* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Technologie de l’ADN Recombinant CHMI 4226 F
G protein–coupled receptor wikipedia , lookup
Gene expression profiling wikipedia , lookup
Homology modeling wikipedia , lookup
Green fluorescent protein wikipedia , lookup
DNA vaccination wikipedia , lookup
Therapeutic gene modulation wikipedia , lookup
Protein structure prediction wikipedia , lookup
Bioinformatics wikipedia , lookup
Artificial gene synthesis wikipedia , lookup
Secreted frizzled-related protein 1 wikipedia , lookup
Magnesium transporter wikipedia , lookup
Signal transduction wikipedia , lookup
Paracrine signalling wikipedia , lookup
Interactome wikipedia , lookup
Protein moonlighting wikipedia , lookup
Gene expression wikipedia , lookup
Western blot wikipedia , lookup
Endogenous retrovirus wikipedia , lookup
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