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Title:
IMMOBILISATION OF CHELATING GROUPS FOR IMMOBILISED METAL ION CHROMATOGRAPHY (IMAC)
Document Type and Number:
WIPO Patent Application WO/2009/019012
Kind Code:
A2
Abstract:
The present invention refers to a method for binding a polycarboxylic acid to a solid phase. Further, the invention refers to a solid phase having a polycarboxylic acid immobilized thereto and methods of using the solid phase, e.g. for purifying His-tagged recombinant polypeptides.

Inventors:
GOERLICH DIRK (DE)
FREY STEFFEN (DE)
Application Number:
PCT/EP2008/006485
Publication Date:
February 12, 2009
Filing Date:
August 06, 2008
Export Citation:
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Assignee:
MAX PLANCK GESELLSCHAFT (DE)
GOERLICH DIRK (DE)
FREY STEFFEN (DE)
International Classes:
B01J20/32; B01D15/38; B01J45/00; C07K1/22; C07K14/00
Domestic Patent References:
WO2005120700A22005-12-22
WO1992017403A11992-10-15
Foreign References:
US20050272116A12005-12-08
GB2067203A1981-07-22
GB2183238A1987-06-03
US4423158A1983-12-27
EP1767631A12007-03-28
Other References:
S. GOVENDER: "A pluronic-coupled metal-chelating ligand for membrane affinity chromatography" JOURNAL OF MEMBRANE SCIENCE, vol. 279, 2006, pages 120-128, XP002502187
Attorney, Agent or Firm:
WEICKMANN & WEICKMANN (Munich, DE)
Download PDF:
Claims:
Claims

1. Use of an immobilized chelator having 6 or more coordination groups for immobilized metal ion chromatography (IMAC).

2. The use of claim 1 , wherein the immobilized chelator is a polycarboxylic acid amide or ester having 6 or more coordination groups, which are particularly selected from amino, carboxyl, carboxamide and hydroxamate groups.

3. The use of claim 1 or 2, wherein the immobilized chelator is a solid phase having a pclycarboxylic acid immobilized thereto having s structure of formula (Ia) or (Ib):

O SP -N-U-PCA (Ia)

I R 1

O SP — CMLPCA (Ib)

wherein SP is a solid phase;

R 1 is hydrogen or an organic residue that does not interfere with the application of the solid phase and

PCA is the residue of a polycarboxylic acid, particularly of an amino polycarboxylic acid, or a salt thereof.

4. The use of claim 2 or 3, wherein the polycarboxylic acid is selected from ethylene diamino tetraacetic acid (EDTA), ethylene glycol- bis(2-aminoethylether)-N,N,N',N 1 -tetraacetic acid (EGTA), diethylene

triarnino pentaacetic acid (DPTA), and triethylene tetramine-N.N.N 1 ^ 1 , N",N"-hexa-acetic acid (TTHA), particularly from EDTA or salts thereof.

5. The use of claim 3 or 4, wherein the solid phase has a structure of formula (II):

wherein SP is the solid phase, and wherein one or more of the carboxylic acid groups may be deprotonated.

6. The use of any one of claims 1 to 5, wherein the chelator is complexed with a metal ion, e.g. a transition metal ion, such as a Ni 2+ ion.

7. A method for binding a polycarboxylic acid having 6 or more coordination groups to a solid phase, comprising the steps:

(a) providing a polycarboxylic acid and a solid phase comprising amino groups,

(b) reacting the amino groups with the polycarboxylic acid in the presence of a condensing agent, wherein the condensing agent is present in a molar excess over the amino groups and the polycarboxylic acid is present in a molar excess over the condensing agent and amino groups, and wherein a single carboxyl group of the polycarboxylic acid reacts with the amino groups.

8. The method of claim 7, wherein the polycarboxylic acid is an amino polycarboxylic acid, particularly selected from ethylene diamino tetraacetic acid (EDTA), ethylene glycol-bis(2-aminoethylether)-N,N,N l ,N l - tetraacetic acid (EGTA), diethylene triamino pentaacetic acid (DPTA), and

triethyiene tetramiπe-N.N.N'.N 1 , N",N"-hexa-acetic acid (TTHA)

9. The method of any one of claims 7 to 8, wherein the solid phase is an amino-functionalized chromatographic support, particularly selected from amino-functionalized carbohydrates such as agarose, sepharose, or cellulose, metals or semi-metals such as silicon, or metal oxides or semi- metal oxides such as silica, glass, plastics such as polystyrene or lipids such as phospholipids.

10. The method of any one of claims 7 to 9, wherein the solid phase comprises particles, e.g. vesicles, magnetic beads, quantum dots, proteins, or molecules with multiple primary or secondary amino groups.

11. The method of any one of claims 7 to 10, wherein the amino groups on the solid phase are primary or secondary amino groups, e.g. aliphatic primary amino groups.

12. The method of any one of claims 7 to 11 , wherein the condensing agent is selected from carbodiimides such as 1-ethyl-3-(3- dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide (EDC), or N, N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCC).

13. The method of any one of claims 7 to 12, wherein the molar excess of the condensing agent over the amino groups is at least 2-fold, preferably at least 4-fold, and/or wherein the molar excess of the polycarboxylic acid over the amino groups is at least 5-fold, preferably at least 25-fold.

