期刊论文详细信息
BMC Biotechnology
Protein body formation in stable transgenic tobacco expressing elastin-like polypeptide and hydrophobin fusion proteins
Sonia P Gutiérrez1  Reza Saberianfar1  Susanne E Kohalmi2  Rima Menassa1 
[1] Southern Crop Protection and Food Research Centre, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, London, ON, Canada
[2] Department of Biology, University of Western Ontario, London, ON, Canada
关键词: Green fluorescent protein;    Molecular farming;    Transgenic expression;    Tobacco;    HFBI;    Hydrophobin I;    ELP;    Elastin-like polypeptide;    Protein body formation;    Protein body;   
Others  :  1123174
DOI  :  10.1186/1472-6750-13-40
 received in 2013-02-06, accepted in 2013-05-06,  发布年份 2013
PDF
【 摘 要 】

Background

Plants are recognized as an efficient and inexpensive system to produce valuable recombinant proteins. Two different strategies have been commonly used for the expression of recombinant proteins in plants: transient expression mediated by Agrobacterium; or stable transformation of the plant genome. However, the use of plants as bioreactors still faces two main limitations: low accumulation levels of some recombinant proteins and lack of efficient purification methods. Elastin-like polypeptide (ELP), hydrophobin I (HFBI) and Zera® are three fusion partners found to increase the accumulation levels of recombinant proteins and induce the formation of protein bodies (PBs) in leaves when targeted to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) in transient expression assays. In this study the effects of ELP and HFBI fusion tags on recombinant protein accumulation levels and PB formation was examined in stable transgenic Nicotiana tabacum.

Results

The accumulation of recombinant protein and PB formation was evaluated in two cultivars of Nicotiana tabacum transformed with green fluorescent protein (GFP) fused to ELP or HFBI, both targeted and retrieved to the ER. The ELP and HFBI tags increased the accumulation of the recombinant protein and induced the formation of PBs in leaves of stable transgenic plants from both cultivars. Furthermore, these tags induced the formation of PBs in a concentration-dependent manner, where a specific level of recombinant protein accumulation was required for PBs to appear. Moreover, agro-infiltration of plants accumulating low levels of recombinant protein with p19, a suppressor of post-transcriptional gene silencing (PTGS), increased accumulation levels in four independent transgenic lines, suggesting that PTGS might have caused the low accumulation levels in these plants.

Conclusion

The use of ELP and HFBI tags as fusion partners in stable transgenic plants of tobacco is feasible and promising. In a constitutive environment, these tags increase the accumulation levels of the recombinant protein and induce the formation of PBs regardless of the cultivar used. However, a specific level of recombinant protein accumulation needs to be reached for PBs to form.

【 授权许可】

   
2013 Gutiérrez et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

【 预 览 】
附件列表
Files Size Format View
20150216015214668.pdf 1256KB PDF download
Figure 8. 260KB Image download
Figure 7. 49KB Image download
Figure 6. 217KB Image download
Figure 5. 109KB Image download
Figure 4. 121KB Image download
Figure 3. 36KB Image download
Figure 2. 47KB Image download
Figure 1. 26KB Image download
【 图 表 】

Figure 1.

Figure 2.

Figure 3.

Figure 4.

Figure 5.

Figure 6.

Figure 7.

Figure 8.

