首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 703 毫秒
1.
Plants offer an alternative inexpensive and convenient technology for large scale production of recombinant proteins especially recombinant antibodies (plantibodies). In this paper, we describe the expression of a model single chain antibody fragment (B6scFv) in transgenic tobacco. Four different gene constructs of B6scFv with different target signals for expression in different compartments of a tobacco plant cell with and without endoplasmic reticulum (ER) retention signal were used. Agrobacterium mediated plant transformation of B6scFv gene was performed with tobacco leaf explants and the gene in regenerated plants was detected using histochemical GUS assay and PCR. The expression of B6scFv gene was detected by western blotting and the recombinant protein was purified from putative transgenic tobacco plants using metal affinity chromatography. The expression level of recombinant protein was determined by indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. The highest accumulation of protein was found up to 3.28 % of the total soluble protein (TSP) in plants expressing B6scFv 1003 targeted to the ER, and subsequently expression of 2.9 % of TSP in plants expressing B6scFv 1004 (with target to apoplast with ER retention signal). In contrast, lower expression of 0.78 and 0.58 % of TSP was found in plants expressing antibody fragment in cytosol and apoplast, without ER retention signal. The described method/system could be used in the future for diverse applications including expression of other recombinant molecules in plants for immunomodulation, obtaining pathogen resistance against plant pathogens, altering metabolic pathways and also for the expression of different antibodies of therapeutic and diagnostic uses.  相似文献   

2.
3.
4.
The smaller isoform of the enzyme glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD65) is a major islet autoantigen in autoimmune type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM). Transgenic plants expressing human GAD65 (hGAD65) are a potential means of direct oral administration of the islet autoantigen in order to induce tolerance and prevent clinical onset of disease. We have previously reported the successful generation of transgenic tobacco and carrot that express immunoreactive, full-length hGAD65. In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that the expression levels of recombinant hGAD65 in transgenic plants can be increased by targeting the enzyme to the plant cell cytosol and by mediating expression through the potato virus X (PVX) vector. By substituting the NH2-terminal region of hGAD65 with a homologous region of rat GAD67, a chimeric GAD671-87/GAD6588-585 molecule was expressed in transgenic tobacco plants. Immunolocalization analysis showed that immunoreactive GAD67/65 was found in the plant cell cytosol. By using a radio-immuno assay with human serum from a GAD65 autoantibody-positive T1DM patient, the highest expression level of the recombinant GAD67/65 protein was estimated to be 0.19% of the total soluble protein, compared to only 0.04% of wild-type hGAD65. Transient expression of wild-type, full-length hGAD65 in N. benthamiana mediated by PVX infection was associated with expression levels of immunoreactive protein as high as 2.2% of total soluble protein. This substantial improvement of the expression of hGAD65 in plants paves the way for immunoprevention studies of oral administration of GAD65-containing transgenic plant material in animal models of spontaneous autoimmune diabetes.  相似文献   

5.
Plants have shown promise as bioreactors for the large-scale production of a wide variety of recombinant proteins. To increase the economic feasibility of this technology, numerous molecular approaches have been developed to enhance the production yield of these valuable proteins in plants. Alternatively, we chose to examine the temporal and spatial distribution of erythropoietin (EPO) accumulation during tobacco plant development, in order to establish the optimal harvesting time to further maximize heterologous protein recovery. EPO is used extensively worldwide for the treatment of anaemia and is currently the most commercially valuable biopharmaceutical on the market. Our results indicate that the concentration of recombinant EPO and endogenous total soluble protein (TSP) declined significantly for every leaf of the plant during maturation, although the rate of these declines was strongly dependent on the leaf’s position on the plant. As a result, the amount of EPO produced in leaves relative to TSP content remained essentially unchanged over the course of the plant’s life. Decreasing levels of recombinant protein in leaves was attributed to proteolytic degradation associated with tissue senescence since transgene silencing was not detected. We found that significantly higher concentrations of EPO within younger leaves more than compensated for their smaller size, when compared to their low-expressing, fully-grown counterparts. This suggests that fast-growing, young leaves should be periodically harvested from the plants as they continue to grow in order to maximize recombinant protein yield. These findings demonstrate that EPO accumulation is highly influenced by the plant’s physiology and development.  相似文献   