14. A solid phase having a polycarboxylic acid immobilized thereto having a structure of formula (Ia) or (Ib):

O

SP — N-U-PCA

I

R 1 (Ia)

O SP—OJLpCA (Ib)

wherein SP is a solid phase;

R 1 is hydrogen or an organic residue that does not interfere with the application of a solid phase, and

PCA is the residue of a poiycarboxyiic acid, particularly of an amino polycarboxylic acid, or a salt thereof,

wherein the immobilized polycarboxylic acid amide or ester has at least 6 or more coordination groups, which are particularly selected from amino, carboxyl, carboxamide and hydroxamate groups,

and wherein the surface of the solid phase is preferably substantially free from accessible amino and/or hydroxy groups, wherein e.g. > 90%, preferably > 95% and more preferably > 99% of the accessible amino and/or hydroxy groups on the surface of the solid phase are blocked.

15. The solid phase of claim 14, wherein PCA is the residue of EDTA or a salt thereof.

16. The solid phase of claim 14 or 15 having a structure of formula

(II):

wherein SP is the solid phase and one or more of the carboxylic acid groups may be deprotonated.

17. The solid phase of any one of claims 14 to 16, wherein the polycarboxylic residue is complexed with a metal ion, e.g. a transition metal ion, such as a Ni 2+ ion, and wherein substantially all loosely bound metal ions preferably have been removed.

18. The solid phase of claim 17, which is stable in the presence of a thiol- or dithiol-containing reducing agent.

19. A method of purifying a recombinant polypeptide comprising the steps:

(a) providing a sample comprising a polypeptide with a plurality of histidine residues,

(b) contacting the sample with a solid phase of any one of claims 14 to 17 that contains a pre-bound complexing metal ion, e.g. a Ni 2+ ion, under conditions wherein the recombinant polypeptide selectively binds to the solid phase,

(c) separating the bound recombinant polypeptide from other sample components, and

(d) eluting the recombinant polypeptide from the solid phase.

20. The method of claim 18, wherein the polypeptide comprises at least 6 consecutive histidine residues.

21. The method of claim 18, wherein the polypeptide comprises at

least 4 histidine residues in a sequence [H n S -,]* wherein H is a histidine residue and S is a spacer amino acid residue, selected from glycine and/or serine and/or threonine, n is in each case independently 1-4, m is in each case independently 1-6, and k is 2-6.

22. A recombinant polypeptide comprising at least 4 histidine residues in a sequence [H n S m ] K wherein H is a histidine residue and S is a spacer amino acid residue, selected from glycine and/or serine and/or threonine, n is in each case independently 1-4, m is in each case independently 1-6, and k is 2-8.

23. The polypeptide of claim 21 , wherein the polyhistidine sequence is at the N- and/or at the C-terminus, or inserted into the sequence of the tagged protein.

Description:

Immobilisation of Chelating Groups for Immobilised Metal Ion Chromatography (IMAC)

Description

The present invention refers to a method for binding a polycarboxylic acid to a solid phase. Further, the invention refers to a solid phase having a polycarboxylic acid immobilized thereto and methods of using the solid phase, e.g. for purifying recombinant polypeptides.

A very powerful strategy for purifying recombinant proteins is the use of a "His-tag", which comprises typically 6-10 consecutive histidines. His-tags bind tightly to free coordination sites of Ni 2+ -ions. They can be released by a high concentration of imidazole, which competes for coordination sites on Ni 2+ . Such cycle of specific absorption and desorption can be used for one- step purification of a desired protein, resulting in enrichment factors of 100 or even more.

The most widely used " variant of this technique uses N α N α - bis(carboxymethyl)-lysine coupled via the ε-amino group to agarose beads. The active group is NTA (nitrilo triacetic acid) charged with Ni 2+ , while the spacer is an amino butyl group. Such Ni 2+ -NTA-matrix has, however, several serious disadvantages, such as the high costs for N 0 N α -bis(carboxymethyl)- lysine.

An additional disadvantage is the instability of the immobilised Ni 2+ -ions. Because NTA has only 4 coordination sites for Ni 2+ , the Ni 2+ ions leak easily from the matrix and contaminate the protein samples. This is a severe problem for at least two reasons: Ni 2+ is a rather toxic heavy metal and it catalyses undesired oxidation of the protein sample. Furthermore, NTA- bound Ni 2+ is easily reduced by protein-protecting agents such as DTT (dithiothreitol) and then released from the matrix. Finally, metal-chelating protease inhibitors such as EGTA or EDTA cannot be combined with a Ni 2+ -

NTA-matrix, because they extract the Ni 2+ -ions from this matrix,

US 6,670,159 describes a method for the preparation of metal chelate conjugates based on NTA, wherein NTA or a salt thereof is reacted in an aqueous medium at an alkaline pH of at least 8 with a proteinaceous molecule containing a primary amine group in the presence of carbodiimide.

WO 2004/036189 discloses a separation method for polypeptides using a metal chelate modified support. This support comprises NTA bound to an amino-modified solid phase via a carboxamide group.

GB 2 067 203 discloses polymeric chelating agents comprising a support bound thereto a mixture of EDTA amides bound via a single carboxamide group or via two carboxamide groups. The use of this support for the purification of polypeptides is neither disclosed nor suggested.

US 2004/204569 discloses a His-tag protein comprising a (His-Asn) 6 -tag.

US 2002/164718 discloses affinity peptides for immobilised metal ion chromatography (IMAC) comprising a spaced His-tag with an amino acid sequence consisting of His, two aliphatic or amide amino acids, His, three basic or acidic amino acids, His, and an aliphatic or amide amino acid.

The object according to the present invention was to provide novel methods and compositions suitable for immobilised metal ion chromatography (IMAC) to circumvent the problems associated with the prior art.

