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Transcript
Recombinant DNA Technology
CHMI 4226 E
Week of March 14, 2005
Expression of proteins into living
organisms
CHMI 4226E - W2009
1
Expression of cDNAs
cDNA
Introduction into organism
(bacteria, yeast, insects, plants, mammals)
Purification
Phenotype
Activity
CHMI 4226E - W2009
Localisation
2
Why express recombinant
proteins?
CHMI 4226E - W2009
3
Expression into living organisms
Source: Genetic Engineering News. 2004, 24(18): 22-28.
Bacteria
•
•
Advantages:
–
–
–
–
•
Yeast
– Eukaryote – allows for posttranslational modifications
– Rapid growth
– High yield
– Inexpensive to scale up
– Secretes products into the
medium easily
– Splices pre-mRNA
Well understood
Inexpensive to scale up
Rapid growth
Wide choice of vectors and
modified strains
Disadvantages:
– No post-translational modifications
(glycosylation),which can affect
protein folding;
– Protein aggregation and formation
of inclusion bodies
– Purified protein may be
contaminated with E. coli-derived
products.
Advantages:
•
Disadvantages:
– Proteases may degrade the
foreign protein
– Hyperglycosylation
– Protein may aggregate or fold
improperly
CHMI 4226E - W2009
4
Expression into living organism
Source: Genetic Engineering News. 2004, 24(18): 22-28.
Insect cells
Mammalian cells
• Advantages:
• Advantages:
– High yield
– Proper post-translational
modifications
– Proteins secreted into medium
– Ability to express multiple genes
simultaneously
–
Proper post-translational
modifications
– Pre-mRNA properly spliced
• Disadvantages:
–
• Disadvantages:
– Slow growth
– More expensive than E. coli /yeast
– Requires expertise in insect cell
culture and baculoviral vectors
Slow growth
– Requires expertise in mammalian
cell culture
– Expensive
– Purified proteins may have viral
contaminants
CHMI 4226E - W2009
5
Expression in E. coli
• Procedure is relatively
straightforward;
• Cloning in the pGEX
vector is facilitated by
carefully designing PCR
primers before
amplification of the cDNA
encoding the protein of
interest
– ORF of protein must be in
frame with GST
– Appropriate restriction sites
for cloning.
CHMI 4226E - W2009
6
Expression in E. coli
• Frequently used to express high levels of a
protein which will then be purified;
• Protein is often expressed as a fusion with
glutathione S-transferase (GST) to facilitate the
purification procedure.
• A protease cleavage site is introduced between
GST and the protein of interest in order to
remove GST following purification procedure.
CHMI 4226E - W2009
7
pGEX vector
CHMI 4226E - W2009
8
Expression in E. coli
Cloning in pGEX
Added restriction sites
Protease cleavage site
ATG
STOP
GST
YFcDNA
Eliminate STOP codon
ORF of YFcDNA in frame
with GST
OR
ATG
STOP
ATG
GST
YFcDNA
CHMI 4226E - W2009
9
Expression in E. coli
• Cells are first lysed
• Protein extract is subjected to
affinity chromatography on
GSH-sepharose: GST (GluCys-Gly) binds GSH and is
retained on the column;
Glutathione sepharose bead
• The protein is then eluted as
follows:
– Addition of an excess of GSH
to the column;
– OR addition of protease to
cleave the protein of interest
from GST.
CHMI 4226E - W2009
Lane 1: Size
marker
Lane 2: Total E.
coli extract
Lane 3: Same
extract after
purification on
GST-sepharose
10
Expression in E. coli
CHMI 4226E - W2009
11
Expression into living organisms
Source: Genetic Engineering News. 2004, 24(18): 22-28.
Bacteria
•
•
Advantages:
–
–
–
–
•
Yeast
– Eukaryote – allows for posttranslational modifications
– Rapid growth
– High yield
– Inexpensive to scale up
– Secretes products into the
medium easily
– Splices pre-mRNA
Well understood
Inexpensive to scale up
Rapid growth
Wide choice of vectors and
modified strains
Disadvantages:
– No post-trasnlational modifications
(glycosylation),which can affect
protein folding;
– Protein aggregation and formation
of inclusion bodies
– Purified protein may be
contaminated with E. coli-derived
products.