6.
Nicotiana tabacum is emerging as a crop of choice for production of recombinant protein pharmaceuticals. Although there is significant commercial expertise in tobacco farming, different cultivation practices are likely to be needed when the objective is to optimise protein expression, yield and extraction, rather than the traditional focus on biomass and alkaloid production. Moreover, pharmaceutical transgenic tobacco plants are likely to be grown initially within a controlled environment, the parameters for which have yet to be established. Here, the growth characteristics and functional recombinant protein yields for two separate transgenic tobacco plant lines were investigated. The impacts of temperature, day-length, compost nitrogen content, radiation and plant density were examined. Temperature was the only environmental variable to affect IgG concentration in the plants, with higher yields observed in plants grown at lower temperature. In contrast, temperature, supplementary radiation and plant density all affected the total soluble protein yield in the same plants. Transgenic plants expressing a second recombinant protein (cyanovirin-N) responded differently to IgG transgenic plants to elevated temperature, with an increase in cyanovirin-N concentration, although the effect of the environmental variables on total soluble protein yields was the same as the IgG plants. Planting density and radiation levels were important factors affecting variability of the two recombinant protein yields in transgenic plants. Phenotypic differences were observed between the two transgenic plant lines and non-transformed N. tabacum, but the effect of different growing conditions was consistent between the three lines. Temperature, day length, radiation intensity and planting density all had a significant impact on biomass production. Taken together, the data suggest that recombinant protein yield is not affected substantially by environmental factors other than growth temperature. Overall productivity is therefore correlated to biomass production, although other factors such as purification burden, extractability protein stability and quality also need to be considered in the optimal design of cultivation conditions.  相似文献   

7.
We evaluated the concept for protection of plants against virus infection based on the expression of single-chain Fv (scFv) fragments in the apoplasm or cytosol of transgenic plants. Cloned cDNA of a tobacco mosaic virus (TMV)-specific scFv antibody, which binds to intact virions, was integrated into the plant expression vector pSS and used for Agrobacterium-mediated transformation of Nicotiana tabacum cv. Xanthi-nc. Regenerated transgenic tobacco plants were analysed by northern blot, western blot and ELISA to assess expression and functionality of recombinant antibody (rAb) fragments. A significant increase of scFv levels in T1 progeny was obtained for plants secreting apoplastic scFv antibodies but not for scFvs expressed in the cytosol. Bioassays revealed that T1 progeny producing scFvs in different plant cell compartments showed different levels of resistance upon inoculation with TMV. The most dramatic reduction of necrotic local lesion numbers upon virus infection was observed in T1 plants expressing scFv fragments in the cytosol. Infectivity could be reduced by more than 90%, despite the observation that protein expression levels for functional scFv antibodies were very low. Furthermore, upon inactivation of the N-resistance gene at elevated temperature, a significant portion of the T1 progenies inhibited systemic virus spread, indicating that expression of TMV-specific cytosolic scFvs confers virus resistance in these transgenic plants. Moreover, inoculation of protoplasts isolated from transgenic and non-transgenic tobacco plants with TMV-RNA demonstrated that accumulation of virus particles is affected by cytosolic scFv expression.  相似文献   

8.
Interleukin-4 (IL-4) is a pleiotropic cytokine that plays a key regulatory role in the immune system. Recombinant human IL-4 (rhIL-4) offers great potential for the treatment of cancer, viral and autoimmune diseases. Unfortunately, the high production cost of IL-4 associated with conventional expression systems has, until now, limited broader clinical testing, particularly with regard to the more convenient and safer oral delivery of IL-4 as opposed to parenteral injection in patients. In this study, we investigated the feasibility of transgenic plants for the cost-effective production of rhIL-4. IL-4 expression vectors with different modifications under the control of a constitutive cauliflower mosaic virus 35S (CaMV 35S) promoter were introduced into tobacco by Agrobacterium-mediated transformation. Transgenic tobaccos expressing various levels of rhIL-4 protein were generated. Higher expression was achieved through IL-4 retention in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), with the maximal accumulation being approximately 0.1% of total soluble protein (TSP) in the leaves. No improvement in expression was further achieved by replacing the native signal peptide of IL-4 with the plant signal peptide. The best rhIL-4-expressing vector shown in tobacco was selected and further transferred into potato plants. The analysis of transgenic tubers also revealed various levels of rhIL-4, with the highest being 0.08% of TSP. Sensitive in vitro T-cell proliferation assays showed that plant-derived rhIL-4 retained full biological activity. These results suggest that plants can be used to produce biologically active rhIL-4 and probably many other mammalian proteins of medical significance. Moreover, the production of plants expressing rhIL-4 will enable the testing of plant rhIL-4 by oral delivery for the treatment of clinical diseases.  相似文献   

9.
Li Y  Sun M  Liu J  Yang Z  Zhang Z  Shen G 《Plant cell reports》2006,25(4):329-333
A tobacco chloroplast expression vector, pTRVP1, containing the foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) VP1 gene and the selective marker aadA gene, was constructed and transferred to tobacco by biolistic method. Three resistant lines were obtained through spectinomycin selection, and each transgenic line was subjected to a second round of spectinomycin selection. PCR and PCR southern blot analysis revealed that the VP1 gene had integrated into the chloroplast genome. Western blot and quantification ELISA assays indicated that the VP1 gene was expressed in tobacco chloroplasts and accounted for 2–3% of total soluble protein. This suggested that plant chloroplasts were an efficient expression system for the potential production of recombinant antigens in plants.  相似文献   

