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Re: [ccp4bb] protease cleavage sites |
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CCP4bb navigationCCP4bb <-- 2007 <-- March 2007 <-- 05 March 2007Subject: Re: protease cleavage sites From: Cynthia Kinsland clk10 {- at -} CORNELL {- dot -} EDU Date: 2007-03-05 I'll second the TEV protease suggestion. We use it routinely because it is highly specific and easy to make ourselves (and, therefore, cheap). We have never seen it cut non-specifically and, since it is cheap, we just chuck in a bunch and let it go. The Prescission protease is also very specific and also available for home preparation (it is the 3C protease...prescission is a marketing name). I don't have as much experience with it, but it has behaved for me so far and I know that a number of people use it routinely with great success. Another nice thing about having the clones around to make your own is that you can make the protease with the same tag that you intend to cut off (say, His or GST or whatever your favorite is). Then, you can remove cleaved tag, uncleaved fusion protein and the protease all in one post-cleavage step. In our case, we almost always have a HisTag (often as part of some larger fusion) so our TEV is His-tagged. We have some of the GE pGEX vector for Prescission protease, so our 3C clone has GST on it. Best of luck, Cynthia On Mar 2, 2007, at 5:01 AM, Rene Frank wrote: > Hi, > > A non-ccp4 Q. Sorry. > > I would like to use a cleavable purification tag at the N-terminus/ > extracellular end of my membrane protein for purification. Before I > start, I wonder if someone could recommend a particular protease > site that I can engineer between the tag and my protein? How about > a proprietary cleavage system such as the PreScission protease (GE > Healthcare)? I would be grateful to hear success and horror > stories in this area. > > Best wishes, > > Rene > > ================================================ > Dr R.A.W. Frank, PhD > Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851 Research Fellow > > Prof Seth Grant Lab / Genes to Cognition > Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute > Hinxton > Cambridge CB10 1SA > > Work Tel: 0044 (0)1223 834244 ext. 7318 > Cell No.: 0044 (0)7870 208280 > =============================================== > > > ____________________ Cynthia Kinsland, Ph.D. Cornell University Protein Facility Director 607-255-8844 CCP4bb navigationCCP4bb <-- 2007 <-- March 2007 <-- 05 March 2007 |
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