High-Throughput Expression of C. elegans Proteins

  1. Chi-Hao Luan1,3,
  2. Shihong Qiu1,
  3. James B. Finley1,
  4. Mike Carson1,
  5. Rita J. Gray1,
  6. Wenying Huang1,
  7. David Johnson1,
  8. Jun Tsao1,
  9. Jérôme Reboul2,
  10. Philippe Vaglio2,
  11. David E. Hill2,
  12. Marc Vidal2,
  13. Lawrence J. DeLucas1, and
  14. Ming Luo1,3
  1. 1 Center for Biophysical Sciences and Engineering, Southeast Collaboratory for Structural Genomics, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama 35294, USA
  2. 2 Center for Cancer Systems Biology and Department of Cancer Biology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, and Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA

Abstract

Proteome-scale studies of protein three-dimensional structures should provide valuable information for both investigating basic biology and developing therapeutics. Critical for these endeavors is the expression of recombinant proteins. We selected Caenorhabditis elegans as our model organism in a structural proteomics initiative because of the high quality of its genome sequence and the availability of its ORFeome, protein-encoding open reading frames (ORFs), in a flexible recombinational cloning format. We developed a robotic pipeline for recombinant protein expression, applying the Gateway cloning/expression technology and utilizing a stepwise automation strategy on an integrated robotic platform. Using the pipeline, we have carried out heterologous protein expression experiments on 10,167 ORFs of C. elegans. With one expression vector and one Escherichia coli strain, protein expression was observed for 4854 ORFs, and 1536 were soluble. Bioinformatics analysis of the data indicates that protein hydrophobicity is a key determining factor for an ORF to yield a soluble expression product. This protein expression effort has investigated the largest number of genes in any organism to date. The pipeline described here is applicable to high-throughput expression of recombinant proteins for other species, both prokaryotic and eukaryotic, provided that ORFeome resources become available.

Footnotes

  • Article and publication are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.2520504.

  • 3 Corresponding authors. E-MAIL luanch{at}uab.edu; FAX (205) 934-7341. E-MAIL mingluo{at}uab.edu; FAX (205) 975-9578.

    • Accepted August 16, 2004.
    • Received February 26, 2004.
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