## Abstract Herewith we report the encapsulation of functional protein synthesis machinery in a silica sol–gel matrix. When the sol–gel reaction using alkoxysilane monomers was carried out in the presence of __Escherichia coli__ cell extract, macromolecular protein synthesis machinery in the cell e
Cell-free synthesis of functional aquaporin Z in synthetic liposomes
✍ Scribed by Norman T. Hovijitra; Jessica J. Wuu; Boris Peaker; James R. Swartz
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 320 KB
- Volume
- 104
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0006-3592
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
The challenges involved in producing sufficient quantities of aquaporins for precise biophysical characterization have limited our knowledge of this important class of molecules. This article describes a cell‐free protein synthesis method for producing high concentrations of the E. coli water transporter, aquaporin Z (AqpZ), in synthetic liposomes. To our knowledge, this is the first report of in vitro synthesis of a membrane protein directly into synthetic liposomes with verified function, (i.e., transport activity and selectivity). Titration of DOPC lipid vesicles added to the cell‐free reaction show that production yields of active AqpZ are dependent on the concentration of DOPC lipid vesicles added to the cell‐free reaction, with 224 ± 24 lipids required per aquaporin monomer. Supplementation of the signal recognition particle receptor (FtsY) to the cell‐free reaction increases production of vesicle‐associated AqpZ but not active AqpZ. Cell‐free reactions using 7 mg/mL lipids that were not supplemented with FtsY produced 507 ± 11 µg/mL of vesicle‐associated AqpZ that exhibited a specific water transport activity of (2.2 ± 0.3) × 10^−14^ cm^3^ s^−1^ monomer^−1^. Proteinase K protection, activation energy determination, and selectivity against glycerol and urea transport also confirmed the production of correctly folded AqpZ. This technique is capable of producing milligram quantities of aquaporin that can be readily assayed for function, facilitating biophysical characterization and high‐throughput analysis. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2009; 104: 40–49 © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract This article reports the cell‐free expression of functional Lipase B from __Candida antarctica__ (CalB) in an __Escherichia coli__ extract. Although most of the cell‐free synthesized CalB was insoluble under conventional reaction conditions, the combined use of molecular chaperones led