Technical Field
[0001] The present invention relates to a method of producing a target protein in biologically-active,
soluble forms in prokaryotes, and polycistronic vectors therefor.
Background Art
[0002] The production system of heterogeneous proteins using recombinant
E. coli ensures rapid cellular growth rates and high density cultures using inexpensive substrates
and uses relatively well-identified genes in comparison with cases using other organism,
thereby making it possible to design various vector systems for facilitating the high
expression and purification of heterogeneous proteins (
Jeffrey G. T. and Amanda A. et al, (1997), Applied Biochemistry and Biotechnology
66, 197-238).
[0003] However, when
E. coli is used as a host cell for the production of eukaryotic proteins,
E. coli cannot perform post-translational modification such as glycosylation because it does
not possess intracellular factors required for protein maturation. In addition, when
a heterogeneous protein is expressed in high levels, it is often accumulated in the
form of inclusion bodies, which are insoluble precipitates.
[0004] Inclusion bodies are typically formed by interaction between hydrophobic surfaces
of folding intermediates of a target protein due to imbalance between the production
rate and the folding rate of the target protein. In this case, inclusion bodies may
be easily isolated, be typically less affected by proteinases and be accumulated in
high concentrations in cells, thereby securing high yields and easy isolation of a
target protein. Due to these advantages, the strategy of expressing a protein as inclusion
bodies is utilized in the production of proteins unfavorable for in vivo folding.
However, a target protein expressed as inclusion bodies requires an additional refolding
process to recover its biological activity. The refolding of a target protein to an
active form is dependent on experience, and is thus always not successful and makes
it difficult to scale up the production of recombinant proteins in industrial scales.
In addition, high molecular weight antibody proteins, tissue plasminogen activator
(tPA) and factor VIII are very difficult to produce in active forms by a refolding
process.
[0005] As described above, since inclusion body proteins should be refolded to have their
structure and biological activity intact (
Andrew D. Guise, Shauna M. West, and Julian B. Chaudhuri (1996), Molecular Biotechnology
6, 53-64), a target protein is expressed as a soluble protein using the so-called "in vivo
protein folding technique" to induce its correct three-dimensional structure formation
in vivo. Since this technique improves problems caused when a heterogeneous protein
is expressed as inclusion bodies, it has an industrial importance in producing heterogeneous
proteins in
E. coli.
[0006] The following three strategies are typically used for in vivo folding of proteins.
[0007] The first strategy involves the control of protein expression sites and culture environments.
When a target protein is designed to be expressed in the cytoplasm, although the target
protein is harmful to cells, the cells are not damaged, and the protein is mostly
expressed in very high levels. Also, this method facilities the preparation of expression
vectors. As another method, the secretion of a target protein to the periplasm has
advantages of simplifying protein purification and, compared to the method of expressing
a protein in the cytoplasm, reducing protein degradation by proteinases and making
disulfide bonding possible to some degree due to a relatively oxidative environment.
The advantages further include that an authentic protein can be obtained by removing
an N-terminal secretory signal. However, a secreted protein may be aggregated, resulting
in formation of inclusion bodies, and reduced folding may occur. In a further method,
the secretion of a target protein to culture media may solve the problems associated
with protein folding and degradation by proteinases. However,
E. coli rarely secretes proteins to culture media, and, even when proteins are secreted to
media, proteins are greatly diluted, thus making purification rather difficult. This
method is effective only in particular proteins and is thus not a generalized method
to prevent inclusion bodies from being formed. Also, the fermentation control is frequently
used to increase a soluble protein, and, in most cases, is the most economical method
(Korean Pat. Application No.
1997-50023). The reduction of culture temperature is not applied to all proteins, but is a very
effective method in many cases because it typically leads to decrease the production
rate of a protein below the folding rate of the protein, resulting in no accumulation
of folding intermediates with strong aggregation to each other (
Schein, C. H. and M. H. M. Noteborn (1988), Biotechnology 6, 291-294;
More, J. T., Uppal, F. Maley and G. F. Maley (1993), Protein. Expr. Purif. 4, 160-163).
[0008] The second strategy involves the co-expression of chaperones and protein foldases.
The chaperones refer to proteins that function to help formation of the desired three-dimensional
structure of protein and prevent unnecessary intermolecular or intramolecular interactions.
Chaperone proteins derived from
E. coli include GroEL, GroES, DnaK, HtpG, SecB and PapD, which protect folding intermediates
and prevent aggregation and precipitation, and all of the
E. coli chaperone proteins except for PapD (present in the periplasmic membrane) are present
in the cytoplasm (Korean Pat. Application No.
2003-7008657;
Hartl, F. U., R. Holdan and T. Langer (1994), Trends Biochem. Sci. 19, 20-25;
Bernadea-Clark, E. and G. Georgiou (1994), American Chem. Soc. Symp. Ser. Vol 470,
ACS). Foldases refer to an auxiliary protein family that serves to facilitate covalent
boding or isomerization during folding. Enzymes stimulating the disulfide bond formation
of proteins include DsbA, DsbB, DsbC and DsbD (
Creighton, T. E., A. Zapun and N. J. Darby (1995), TIBTECH. 13, 18-27;
Gottesman, M. E. and W. A. Hendrickson (2000. Curr. Opin. Microbiol. 3, 197-202).
[0009] The third strategy involves the use of fusion proteins. Many proteins have been developed
as fusion proteins, which include glutathione-S-transferase, maltose-binding protein,
Protein A, tumor necrosis factor-α and lysyl-tRNA synthetase (
Smith, D. B. and Johnson, K. S. (1988), Gene 67, 31-40.;
Bedouelle, H. and Duplay, P. (1988), Euro. J. Biochem. 171, 541-549.;
Nisson, B. et al. (1987), Prot. Eng. 1, 107-113; Korean Pat. Application No.
1996-44010). Also, as described in
U.S. Pat. No. 6,027,888, a soluble eukaryotic protein having disulfide bonds can be produced by being expressed
in a fused form with disulfide isomerase. In addition, as described in Korean Pat.
Application No.
2002-0040497, an H-chain human ferritin protein can be produced as a soluble fusion protein with
a L-chain human ferritin protein that is expressed in an insoluble form in
E.
coli. As described above, various attempts were made to express heterogeneous proteins
in soluble fusion protein forms. However, the fusion effect varies according to the
type of fusion proteins, as follows: fusion proteins are expressed as inclusion bodies;
only a portion of them are expressed as soluble forms; and a protein fused with a
target protein functions to aid the folding of the target protein (
Savvas C. Makrides (1996), Microbiological Review, 512-538).
[0010] Thus, there is an urgent need for techniques allowing the high level production of
biologically-active, soluble recombinant proteins in high efficiency and high concentrations.
Disclosure of the Invention
[0011] Based on the above background, the present inventors intended to develop a novel
vector system capable of producing in high levels a heterogeneous protein expressed
as a biologically active form (but not inclusion bodies) in prokaryotes instead of
finding fusion proteins useful for producing proteins by recombinant DNA technology.
[0012] As a result, the present inventors found that an expression vector system based on
the polycistronic expression of a gene encoding a target protein and a beta-lactamase
gene highly expresses both the target protein and beta-lactamase in prokaryotes, resulting
in the expression of the target protein in a soluble form in a higher percentage,
and is thus effective in the mass production of proteins. Using the established protein
expression system, the present inventors developed a method of mass-producing a target
protein in a biologically active form, thereby leading to the present invention.
[0013] It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a method of producing
a target protein expressed as a biologically active, soluble form instead of inclusion
bodies, in prokaryotic cells.
[0014] It is another object of the present invention to provide a polycistronic vector system
for producing the above target protein in a biologically active form.
