Efficient Production and
Characterization of the Sweet-Tasting
Brazzein Secreted by the Yeast Pichia pastoris
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Abstract
Brazzein is a small, heat-, and pH-stable sweet protein
present
in the fruits of the West African plant Pentadiplandra
brazzeana Baillon. It exists in two forms differing
in sweetness intensity. The major form, called pyrE-bra, contains
a pyroglutamic acid at its N-terminus, while the minor form, called
des-pyrE-bra, lacks this residue. Here we describe the heterologous
expression in the methylotrophic yeast Pichia pastoris of two natural forms of brazzein, pyrE-bra and des-pyrE-bra, and
an additional form, called Q1-bra, which is not naturally occurring
in the fruit. Q1-bra differs from pyrE-bra in having a glutamine residue
instead of pyrE at its N-terminus. Over an expression period of 6
days, we obtained approximately 90, 30, and 90 mg/L of purified recombinant
pyrE-bra, Q1-bra, and des-pyrE-bra brazzein forms, respectively. Recombinant
proteins were purified and submitted to mass spectrometry and <sup>1</sup>H NMR spectroscopy. The data indicate that the recombinant
brazzein forms were properly folded. Moreover, they activated the
human sweet receptor in vitro and evoked sweetness in vivo with properties
similar to those of the two natural brazzein forms