Surprisingly it was found that an EDTA-based solid phase complexed with Ni 2+ , particularly a solid phase wherein a carboxyl group of EDTA is bound to amino groups on the solid phase, has excellent properties in immobilized metal ion chromatography (IMAC) applications, particularly for the purification of recombinant polypeptides comprising poly-histidine tags. This finding was fully unexpected: According to the existing literature, an EDTA-

based solid phase should not be suitable for nicke! chelate chromatography, because this hexadentate chelator should occupy all six coordinations on Ni 2+ , supposedly leaving none for the binding of a histidine residue. In contrast to this expectation, it was found that an EDTA-based solid phase not only exhibits a stable binding of transition metal ions, particularly of Ni 2+ ions, but also that the resulting complexes with Ni 2+ , Zn 2+ , Co 2+ or Cu 2+ have a high selectivity for histidine-tagged proteins.

A first aspect of the present invention refers to the use of an immobilized chelator having six or more coordination groups for immobilized metal ion chromatography (IMAC) 1 particularly for purification of poly-histidine-tagged proteins. Preferably, the immobilized chelator is a polycarboxylic acid amide or ester having six or more coordination groups, which are particularly selected from amino, carboxyl, carboxamide and hydroxamate groups.

More preferably, the immobilized chelator is a solid phase having a polycarboxylic acid immobilized thereto having a structure of formula (Ia) or (Ib):

O

SP -N- 11 PCA (Ia)

R 1

O

SP —O-lLpcA (Ib) wherein SP is a solid phase;

R 1 is hydrogen or an organic residue that does not interfere with the application of the solid phase, e.g. a Ci-C 3 alkyl radical, and

PCA is the residue of a polycarboxylic acid, particularly of an amino polycarboxylic acid, or a salt thereof.

Even more preferably, the solid phase has a structure of formula (II):

wherein SP is the solid phase; and one or more of the carboxylic acid groups may be deprotonated.

The solid phase-bound polycarboxylic acid (Ia), (Ib) or (II) may be complexed with a polyvalent metal ion, e.g. a Ni 2+ ion.

A further aspect of the present invention refers to a method for binding a polycarboxylic acid having 6 or more coordination groups to a solid phase, comprising the steps: (a) providing a polycarboxylic acid and a solid phase comprising amino groups, (b) reacting the amino groups with the polycarboxylic acid in the presence of a condensing agent, wherein the condensing agent is present in a molar excess over the amino groups and the polycarboxylic acid is present in molar excess over the condensing agent and the amino groups, and wherein a single carboxyl group of the polycarboxylic acid reacts with the amino groups.

Still a further aspect of the present invention refers to a solid phase having a polycarboxylic acid immobilized thereto having a structure of formula (Ia) or (Ib):

O SP -N-U-PCA (Ia) I

R 1

O SP — 0-"-PCA (Ib) wherein SP is a solid phase;

R 1 is hydrogen or an organic residue that does not interfere with the application of the solid phase, e.g. a C 1 -C 3 alkyl radical,

PCA is the residue of a polycarboxylic acid, particularly of an amino polycarboxylic acid, or a salt thereof,

wherein the immobilized polycarboxylic acid amide or ester has at least 6 or more coordination groups, which are particularly selected from amino, carboxyl, carboxamide and hydroxamate groups,

and wherein the surface of the solid phase is preferably substantially free from accessible amino groups, wherein e.g. > 90%, preferably > 95% and more preferably > 99% of the accessible amino groups on the surface of the solid phase are blocked.

In some embodiments of the invention, the carboxamide group -NR 1 -CO- is directly bound to the solid phase. In other embodiments, the carboxamide group is bound to the solid phase via a linker, which may have a length of 1 atom up to 20 atoms, preferably 2-12 atoms, e.g. 2-6 atoms which may be selected from carbon atoms and optionally heteroatoms such as O and/or N.

Still a further aspect of the present invention is a method of purifying a recombinant polypeptide comprising the steps: (a) providing a sample comprising a polypeptide with a plurality of histidine residues, e.g. a plurality of consecutive histidine residues, (b) contacting the sample with a solid phase as described above that contains a pre-bound complexing metal ion, e.g. a Ni 2+ ion, under conditions wherein the recombinant polypeptide selectively binds to the solid phase, (c) separating the bound recombinant polypeptide from other sample components, and (d) eluting the recombinant polypeptide from the solid phase.

Still a further aspect of the present invention is a recombinant polypeptide comprising a "spaced histidine tag" with at least 4 histidine residues in a

sequence [H n S m ]k wherein H is histidine, S is an amino acid residue different from histidine selected from glycine and/or serine and/or threonine, n is in each case independently 1-4, m is in each case independently 1- 6, and k is 2-6, preferably 2-5. The spaced histidine tag may have a regular sequence, i.e. n and m have in each occurrence the same value or an irregular sequence, i.e. n and m may have different values. A larger number of histidines within a polyhistidine-tag may increase binding strength and specificity for a Ni 2+ chelate matrix. Too many consecutive histidines, however, may lower expression levels and solubility of recombinant proteins, e.g. proteins recombinantly expressed in E. coli. These problems can be overcome by interrupting continuous runs of histidines with short spacers comprising glycine, serine and/or threonine, i.e. with a spaced histidine tag. Recombinant proteins, such as nuclear transport receptors or dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) show higher expression and better solubility during expression in Escherichia coli, when tagged with a spaced histidine tag according to the present invention as compared to a conventional oligo histidine tag.