【 参考文献 】
  • [1]Egelkrout E, Rajan V, Howard JA: Overproduction of recombinant proteins in plants. Plant Sci 2012, 184:83-101.
  • [2]Tremblay R, Wang D, Jevnikar AM, Ma S: Tobacco, a highly efficient green bioreactor for production of therapeutic proteins. Biotechnol Adv 2010, 28:214-221.
  • [3]Twyman RM, Stoger E, Schillberg S, Christou P, Fischer R: Molecular farming in plants: host systems and expression technology. Trends Biotechnol 2003, 21:570-578.
  • [4]Fischer R, Schillberg S, Hellwig S, Twyman RM, Drossard J: GMP issues for recombinant plant-derived pharmaceutical proteins. Biotechnol Adv 2012, 30:434-439.
  • [5]Hood EE, Requesens DV: Recombinant protein production in plants: challenges and solutions. Methods Mol Biol 2012, 824:469-481.
  • [6]Maxmen A: Drug-making plant blooms. Nature 2012, 485:160.
  • [7]Commandeur U, Twyman RM, Fischer R: The biosafety of molecular farming in plants. AgBiotechNet 2003, 5:1-9.
  • [8]Conley AJ, Joensuu JJ, Richman A, Menassa R: Protein body-inducing fusions for high-level production and purification of recombinant proteins in plants. Plant Biotechnol J 2011, 9:419-433.
  • [9]Conley AJ, Zhu H, Le LC, Jevnikar AM, Lee BH, Brandle JE, Menassa R: Recombinant protein production in a variety of Nicotiana hosts: a comparative analysis. Plant Biotechnol J 2011, 9:434-444.
  • [10]Rymerson R, Menassa R, Brandle J: Tobacco, a platform for the production of recombinant proteins. In Molecular farming of plants and animals for human and veterinary medicine. Edited by Erickson L, Yu W-J, Brandle J, Rymerson R. Dorcrecht, The Netherlands; Boston, MA: Kluwer Academic Publishers; 2002:1-32.
  • [11]Menassa R, Nguyen V, Jevnikar A, Brandle J: A self-contained system for the field production of plant recombinant interleukin-10. Mol Breed 2001, 8:177-185.
  • [12]Boothe J, Nykiforuk C, Shen Y, Zaplachinski S, Szarka S, Kuhlman P, Murray E, Morck D, Moloney MM: Seed-based expression systems for plant molecular farming. Plant Biotechnol J 2010, 8:588-606.
  • [13]Conley AJ, Joensuu JJ, Jevnikar AM, Menassa R, Brandle JE: Optimization of elastin-like polypeptide fusions for expression and purification of recombinant proteins in plants. Biotechnol Bioeng 2009, 103:562-573.
  • [14]Conley AJ, Joensuu JJ, Menassa R, Brandle JE: Induction of protein body formation in plant leaves by elastin-like polypeptide fusions. BMC Biol 2009, 7:48. BioMed Central Full Text
  • [15]Torrent M, Llompart B, Lasserre-Ramassamy S, Llop-Tous I, Bastida M, Marzabal P, Westerholm-Parvinen A, Saloheimo M, Heifetz PB, Ludevid MD: Eukaryotic protein production in designed storage organelles. BMC Biol 2009, 7:5. BioMed Central Full Text
  • [16]Ge X, Trabbic-Carlson K, Chilkoti A, Filipe CD: Purification of an elastin-like fusion protein by microfiltration. Biotechnol Bioeng 2006, 95:424-432.
  • [17]Phan HT, Conrad U: Membrane-based inverse transition cycling: an improved means for purifying plant-derived recombinant protein-elastin-like polypeptide fusions. Int J Mol Sci 2011, 12:2808-2821.
  • [18]Phan HT, Pohl J, Floss DM, Rabenstein F, Veits J, Le BT, Chu HH, Hause G, Mettenleiter T, Conrad U: ELPylated haemagglutinins produced in tobacco plants induce potentially neutralizing antibodies against H5N1 viruses in mice. Plant Biotechnol J 2013. (in press)
  • [19]Raju K, Anwar RA: Primary structures of bovine elastin a, b, and c deduced from the sequences of cDNA clones. J Biol Chem 1987, 262:5755-5762.
  • [20]Urry DW: Entropic elastic processes in protein mechanisms. I. Elastic structure due to an inverse temperature transition and elasticity due to internal chain dynamics. J Protein Chem 1988, 7:1-34.
  • [21]Meyer DE, Chilkoti A: Purification of recombinant proteins by fusion with thermally-responsive polypeptides. Nat Biotechnol 1999, 17:1112-1115.
  • [22]Floss DM, Schallau K, Rose-John S, Conrad U, Scheller J: Elastin-like polypeptides revolutionize recombinant protein expression and their biomedical application. Trends Biotechnol 2010, 28:37-45.