Brief Description of the Drawings
[0015] The above and other objects, features and other advantages of the present invention
will be more clearly understood from the following detailed description taken in conjunction
with the accompanying drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is a diagram for a process of preparing an expression vector carrying a human
growth hormone gene, pTT191;
FIG. 2 is a photograph showing a result of analysis for human growth hormone expression
on a SDS-PAGE gel after E. coli BL21 (DE3) was transformed with a pTT191 expression vector (lane 1: protein size
marker; lane 2: standard of human growth hormone; lane 3: supernatant obtained by
disrupting the IPTG-induced transformant; and lane 4: pellet obtained by disrupting
the IPTG-induced transformant);
FIG. 3 is a diagram for a process of preparing pT0191 and pT0-CSF expression vectors
respectively carrying a human growth hormone (hGH) gene and a human granulocyte-colony
stimulating factor (G-CSF) gene;
FIG. 4 is a photograph showing a result of analysis for human growth hormone expression
on a SDS-PAGE gel after E. coli BL21 (DE3) was transformed with a pT0191 expression vector (lane 1: protein size
marker; lane 2: standard of human growth hormone; lane 3: whole proteins obtained
by disrupting the IPTG-induced transformant; lane 4: supernatant obtained by disrupting
the IPTG-induced transformant; and lane 5: pellet obtained by disrupting the IPTG-induced
transformant);
FIG. 5 is a construct of a pTR0191 prepared by inserting a human growth hormone (hGH)
gene into an expression vector carrying a beta-lactamase gene in a reverse-orientation
to the hGH gene;
FIG. 6 is a photograph showing a result of analysis for human growth hormone expression
on a SDS-PAGE gel after E. coli BL21 (DE3) was transformed with a pTR0191 expression vector (lane 1: protein size
marker; lane 2: standard of human growth hormone; lanes 3 and 4: pellets obtained
by disrupting the IPTG-induced transformant; and lane 5 and 6: supernatants obtained
by disrupting the IPTG-induced transformant);
FIG. 7 is a photograph showing a result of analysis for human G-CSF expression on
a SDS-PAGE gel after E. coli BL21Star(DE3)pLysS was transformed with a pT0-CSF expression vector (lane 1: protein
size marker; lane 2: supernatant obtained by disrupting the transformant before IPTG
induction; lanes 3 and 4: supernatants obtained by disrupting the IPTG-induced transformant;
and lane 5 and 6: pellets obtained by disrupting the IPTG-induced transformant);
FIG. 8 is a photograph showing a result of analysis for interferon-α2b expression
on a SDS-PAGE gel after E. coli BL21(DE3) was transformed with a pT0-IFN expression vector (lane 1: protein size
marker; lane 2: pellet obtained by disrupting the IPTG-induced transformant; and lane
3: supernatants obtained by disrupting the IPTG-induced transformant);
FIG. 9 is a photograph showing a result of analysis for basic fibroblast growth factor
expression on a SDS-PAGE gel after E. coli BL21 (DE3) was transformed with a pT0-bFGF expression vector (lane 1: protein size
marker; lane 2: pellets obtained by disrupting the IPTG-induced transformant; and
lane 3: supernatants obtained by disrupting the IPTG-induced transformant);
FIG. 10 is a photograph showing a result of analysis for insulin-like growth factor-1
expression on a SDS-PAGE gel after E. coli BL21(DE3) was transformed with a pTO-IGF1 expression vector (lane 1: protein size
marker; lane 2: pellet obtained by disrupting the IPTG-induced transformant; and lane
3: supernatant obtained by disrupting the IPTG-induced transformant);
FIG. 11 is a photograph showing a result of analysis for insulin-like growth factor-2
expression on a SDS-PAGE gel after E. coli BL21(DE3) was transformed with a pT0-IGF2 expression vector (lane 1: protein size
marker; lane 2: pellet obtained by disrupting the IPTG-induced transformant; and lane
3: supernatant obtained by disrupting the IPTG-induced transformant);
FIG. 12 is a photograph showing a result of analysis for keratinocyte growth factor
expression on a SDS-PAGE gel after E. coli BL21(DE3) was transformed with a pT0-KGF expression vector (lane 1: protein size
marker; lane 2: pellets obtained by disrupting the IPTG-induced transformant; and
lane 3: supernatant obtained by disrupting the IPTG-induced transformant); and
FIG. 13 is a photograph showing a result of analysis for keratinocyte growth factor
expression on a SDS-PAGE gel after E. coli BL21(DE3) was transformed with a pT0N-KGF expression vector (lane 1: protein size
marker; lane 2: pellets obtained by disrupting the IPTG-induced transformant; and
lane 3: supernatants obtained by disrupting the IPTG-induced transformant).
Best Mode for Carrying Out the Invention
[0016] In one aspect, the present invention relates to a method of producing an active,
soluble target protein in a prokaryotic cell, which is based on expressing the target
protein and beta-lactamase as a first cistron and a second cistron, respectively,
in a polycistron.
[0017] The present inventors found that, when human growth hormone expressed as inclusion
bodies in prokaryotic cells and beta-lactamase were polycistronically expressed, both
human growth hormone and beta-lactamase were produced in high concentrations, and
the expressed human growth hormone was present in an active, soluble form. In contrast,
when basic fibroblast growth factor and keratinocyte growth factor were expressed
using kanamycin instead of beta-lactamase under same conditions, the target proteins
were mostly expressed as inclusion bodies. Based on this finding, the present inventors
polycistronically coexpressed various target proteins that are expressed in the form
of inclusion bodies in prokaryotic cells but have medical usefulness, with beta-lactamase.
As a result, the target proteins in this system were produced in active, soluble forms.
[0018] Thus, in another aspect, the present invention relates to a polycistronic vector
to produce a heterogeneous proteins in an active, soluble form.
[0019] In an embodiment, the present invention relates to a polycistronic vector for expressing
target proteins in an active, soluble form in a prokaryotic cell, which comprises
(i) a promoter operable in the prokaryotic cell, (ii) a first cistron including a
DNA sequence encoding the target protein, and (iii) a second cistron including a DNA
sequence encoding beta-lactamase.
[0020] The term "polycistron", as used herein, refers to a system where a single mRNA is
synthesized from an same promoter, cistrons are separated from each other by a termination
codon and an initiation codon, a ribosome binding site is present for each cistron,
and proteins corresponding to each cistron are simultaneously expressed from the single
mRNA transcribed in a single promoter. Herein, the "cistron" means a nucleotide sequence
encoding for a single protein or polypeptide, and includes a 5' initiation codon and
a 3' termination codon. In addition, the first and second cistrons do not mean the
sequence in a DNA sequence but only indicate an individual cistron.
[0021] In a preferred aspect, in the polycistron of the present invention, the first cistron
including a DNA sequence encoding a target protein may be in a 5' to 3' direction
operably linked to the second cistron including a DNA sequence encoding beta-lactamase,
or the second cistron including a DNA sequence encoding beta-lactamase may be in a
5' to 3' direction operably linked to the first cistron including a DNA sequence encoding
a target protein
[0022] The term "vector", as used herein, refers to a DNA construct that contains a DNA
sequence operably linked to a suitable regulatory sequence capable of expressing DNA
in a suitable host, and, in detail, may be constructed to contain a promoter sequence,
a terminator sequence, a marker gene and other suitable sequences including a suitable
regulatory sequence. Such a vector may be a plasmid, a pharge, a cosmid, or the like
(
Molecular Cloning: Laboratory Mannual second edition, Sambrook et al., Cold Spring
Harbor Laboratory Press (1989)). The preparation of such a vector, mutagenesis, sequence analysis, DNA introduction
into cells, gene expression and protein analysis are described in detail in
Current Protocols in Molecular Biology, edited by Ausubel et al., John Wiley & Sons
(1992). When introduced into a suitable host, a vector may be replicated or function independently
of the host genome, or, in some cases, may be integrated into the host genome. Plasmids
are at present the most common form of vectors, and, in the present invention, the
terms "plasmid" and "vector" may be used interchangeably. With respect to the objects
of the present invention, a vector is a vector suitable for protein expression in
prokaryotic cells, and is a polycistronic vector polycistronically expressing a heterogeneous
target protein and beta-lactamase.