According to the present invention a method for binding a polycarboxylic acid to a solid phase is provided. The polycarboxylic acid has 6 or more, e.g. 6, 7 or 8 coordination groups. Preferably the polycarboxylic acid has 4, 5 or more carboxylic acid groups. The polycarboxylic acid may be an amino, nitrilo or ether polycarboxylic acid, wherein amino polycarboxylic acids, particularly amino polycarboxylic acids with tertiary amino groups are preferred. Specific examples of polycarboxylic acids are ethylene diamino tetraacetic acid

(EDTA), ethylene glycol-bis(2-aminoethylether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid

(EGTA) 1 diethylene triamino pentaacetic acid (DTPA) and triethylenetetramine-N,N,N l ,N l ,N" ) N" hexaacetic acid (TTHA). Especially preferred is EDTA.

The polycarboxylic acid is preferably bound to a solid phase comprising primary or secondary amino groups. The binding is carried out under conditions which allow selective binding of only one carboxyl group of the

poiycarboxyiic acid to the solid phase without the need of isolating an activated or derivatized form of the polycarboxylic acid such as an anhydride, an active ester, or a form where a primary or secondary amine group of the polycarboxylic acid has been kept accessible for a subsequent coupling step. By means of the reaction between carboxyl group and amino groups a carboxamide bond is formed. The solid phase may, e.g. be an amino-functionalized chromatographic support. For example, the solid phase may be selected from amino-functionalized carbohydrates such as agarose, sepharose, or cellulose, metals or semi-metals such as silicon or oxides thereof such as silica, glass, plastics such as polystyrene or lipids such as phosphatidylethanolamine- or phosphatidylserine-containing phospholipids. Further, the solid phase may comprise particles, e.g. vesicles, magnetic beads, quantum dots, vesicles, or proteins. The amino groups on the solid phase are preferably primary or secondary amino groups, e.g. aliphatic primary amino groups.

The amino-functionalization of the solid phase may be carried out by known methods, e.g. by reacting an amino group-containing silane such as amino propyl triethoxysilane with a solid phase such as silica or glass or by reacting ammonia with an epoxy-activated solid phase. Preferably, the amino- functionalization of silica or glass is carried out with aminopropyl trimethoxy silane or aminopropyl triethoxy silane. Carbohydrates, such as agarose, sepharose, or cellulose are preferably first epoxy-activated e.g. with epichlorohydrine or epibromohydrine to yield epoxy-activated matrices and then treated with excess of ammonia, a primary amine, or a hydroxylamine to yield amino-modified matrices.

The amino group density on the solid phase can be varied by the reaction conditions of the amino-functionalization, e.g. temperature, duration and/or concentration of reactants. For example, the amino-functionalizing agent may be diluted with a passivating agent, e.g. a non-amino group containing silane, in order to reduce the amino group density on the surface, if necessary. The amino group-containing reactant may be diluted to a

concentration of e.g. 1-50% with a passivating agent, preferably with the reaction product between glycidyl oxypropyl trimethoxy silane and 3- mercapto 1 ,2-propanediol. Alternatively, the amino group density may be increased by using di- or polyfunctional agents, which contain 2 or more primary or secondary amino groups such as 1,13-diamino-4,7,10- trioxatridexane. Thereby, the affinity of the matrix for His-tagged proteins may be increased. Thus, the reaction conditions may be chosen to obtain a final product with desired characteristics, e.g. such that His-tagged proteins bind specifically to the final product, while background-binding of other proteins is minimal. The optimal amino group density may be determined empirically for each solid support according to procedures described in the Examples.

For example, the purification of proteins with a long histidine tag, with e.g. > 10 histidine residues, is preferably carried out with a surface having a lower density of Ni 2+ -complexed polycarboxylic acid amide groups than purification of proteins having a tag of 6 histidine residues. Conversely, purification under denaturing conditions, e.g. in the presence of guanidinium chloride, is preferably carried out with a higher density of chelating groups than a purification under native conditions.

In the next step, a condensation reaction between one carboxyl group of the polycarboxylic acid and an amino group on the surface is carried out. Figure 1 shows a schematic depiction of this reaction exemplified with EDTA as polycarboxylic acid.

The reaction is carried out in the presence of a condensing agent, which may be selected from carbodiimides, carbonates such as di(N-succinimidyl) carbonate, O-(N-succinimidyl)-N,N,N',N'-tetramethyluroniumtetrafluorobo rate or analogous compounds. Carbodiimides such as 1 -ethyl-3-(3- dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide (EDC), or N.N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCC) are preferred. Reaction conditions were found, where a single carboxyl group of the polycarboxylic acid reacts with the amino groups on

the solid phase when the polycarboxylic acid is present in a sufficient molar excess over the amino groups and/or the condensing agent. In preferred embodiment, to obtain a highly specific matrix for IMAC 1 reaction conditions are selected wherein the amino groups are reacted substantially quantitatively with the polycarboxylic acid. Therefore, an at least 2-fold molar excess, preferably an at least 4-fold molar excess, of the condensing agent and an at least 5-fold excess, preferably an at least 10-fold molar excess and more preferably an at least 25-fold molar excess, of the polycarboxylic acid over amino groups should be used (see Examples).

The reaction is preferably carried out in an aqueous phase. The reaction conditions are preferably pH 5-9, more preferably pH 7-8.5. The polycarboxylic acid is preferably used close to the saturation limit (e.g. 0.5 M for EDTA and 0.1 M for EGTA) and the condensing agent at 1/10- 1/50 of the concentration of the polycarboxylic acid.

The reaction product is a solid phase having a polycarboxylic acid immobilized thereto via a stable carboxylic acid amide bond. Preferably, the solid phase has the structure of immobilized formula (Ia) as indicated above. Preferably, the immobilized polycarboxylic acid residue has still at least 3, 4 or more carboxyl groups and optionally further chelating groups such as amino or ether groups.

