A mutant species of the 185-residue chain of human interleukin-6 lacking 22-residues at its N-terminus and with a Cys+Ser substitution at positions 45 and 51 was produced in Escherichiu coli. The 163-residue protein des-(A1 -S22)-[C45S, CSISlinterleukin-6, containing a single disulfide bridge, formed inclusion bodies. Mutant interleukin-6 was solubilized in 6 M guanidine hydrochloride, subjected to oxidative refolding and purified to homogeneity by ammonium sulfate precipitation and hydrophobic chromatography. The purity of the mutant species was established by electrophoresis, isoelectrofocusing and reverse-phase HPLC and its structural identity was checked by N-terminal sequencing of both the intact protein and several of its proteolytic fragments. Electrospray mass spectrometry analysis of mutant interleukin-6 gave a molecular mass of 18 695 ? 2 Da in excellent agreement with the calculated value. Circular dichroic, fluorescence emission and second-derivative ultraviolet absorption spectra indicated that mutant interleukind maintains the overall secondary and tertiary structure, as well as stability characteristics, of the recombinant wild-type human interleukin-6. The urea-induced unfolding of mutant interleukin-6, monitored by circular dichroic measurements in the far-ultraviolet region, occurs as a highly cooperative process with a midpoint of denaturation at 5.5 M urea. The data of the reversible unfolding of mutant interleukin-6 mediated by urea were used to calculate a value of 20.9 2 0.4 kJ . mol-' for the thermodynamic stability of the protein at 25°C in the absence of denaturant. The biological activity of mutant interleukin-6 was evaluated in vitro by the hybridoma proliferation assay, and in vivo by measuring thrombopoiesis in monkeys. Dose/response effects of the mutant were comparable or even higher than those of the wild-type protein. Overall the results of this study show that mutant interleukin-6 is a biologically active cytokine, which could find practical use as a therapeutic agent.
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