[0023] The term "operably linked", as used herein, means that an expression regulatory sequence
is linked in such a way of regulating the transcription and translation of a polynucleotide
sequence encoding a target protein, and includes maintaining a precise translation
frame in such a way that a polypeptide of a target protein encoded by a polynucleotide
sequence is produced when the polypeptide sequence is expressed under the control
of regulatory sequences (including a promoter).
[0024] The term "promoter", as used herein, means a minimum sequence sufficient for triggering
transcription. With respect to the objects of the present invention, a promoter inducible
by an external signal or an effector is used. Promoters useful for the expression
of a target protein in prokaryotic cells include T7, tac, trc, lac, lpp, phoA, recA,
araBAD, proU, cst-1, tetA, cadA, nar, lpp-lac, starvation promoters, cspA, T7-lac
operator, T3-lac operator, T5-lac operator, T4 gene 32, and nprM-lac operator. Preferred
are T7, tac, lac, T7-lac operator, T3-lac operator, T5-lac operator and T4 gene 32,
and more preferred are T7, tac and T7-lac operator. The most preferred promoter is
T7 promoter. T7 promoter can be controlled by T7 RNA polymerase and the expression
of a T7 RNA polymerase can be controlled by IPTG(isopropyl-β-D-thiogaloactosidase).
T7 promoter can induce expression of a target protein in a desired time using IPTG.
This is because it is preferable that a prokaryotic host cell, for example,
E.
coli is grown until a cell number is increased while a target protein is not expressed,
and, after the
E. coli cell number is sufficiently increased, the expression of the target protein is induced.
[0025] A ribosome binding site is typically located in about 10 bp upstream of an initiation
codon, and functions to precisely and effectively initiate mRNA translation in polycistronic
operon systems of phages or prokaryotes.
[0026] A target protein to be expressed using the polycistronic vector of the present invention
may include all proteins having medical applications. In particular, proteins having
demands for medical purposes but being known to be produced as inclusion bodies upon
high expression in host cells by genetic engineering are suitable as the target protein
of the present invention. Examples of the target protein include human growth hormone
(hGH), granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF), interferons (IFN), basic fibroblast
growth factor (bFGF), insulin-like growth factor (IGF), keratinocyte growth factor
(KGF), erythropoietin (EPO), thrombopoietin (TPO), human epidermal growth factor (EGF),
platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF), vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF),
nerve growth factor (NGF), transforming growth factor (TGF), tumor necrosis factor
(TNF), angiogenin, angiotensin, interleukin (IL), and tissue plasminogen activator
(tPA). More preferred are hGH, G-CSF, IFN-α2b, bFGF, IGF-1, IGF-2, KGF, EPO, IL-7
and TPO. These target proteins may be in a natural or modified form, and may include
their variants including deletions, substitutions or additions of the whole sequence
or its fragment. In another embodiment of the present invention, hGH, G-CSF, IFN-α2b,
bFGF, IGF-1, IGF-2 and KGF were expressed.
[0027] The target protein to be expressed in the present invention may be present itself,
or may be present in the form of a fusion protein, such as a fused form with a sequence
increasing solubility, to facilitate purification, provide various functions by being
fused with an antibody or enzyme, or increase solubility. When the target protein
contains a sequence facilitating, for example, purification, the target protein may
be expressed in the form of a fusion protein with such a sequence. Such a fused target
protein may be present in a sequence of a fusion partner-a peptide linker-a target
protein, but may be prepared in various organizations according to the types of target
proteins and fusion partners. More preferably, the fusion partner is employed for
facilitating the purification of a produced protein, and is exemplified by histidine-tag,
glutathione-S-transferase, maltose-binding protein, protein A, protein G, flag peptide,
thioredoxin, S-peptide, avidin, streptavidin, galactose binding protein, cellulose-binding
domain, chitin-binding domain, polyarginine, polycysteine and polyphenylalanine. In
a further embodiment of the present invention, a histidine tag containing ten histidines
was used. The peptide linker linking the target protein to such a fusion partner includes
a sequence recognizable by a proteinase, and is exemplified by enterokinase, thrombin,
factor Xa, urokinase, TEV protease and subtilisin, which have a high sequence specificity.
[0028] The term "active", as used herein, refers to a soluble protein that has biological
activity by being stably expressed in a transformant with a recombinant vector and
being folded into a native form without additional denaturation or refolding.
[0029] The term "soluble", as used herein, means the nature with which a protein is not
easily precipitated in an aqueous solution and does not easily form inclusion bodies
or other aggregates.
[0030] The beta-lactamase (bla) used in the present invention, as a factor for selecting
a host cell transformed with an expression vector, is a protein providing a resistance
to ampicillin. In the polycistronic vector of the present invention, the arrangement
of a cistron encoding a target protein and another cistron encoding beta-lactamase
may be changed by a certain purpose, but the cistron encoding beta-lactamase is preferably
located in the downstream region of the cistron encoding a target protein.
[0031] pT0 expression vectors used in embodiments of the present invention are vectors in
which a fused target protein gene (fusion partner-peptide linker-target protein gene)
or a target protein gene itself is operably linked to the downstream region of T7
promoter of pET3a, and which overexpresses the target protein and beta-lactamase when
the fused target protein gene( or the target protein gene) and a beta-lactamase gene
are transcribed under the control of an same promoter. The pT0 expression vectors
prepared in the present invention include pT0191, pT0-CSF pT0-IFN, pT0-bFGF, pT0-IGF1,
pT0-IGF2, pT0-KGF and pT0N-KGF, which each carry fused hGH, G-CSF, IFN-α2b, bFGF,
IGF-1, IGF-2 and KGF genes, and a non-fused KGF gene. When these vectors were expressed,
most of the target proteins were expressed in soluble, active forms in comparison
with a control.
[0032] On the other hand, the control expression vector of pTT used in embodiments of the
present invention are vectors in which a fused target protein gene (fusion partner-peptide
linker-target protein gene) is operably linked to the downstream region of T7 promoter
of pET3a, but in which the fused target protein gene and a beta-lactamase gene are
expressed under the control of different promoters.
E.
coli transformed with such a vector overexpressed the fused target protein in vivo, but
a large quantity of the fusion protein was expressed as inclusion bodies (Example
2). Another control vector, pTR0191, is a plasmid prepared by converting a beta-lactamase
gene to a reverse orientation in a pT0191 expression vector and operably linking a
fused human growth hormone gene to the downstream region of T7 promoter, and in which
the target protein and the beta-lactamase gene are not located under the control of
the same promoter. When the pTR0191 was expressed in a host cell, the fusion protein
was mostly expressed as inclusion bodies, and beta-lactamase was expressed in low
levels (Example 5).
