not affect the expression and is accessible for affinity chromatography. The influence of the Strep-tag to the enzymatical activity of the in vitro-synthesized CAT (16) with and without Strep-tag, before and after affinity chromatography, was assayed using a fluorescent deoxychloramphenicol substrate (17) (Molecular Probes). The observed activities were comparable with a commercially available CAT (Sigma) or even higher (Table II), so that neither the Strep-tag nor the conditions of the chromatography seem to affect the biological function of the fused protein. We did observe an influence of the Strep-tag on the solubility of CAT but not FABP. CAT is partly insoluble in our system, and that effect was increased by fusion with the Strep-tag I and II. It is known that hydrophobic interactions at the C terminus are essential for folding and stabilizing CAT (18). One possible reason for the increase in misfolding would be a disruption of these interactions caused by the presence of the Strep-tag sequences.

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FIG. 2. Purification of FABP containing the Strep-tag II after the cell-free synthesis using a StrepTactin affinity column. Comparable amounts of every isolated fraction were analyzed by SDS-PAGE. A, Coomassie stain; B, autoradiography of the radioactively labeled products. The samples in the numbered lanes are as follows: 1, marker; 2, reaction mixture; 3, sample loading; 46, wash fractions 13; 712, elution fractions 16; 13, [14C]marker (only partly visible in the Coomassie stain).
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TABLE II Enzymatical activity of the in vitro-synthesized CAT with and without Strep-tag before and after affinity chromatography
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Influence of Affinity Matrix to Coupled Transcription/Translation
After the purification system performed according to our expectations we tried to separate the Strep-tag fusion proteins during the continued process of protein synthesis. For that reason the influence of the StrepTactin-Sepharose (IBA, Göttingen, Germany) on the coupled transcription/translation reaction was examined. 20 µl StrepTactin-Sepharose were added to one of two identical 60-µl coupled reaction mixtures, and a plasmid coding for FABP without Strep-tag was used to determine the total amount of synthesized protein after translation. The products were analyzed by trichloroacetic acid precipitation and SDS-PAGE followed by autoradiography (Fig. 3A). The amount of synthesized protein in the presence of the matrix was reduced by 6 ± 2% compared with the unchanged reaction; unexpectedly, the by-products were also decreased (Fig. 3B). The rest of the reaction mixture with matrix was treated with 0.5% SDS (30 min, 50 °C), and an identical volume was also analyzed by SDS-PAGE to determine whether some product was bound to the matrix. The autoradiogram revealed that more by-products and not the main product were increased in this sample (Fig. 3A). The FABP itself seems to have no affinity for the matrix, and the slightly reduced performance is probably a consequence of the matrix present in the system. Most likely, the by-products are unfolded, insoluble proteins with some unspecific affinity to the matrix.

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FIG. 3. Influence of StrepTactin-Sepharose on a coupled transcription/translation reaction of FABP without an affinity tag. One of two identical 60-µl reactions was carried out in the presence of 20 µl of affinity matrix. After centrifugation both supernatants were analyzed by trichloroacetic acid precipitation and SDS-PAGE. The rest of the reaction mixture with matrix was treated with 0.5% SDS, and comparable volumes were analyzed as described above. A, autoradiogram of the SDS-PAGE; B, amount and distribution of the products. 1, standard reaction; 2, reaction with matrix; 3, reaction with matrix treated with SDS.
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Removal of CAT+Strep-tag II during in Vitro Protein Synthesis
The insignificant influence of the StrepTactin-Sepharose on the translation system gave us the opportunity to separate a protein with Strep-tag II during a coupled transcription/translation reaction. Thus, CAT with Strep-tag II was produced in the presence of StrepTactin-Sepharose and purified. About 82% of the synthesized product was bound to the matrix from which about 87% could be isolated in reasonable purity. The data of the chromatography results are shown in the Coomassie stain (Fig. 4A) and in the autoradiogram of the protein gel (Fig. 4B). The amount of eluted protein was comparable with a purification via the column method. Although the overall synthesis is generally decreased in such a batch system the amount of soluble CAT+Strep-tag II was increased slightly (data not shown).