If the polycarboxylic acid is EDTA the solid phase preferably has a structure of formula (II):

wherein SP is the solid phase.

The solid phase of the invention, e.g. the EDTA-amide solid phase has a high affinity for polyvalent metal ions, such as transition metal ions, e.g. Ni 2+ , Zn 2+ , Co 2+ , or Cu 2+ -ions. Several combinations of these metal ions with chelators immobilized according to this invention provide highly selective matrices for binding histidine-tagged proteins, with less non-specific binding than the traditionally immobilised NTA-group (see Figures 2 and 3).

In a preferred embodiment, the solid phase of the invention is substantially quantitatively free from accessible amino groups, e.g. primary amino groups, and/or hydroxy groups, since unreacted amino groups may be cause of low affinity Ni 2+ binding and high unspecific background binding of polypeptides not carrying a His-tag. Thus, it may be desirable that > 90%, preferably > 95% and more preferably > 99% of accessible amino groups, particularly primary amino groups on the surface of the solid phase are blocked, e.g. by reaction with the polycarboxylic acid mediated by the condensing agent. The quantity of accessible unreacted groups, e.g. primary amino groups, may be determined according to known methods, e.g. by a ninhydrin-test or an OPA (ortho-phthalaldehyde/mercaptane) reaction.

Further, it is preferred that the solid phase, e.g. the EDTA-amide solid phase, is substantially free from loosely bound polyvalent metal ions, such as Ni 2+ ions. The present inventors have found that when initially saturating an EDTA-amide matrix with Ni 2+ ions, a significant amount thereof may remain only loosely bound thereto, in particular, when the solid support still contains unreacted amine groups. This loosely bound Ni 2+ fraction may be detected with suitable reagents, e.g. dimethylglyoxime. For example, after adding 0.2-1 volumes of 1% w/v dimethylglyoxime dissolved in ethanol to an Ni 2+ loaded matrix in Tris-buffer pH7.5 and shaking the mixture for 15 minutes at 6O 0 C, any loosely bound Ni 2+ ions can be detected as a pink precipitate. Loosely bound metal ions may cause problems, namely a contamination of a protein-containing sample with toxic and oxidizing Ni 2+ ions and an increased non-specific binding of non-His-tag proteins.

Thus, the solid phase of the present invention is preferably substantially free from loosely bound metal ions, particularly loosely bound Ni 2+ ions. Loosely bound metal ions may, e.g. be removed from the solid phase by contacting the solid phase with a free polycarboxylic acid chelator, e.g. NTA or EGTA or EDTA, preferably at about pH 7.5, e.g. with 40 mM NTA or 10 mM EGTA or 10 mM EDTA, until loosely bound metal ions have become undetectable, e.g. by contacting the matrix with a suitable detection reagent for the respective metal ion, e.g. dimethylglyoxime for the detection of Ni 2+ ions. After removal of loosely bound metal ions, the remaining ions remain so tightly bound that even an overnight incubation at room temperature with an equal volume of 0.5 M EDTA (pH 7.5) is insufficient for a complete release from the EDTA-amide matrix. In contrast, it should be noted that pre-washing of commercially available Ni-NTA-agarose (Qiagen) or of an Ni-NTA-amide matrix with 40 mM NTA, or 10 mM EGTA or 10 mM EDTA removes not only loosely bound, but apparently all bound Ni 2+ ions (Fig. 4).

Surprisingly, no indication was found that the conversion of one carboxyl group in EDTA to a carboxamide group would weaken the affinity for Ni 2+ at neutral pH. Instead, the carbonyl oxygen or the amino group of the carboxamide can apparently engage in a coordinative bond to Ni 2+ , suggesting that EDTA-amide is a truly hexadentate chelator. That a carboxamide groups can coordinate Ni 2+ is evident, e.g., from methyl coenzyme M-reductases, where 4 coordination sites for Ni 2+ are provided by Coenzyme F430 and the 5 th by the carboxamide of a glutamine side chain (Ermler et al, Science 278 (1997), 1457).

The solid phase of the invention may be used for immobilized metal ion chromatography (IMAC). In this chromatographic method polypeptides comprising a plurality of histidine residues, e.g. consecutive histidine residues, e.g. at least six consecutive histidine residues are selectively bound to a metal complex solid phase of the present invention . and separated from other components. The polypeptide may be eluted from the

soiid phase by adding a suitable elution agent such as imidazole. The imidazole concentration is preferably in the range from 1 to 1000 mM, depending on the density of immobilised active groups, the length of the poly-histidine tag, and the multimeric state of the tagged protein.

For IMAC purification of His-tagged proteins to work, it was so far assumed that the immobilised chelator should occupy only 3-5 out of the 6 coordination sites of Ni 2+ . It is therefore an unexpected aspect of this invention that immobilised hexadentate chelators such as EDTA-amide or EDTA-hydroxamide and even chelators with more than 6 coordinating groups work extremely well for this application. Apparently, histidine side chains can transiently displace weakly coordinating groups within a given chelator. Thus, according to an embodiment of the invention, the immobilized chelator, i.e. the immobilized polycarboxylic acid amide has 6 or more coordination groups, particularly selected from amino, carboxyl, carboxamide, and hydroxamate groups.

On the solid phase of the invention, e.g. EDTA-amide, kinetically very stable complexes e.g. with Ni 2+ may be formed. The resulting matrices are extremely resistant to Ni 2+ -extraction, e.g. by EGTA or NTA. Even 0.5 M EDTA extracts Ni 2+ only very slowly, i.e. at a time scale of hours to days. The resistance towards Ni 2+ -extraction increases further by including imidazole, e.g. 1 mM imidazole in the buffer. Therefore, IMAC with a solid phase of the invention, e.g. an EDTA-amide matrix, can be performed in the presence of a chelating metalloprotease-inhibitor, e.g. EDTA in concentrations of 1-10 mM, e.g. 5 mM.