[0033] Thus, in one detailed aspect, to simultaneously overexpress beta-lactamase and a
target protein itself or a target fusion protein and express the target protein in
an active form in a higher percentage, the present invention provides polycistronic
vectors, pT0191, pT0-CSF, pT0-IFN, pT0-bFGF, pT0-IGF1, pT0-IGF2, pT0-KGF and pT0N-KGF,
which carry respectively genes encoding hGH (SEQ ID NO. 5), G-CSF (SEQ ID NO. 7),
IFN-α2b (SEQ ID NO. 9), bFGF (SEQ ID NO. 11), IGF-1 (SEQ ID NO. 13), IGF-2 (SEQ ID
NO. 15) and KGF (SEQ ID NO. 23), which are fused to a pT0 expression vector derived
from a pET3a expression vector, and non-fused KGF (SEQ ID NO. 25). Of them, the pT0191
and pT0-IFN are introduced into
E.coli BL21(DE3), and the pT0-CSF is introduced into
E.coli BL21 Star(DE3)pLysS. The resulting transformants were deposited at KCTC (Korean Collection
for Type Cultures; KRIBB, 52, Oun-dong, Yusong-ku, Taejon, Korea) on March 11, 2004,
under accession numbers KCTC-10610BP, KCTC-10612BP and KCTC-10611BP, respectively.
[0034] The polycistronic expression vectors of the present invention may be introduced into
a host cell to transform the host cell by certain methods known in the art, including
chemical methods using CaCl
2 and electroporation.
[0035] The term "transformed", as used herein, refers to introduction into a prokaryotic
cell in such a manner as to allow a gene carried by the polycistronic vector to be
expressed.
[0036] If a recombinant nucleotide sequence of a fusion protein is suitably transcribed
to mRNA in a cell, and the cell is able to express proteins, a certain prokaryotic
cell can be used, and a Gram-negative bacterium,
E. coli, and a Gram-positive bacterium,
Bacillus, are preferred. More preferred is
E. coli, and most preferred are
E. coli BL21 (DE3),
E. coli BL21 Star (DE3)pLysS,
E. coli HMS (DE3) and
E. coli AD494 (DE3). The above host cells possess bacteriophage T
7 RNA polymerase, and the present invention is not limited to the examples. The bacteriophage-derived
T7 promoter used in the present invention is more effectively expressed by bacteriophage
T
7 RNA polymerase than by
E. coli RNA polymerase (
Studier FW et al. (1990), Method Enzymol. 185, 60-89). Thus, the pT0 expression vectors are preferably expressed by being introduced into
E. coli BL21 (DE3) or
E. coli BL21 Star (DE3) pLysS which carries T
7 RNA polymerase gene under control of the lacUV5 promoter. When the pT0-CSF expression
vector of the present invention is introduced into
E. coli BL21 (DE3), BL21 Star (DE3) pLysS, HMS (DE3) or AD494(DE3), a target fusion protein
may be expressed in an active form with an efficiency of 70% or higher.
[0037] Thus, in still another aspect, the present invention provides transformants transformed
with the above polycistronic expression vectors. In detail, the transformants include
E. coli transformed with pT0191, pT0-CSF, pT0-IFN, pT0-bFGF, pT0-IGF1, pT0-IGF2, pT0-KGF
or pT0N-KGF.
[0038] The transformants transformed with the expression vectors according to the present
invention are cultured in suitable media under suitable conditions in a manner of
allowing a DNA sequence encoding a target protein to be expressed. A method of expressing
a recombinant protein by culturing a transformant is known in the art. For example,
a transformant is inoculated in a suitable medium for seed culture, and the seed culture
is inoculated in a production culture medium and grown under suitable conditions,
thereby inducing protein expression. In the production culture, microbial growth is
performed separately from the induction of recombinant protein expression, thereby
increasing recombinant protein yield.
[0039] Thus, in still another aspect, the present invention provides a method of producing
an active, soluble protein, comprising culturing the transformant and recovering a
soluble target protein from a culture.
[0040] From the culture obtained by culturing a transformant, a target protein is recovered
in substantially pure forms, and thus can be used for medical purposes. The recovery
of a recombinant protein may be achieved by various isolation and purification methods
known in the art. Typically, to remove cell debris, a cell lysate is centrifuged,
and the supernatant is subjected to precipitation, dialysis and various column chromatographies.
Examples of the column chromatography include ion exchange chromatography, gel-filtration
chromatography, HPLC, reverse phased HPLC, preparative SDS-PAGE, and affinity column
chromatography.
[0041] The purification of the soluble, active protein according to the present invention
may be achieved by typical purification methods such as ultrafiltration and ion exchange
chromatography without a refolding process after cell disruption and centrifugation,
thereby facilitating the isolation of an active target protein.
[0042] A better understanding of the present invention may be obtained through the following
examples which are set forth to illustrate, but are not to be construed as the limit
of the present invention.
EXAMPLE 1: Construction of pTT191 expression vector
[0043] A control expression vector pTT191 was prepared to express in high yields a fusion
protein containing human growth hormone as inclusion bodies.
[0044] A fusion gene encoding a fusion protein (SEQ ID NO. 5) containing human growth hormone,
which is linked to a histidine-tag and an enterokinase recognition sequence, was prepared
by a PCR ligation method (PCR ligation method,
Willem P.C. Stemmer, and Herbert L. Heyneker (1995) Gene 164, 49-53;
Scott W. Altmann, and Robert A. Kastelein (1995) Protein Expression and Purification
6, 722-726;
Ana Paula de Mattos Areas, and Paulo Lee Ho (2002) Protein Expression and Purification
25, 481-487). The PCR ligation method was carried out as follows. To a PCR tube, 50 pmole of
each of pairs of synthetic oligonucleotides containing twenty complementarily overlapped
bases, 2.5 U (1 µl) of Pfu DNA polymerase (Stratagene, USA), 2 µL of 2.5 mM dNTPs
(Takara, Japan), and 2 µl of 10x Pfu polymerase buffer were sequentially added, and
sterile distilled water was added to a final volume of 20 µl. PCR was carried out
using a PCR machine (MJ research, USA). Herein, each of the oligonucleotides served
as a template as well as a primer. PCR conditions included denaturation at 94°C for
5 min, and 20 cycles of denaturation at 95°C for 1 min, annealing at 52°C for 30 sec
and elongation at 72°C for 30 sec, followed by final elongation at 72°C for 10 min.
Two PCR products having a complementary nucleotide sequence (20 bp) at ends were amplified.
To a PCR tube, 5 µl of each of the PCR products, 2.5 U (1 µl) of Pfu DNA polymerase
(Stratagene, USA), 2 µl of 2.5 mM dNTPs (Takara, Japan), and 2 µl of 10x Pfu polymerase
buffer were sequentially added, and sterile distilled water was added to a final volume
of 20 µl. PCR was carried out using a PCR machine (MJ research, USA). PCR conditions
included denaturation at 94°C for 5 min, and 20 cycles of denaturation at 95°C for
1 min, annealing at 52°C for 30 sec and elongation at 72°C for 30 sec, followed by
final elongation at 72°C for 10 min. This procedure was repeated, and, in a final
step, PCR was carried with 30 cycles, thus generating a synthetic gene. The synthesized
gene was run on a 1% agarose gel and isolated from the gel using QIAQuick gel extraction
kit (Qiagen, USA). As a result, a fused human growth hormone (somatotropin) gene (SEQ
ID NO. 5) was obtained, which included a histidine-tag (SEQ ID NO. 1) and an enterokinase
recognition sequence (SEQ ID NO. 3) and an Nde I recognition sequence at both ends.
Thereafter, the pTT191 expression vector was constructed as shown in FIG. 1. The synthesized
fusion gene was digested with NdeI, separated on a 1% agarose gel, and isolated from
the gel. The linearized fusion gene was ligated to NdeI-digested pET3a (Novagen, USA)
that was also pretreated with CIAP (calf intestine alkaline phosphatase; NEB, USA).