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FIG. 4. Removal of CAT with Strep-tag II during in vitro protein synthesis in the batch mode via StrepTactin-Sepharose. A comparable amount of every isolated fraction except the elution fractions was analyzed by SDS-PAGE. From the elution fractions the 4-fold amount was separated to check the purity. The samples in the numbered lanes are as follows: 1, marker; 2, the whole reaction after settling; 3, the reaction after centrifugation (5 min, 15,000 x g); 46, wash fractions 13; 710, elution fractions 14. A, Coomassie stain; B, autoradiogram of the SDS-PAGE.
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Removal of FABP+Strep-tag II from an SFCF Reactor during Protein Synthesis
The advantage of a dialysis system is the longer reaction time of cell-free expression and the consequently higher yields. After a reaction time of 20 h at 30 °C the yields of our SFCF reactor were between 700 and 1000 µg/ml for FABP and 600800 µg/ml for CAT. The yields for the constructs with affinity tags were identical. The removal of fusion proteins via StrepTactin-Sepharose from an SFCF system (Fig. 1) was performed for 20 h followed by washing the affinity column and eluting of the bound fusion protein. 41% of the synthesized protein was found in the reaction mixture, 13% was found in the wash fractions, and 46% could be eluted from the affinity column. The Coomassie stain (Fig. 5A) of the protein gel and the corresponding autoradiogram (Fig. 5B) demonstrate the result of the chromatography. The fact that the elution fractions contained only 46% of the synthesized protein is because of the small volume of the affinity column (530 µl) compared with the total volume of the reaction mixture (2150 µl). In all likelihood an increased amount of affinity matrix will shift the contribution of the synthesized protein to the elution fractions. The amount of synthesized protein in the presence of the affinity column was reduced by 28 ± 6% compared with the unchanged reaction. Our results suggest that the reduced performance of the modified dialysis reactor is a technical problem that can be solved in the near future.

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FIG. 5. Removal of FABP with Strep-tag II from an SFCF reactor during protein synthesis using a StrepTactin-Sepharose column. 15 µl of every isolated fraction were analyzed by SDS-PAGE. The samples in the numbered lanes are as follows: 1, marker; 2, reaction mixture; 35, wash fractions 13; 611, elution fractions 16; 12, [14C]marker (only partly visible in the Coomassie stain). A, Coomassie stain; B, autoradiogram of the SDS-PAGE.
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DISCUSSION
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The introduction of an affinity system is a very useful addition to the development of an in vitro protein biosynthesis system, because the synthesis of the protein usually requires its isolation and purification. Because this step of the purification takes place during the process of protein biosynthesis it greatly reduces the time to isolate the protein product. Furthermore it is possible to avoid such negative effects during protein synthesis, by which the proteins are precipitated once a critical concentration is reached.2 The cell-free protein biosynthesis system described is a batch system in which the presence of StrepTactin-Sepharose allows the simultaneous removal of the protein product via a Strep-tag II affinity peptide.
Until now an important problem has been the continuous removal of the product from the reaction chamber of the protein bioreactor. Different solutions of this problem had been discussed by Stiege and Erdmann (1). Marszal and Scouten (19) synthesized dihydrofolate reductase in a coupled wheat germ batch system in the presence of the affinity ligand methotrexate (19). They could remove the synthesized protein from the reaction mixture, and on the basis of these results they also discussed a new type of continuous flow cell-free protein synthesis system. To the best of our knowledge such a novel type of protein bioreactor has never been developed or published.
In this paper we have demonstrated for the first time the continuous removal of the synthesized protein from an SFCF reactor, and now we are using the system reported here to solve the problem of product removal from the protein bioreactor (CFCF reactor). This step prevents the limitations observed by reactors based on an ultrafiltration membrane. Fig. 6 gives an example what our new type of protein bioreactor will look like. This reactor still has an ultrafiltration membrane, but in this case the membrane is only required to remove small molecular waste products and not the large molecular protein product synthesized. We think that our new type of protein biosynthesis reactor will be much more efficient for the synthesis of proteins with high molecular masses (
50 kDa) than the conventional membrane reactor, because the losses of components of the protein biosynthesizing machinery are avoided.

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FIG. 6. Schematic drawing of a novel kind of continuous flow protein bioreactor using an affinity system for continuous product removal.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
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We thank Iris Reker for assistance with the SFCF reactor and Susette Chakkal for critical reading of the manuscript.
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FOOTNOTES
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Received, June 5, 2002
Published, MCP Papers in Press, June 21, 2002, DOI 10.1074/mcp.T200004-MCP200
1 The abbreviations used are: CFCF, continuous flow cell-free; FABP, fatty acid-binding protein from bovine heart; CAT, chloramphenicol acetyltransferase; SFCF, semicontinuous flow cell-free. 
2 W. S. and V. A. E., unpublished data. 
* This work was supported in part by grants from the Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung (BMBF) and the Fonds der Chemischen Industrie e.V. The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact. 
To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel.: 49-30-838-56002; Fax: 49-30-838-56403; Email: erdmann{at}chemie.fu-berlin.de
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