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Merck
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In vitro folding of inclusion body proteins.

FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (1996-01-01)
R Rudolph, H Lilie
ABSTRACT

Insoluble, inactive inclusion bodies are frequently formed upon recombinant protein production in transformed microorganisms. These inclusion bodies, which contain the recombinant protein in an highly enriched form, can be isolated by solid/liquid separation. After solubilization, native proteins can be generated from the inactive material by using in vitro folding techniques. New folding procedures have been developed for efficient in vitro reconstitution of complex hydrophobic, multidomain, oligomeric, or highly disulfide-bonded proteins. These protocols take into account process parameters such as protein concentration, catalysis of disulfide bond formation, temperature, pH, and ionic strength, as well as specific solvent ingredients that reduce unproductive side reactions. Modification of the protein sequence has been exploited to improve in vitro folding.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Urea, ReagentPlus®, ≥99.5%, pellets
Sigma-Aldrich
Urea, powder, BioReagent, Molecular Biology, suitable for cell culture