  • [23]Nakari-Setala T, Aro N, Kalkkinen N, Alatalo E, Penttila M: Genetic and biochemical characterization of the Trichoderma reesei hydrophobin HFBI. Eur J Biochem 1996, 235:248-255.
  • [24]Hakanpaa J, Paananen A, Askolin S, Nakari-Setala T, Parkkinen T, Penttila M, Linder MB, Rouvinen J: Atomic resolution structure of the HFBII hydrophobin, a self-assembling amphiphile. J Biol Chem 2004, 279:534-539.
  • [25]Linder MB: Hydrophobins: Proteins that self assemble at interfaces. Curr Opin Colloid Interface Sci 2009, 14:356-363.
  • [26]Wang X, Shi F, Wosten HA, Hektor H, Poolman B, Robillard GT: The SC3 hydrophobin self-assembles into a membrane with distinct mass transfer properties. Biophys J 2005, 88:3434-3443.
  • [27]Wösten HA, De Vocht ML: Hydrophobins, the fungal coat unravelled. Biochim Biophys Acta 2000, 1469:79-86.
  • [28]Linder M, Selber K, Nakari-Setala T, Qiao M, Kula MR, Penttila M: The hydrophobins HFBI and HFBII from Trichoderma reesei showing efficient interactions with nonionic surfactants in aqueous two-phase systems. Biomacromolecules 2001, 2:511-517.
  • [29]Linder MB, Qiao M, Laumen F, Selber K, Hyytia T, Nakari-Setala T, Penttila ME: Efficient purification of recombinant proteins using hydrophobins as tags in surfactant-based two-phase systems. Biochemistry 2004, 43:11873-11882.
  • [30]Joensuu JJ, Conley AJ, Lienemann M, Brandle JE, Linder MB, Menassa R: Hydrophobin fusions for high-level transient protein expression and purification in Nicotiana benthamiana. Plant Physiol 2010, 152:622-633.
  • [31]Lahtinen T, Linder MB, Nakari-Setala T, Oker-Blom C: Hydrophobin (HFBI): A potential fusion partner for one-step purification of recombinant proteins from insect cells. Protein Expr Purif 2008, 59:18-24.
  • [32]Bellucci M, De Marchis F, Nicoletti I, Arcioni S: Zeolin is a recombinant storage protein with different solubility and stability properties according to its localization in the endoplasmic reticulum or in the chloroplast. J Biotechnol 2007, 131:97-105.
  • [33]Mainieri D, Rossi M, Archinti M, Bellucci M, De Marchis F, Vavassori S, Pompa A, Arcioni S, Vitale A: Zeolin. A new recombinant storage protein constructed using maize gamma-zein and bean phaseolin. Plant Physiol 2004, 136:3447-3456.
  • [34]Torrent M, Llop-Tous I, Ludevid MD: Protein body induction: a new tool to produce and recover recombinant proteins in plants. Methods Mol Biol 2009, 483:193-208.
  • [35]Kay R, Chan A, Daly M, McPherson J: Duplication of CaMV 35S promoter sequences creates a strong enhancer for plant genes. Science 1987, 236:1299-1302.
  • [36]Wu K, Malik K, Tian L, Hu M, Martin T, Foster E, Brown D, Miki B: Enhancers and core promoter elements are essential for the activity of a cryptic gene activation sequence from tobacco, tCUP. Mol Genet Genomics 2001, 265:763-770.
  • [37]Bevan M, Barnes WM, Chilton MD: Structure and transcription of the nopaline synthase gene region of T-DNA. Nucleic Acids Res 1983, 11:369-385.
  • [38]Harris LJ, Gleddie SC: A modified Rpl3 gene from rice confers tolerance of the Fusarium graminearum mycotoxin deoxynivalenol to transgenic tobacco. Physiol Mol Plant Pathol 2001, 58:173-181.
  • [39]Finnegan J, McElroy D: Transgene inactivation: plants fight back! Bio/Technology 1994, 12:883-889.
  • [40]Stam M, Mol JNM, Kooter JM: The silence of genes in transgenic plants. Ann Bot 1997, 79:3-12.
  • [41]Nap J-P, Keizer P, Jansen R: First-generation transgenic plants and statistics. Plant Mol Biol Rep 1993, 11:156-164.
  • [42]Day CD, Lee E, Kobayashi J, Holappa LD, Albert H, Ow DW: Transgene integration into the same chromosome location can produce alleles that express at a predictable level, or alleles that are differentially silenced. Genes Dev 2000, 14:2869-2880.
  • [43]Schubert D, Lechtenberg B, Forsbach A, Gils M, Bahadur S, Schmidt R: Silencing in Arabidopsis T-DNA transformants: the predominant role of a gene-specific RNA sensing mechanism versus position effects. Plant Cell 2004, 16:2561-2572.
