Protein Expression and Purification, Vol.82, No.1, 55-60, 2012
One-step purification of a functional, constitutively activated form of visual arrestin
Desensitization of agonist-activated G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) requires phosphorylation followed by the binding of arrestin, a similar to 48 kDa soluble protein. While crystal structures for the inactive, 'basal' state of various arrestins are available, the conformation of 'activated' arrestin adopted upon interaction with activated GPCRs remains unknown. As a first step towards applying high-resolution structural methods to study arrestin conformation and dynamics, we have utilized the subtilisin prodomain/Profinity eXact (TM) fusion-tag system for the high-level bacterial expression and one-step purification of wild-type visual arrestin (arrestin 1) as well as a mutant form (R175E) of the protein that binds to non-phosphorylated, light-activated rhodopsin (Rho*). The results show that both prodomain/Profinity eXact (TM) fusion-tagged wild-type and R175E arrestins can be expressed to levels approaching 2-3 mg/l in Luria-Bertani media, and that the processed, tag-free mature forms can be purified to near homogeneity using a Bio-Scale (TM) Mini Profinity eXact (TM) cartridge on the Profinia (TM) purification system. Functional analysis of R175E arrestin generated using this approach shows that it binds to non-phosphorylated rhodopsin in a light-dependent manner. These findings should facilitate the structure determination of this 'constitutively activated' state of arrestin 1 as well as the monitoring of conformational changes upon interaction with Rho*. (C) 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Keywords:Acrestin;Vision;Desensitization;Rhodopsin;Affinity fusion-tag;Subtilisin;Protein purification;Automated chromatography