Advantages:
•
Disadvantages:
– Proteases may degrade the
foreign protein
– Hyperglycosylation
– Protein may aggregate or fold
improperly
CHMI 4226E - W2009
12
Expression in yeast – use of
Saccaromyces cerevisiae
• 2u origin: yeast replication
origin
• URA 3: selection of yeast
auxotrophic for uracil (allows
growth on uracil-deficient
media)
• Cyc1 TT: transcription
termination sequence of Cyc1
mRNA
• pGal promoter: induction of
expression when yeast are
grown in galactose-containing,
glucose-deficient media;
CHMI 4226E - W2009
13
Expression in yeast – use of Pichia
pastoris
• P. pastoris:
– Methylotrophic yeast: uses
methanol as sole carbon
source, yielding formaldehyde
and hydrogen peroxide (done
in peroxysomes);
– Protein glycosylation is closer
to mammalian cells;
– A mich higher biomass (10
times!!) can be obtained with
P. pastoris than S. cerevisiae,
yielding greater protein
amounts (10 to 100 fold!).
CHMI 4226E - W2009
14
Expression in yeast – use of Pichia
pastoris
•
Alcohol oxidase (AOX1) promoter:
–
–
–
•
Zeocin:
–
–
•
Amino acid sequence from c-myc protein
Used for easy detection by Western blot
(reviewd later…patience!)
a-factor:
–
–
•
an antibiotic
allows for selection of yeast containing
the vector
C-myc epitope:
–
–
•
Induced by methanol
Allows for high levels of foreign protein
expression (30% of all proteins in
methonal-induced P. pastoris is Alcohol
oxidase!!)
Repressed by glucose
Mating factor secreted by yeast cells;
Allows for secretino of the foreign protein
into the culture media;
6 x HIS:
–
–
CHMI 4226E - W2009
6 histidine residues added after the
protein of interest
Allow for easy purification by affinity
chromatography on a nickel column.
15
Protein purification with 6 x His tag
•
Protein extracts are loaded on a
column with beads onto which Ni+2 is
bound;
•
The His residues of the tag will bind
the Ni+2, retaining the protein on the
column;
•
Elution is done by adding an excess
of imidazole to the column (imidazole
is the building block of the His side
chain).
•
Advantages:
– Smaller in size than GST
• less immunologically active
• Less interference with protein folding
– No need to remove from protein after
purification
– The interaction His-resin does not
depend on tag structure (unfolded
proteins can be purified).
CHMI 4226E - W2009
16
Expression into living organism
Source: Genetic Engineering News. 2004, 24(18): 22-28.
Insect cells
Mammalian cells
• Advantages:
• Advantages:
– High yield
– Proper post-translational
modifications
– Proteins secreted into medium
– Ability to express multiple genes
simultaneously
• Disadvantages:
– Slow growth
– More expensive than E. coli /yeast
– Requires expertise in insect cell
culture and baculoviral vectors
–
Proper post-translational
modifications
– Pre-mRNA properly spliced
• Disadvantages:
– Slow growth
– Requires expertise in mammalian
cell culture
– Expensive
– Purified proteins may have viral
contaminants
CHMI 4226E - W2009
17
Using insect cells for protein expression –
the baculovirus system
CHMI 4226E - W2009
18
Using insect cells for protein expression –
the baculovirus system
CHMI 4226E - W2009
19
Using insect cells for protein expression –
the baculovirus system
CHMI 4226E - W2009
20
Using insect cells for protein expression –
the baculovirus system
• Requires homologous recombination to create a
recombinant baculovirus.
• This recombination takes place between:
– a linearized version of the baculovirus genome with part of an
essential gene missing,
– and a transfer vector carrying the needed missing piece and the
desired gene.
• The recombinant retrovirus is then used to infect insect
cells, which will produce large amounts of the protein of
interest (which is under the control of the strong
polyhedrin promoter that normally controls formation of
the major baculovirus protein.).
