Title: Strategies in protein purification
1Developing an efficient protein purification
scheme
2Developing an efficient protein purification
scheme
- Introduction
- Three phase strategy
- Combining techniques
- Purity requirements
- Characteristics of the target protein and
contaminants - Examples
- Summary and shortcuts
3Protein Purification - Aims
- Sufficient purity and quantity
- Maintained biological activity
- Good economy
4Yields from Multistep Protein Purifications
Yield ()
95 / step
90 / step
85 / step
80 / step
75 / step
Number of steps
5Input for Purification Protocol Development
Required purity and quantity
Three phase strategy
Purification protocol
Physical-chemical properties of target and main
contaminants
Separation technique knowledge
Source material information
Economy and resources
Scouting runs and optimization
6Protein Purification
- Analytical tools
- A rapid and reliable assay for the target protein
- Purity determination(e.g. SDS-PAGE)
- Total protein determination (e.g. colorimetric
method)
7Three Phase Strategy
Achieve final purity. Remove trace impurities,
structural variants, aggregates etc.
Purity
Polishing
Remove bulk impurities
Intermediate purification
Isolate product, concentrate, stabilize
Capture
Step
8Capture
- Initial purification of the target molecule from
crude or clarified source
material - Concentration and stabilization (e.g. removal of
proteases)
Resolution
Speed
Capacity
Recovery
9Intermediate Purification
- Removal of bulk impurities
Resolution
Speed
Capacity
Recovery
10Polishing
- Final removal of trace contaminants, e.g.
structural variants of the target protein -
Resolution
Speed
Capacity
Recovery
11Three Phase Strategy - Ranking of Chromatography
Techniques
Considerations Limited sample volume Limited
flow rate range Protein ligand is
sensitive to harsh cleaning conditions Use of
organic solvents, loss of biological activity
Technique Capture Intermediate Polishing GF
IEX HIC AC RPC
12Linking Chromatography Techniques into a
Purification Protocol - General Rules
- Combine techniques with complementary
selectivities (e.g. IEX, HIC and GF). - Minimize sample handling between purification
steps (e.g. concentration, buffer exchange).
13Linking Chromatography Techniques
Technique
End conditions
Start conditions
GF
Small sample volume
Diluted sample Buffer change (if required)
IEX
Low ionic strength
High ionic strength orpH change
HIC
High ionic strength
Low ionic strength
AC
Specific binding conditions
Specific elution conditions
14Linking Chromatography Techniques
1. IEX HIC GF
2. AC GF
RPC IEX 3. HIC GF AC GF
4. (NH4)2SO4 HIC IEX GF
HIC GF IEX 5. GF GF
(desalting) AC GF
15Purity Requirements
- Contaminants which degrade or inactivate the
target protein (e.g. proteases), need to be
reduced to non-detectable levels. - Contaminants which interfere with subsequent
analyses need to be reduced to non-detectable
levels. - It is better to over-purify than to
under-purify.
16Purity Requirements - Brief Guidelines
Extremely high
High
Moderate
- Crystallization for x-ray studies
- N-terminal sequencing of an unknown protein
- Most physical-chemical characterization methods
- Antigen for monoclonal antibody production
17Towards the Optimal Purification Protocol -
Accounting for Target Protein Properties (1)
Target protein property Purification
parameter affected
IEX conditions (also AC and RPC) HIC conditions
selection of buffers, pH, salts,
additives buffer additives RPC conditions various
- Stability window
- pH
- Ionic strength
- Co-factors
- Detergent concentration
- Organic solvents
- Other (light, oxygen etc.)