The CIAP treatment was carried out at 37°C for one hour to prevent self-ligation of
the NdeI-digested pET3a. The ligation was carried out at 16°C for 18 hrs using T4
DNA ligase (NEB, USA), thus generating pTT191. Then,
E. coli TOP10 (Invitrogen, USA) was transformed with the pTT191. The plasmid DNA was prepared from
the resulting transformant and introduced into
E.coli BL21 (DE3) (Novagen, USA). The resulting
E.coli BL21 (DE3) transformant transformed with the pTT191 expression vector was selected
on ampicillin-containing LB plates, and designated as "
E.coli BL21 (DE3)/pTT191". The correct insertion of the fusion gene containing a human growth
hormone gene in the pTT191 expression vector was confirmed by digestion with restriction
enzymes AlwNI and HindIII and DNA sequencing.
EXAMPLE 2: Expression of the fusion protein with human growth hormone in the E.coli BL21 (DE3)/pTT191 transformant
[0045] The expression pattern of the fusion protein with human growth hormone was tested
in
E. coli transformed with the control expression vector pTT191.
[0046] The
E.coli BL21 (DE3)/pTT191 transformed with the pTT191 expression vector was cultured in LB
medium (Luria-Bertani medium) at 30°C for 12 hrs, and the expression of the fusion
protein was then induced with IPTG (Isopropyl-µ-D-Thiogalactopyranoside). After IPTG
induction, cells were collected by centrifugation and disrupted. After centrifugation,
the supernatant was used to investigate the expression of the fusion protein. As a
result, as shown in FIG. 2, the fusion protein containing human growth hormone had
the predicted molecular weight of about 24 kDa, but mainly expressed as inclusion
bodies.
EXAMPLE 3: Construction of pT0191 expression vector
[0047] A pT0191 expression vector was prepared to express the fusion protein containing
human growth hormone in a soluble form in a higher percentage.
[0048] To insert a gene encoding the fusion protein with human growth hormone into a pET3a
vector, PCR was carried out using pTT191 as a template, thus providing an NdeI recognition
site and a HindIII recognition site to each end of a nucleotide sequence encoding
the fusion protein. To a PCR tube, 100 ng of pTT191 plasmid (Example 1) as a template,
2.5 U (1 µl) of Pfu DNA polymerase (Stratagene, USA), 30 pmole of primer A (5'-AAACATATGGGCCATCATCATCATCATCATCATCATCATCAC-3':
SEQ ID NO. 19), 30 pmole of primer B (5'-AAAAAGCTTTTACTAGAAGCCACAGCTGCC-3': SEQ ID
NO. 20), 2 µl of 2.5 mM dNTPs (Takara, Japan), and 2 µl of 10x Pfu polymerase buffer
were sequentially added, and sterile distilled water was added to a final volume of
20 µl. PCR was carried out using a PCR machine (MJ research, USA). PCR conditions
included denaturation at 94°C for 5 min, and 30 cycles of denaturation at 95°C for
1 min, annealing at 58°C for 30 sec and elongation at 72°C for 2 min, followed by
final elongation at 72°C for 10 min. The amplified gene was digested with NdeI and
HindIII restriction enzymes, separated on a 1% agarose gel and purified from the gel.
The pET3a expression vector was digested with NdeI and HindIII and separated on a
1% agarose gel, and a 4119-bp fragment was purified from the gel. The NdeI/HindIII-treated
fusion gene and pET3a fragment were ligated to each other at 16°C for 18 hrs using
T4 DNA ligase, thus generating pT0191. Then,
E. coli TOP10 (Invitrogen, USA) was transformed with the pT0191 (FIG. 3). The plasmid DNA was prepared
from the resulting transformant and introduced into
E.coli BL21 (DE3). The resulting
E.coli BL21 (DE3) transformant transformed with the pT0191 expression vector was selected
on ampicillin-containing LB plates, and designated as
"E.coli BL21 (DE3)/pT0191 (KCTC10610BP)". The correct insertion of the fusion gene containing
a human growth hormone gene in the pT0191 expression vector was confirmed by digestion
with restriction enzymes NdeI and HindIII and DNA sequencing.
EXAMPLE 4: Expression of the fusion protein with human growth hormone in the E. coli BL21(DE3)/pT0191 transformant
[0049] The expression pattern of the fusion protein with human growth hormone was tested
in
E. coli transformed with the pT0191 expression vector.
[0050] The
E.coli BL21 (DE3)/pT0191 transformed with the pT0191 expression vector was cultured in LB
medium at 30°C for 12 hrs, and the expression of the fusion protein was then induced
with IPTG. Thereafter, the expression of the fusion protein was estimated. As shown
in FIG. 4, the fusion protein mainly expressed in an active form and was present in
a centrifuged supernatant, and had a molecular weight of about 24 kDa. Unlike the
E.coli BL21 (DE3)/pTT191 transformant, the
E.coli BL21 (DE3)/pT0191 transformant was found to overexpress the target fusion protein
along with beta-lactamase. The expression of beta-lactamase was confirmed by N-terminal
sequencing.
EXAMPLE 5: Construction of pTR0191 expression vector and expression of human growth
hormone in E. coli BL21 (DE3)/pTR0191 transformant
[0051] The pT0191 plasmid prepared in Example 3 was digested with SphI and HindIII, and
a 3812-bp fragment was purified. A gene encoding beta-lactamase contained in the pT0191
plasmid was amplified by PCR using two primers (primer 1: 5'-AAAAAGCTTAAGGAGATGGCGCCCA-3'
(SEQ ID NO. 21); primer 2: 5'-AAAGCATGCCTAGAAGCCACAGCTG-3' (SEQ ID NO. 22)), thus
generating a 950-bp fragment in which the positions of the SphI and HindIII sites
were exchanged with each other. Then, the 950-bp fragment was ligated to the 3812-bp
fragment using T4 DNA ligase, thus generating a pTR0191 expression vector in which
the human growth hormone gene had a different orientation from the beta-lactamase
gene (FIG. 5).
E. coli By21 (DE3) was transformed with the prepared expression vector, and protein expression
was carried out at 30°C. As shown in FIG. 6, the target protein was expressed mainly
as inclusion bodies, and the beta-lactamase was expressed in lower levels than the
case of using the pT0191 expression vector.
EXAMPLE 6: Construction of pT0-CSF expression vector
[0052] A pT0-CSF expression vector was prepared to express in high yields a fusion protein
containing human granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) in a soluble form.
A gene (SEQ ID NO. 7) encoding a fusion protein containing human G-CSF linked to a
histidine-tag and an enterokinase recognition sequence was synthesized according to
the same PCR ligation method as in Example 1, and the pT0-CSF expression vector was
constructed according to the same method as in Example 3 (FIG. 3). The pT0-CSF expression
vector was introduced into
E.coli BL21 Star (DE3) pLysS (Invitrogen, USA), and the resulting transformant was designated
as "
E.coli BL21 Star(DE3)pLysS/pT0-CSF (KCTC10611BP)". The correct insertion of the fusion gene
containing a human G-CSF gene into the pT0-CSF expression vector was confirmed by
digestion with NdeI and HindIII and DNA sequencing.