CHMI 4226E - W2009
21
Using insect cells for protein expression –
the baculovirus system
Transfer vector
Cloned gene
5’
3’
x
x
Cloned gene
5’
3’
Polyhedrin gene
Recombinant
AcMNPV DNA
AcMNPV DNA
CHMI 4226E - W2009
22
Using insect cells for protein expression –
the baculovirus system
• Pph: polyhedrin promoter
for high expression
levels;
• TnTr/TnTL: sequences
used for the homologous
recombination between
the transfer vector and
the baculovirus genome;
• Gentamicin: gene for
resistance to the
antibiotic gentamicin;
CHMI 4226E - W2009
23
Using insect cells for protein expression
CHMI 4226E - W2009
24
Recombinant proteins produced with the
baculovirus system
a/b-interferon
Adenosine deaminase
Rhodopsine
CFTR
Erythropoietin
HIV envelope protein
Influenza hemagglutinin
protein
• Interleukin 2
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
• Malaria parasite proteins
• Mouse monoclonal
antibodies
• Poliovirus proteins
• Rabies virus glycoprotein
• Simian rotavirus capsid
antigen
• Tissue plasminogen
activator
CHMI 4226E - W2009
25
Expression into living organism
Source: Genetic Engineering News. 2004, 24(18): 22-28.
Insect cells
Mammalian cells
• Advantages:
• Advantages:
– High yield
– Proper post-translational
modifications
– Proteins secreted into medium
– Ability to express multiple genes
simultaneously
–
Proper post-translational
modifications
– Pre-mRNA properly spliced
• Disadvantages:
–
• Disadvantages:
– Slow growth
– More expensive than E. coli /yeast
– Requires expertise in insect cell
culture and baculoviral vectors
Slow growth
– Requires expertise in mammalian
cell culture
– Expensive
– Purified proteins may have viral
contaminants
CHMI 4226E - W2009
26
Protein expression in
mammalian cells
• 1. Clone cDNA of interest
• 2. Introduce modifications
(mutations):
– Increase stability (e.g. in
blood)
– Improve enzymatic activity
– Decrease antigenicity
• 3. Introduce into
mammalian cells
(transfection)
• 4. Purification
CHMI 4226E - W2009
27
Protein expression in mammalian
cells– tissue plasminogen activator (tPA)
Modifications
Stability in
plasma
Fibrin
binding
Activity
against
clots
Thr(103)Asn
10
0.34
0.56
Lys-His-Arg-Arg (296-299)
Ala-Ala-Ala-Ala
0.85
0.93
1.01
Thr(103)Asn
+
Asn (117)Gln
3.4
1
1.17
0.87
0.85
Thr(103)Asn + Asn (117)Gln
8.3
+
Lys-His-Arg-Arg (296-299)
CHMI 4226E - W2009
Ala-Ala-Ala-Ala
28
Mammalian expression vector
Promoter
Polyadenylation signal
Antibiotic resistance gene
CHMI 4226E - W2009
29
Mammalian Promoters
CHMI 4226E - W2009
30
Useful Mammalian Promoters
• Viral promoters
• Cellular promoters:
– Constitutive:
– Constitutive:
• CMV
• SV40
• Ubiquitin (UbC)
• Thymidine kinase
• Human eIF1a
– Inducible:
• MMTV (glucocorticoids)
– Inducible:
• Heat shock (42oC)
• Metallothioneine (zinc)
– Restricted expression:
• Lck: thymocytes
CHMI 4226E - W2009
31
Antibiotic resistance genes
CHMI 4226E - W2009
32
Optimization of translation in
mammalian cells
• Kozak consensus sequence:
(GCC)GCCA/GCCATGG
• Ensures optimal translation initiation;
• Can easily be added by PCR-mediated
mutagenesis.
CHMI 4226E - W2009
33
Epitope tagging
• Epitope tags: facilitate the detection of the protein of
interest with «generic» antibodies.
• Tag added either at the N- or C-terminal of the ORF (in
that latter case: BEFORE the stop codon!!)
