Overexpression of the reverse transcriptase was designed in
E. coli. For a high level of expression, HIV protein was expressed as a protein fusion with β-galactosidase. When the proviral DNA fragment covering the 3' half of the
gag gene and the entire
pol gene was ligated to the 3' end of the
lacZ gene to fuse the truncated
gag to
lacZ in frame, a small quantity of reverse transcriptase was produced, indicating that frameshifting and post-translational processing have occurred. Much more reverse transcriptase was produced when the entire
pol region was directly fused to the
lacZ gene. From a one liter culture of bacteria, 1mg of highly purified reverse transcriptase consisting of approximately equimolar amounts of two species (p64 and p51) was obtained. These proteins had identical N-termini consistent with the deduced amino acid sequence and therefore, might be correctly processed from the fusion protein in
E. coli by the protease encoded by the
pol region. The purified reverse transcriptase was enzymatically as active as the enzyme purified from the virus particles, and immunoreactive to the sera of HIV carriers with high sensitivity and specificity.
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