EXAMPLE 7: Expression of the fusion protein with human G-CSF in the E. coli B21 Star(DE3)pLysS/pT0-CSF transformant
[0053] The expression pattern of the fusion protein with human G-CSF was investigated in
E. coli transformed with the pT0-CSF expression vector.
[0054] The
E. coli B21 Star(DE3)pLysS/pT0-CSF transformed with the pT0-CSF expression vector was cultured
in LB medium at 30°C for 12 hrs, and the expression of the fusion protein was then
induced with IPTG. As shown in FIG. 7, the fusion protein containing human G-CSF was
expressed mainly in an active form and present in a centrifugal supernatant, and had
a molecular weight of about 20 kDa. Like the
E.coli BL21 (DE3)/pT0191 transformant, the
E. coli B21 Star(DE3)pLysS/pT0-CSF transformant transformed with the pT0-CSF expression vector
was found to overexpress the target fusion protein containing human G-CSF along with
beta-lactamase.
[0055] In addition, the pT0-CSF expression vector was introduced into
E. coli BL21 (DE3) (Novagen, USA),
E. coli HMS (DE3) (Novagen, USA) and
E. coli AD494 (DE3) (Novagen, USA) to investigate the expression pattern of the fusion protein
containing human G-CSF (also designated herein as human G-CSF fusion protein) in the
E. coli strains. The results are given in Table 1, below. As apparent from the data of Table
1, the fusion protein was mainly expressed in an active form.
TABLE 1
| Host cell (E.coli) |
Volume (arbitary unit [a.u.]) |
Percentage of active form* |
| |
Total |
Active form |
Inclusion bodies |
|
| BL21 (DE3) |
15,043 |
10,610 |
4,433 |
70.5% |
| BL21 Star (DE3) pLysS |
28,169 |
25,554 |
2,614 |
90.7% |
| HMS (DE3) |
13,376 |
12,361 |
1,015 |
92.4% |
| AD 494 (DE3) |
22,843 |
16,886 |
5,957 |
73.9% |
| *: measured by a densitometer after electorphoresis |
EXAMPLE 8: Construction of pT0-IFN, pT0-bFGF, pT0-IGF1, pT0-IGF2, pT0-KGF and pT0N-KGF
expression vectors
[0056] Several expression vectors, pT0-IFN, pT0-bFGF, pT0-IGF1, pT0-IGF2, pT0-KGF and pT0N-KGF,
were prepared to express in high yields various target proteins themselves or fusion
proteins containing target proteins in soluble forms. Genes coding for an IFN-α2b
fusion protein (SEQ ID NO. 9), a bFGF fusion protein (SEQ ID NO. 11), an IGF-1 fusion
protein (SEQ ID NO. 13), an IGF-2 fusion protein (SEQ ID NO. 15) and a KGF fusion
protein (SEQ ID NO. 23), which each are linked to a histidine-tag and an enterokinase
recognition sequence, and a non-fused KGF itself (SEQ ID NO. 25) were prepared according
to the same PCR ligation method as in Example 1, wherein primers were designed to
provide a NdeI site and a HindIII site at each end of a sequence of each of the coding
genes to insert fusion protein into pET3a vector. The amplified genes were digested
with NdeI and HindIII, separated on a 1% agarose gel, and purified from the gel. A
pET3a expression vector was digested with NdeI and HindIII and separated on a 1% agarose
gel, and a 4119-bp fragment was purified from the gel. Each of the NdeI/HindIII-treated
fused genes and pET3a fragment was ligated to each other at 16°C for 18 hrs using
T4 DNA ligase, thus generating expression vectors, pT0-IFN, pT0-bFGF, pT0-IGF1, pT0-IGF2,
pT0-KGF and pT0N-KGF, respectively. Then,
E. coli TOP10 was transformed with the expression vectors. The plasmid DNA was prepared from each
of the resulting transformants and introduced into
E.coli BL21 (DE3). The correct insertion of each gene into the corresponding expression
vector was confirmed by digestion with NdeI and HindIII and DNA sequencing.
EXAMPLE 9: Expression of each target protein in E. coli BL21 (DE3)/pT0-IFN, pT0-bFGF, pT0-IGF1, pT0-IGF2, pT0-KGF and pT0N-KGF transformants
[0057] The expression pattern of each target protein was investigated in
E. coli transformed with the expression vectors, pT0-IFN, pT0-bFGF, pT0-IGF1, pT0-IGF2, pT0-KGF
and pT0N-KGF.
[0058] The
E.coli BL21 (DE3) transformants transformed with the above expression vectors were individually
cultured in LB medium at 30°C for 12 hrs, and the expression of each target protein
was then induced with IPTG. The results are given in FIGS. 8 to 13. As shown in the
figures, the expressed target proteins were present in a centrifugal supernatant,
thus indicating that the target proteins are expressed in soluble, active forms.
Industrial Applicability
[0059] As described hereinbefore, the present invention provides expression vectors overexpressing
a target protein along with beta-lactamase. The expression vectors can produce in
high levels a soluble, active form of heterogeneous target proteins in prokaryotic
cells where the proteins are mostly expressed as inclusion bodies when other expression
vectors are used.
SEQL
[0060]
<110> DAEWOONG CO., LTD.
<120> Preparation method for the production of active and soluble proteins in prokaryotes
and polycistronic vectors therefor
<150> KR10-2004-0031977
<151> 2004-05-06
<160> 26
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<220>
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1. A method of producing an active, soluble target protein in a prokaryotic cell, which
is characterized by expressing the target protein and beta-lactamase as a first cistron and a second
cistron, respectively, in a polycistron.
2. The method according to claim 1, wherein the polycistron is derived from a recombinant
vector comprising (i) a promoter oparable in the prokaryotic cell, (ii) a first cistron
including a DNA sequence encoding the target protein and (iii) a second cistron including
a DNA sequence encoding beta-lactamase which are operable linked in a 5' to 3' direction.
3. The method according to claim 1, wherein the target protein is selected from the group
consisting of human growth hormone, granulocyte-colony stimulating factor, interferons,
basic fibroblast growth factor, insulin-like growth factors, keratinocyte growth factor,
erythropoietin, thrombopoietin, human epidermal growth factor, platelet-derived growth
factor, vascular endothelial growth factor, nerve growth factor, transforming growth
factor, tumor necrosis factor, angiogenin, angiotensin and interleukins.
4. The method according to claim 3, wherein the target protein is selected from the group
consisting of human growth hormone, granulocyte-colony stimulating factor, interferon-α2b,
basic fibroblast growth factor, insulin-like growth factor-1, insulin-like growth
factor-2 and keratinocyte growth factor.
5. The method according to claim 1, wherein the prokaryotic cell is Escherichia coli
(E.coli).
6. The method according to claim 5, wherein the E.coli is selected from the group consisting
of E.coli BL21 (DE3), E.coli BL21 Star (DE3) pLys S, E.coli HMS (DE3) and E.coli AD494
(DE3).
7. A polycistronic vector for expressing a target protein in an active, soluble form
in a prokaryotic cell, comprising:
(i) a promoter operable in the prokaryotic cell;
(ii) a first cistron including a DNA sequence encoding the target protein; and
(iii) a second cistron including a DNA sequence encoding beta-lactamase.
8. The polycistronic vector according to claim 7, wherein the vector comprises (i) a
promoter operable in the prokaryotic cell, (ii) a first cistron including a DNA sequence
encoding the target protein and (iii) a second cistron including a DNA sequence encoding
beta-lactamase which are operably linked in a 5' to 3' direction.
9. The polycistronic vector according to claim 7, wherein the vector comprises (i) a
promoter operable in the prokaryotic cell, (ii) a second cistron including a DNA sequence
encoding beta-lactamase and (iii) a first cistron including a DNA sequence encoding
the target protein which are operably linked in a 5' to 3' direction.
