CHARACTERIZATION OF A BETA-GALACTOSIDASE FUSION PROTEIN CONTAINING THE STARCH-BINDING DOMAIN OF ASPERGILLUS GLUCOAMYLASE Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Granular starch was used as a biospecific adsorbent to investigate the possible application of the starch-binding domain (SBD) as an affinity tail for a one-step purification of target proteins from crude cell extracts. A -galactosidase (-gal) fusion protein containing the C-terminal 119 amino-acids from GA-I (BSB119) was used as a model system to study the starch binding and elution. Because of proteolysis, approximately 40% of initial -gal activity lacked the SBD, and the remaining fusion protein contained from to one to four SBDs per molecule of -gal tetramer. The fusion protein forms containing at least one intact SBD adsorbed to starch. The bound fusion protein was eluted by using 10 mm solutions of various maltooligosaccharides and cyclodextrins. The best eluants were 10 mm maltodextrin with an average degree of polymerization (DP) of 10 and 10 mm -cyclodextrin. The elution of BSB119 with maltooligosaccharides of increasing DP suggested that the starch-binding site of the SBD consists of at least five glucosyl binding sites. SDS-PAGE gels and Western blots showed that the purity of the fusion protein eluted from starch was as good as or better than that obtained by conventional affinity chromatography. 1994.

published proceedings

  • ENZYME AND MICROBIAL TECHNOLOGY

altmetric score

  • 3

author list (cited authors)

  • DALMIA, B. K., & NIKOLOV, Z. L.

citation count

  • 13

publication date

  • January 1994