Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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Generation of Artificial N-end Rule Substrate Proteins In Vivo and In Vitro.

In order to determine the stability of a protein or protein fragment dependent on its N-terminal amino acid, and therefore relate its half-life to the N-end rule pathway of targeted protein degradation (NERD), non-Methionine (Met) amino acids need to be exposed at their amino terminal in most cases. Per definition, at this position, destabilizing residues are generally unlikely to occur without further posttranslational modification of immature (pre-)proproteins. Moreover, almost exclusively, stabilizing, or not per se destabilizing residues are N-terminally exposed upon Met excision by Met aminopeptidases. To date, there exist two prominent protocols to study the impact of destabilizing residues at the N-terminal of a given protein by selectively exposing the amino acid residue to be tested. Such proteins can be used to study NERD substrate candidates and analyze NERD enzymatic components. Namely, the well-established ubiquitin fusion technique (UFT) is used in vivo or in cell-free transcription/translation systems in vitro to produce a desired N-terminal residue in a protein of interest, whereas the proteolytic cleavage of recombinant fusion proteins by tobacco etch virus (TEV) protease is used in vitro to purify proteins with distinct N-termini. Here, we discuss how to accomplish in vivo and in vitro expression and modification of NERD substrate proteins that may be used as stability tester or activity reporter proteins and to characterize potential NERD substrates.The methods to generate artificial substrates via UFT or TEV cleavage are described here and can be used either in vivo in the context of stably transformed plants and cell culture expressing chimeric constructs or in vitro in cell-free systems such as rabbit reticulocyte lysate as well as after expression and purification of recombinant proteins from various hosts.

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