10. The polycistronic vector according to claim 7, wherein the target protein is selected
from the group consisting of human growth hormone, granulocyte-colony stimulating
factor, interferons, basic fibroblast growth factor, insulin-like growth factors,
keratinocyte growth factor, erythropoietin, thrombopoietin, human epidermal growth
factor, platelet-derived growth factor, vascular endothelial growth factor, nerve
growth factor, transforming growth factor, tumor necrosis factor, angiogenin, antiotensin
and interleukins.
11. The polycistronic vector according to claim 10, wherein the target protein is selected
from the group consisting of human growth hormone, granulocyte-colony stimulating
factor, interferon-α2b, basic fibroblast growth factor, insulin-like growth factor-1,
insulin-like growth factor-2 and keratinocyte growth factor.
12. The polycistronic vector according to claim 7, wherein the promoter is selected from
the group consisting of T7, tac, trc, lac, Ipp, phoA, recA, araBAD, proU, cst-1 tetA,
cadA, nar, lpp-lac, starvation promoters, cspA, T7-lac operator, T3-lac operator,
T5-lac operator, T4 gene 32 and nprM-lac operator.
13. The polycistronic vector according to claim 12, wherein the promoter is T7 promoter.
14. The polycistronic vector according to claim 7, wherein the vector is selected from
the group consisting of pT0191 (pET3a-T7 promoter-human growth hormone-β-lactamase),
pT0-CSF (pET3a-T7 promoter-CSF-β-lactamase), pT0-IFN (pET3a-T7 promoter-IFN-β-lactamase),
pT0-bFGF (pET3a-T7 promoter-bFGF-β-lactamase), pT0-IGF1 (pET3a-T7 promoter-IGF1-β-lactamase),
pT0-IGF2 (pET3a-T7 promoter-IGF2-β-lactamase), pT0-KGF (pET3a-T7 promoter-KGF-β-lactamase)
and pTON-KGF (pET3a-T7 promoter-N-KGF-β-lactamase).
15. A transformant transformed with the expression vector of claim 7.
16. The transformant according to claim 15, wherein the transformant is Escherichia coli
(E.coli).
17. A method of producing an active, soluble target protein, which is characterized by culturing the transformant of claim 16 and recovering an expressed target protein
from a culture.
1. Ein Verfahren zum Herstellen eines aktiven löslichen Targetproteins in einer prokaryontischen
Zelle, dadurch charakterisiert, dass das Targetprotein und β-Lactamase als ein erstes Cistron bzw.
ein zweites Cistron in einem Polycistron exprimiert werden.
2. Das Verfahren gemäß Anspruch 1, wobei das Polycistron von einem rekombinanten Vector
erhalten wird, der (i) einen Promotor, der in der prokaryontischen Zelle wirksam ist,
(ii) ein erstes Cistron, das eine DNA Sequenz, die für das Targetprotein kodiert,
einschließt, und (iii) ein zweites Cistron, das eine DNA Sequenz, die β-Lactamase
kodiert, einschließt, welche operativ in einer 5' → 3'-Richtung verknüpft sind, umfasst.
3. Das Verfahren gemäß Anspruch 1, wobei das Targetprotein ausgewählt ist aus der Gruppe
bestehend aus menschlichem Wachstumshormon, Granulocyten-Kolonie-Stimulierungsfaktor,
Interferonen, dem basischen Fibroblast-Wachstumsfaktor, insulinähnlichen Wachstumsfaktoren,
dem Keratinocyten-Wachstumsfaktor, Erythropoietin, Thrombopoietin, menschlichem epidermalem
Wachstumsfaktor, von Blutplättchen freigesetztem Wachstumsfaktor, vascularem endothelialem
Wachstumsfaktor, Nervenwachstumsfaktor, transformierendem Wachstumsfaktor, Tumornecrosefaktor,
Angiogenin, Angiotensin und Interleukinen.
4. Das Verfahren gemäß Anspruch 3, wobei das Targetprotein ausgewählt ist aus der Gruppe
bestehend aus menschlichem Wachstumshormon, Granulocyten-Kolonie-Stimulierungsfaktor,
Interferon-a2b, basischem Fibroblasten-Wachstumsfaktor, insulinähnlichem Wachstumsfaktor-1,
insulinähnlichem Wachstumsfaktor-2 und Keratinocyten-Wachstumsfaktor.
5. Das Verfahren gemäß Anspruch 1, wobei die prokaryontische Zelle Escherichia coli (E.coli)
ist.
6. Das Verfahren gemäß Anspruch 5, wobei das E.coli ausgewählt ist aus der Gruppe bestehend
aus E.coli BL21 (DE3), E.coli BL21 Star (DE3) pLys S, E.coli HMS (DE3) und E.coli
AD494 (DE3).
7. Ein polycistronischer Vector zur Expression eines Targetproteins in einer aktiven
löslichen Form in einer prokaryontischen Zelle, umfassend:
(i) einen Promotor, der in der prokaryontischen Zelle wirksam ist;
(ii) ein erstes Cistron, das eine DNA Sequenz, die das Targetprotein kodiert, einschließt
und
(iii) ein zweites Cistron, das eine DNA Sequenz, die für β-Lactamase kodiert, einschließt.
8. Der polycistronische Vector gemäß Anspruch 7, wobei der Vector (i) einen Promotor,
der in der prokaryontischen Zelle wirksam ist, (ii) ein erstes Cistron, das eine DNA
Sequenz, die das Targetprotein kodiert, einschließt, und (iii) ein zweites Cistron,
das eine DNA Sequenz, für β-Lactamase kodiert, einschließt, welche operativ in einer
5' → 3'-Richtung verknüpft sind, umfasst.
9. Der polycistronische Vector gemäß Anspruch 7, wobei der Vector (i) einen Promotor,
der in der prokaryontischen Zelle wirksam ist, (ii) ein zweites Cistron, das eine
DNA Sequenz, die β-Lactamase kodiert, einschließt und (iii) ein erstes Cistron, das
eine DNA Sequenz, die das Targetprotein kodiert, einschließt, welche operativ in einer
5' → 3'-Richtung verknüpft sind, umfasst.
10. Der polycistronische Vector gemäß Anspruch 7, wobei das Targetprotein ausgewählt ist
aus der Gruppe bestehend aus menschlichem Wachstumshormon, Granulocyten-Kolonie-Stimulierungsfaktor,
Interferonen, dem basischen Fibroblast-Wachstumsfaktor, insulinähnlichen Wachstumsfaktoren,
dem Keratinocyten-Wachstumsfaktor, Erythropoietin, Thrombopoietin, menschlichem epidermalem
Wachstumsfaktor, von Blutplättchen freigesetztem Wachstumsfaktor, vascularem endothelialem
Wachstumsfaktor, Nervenwachstumsfaktor, transformierendem Wachstumsfaktor, Tumornecrosefaktor,
Angiogenin, Angiotensin und Interleukinen.
11. Der polycistronische Vector gemäß Anspruch 10, wobei das Targetprotein ausgewählt
ist aus der Gruppe bestehend aus menschlichem Wachstumshormon, Granulocyten-Kolonie-Stimulierungsfaktor,
Interferon-α2b, basischem Fibroblasten-Wachstumsfaktor, insulinähnlichem Wachstumsfaktor-1,
insulinähnlichem Wachstumsfaktor-2 und Keratinocyten-Wachstumsfaktor.
12. Der polycistronische Vector gemäß Anspruch 7, wobei der Promotor ausgewählt ist aus
der Gruppe bestehend aus T7, tac, trc, lac, Ipp, phoA, recA, araBAD, proU, cst-1 tetA,
cadA, nar, Ipp-lac, Unterernährungspromotoren, cspA, T7-lac Operator, T3-lac Operator,
T5-lac Operator, T4 Gen 32 und nprm-lac Operator.