Traditional Ni-chelate matrices, such as Ni-NTA agarose, get easily reduced by protein-protecting agents such as dithiothreitol (DTT). Even low millimolar concentrations of DTT extract nickel in the form of brownish reduction products. In contrast, Ni 2+ EDTA-amide matrices, from which loosely-bound Ni 2+ had been removed, do not show these problems. Instead, on Ni 2+ EDTA- amide silica we could successfully purify his-tagged proteins in the presence

of extremeiy high concentrations of DTT, e.g. of 0.5 M or 1 M DTT (Figure 5), which is a 100-1000-fold higher DTT concentration than used in typical protein purification schemes. Thus, in a preferred embodiment, the metal ion, e.g. Ni 2+ ion containing solid phase of the invention is stable in the presence of a thiol-containing or dithiol-containing reducing agent, e.g., DTT, in a concentration of at least 10 mM, preferably of at least 20 mM, more preferably of at least 50 mM, and even more preferably of at least 100 mM or even of at least 500 mM, and up to 1000 mM or even higher, preferably for at least 1 h at room temperature.

In an especially preferred embodiment of the present invention the chromatography is carried out with a recombinant polypeptide comprising a plurality of histidine residues in a "spaced histidine tag", preferably in a sequence [H n Sm]k wherein H is histidine, S a spacer residue selected from glycine and/or serine and/or threonine, n is 1-4, m is 1- 6, preferably 1-4, and k is 2-8, preferably 2-6. The length of the tag is preferably from 8 to 50 amino acids, more preferably from 12 to 40 amino acids. The present invention also comprises irregularily-spaced histidine tags, where the lengths of the oligo histidine clusters and the lengths of the spacer regions vary within a given tag sequence. The spaced histidine tag is preferably located at the N- and/or at the C-terminus of the recombinant polypeptide and/or inserted into the sequence of the recombinant polypeptide.

Further, the invention is explained in more detail by the following Figures and Examples.

Figure Legends

Figure 1 : Scheme for the coupling of EDTA to an amine-containing support. The reaction is carried out under conditions where a selective reaction occurs between a single carboxyl group of EDTA with the amino group on the support.

Fsgure 2: Comparison of the protein binding specificity of various Ni 2+ - containing chromatographic matrices in IMAC.

The protein binding characteristics of various His-tagged proteins, namely a comparative matrix (NTA-Qiagen) and three inventive matrices (EDTA- amide silica I, EDTA-amide silica Il and EDTA-amide sepharose) are shown (cf. Example 5 for details).

Figure 3: Combination of various chelators and transition metal ions for IMAC.

The protein binding properties of various matrices (inventive EDTA, EGTA and TTHA matrices and an NTA matrix) with different chelators in the presence of various transition metal ions are shown (cf. Example 6 for details).

Figure 4: Resistance of Ni-chelate matrices against extraction of Ni 2+ by free chelators.

The strength of Ni 2+ binding to an inventive EDTA-amide matrix and comparative NTA matrices is shown (cf. Example 7 for details).

Figure 5: Resistance of various Ni-chelate matrices against thiol-containing reducing agents.

The resistance of various Ni 2+ containing chelator matrices (an inventive EDTA-amide matrix and comparative NTA matrices) against Ni 2+ extraction and reduction in the presence of DTT is shown (cf. Example 8 for details).

Figure 6: Characterisation of spaced poly-histidine tags.

A) The binding characteristics of inventive spaced poly-His tags (spaced H14, spaced H21 and spaced H28) and comparative His tags (MRGS6 and H 10) are shown.

B) The expression of proteins containing an inventive spaced His-tag and a comparative His-tag (H 10) are shown (cf. Example 9 for details).

Examples

Example 1: Preparation of Ni-EDTA-amide Sepharose 4B

1 liter Sepharose 4B is prewashed on a glass-funnel with 1 liter 0.1 M NaOH (in water), followed by 5 times one liter of pure water, transferred to a 5 liter flask, and filled up with water to a volume of 2 liters. 0.8 mol of NaOH are added, the temperature adjusted to 25°C, followed by addition of 1.0 mol epibromhydrine. The mixture is then shaken for 2 hours at 25°C, and then chilled on ice. The resulting epoxy-activated Sepharose is subsequently recovered by filtration through a glass funnel, washed with water, and resuspended in 2 M NH 4 CI (final concentration in water, final volume 2 liters). 4 mol NH 3 are added from a 25% aqueous solution and the mixture is shaken o/n at room temperature.

The resulting NH 2 -Sepharose 4B is recovered by filtration, washed with water until free NH 3 has be become undetectable, and resuspended in 0.5 M EDTA/Na + pH 8.0 (final concentration, final volume 2 liters). Then, 50 mmol EDC are added and the mixture is shaken for 1 hour at room temperature. Thereafter, another 50 mmol EDC aliquot is added and the reaction is allowed to proceed o/n.

The resulting EDTA-amide Sepharose is recovered by filtration and washed until the free EDTA-concentration has dropped below 1 mM. The Sepharose is then charged with 20 mM NiCI 2 in Tris buffer pH 7.5, until free Ni 2+ appears in the non-bound fraction. Free and loosely-bound Ni 2+ ions are then removed by washing with water, 10 mM NTA pH 7.5, water, and is finally resuspended in 30% ethanol + 10 mM imidazole/HCI + 1 mM NTA pH 7.5 for long-term storage.