18Towards the Optimal Purification Protocol -
Accounting for Target Protein Properties (2)
Target protein property Purification
parameter affected
- Physical-chemical properties
- Charge properties (isoelectric point)
- Molecular weight
- Post-translational modifications
- Biospecific affinity
selection of IEX conditions selection of GF
medium selection of group specific AC
medium selection of ligand for AC
19Target Protein Stability Window
- Determination of a suitable ammonium sulfate
concentration and pH screening range for HIC
20Target Protein PropertiesSelection of ion
exchange conditions
Electrophoretic titration curve of chicken breast
muscle using zymogram detection for creatine
kinase
Contaminants
Target protein
21G Protein Receptor Kinase Purification
Technique
Comment
Purificationfactor
Porcine cerebella homogenate
A. Tobin et al. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271,
3907-3916
Ppt
Ammonium sulfateprecipitation
7
- All buffers contain protease inhibitors
- All purifications done at 4o C
Butyl Sepharose Fast Flow
HIC
20
RESOURCE Q
AIEX
- Removal step, main contaminant is bound
2408
CIEX
- Elution buffer is used as starting buffer
for next column
RESOURCE s
HiTrap Heparin
AC
- 10 mg homogenous protein obtained
18647
22Rec a-Mannosidase Purification from Pichia
Technique
Comment
Purificationfactor
Y.-F. Liao et al. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271,
28348-28358
- Capture with step gradient730 mg of total
protein applied
- 83 mg homogenous protein obtained
23DNA Binding Protein Purification
Technique
Comment
Purificationfactor
HeLa cell nuclearextracts
J. Berthelsen et al. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271,
3822-3830
5
CIEX
SP Sepharose High Performance
AC
8
- General AC step for DNA binding proteins
Heparin Sepharose Fast Flow
- Removal step, non-specific DNA binding
activity removed
AC
9
DNA-1 Sepharose
AC
2447
DNA-2 Sepharose
CIEX
4943
- Final polishing, 20 mg protein obtained
Mono S
24Membrane Protein Purification
Technique
Purificationfactor
Comment
T. White et al. (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270,
24156-24165
- Step gradient, rapid concentrating capture step
AC
3
- Negative step contaminant removed
4
AIEX
CIEX
6
- Detergent exchange, volume reduction before AC
AC
242
- Final polishing and purity check, 20 mg
obtained
CIEX
1442
25Towards a General Protein Purification Protocol
- A rapid method for obtaining milligram quantities
of different recombinant proteins, for initial
characterization studies - Semi-automated in Ă„KTAexplorer, with pre-made
method templates and BufferPrep
Ion exchange STREAMLINE SP or DEAE SP or Q
Sepharose FF
Hydrophobic interaction Phenyl Sepharose FF
(high sub)
Gel filtration Superdex 75 prep grade
26Towards a General Protein Purification Protocol -
Results with E. coli r-Proteins
Ion exchange STREAMLINE SP or DEAE SP or Q
Sepharose FF
Hydrophobic interaction Phenyl Sepharose FF
(high sub)
Gel filtration Superdex 75 prep grade
Protein Expression Capture step (purified to
homogeneity) Annexin V Extracellular STREAMLINE
DEAE a-Amylase Intracellular STREAMLINE
DEAE anti-gp 120 Fab Periplasmic SP Sepharose
Fast Flow
27Shortcuts - Rapid Establishment of Milligram
Scale Purification Protocols
- If a biospecific ligand is available use AC as
the main purification step. - If the purification is not intended to be scaled
up use high performance media (e.g. MonoBeads)
throughout. - For one-of-a-kind purification of a protein
e.g. for sequencing before gene
isolationsacrifice yield for purity by making
narrow cuts. - If nothing is known about target protein and
contaminants propertiestry the IEX HIC
GF combination. - Establish a fast and reliable assay for the
target protein.
28A Systematic Approach to Purification Development
- Summary
- Develop assay methods
- Set the aims (purity and quantity)
- Characterize the target protein
- Use different separation principles
- Use few steps
- Limit sample handling between purification steps
- Start with high selectivity - increase efficiency
- Remove proteases quickly
- Reduce volume in early step
- Keep it simple!