13. Der polycistronische Vector gemäß Anspruch 12, wobei der Promotor der T7 Promotor
ist.
14. Der polycistronische Vector gemäß Anspruch 7, wobei der Vector ausgewählt ist aus
der Gruppe bestehend aus pT0191 (pET3a-T7 Promotor-menschliches Wachstumshormon-β-Lactamase),
pT0-CSF (pET3a-T7 Promotor-CSF-β-Lactamase), pT0-IFN (pET3a-T7 Promotor-IFN-β-Lactamase),
pT0-bFGF (pET3a-T7 Promotor-bFGF-β-Lactamase), pTO-IGF1 (pET3a-T7 Promotor-IGF1-β-Lactamase),
pTO-IGF2 (pET3a-T7 Promotor-IGF2-β-Lactamase), pT0-KGF (pET3a-T7 Promotor-KGF-β-Lactamase)
und pTON-KGF (pET3a-T7 Promotor-N-KGF-β-Lactamase).
15. Eine transformierte Zelle, transformiert mit dem Expressionsvector gemäß Anspruch
7.
16. Die transformierte Zelle gemäß Anspruch 15, wobei die transformierte Zelle Escherichia
coli (E.coli) ist.
17. Ein Verfahren zur Herstellung eines aktiven löslichen Targetproteins, charakterisiert
durch das Kultivieren der transformierte Zelle gemäß Anspruch 16, und Gewinnen eines
exprimierten Targetproteins aus einer Kultur.
1. Procédé de production d'une protéine cible soluble active dans une cellule procaryote,
qui est caractérisé par l'expression de la protéine cible et de bêta-lactamase comme premier cistron et d'un
deuxième cistron, respectivement, dans un polycistron.
2. Procédé selon la revendication 1, dans lequel le polycistron est dérivé d'un vecteur
recombinant comprenant (i) un promoteur opérationnel dans la cellule procaryote, (ii)
un premier cistron comprenant une séquence d'ADN codant pour la protéine cible et
(iii) un deuxième cistron comprenant une séquence d'ADN codant pour la bêta-lactamase
qui sont liés de manière opérationnelle dans le sens 5' à 3'.
3. Procédé selon la revendication 1, dans lequel la protéine cible est choisie dans le
groupe constitué par l'hormone de croissance humaine, le facteur de croissance hématopoïétique
G-CSF, les interférons, le facteur de croissance basique des fibroblastes, les facteurs
de croissance insulinomimétiques, le facteur de croissance de kératinocytes, l'érythropoïétine,
la thrombopoïétine, le facteur de croissance de l'épiderme humain, le facteur de croissance
dérivé des plaquettes, le facteur de croissance endothélial vasculaire, le facteur
de croissance du tissu, nerveux, le facteur de croissance transformant, le facteur
de nécrose tumorale, le facteur angiogénique, l'angiotensine et les interleukines.
4. Procédé selon la revendication 3, dans lequel la protéine cible est choisie dans le
groupe constitué par l'hormone de croissance humaine, le facteur de croissance hématopoïétique
G-CSF, l'interféron α2b, le facteur de croissance basique des fibroblastes, le facteur
de croissance insulinomimétique de type 1, le facteur de croissance insulinomimétique
de type 2 et le facteur de croissance de kératinocytes.
5. Procédé selon la revendication 1, dans lequel la cellule procaryote est Escherichia
coli (E. coli).
6. Procédé selon la revendication 5, dans lequel la cellule E. coli est choisie dans
le groupe constitué par E. coli BL21 (DE3), E. coli BL21 Star (DE3) pLys S, E. coli
HMS (DE3) et E. coli A494 (DE3).
7. Vecteur polycistronique pour l'expression d'une protéine cible dans une forme soluble
active dans une cellule procaryote, comprenant :
(i) un promoteur opérationnel dans la cellule procaryote ;
(ii) un premier cistron comprenant une séquence d'ADN codant pour la protéine cible
; et
(iii) un deuxième cistron comprenant une séquence d'ADN codant pour la bêta-lactamase.
8. Vecteur polycistronique selon la revendication 7, dans lequel le vecteur comprend
(i) un promoteur opérationnel dans la cellule procaryote, (ii) un premier cistron
comprenant une séquence d'ADN codant pour la protéine cible et (iii) un deuxième cistron
comprenant une séquence d'ADN codant pour la bêta-lactamase qui sont liés de manière
opérationnelle dans le sens 5' à 3'.
9. Vecteur polycistronique selon la revendication 7, dans lequel le vecteur comprend
(i) un promoteur opérationnel dans la cellule procaryote, (ii) un deuxième cistron
comprenant une séquence d'ADN codant pour la bêta-lactamase et (iii) un premier cistron
comprenant une séquence d'ADN codant pour la protéine cible qui sont liés de manière
opérationnelle dans le sens 5' à 3'.
10. Vecteur polycistronique selon la revendication 7, dans lequel la protéine cible est
choisie dans le groupe constitué par l'hormone de croissance humaine, le facteur de
croissance hématopoïétique G-CSF, les interférons, le facteur de croissance basique
des fibroblastes, les facteurs de croissance insulinomimétiques, le facteur de croissance
de kératinocytes, l'érythropoïétine, la thrombopoïétine, le facteur de croissance
de l'épiderme humain, le facteur de croissance dérivé des plaquettes, le facteur de
croissance endothélial vasculaire, le facteur de croissance du tissu nerveux, le facteur
de croissance transformant, le facteur de nécrose tumorale, le facteur angiogénique,
l'angiotensine et les interleukines.
11. Vecteur polycistronique selon la revendication 10, dans lequel la protéine cible est
choisie dans le groupe constitué par l'hormone de croissance humaine, le facteur de
croissance hématopoïétique G-CSF, l'interféron α2b, le facteur de croissance basique
des fibroblastes, le facteur de croissance insulinomimétique de type 1, le facteur
de croissance insulinomimétique de type 2 et le facteur de croissance de kératinocytes.
12. Vecteur polycistronique selon la revendication 7, dans lequel le promoteur est choisi
dans le groupe constitué par T7, tac, trc, lac, lpp, phoA, recA, araBAD, proU, cst-1
tetA, cadA, nar, lpp-lac, les promoteurs d'inanition, cspA, T7-opérateur lac, T3-opérateur
lac, T5-opérateur lac, le gène 32 de T4 et nprM-opérateur lac.
13. Vecteur polycistronique selon la revendication 12, dans lequel le promoteur est le
promoteur T7.
14. Vecteur polycistronique selon la revendication 7, dans lequel le vecteur est choisi
dans le groupe constitué par pT0191 (pET3a-promoteur T7-hormone de croissance humaine-β-lactamase),
pT0-CSF (pET3a-promoteur T7-CSF-F-lactamase), pT0-IFN (pET3a-promoteur T7-IFN-β-lactamase),
pT0-bFGF (pET3a-promoteur T7-bFGF-β-lactamase), pT0-IGF1 (pET3a-promoteur T7-IGF1-β-lactamase),
pT0-IGF2 (pET3a-promoteur T7-IGF2-β-lactamase), pT0-KGF (pET3a-promoteur T7-KGF-β-lactamase)
et pT0N-KGF (pET3a-promoteur T7-N-KGF-β-lactamase).
15. Transformant transformé avec le vecteur d'expression selon la revendication 7.
16. Transformant selon la revendication 15, dans lequel le transformant est Escherichia
coli (E. coli).
17. Procédé de production d'une protéine cible soluble active, qui est caractérisé par la culture du transformant selon la revendication 16 et la récupération d'une protéine
cible exprimée à partir d'une culture.