  • [44]Brodersen P, Voinnet O: The diversity of RNA silencing pathways in plants. Trends Genet 2006, 22:268-280.
  • [45]Fagard M: Vaucheret H: (trans)gene silencing in plants: How many mechanisms? Annu Rev Plant Physiol Plant Mol Biol 2000, 51:167-194.
  • [46]Silhavy D, Molnar A, Lucioli A, Szittya G, Hornyik C, Tavazza M, Burgyan J: A viral protein suppresses RNA silencing and binds silencing-generated, 21- to 25-nucleotide double-stranded RNAs. EMBO J 2002, 21:3070-3080.
  • [47]Angel CA, Hsieh YC, Schoelz JE: Comparative analysis of the capacity of tombusvirus P22 and P19 proteins to function as avirulence determinants in Nicotiana species. Mol Plant Microbe Interact 2011, 24:91-99.
  • [48]Garabagi F, Gilbert E, Loos A, McLean MD, Hall JC: Utility of the P19 suppressor of gene-silencing protein for production of therapeutic antibodies in Nicotiana expression hosts. Plant Biotechnol J 2012, 10:1118-1128.
  • [49]Patel J, Zhu H, Menassa R, Gyenis L, Richman A, Brandle J: Elastin-like polypeptide fusions enhance the accumulation of recombinant proteins in tobacco leaves. Transgenic Res 2007, 16:239-249.
  • [50]Scheller J, Leps M, Conrad U: Forcing single-chain variable fragment production in tobacco seeds by fusion to elastin-like polypeptides. Plant Biotechnol J 2006, 4:243-249.
  • [51]Joensuu JJ, Niklander-Teeri V, Brandle JE: Transgenic plants for animal health: Plant-made vaccine antigens for animal infectious disease control. Phytochem Rev 2008, 7:553-577.
  • [52]Menassa R, Du C, Yin ZQ, Ma S, Poussier P, Brandle J, Jevnikar AM: Therapeutic effectiveness of orally administered transgenic low-alkaloid tobacco expressing human interleukin-10 in a mouse model of colitis. Plant Biotechnol J 2007, 5:50-59.
  • [53]Galili G: ER-derived compartments are formed by highly regulated processes and have special functions in plants. Plant Physiol 2004, 136:3411-3413.
  • [54]Vitale A, Ceriotti A: Protein quality control mechanisms and protein storage in the endoplasmic reticulum. A conflict of interests? Plant Physiol 2004, 136:3420-3426.
  • [55]Havelda Z, Hornyik C, Crescenzi A, Burgyan J: In situ characterization of Cymbidium Ringspot Tombusvirus infection-induced posttranscriptional gene silencing in Nicotiana benthamiana. J Virol 2003, 77:6082-6086.
  • [56]Lombardi R, Circelli P, Villani ME, Buriani G, Nardi L, Coppola V, Bianco L, Benvenuto E, Donini M, Marusic C: High-level HIV-1 Nef transient expression in Nicotiana benthamiana using the P19 gene silencing suppressor protein of Artichoke Mottled Crinckle Virus. BMC Biotechnol 2009, 9:96. BioMed Central Full Text
  • [57]Vézina LP, Faye L, Lerouge P, D’Aoust MA, Marquet-Blouin E, Burel C, Lavoie PO, Bardor M, Gomord V: Transient co-expression for fast and high-yield production of antibodies with human-like N-glycans in plants. Plant Biotechnol J 2009, 7:442-455.
  • [58]Voinnet O, Rivas S, Mestre P, Baulcombe D: An enhanced transient expression system in plants based on suppression of gene silencing by the p19 protein of tomato bushy stunt virus. Plant J 2003, 33:949-956.
  • [59]Rybicki EP: Plant-produced vaccines: promise and reality. Drug Discov Today 2009, 14:16-24.
  • [60]Wroblewski T, Tomczak A, Michelmore R: Optimization of Agrobacterium-mediated transient assays of gene expression in lettuce, tomato and Arabidopsis. Plant Biotechnol J 2005, 3:259-273.
  • [61]Horsch RB, Fry JE, Hoffmann NL, Eichholtz D, Rogers SG, Fraley RT: A simple and general method for transferring genes into plants. Science 1985, 227:1229-1230.
  • [62]Kapila J, De Rycke R, Van Montagu M, Angenon G: An Agrobacterium-mediated transient gene expression system for intact leaves. Plant Sci 1997, 122:101-108.
  • [63]Bradford MM: A rapid and sensitive method for the quantitation of microgram quantities of protein utilizing the principle of protein-dye binding. Anal Biochem 1976, 72:248-254.
  文献评价指标  
  下载次数:77次 浏览次数:20次