The properties of the Ni 2+ EDTA-amide Sepharose can be adjusted by varying the epoxy-activation step. Coupling at higher temperature (up to

40 0 C) and using higher concentrations of epichlorhydrine and NaOH (up to 1.2 M epichlorhydrine and 1.0 M NaOH, respectively) will result in higher coupling-density, but also in higher background-binding. Lower temperature

(down to 18°C) using a lower concentration of epichlorhydrine and NaOH

(down to 0.2 M epichlorhydrine and 0.1 M NaOH, respectively) will result in lower coupling density, and in even lower background binding, but also in lower specific binding capacity, in particular for proteins with short His-tags.

Example 2: Preparation of EDTA-amide magnetic beads.

5 ml of amine-terminated magnetic beads (Sigma # 17643-5ml) are washed in water and resuspended in a final volume of 5 ml in 0.5 M EDTA/Na + pH 8.0. A 125 μmol EDC aliquot is added and the reaction is shaken for 1 hour at room temperature. Thereafter, another 125 μmol EDC aliquot is added and the reaction is continued o/n.

The resulting EDTA-amid magnetic beads are recovered by magnetic separation, washed with water, and charged with Ni 2+ or another metal ion analogously to Example 1.

Example 3: Preparation of high-density EDTA-amide silica

10O g Davisil XWP1000A 90-130 (Grace) are resuspended in 500 ml of 3% (v/v) aminopropyl triethoxy silane, 4% water, 93% ethanol and shaken gently for 2 hours at 40 0 C and then o/n at room temperature. The amino-modified silica is recovered by filtration and free silane is removed by washing with pure water. Covalent coupling to EDTA and charging with Ni 2+ are performed as described for Sepharose 4B. For long term-storage, the product can be dried out of water or isopropanol.

Example 4: Preparation of EDTA-amide silica with a passivated surface

The Ni 2+ EDTA-amide silica from Example 3 three still suffers from high background-binding when used in IMAC. This background may probably result from residual silanol- and amino groups (which for sterical reasons could not react with the activated EDTA) and/or from high surface concentrations of EDTA-amide. The background-problem can be solved by including a passivating silane during the modification of silica with aminopropyl-silane. The so far best passivating silane is the reaction product between glycidyl oxypropyl trimethoxy silane and 3-mercapto 1 ,2-propandiol.

3 ml glycidyl oxypropyl trimethoxy silane are mixed with 3 ml 2-mercapto 1 ,3- propandiol, 90 ml methanol, 4 ml water and 10 μl 4-methyl morpholine. and the reaction is allowed to proceed for 30 minutes at 25°C. 150 μl aminopropyl trimethoxy silane are added, and the resulting mixture is used to modify 30 g Davisil XWP1000A 90-130 as described above. The ratio between the aminosilane and the passivating silane is in this example defined as 5%. It can, however, be varied between 1% and 50%. The resulting passivated amino-silica is then reacted with EDTA or another chelating group, charged with metal ions, and treated to remove loosely- bound metal ions as described above.

Example 5: Comparison of Ni 2+ -containing chromatographic supports in IMAC

The following chromatographic supports were tested:

E. coli cells were resuspended in buffer (50 mM Tris/ HCI pH 7.5, 2 mM magnesium acetate, 50 mM NaCI, 5 mM mercaptoethanol). A lysate was prepared and cleared by ultracentrifugation. Then, either 1 μM of a fusion protein ("N ES-YFP-Hi 0 ") comprising a nuclear export signal (NES), the yellow fluorescent protein (YFP) and a C-terminal deca His-tag, or 1 μM of a fusion between the maltose binding protein (MBP) with a C-terminal hexa His-tag ("MBP-H 6 "), or 0.5 μM of a fusion protein containing a deca His-tag, a zz-tag and the mouse exportin CRM1 ("Hi O -zz-CRM1") were added and used as starting materials for the binding experiments. For purification of the deca-His-tagged proteins, starting materials were supplemented with 1 mM imidazole.

400 μl starting material each were rotated o/n at 4 0 C with 10 μl chromatographic support. After washing with 5 ml buffer, bound proteins were eluted with 0.4 M imidazole pH 7.5. Analysis was by SDS-PAGE on 12% acrylamide gel, followed by Coomassie-staining. The load corresponds to 0.5 μl matrix.

Figure 2 shows the results for NES-YFP-Hi 0 (panel A), MBP-H 6 (panel B) and Hi 0 -ZZ-CRM 1 (panel C). All tested matrices exhibit efficient binding of His-tagged proteins. The matrices of the present invention however show significantly lower backgrounds compared to the NTA-Qiagen matrix.

Example 6: Testing of various chelators and transition metal ions for IMAC

Amino-silica with 5 % coupling density (as described in Example 4) was conjugated with either EDTA, EGTA, NTA, or TTHA. Each of the resulting matrices was then charged with either Ni 2+ , Co 2+ , Zn 2+ , or Cu 2+ . The binding assays for NES-YFP-H I0 were performed as described in Example 5, however, 100 mM NaCI were included in the wash buffer.

Figure 3 shows that the tested combinations of matrices and metal ions

show efficient binding of NES-YFP-HI 0 .

Example 7: Resistance of Ni-chelate matrices against extraction of Ni 2+ by free chelators.

