Nanobodies show a great potential in biomedical and biotechnology applications. Bacterial expression is the most widely used expression system for nanobody production. However, the yield of nanobodies is relatively low compared to that of eukaryotic systems. In this study, the repetitive amino acid sequence motifs (GAGAGS) found in silk fibroin protein (SFP) were developed as a novel fusion tag (SF-tag) to enhance the expression of nanobodies in Escherichia coli. SF-tags of 1 to 5 hexapeptide units were fused to the C-terminus of 4G8, a nanobody against human epididymis protein 4 (HE4). The protein yield of 4G8 variants was increased by the extension of hexapeptide units and achieved a 2.5 ~ 7.1-fold increa... More
Nanobodies show a great potential in biomedical and biotechnology applications. Bacterial expression is the most widely used expression system for nanobody production. However, the yield of nanobodies is relatively low compared to that of eukaryotic systems. In this study, the repetitive amino acid sequence motifs (GAGAGS) found in silk fibroin protein (SFP) were developed as a novel fusion tag (SF-tag) to enhance the expression of nanobodies in Escherichia coli. SF-tags of 1 to 5 hexapeptide units were fused to the C-terminus of 4G8, a nanobody against human epididymis protein 4 (HE4). The protein yield of 4G8 variants was increased by the extension of hexapeptide units and achieved a 2.5 ~ 7.1-fold increase compared with that of untagged 4G8 (protein yield of 4G8-5C = 0.307 mg/g vs that of untagged 4G8 = 0.043 mg/g). Moreover, the fusion of SF-tags not only had no significant effect on the affinity of 4G8, but also showed a slight increase in the thermal stability of SF-tag-fused 4G8 variants. The fusion of SF-tags increased the transcription of 4G8 by 2.3 ~ 7.0-fold, indicating SF-tags enhanced the protein expression at the transcriptional level. To verify the applicability of the SF-tags for other nanobody expression, we further investigated the protein expression of two other anti-HE4 nanobodies 1G8 and 3A3 upon fusion with the SF-tags. Results indicated that the SF-tags enhanced the protein expression up to 5.2-fold and 5.7-fold for 1G8 and 3A3, respectively. For the first time, this study reported a novel and versatile fusion tag system based on the SFP for improving nanobody expression in Escherichia coli, which may enhance its potential for wider applications.Key points• A silk fibroin protein-based fusion tag (SF-tag) was developed to enhance the expression of nanobodies in Escherichia coli.• The SF-tag enhanced the nanobody expression at the transcriptional level.• The fusion of SF-tag had no significant effect on the affinity of nanobodies and could slightly increase the thermal stability of nanobodies.