About the journal   Subscriptions   Authors   Users   Librarians   FAQs 

Biotechnology and Applied Biochemistry (1999) 30, (163–170) (Printed in Great Britain)
Evaluation of refolding conditions for a recombinant human interleukin-3 variant (daniplestim)
Denis M. Boyle*1, Russell E. McKinnie†, William D. Joy†, Bernard N. Violand†, Joseph K. McLaughlin* and Bryan H. Landis*
*Department of BioProcess Technology, Searle R&D/Monsanto Co., 700 Chesterfield Village Pkwy., St. Louis, MO 63198, U.S.A., and Department of Protein Biochemistry, Searle R&D/Monsanto Co., 700 Chesterfield Village Pkwy., St. Louis, MO 63198, U.S.A.

Abbreviations used: IL-3, interleukin-3; RP-HPLC, reversed-phase HPLC; TFA, trifluoroacetic acid; DTT, D, L-dithiothreitol.

1To whom correspondence should be addressed.

The refolding of daniplestim, a human interleukin-3 variant (SC-55494) from Escherichia coli inclusion bodies, was optimized using a reversed-phase HPLC method developed to permit quantification of the reduced and oxidized forms of daniplestim. The presence of cysteine or dithiothreitol accelerated refolding of daniplestim from E. coli inclusion body slurries dissolved in urea or guanidine solutions and was complete in 4–6 h. Regardless of the dissolution and refolding protocol used to renature daniplestim, equivalently bioactive protein was produced. Under refolding conditions, no covalent modification of daniplestim by cysteine or cyanate was observed. The folding process was characterized further by following the unfolding of purified daniplestim by far-UV CD and fluorescence spectroscopies under both oxidizing and reducing conditions at pH values between 7 and 11. Formation of the single disulphide bond had a large stabilizing effect on daniplestim structure ( 4–5 kCal at pH 9.5). This thermodynamic stabilization drove the refolding process towards the native form, even under conditions where the reduced protein was largely unfolded. From these data, scaleable refolding conditions for daniplestim were established.

Received 10 May 1999; accepted 8 July 1999

Portland Press Ltd © 1999



 RSS feeds
My BAB
Table of Contents by email


Instructions for authors
Submit your paper


Immediate publications
Vol.52 (2): Feb 09
Vol.52 (1): Jan 09
Browse archive
Search archive
Reviews










Chinese users - get faster access here
Bookmark with:
Bookmark with Del.icio.us Bookmark with Connotea