Two recombinant trehalose synthases from Deinococcus geothermalis (DSMZ 11300) were compared. A significant influence of the artificial polyhistidine tag was observed in protein constitution. The recombinant trehalose synthase from D. geothermalis with His6-tag has a higher Km value of 254 mM, in comparison with the wild-type trehalose synthase (Km 170 mM), and displayed a lower activity of maltose conversion when compared to the wild type. Moreover, differences in properties like temperature, pH, thermal- and pH-stability were observed. Presence of the histidine tag caused a decrease of thermal resistance in case of trehalose synthase with His6-tag. These data confirmed a suggestion that the introduction of the histidine domain produces in some seldom cases undesirable changes in the protein.
A trehalose synthase gene from Deinococcus radiodurans (DSMZ 20539) containing 1659 bp reading frame encoding 552 amino acids was amplified using PCR. The gene was finally ligated into pET30Ek/LIC vector and expressed after isopropyl β-d-thiogalactopyranoside induction in Escherichia coli (DE3) Rosetta pLysS. The recombinant trehalose synthase (DraTreS) containing a His6-tag at the C-terminus was purified by metal affinity chromatography and characterized. The expressed enzyme is a homodimer with molecular mass of 126.9 kDa and exhibits the highest activity of 11.35 U/mg at pH 7.6 and at 30°C. DraTreS activity was almost unchanged after 2 h preincubation at 45°C and pH 7.6, and retained about 56% of maximal value after 8 h incubation at 50°C. The DraTreS was strongly inhibited by Cu2+, Hg2+, Zn2+, Al3+ and 10 mM Tris. The Km value of maltose conversion was 290.7 mM.
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