• Tag can easily be added through PCR-mediated
mutagenesis.
HA-tag: Tyr-Pro-Tyr-Asp-Val-Pro-Asp-Tyr-Ala
HIS-tag: His-His-His-His-His-His
Myc-tag: Glu-Gln-Lys-Leu-Ile-Ser-Glu-Glu-Asp-Leu
CHMI 4226E - W2009
34
Mammalian cell transfection
Stable vs transient
CHMI 4226E - W2009
35
Transfection procedures
Calcium Phosphate
precipitation
Electroporation
CHMI 4226E - W2009
Lipofection
36
Cell transduction
• Viruses are widely used to introduce DNA
molecules into mammalian cells;
• Form the basic vehicle for gene therapy
CHMI 4226E - W2009
37
Cell transduction
Retroviruses
http://www.clontech.com/upload/images/tools/retroviral/RetroDiagram.gif
CHMI 4226E - W2009
http://home.ncifcrf.gov/hivdrp/RCAS/images/figure1_870x660.gif
38
Cell transduction
Retroviral vectors
•
Advantages:
– 100% transduction can be
acheived
– Integrates in the genome: stable
tranduction is possible
•
Disadvantages:
– Limited to actively proliferating
cells (so: neurons cannot be
transduced with retroviruses);
– Low titers (106-107)
http://www.clontech.com/upload/images/tools/retro/images/retro7.jpg
– Integration is random and can
lead to insertional mutagenesis:
insertion in the genome may lead
to cancer.
CHMI 4226E - W2009
39
Cell transduction
Retroviruses
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=rv.section.4357
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=rv.section.4357
CHMI 4226E - W2009
40
Cell transduction
http://catalog.takara-bio.co.jp/en/IMAGES/6160b_en.gif
CHMI 4226E - W2009
http://www.nature.com/gt/journal/v12/n14/images/3302570f1.jpg
41
http://www.biotechnology.uwc.ac.za/StaffandStudents/Staff/Sean/Virology%20Lecture%20Gene%20Therapy_files/image008.jpg
Retrovirus production
Cell transduction
• Adenovirus:
Adenoviruses
– DNA virus
– Endemic in humans
– Infects human cells by biding to cell
adhesion receptors common to most
cells
• Adenoviral vectors:
– Advantages:
• Infects wide variety of cells (replicating
and non-replicating)
• High titers are acheived (1012)
• Does not integrate in genome: no
insertional mutagenesis
– Disadvantages:
• Does not integrate in genome
(application is limited to transient
transfection)
• Causes immune response in humans
(limits in vivo applications) CHMI 4226E - W2009
42
Cell transduction
Adenoviruses
http://dels.nas.edu/ilar_n/ilarjournal/45_3/graphics/45_3_337f2.jpg
CHMI 4226E - W2009
43
http://www.qbiogene.com/products/adenovirus/images/figure1-large.gif
Cell transduction
Adenoviruses
CHMI 4226E - W2009
44
Transfection procedures
• The choice of the transfection procedure
depends on several considerations:
– The type of molecule transfected
(oligonucleotide, RNA, DNA);
– The cell line (suspension, adherent);
– The downstream application (importance of
high vs low transfection efficiency).
CHMI 4226E - W2009
45
Fusion protein
Green fluorescent Protein (GFP)
• GFP:
– Protein isolated
from the jelly fish
– Glows green on its
own when exposed
to UV light!
– Very useful to
« see » your
favorite protein!
CHMI 4226E - W2009
46
Fusion protein
Green fluorescent Protein (GFP)
CHMI 4226E - W2009
47
Fusion protein
Green fluorescent Protein (GFP)
CHMI 4226E - W2009
48
Fusion protein
Green fluorescent Protein (GFP)
CHMI 4226E - W2009
49
Fusion protein
Green fluorescent Protein (GFP)
CHMI 4226E - W2009
50
Fusion protein
Green fluorescent Protein (GFP))
Golgi
apparatus
CHMI 4226E - W2009
51
Fusion protein
Green fluorescent Protein (GFP)
CHMI 4226E - W2009
52