Fusion protein tags are small peptide sequences that can be used to detect, purify, and characterize proteins of interest. In order to generate tagged proteins, these tags need to be inserted into the sequence of targeted proteins via genetic engineering, resulting in the expression of recombinant proteins that harbor the tags in cis.
Traditionally, the engineering of tagged recombinant proteins has been performed by restriction-dependent cloning. This method requires a donor template to amplify the selected tag sequence and several cloning steps. The advent of restriction-independent cloning has greatly simplified this process, allowing the engineering of recombinant proteins with small tags (<10 aa) in a single step and without the need for a tag template (de novo).
In the experiment described here, In‑Fusion HD Cloning Plus (Note: In-Fusion HD Cloning Plus has been discontinued and replaced with In-Fusion Snap Assembly) was used for the construction of a recombinant chimera harboring domains from two different template proteins (A and B) and the de novo inserted fusion tag A-4 (Zhou et al. 2008; Figure 1).
Figure 1. Schematic of the recombinant vector constructed during this experiment. Red letters indicate complementary regions between the 5' overhangs of Primers A and B. The full sequence of the A-4 tag is highlighted in the pink box.