Despite the fundamental importance of E. coli in the manufacture of a wide range of
biotechnological and biomedical products, extensive process and/or target optimisation is routinely
required in order to achieve functional yields in excess of low mg/l levels. Molecular chaperones
and folding catalysts appear to present a panacea for problems of heterologous protein folding in
the organism, due largely to their broad substrate range compared with, e.g., protein-specific
mutagenesis approaches. Painstaking investigation of chaperone overproduction has, however, met
with mixed – and largely unpredictable – results to date. The past 5 years have nevertheless seen
an explosion in interest in exploiting the native folding modulators of E. coli, and particularly
cocktails thereof, driven largely by the availability of plasmid systems that facilitate simultaneous,
non-rational screening of multiple chaperones during recombinant protein expression. As interest
in using E. coli to produce recombinant membrane proteins and even glycoproteins grows,
approaches to reduce aggregation, delay host cell lysis and optimise expression of difficult-toexpress
recombinant proteins will become even more critical over the coming years. In this review,
we critically evaluate the performance of molecular chaperones and folding catalysts native to E.
coli in improving functional production of heterologous proteins in the bacterium and we discuss
how they might best be exploited to provide increased amounts of correctly-folded, active protein
for biochemical and biophysical studies.