Each 1 ml of Ni 2+ -EDTA-amide silica (50% coupling density; prepared according to Example 4), Ni 2+ -NTA-amide silica (50% coupling density), or Ni 2+ -NTA-agarose (Qiagen) were washed over a time of 45 min with either 30 ml Tris-buffer, or 10 mM EDTA pH 7.6, or 10 mM EGTA pH 7.6, or 40 mM NTA pH 7.6, followed by equilibration in binding buffer (50 mM Tris/HCI pH 7.5, 500 mM NaCI, 5 mM MgCI 2 ). 10 μl of each pre-treated matrix was then used to bind a HiS 10 -MBP-GFP fusion (10 μM concentration) out of 600 μl E. colt lyssts. Thε bound fraction was eluted with 75 μ! 1 M imidazo!/ HC! pH 7.5. 1 μl of each eluate was then analysed by SDS-PAGE followed by Coomassie-staining. The results are shown in Figure 4A. The inventive Ni 2+ - EDTA-amide silica matrix was completely resistant against all tested chelator-solutions. The comparative matrices were significantly less resistant. Ni 2+ -NTA-agarose was discharged by any of the chelator- treatments. Ni 2+ -NTA-amide silica was completely discharged by 10 mM EDTA and 40 mM NTA, but retained a small activity after treatment with EGTA.

The chelator-washed matrices from the panel shown in Figure 4A were equilibrated in 100 mM Tris/ HCI pH 7.5, mixed with an equal volume of 1% dimethylglyoxime (dissolved in Ethanol) and incubated for 15 min at 60° and subsequently o/n at room temperature, before photographs were taken. The results are shown in Figure 4B. A pink dimethylglyoxime-Ni 2+ precipitate, representing loosely-bound Ni 2+ , occurred with untreated Ni 2+ -NTA-amide silica and with untreated Ni 2+ -NTA agarose, but not with the inventive Ni 2+ - EDTA-amide silica. Pre-washing of Ni 2+ -NTA-amide silica or of Ni 2+ -NTA agarose with the above-mentioned chelators removed loosely-bound Ni 2+ to the same extent as it reduced the capacity to bind the histidine-tagged protein.

Thus, the binding of Ni 2+ ions to the inventive EDTA-amide matrix is significantly stronger than to comparative NTA matrices.

Example 8: Resistance of Ni-chelator matrices against thiol-containing reducing agents.

The resistance of various Ni 2+ containing chelator matrices against dithiothreitol (DTT), a thiol-containing reducing agent, was tested.

NTA-agarose (Qiagen), NTA-amide silica and EDTA-amide silica were either left untreated or were incubated o/n at room temperature with 1 M DTT, buffεrεd with 1 M Tris/HC! n H 7.5. The results are shown in Fi π ure 5A. The DTT treatment converted Ni 2+ from NTA-agarose (Qiagen) and NTA-amide silica into brownish reduction products. In contrast, Ni 2+ EDTA-amide silica remained fully unaffected.

The above matrices (« 50 μl) were resuspended in either 1 ml 1 M Tris/HCI pH 7.5 or 1 M Tris/HCI pH 7.5 + 1 M DTT. 5 min later, a His 10 -tagged red fluorescent protein was added and the binding reactions were rotated o/n at room temperature. The matrices were allowed to sediment by gravity and photographs were taken. The results are shown in Figure 5B (upper panel). Red colour on the beads indicates binding of the his-tagged protein. In the absence of DTT, all matrices bound the his-tagged protein very well. The DTT-treatment fully abolished binding to Ni 2+ NTA agarose (Qiagen) and Ni 2+ NTA-amide silica. The non-bound fractions contained brownish reduction products of Ni 2+ that were released from the beads. In contrast, binding of the His-tagged red fluorescent protein to the inventive Ni 2+ EDTA amide silica remained unaffected by the DTT treatment.

The bound fractions were eluted with 1 M imidazol pH 7.3, and analysed by SDS-PAGE followed by Coomassie staining. The results are shown in Figure 5B (lower panel). The analysis confirmed that 1 M DTT completely abolished

binding of the his-tagged protein to Ni 2+ NTA-agarose or Ni 2+ NTA-amide silica, while binding to the inventive Ni 2+ EDTA-amide silica was not affected at all.

Example 9: Characterisation of spaced poly-Histidine Tags

A mixture of DHFR derivatives tagged with various histidine tags was bound to Ni 2+ EDTA amide silica and eluted slowly with a gradient of increasing imidazole concentration. The results are shown in Figure 6A. (Actual concentrations are given above the lanes). Panel shows analysis of eluted fractions by SDS-PAGE/ Coomassie-staining. Tags with greater number of histidines confer tighter binding to the matrix, elution at higher imidazole concentration, and thus better separation from contaminants that are not poly-histidine tagged. The following tags have been used (amino acids in single letter code):

MRGS6= MRGSHHHHHH (SEQ ID NO:1)

H10= MHHHHHHHHHH (SEQ ID NO:2) spaced H14= MSKHHHHSGHHHTGHHHHSGSHHH (SEQ ID NO:3) spaced H21= MSKHHHHSGHHHTGHHHHSGSHHHTGHHHHSGSHHH (SEQ ID NO:4) spaced H28= MSKHHHHSGHHHTGHHHHSGSHHHTGHHHHSGSHHHTGHHHHSGSHHH (SEQ ID NO: 5)

Although His-tags with more histidines confer a more specific binding to Ni- chelate matrices, they pose the problem that continuous stretches of too many histidines compromises expression levels and solubility in E. coli.

Interrupting continuous polyhistidine stretches with GIy, Ser, and/or Thre- containing spacers rectifies these problems. In the representative example shown, tagging of DHFR with a spaced HiSu tag doubled the yield of soluble protein during recombinant expression in E.coli as compared to a conventional, continuous Hisi 0 tag (Figure 6B).