10.
Over the past decade various approaches have been used to increase the expression level of recombinant proteins in plants. One successful approach has been to target proteins to specific subcellular sites/compartments of plant cells, such as the chloroplast. In the study reported here, hyperthermostable endoglucanase Cel5A was targeted into the chloroplasts of tobacco plants via the N-terminal transit peptide of nuclear-encoded plastid proteins. The expression levels of Cel5A transgenic lines were then determined using three distinct transit peptides, namely, the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding protein (CAB), Rubisco small subunit (RS), and Rubisco activase (RA). RS:Cel5A transgenic lines produced highly stable active enzymes, and the protein accumulation of these transgenic lines was up to 5.2% of the total soluble protein in the crude leaf extract, remaining stable throughout the life cycle of the tobacco plant. Transmission election microscopy analysis showed that efficient targeting of Cel5A protein was under the control of the transit peptide.  相似文献   

11.
We evaluated transgenic tobacco plants as an alternative to Escherichia coli for the production of recombinant human complement factor 5a (C5a). C5a has not been expressed in plants before and is highly unstable in vivo in its native form, so it was necessary to establish the most suitable subcellular targeting strategy. We used the strong and constitutive CaMV 35S promoter to drive transgene expression and compared three different subcellular compartments. The yields of C5a in the T0 transgenic plants were low in terms of the proportion of total soluble protein (TSP) when targeted to the apoplast (0.0002% TSP) or endoplasmic reticulum (0.0003% TSP) but was one order of magnitude higher when targeted to the vacuole (0.001% TSP). The yields could be increased by conventional breeding (up to 0.014% TSP in the T2 generation). C5a accumulated to the same level in seeds and leaves when targeted to the apoplast but was up to 1.7-fold more abundant in the seeds when targeted to the ER or vacuole, although this difference was less striking in the better-performing lines. When yields were calculated as an amount per gram fresh weight of transgenic plant tissue, the vacuole targeting strategy was clearly more efficient in seeds, reaching 35.8 µg C5a per gram of fresh seed weight compared to 10.62 µg C5a per gram fresh weight of leaves. Transient expression of C5aER and C5aVac in N. benthamiana, using MagnICON vectors, reached up to 0.2% and 0.7% of TSP, respectively, but was accompanied by cytotoxic effects and induced leaf senescence. Western blot of the plant extracts revealed a band matching the corresponding glycosylated native protein and the bioassay demonstrated that recombinant C5a was biologically active.  相似文献   

12.
In recent years, several studies have demonstrated the use of autonomously replicating plant viruses as vehicles to express a variety of therapeutic molecules of pharmaceutical interest. Plant virus vectors for expression of heterologous proteins in plants represent an attractive biotechnological tool to complement the conventional production of recombinant proteins in bacterial, fungal, or mammalian cells. Virus vectors are advantageous when high levels of gene expression are desired within a short time, although the instability of the foreign genes in the viral genome may present problems. Similar levels of foreign protein production in transgenic plants often are unattainable, in some cases because of the toxicity of the foreign protein. Now virus-based vectors are for the first time investigated as a means of producing recombinant allergens in plants. Several plant virus vectors have been developed for the expression of foreign proteins. Here, we describe the utilization of tobacco mosaic virus- and potato virus X-based vectors for the transient expression of plant allergens in Nicotiana benthamiana plants. One approach involves the inoculation of tobacco plants with infectious RNA transcribed in vitro from a cDNA copy of the recombinant viral genome. Another approach utilizes the transfection of whole plants from wounds inoculated with Agrobacterium tumefaciens containing cDNA copies of recombinant plus-sense RNA viruses.  相似文献   

13.
The 2L21 peptide, which confers protection to dogs against challenge with virulent canine parvovirus (CPV), was expressed in tobacco chloroplasts as a C-terminal translational fusion with the cholera toxin B subunit (CTB) or the green fluorescent protein (GFP). Expression of recombinant proteins was dependent on plant age. A very high-yield production was achieved in mature plants at the time of full flowering (310 mg CTB-2L21 protein per plant). Both young and senescent plants accumulated lower amounts of recombinant proteins than mature plants. This shows the importance of the time of harvest when scaling up the process. The maximum level of CTB-2L21 was 7.49 mg/g fresh weight (equivalent to 31.1% of total soluble protein, TSP) and that of GFP-2L21 was 5.96 mg/g fresh weight (equivalent to 22.6% of TSP). The 2L21 inserted epitope could be detected with a CPV-neutralizing monoclonal antibody, indicating that the epitope is correctly presented at the C-terminus of the fusion proteins. The resulting chimera CTB-2L21 protein retained pentamerization and G(M1)-ganglioside binding characteristics of the native CTB and induced antibodies able to recognize VP2 protein from CPV. To our knowledge, this is the first report of an animal vaccine epitope expression in transgenic chloroplasts. The high expression of antigens in chloroplasts would reduce the amount of plant material required for vaccination (approximately 100 mg for a dose of 500 microg antigen) and would permit encapsulation of freeze-dried material or pill formation.  相似文献   

14.
A recombinant dog gastric lipase with therapeutic potential for the treatment of exocrine pancreatic insufficiency was expressed in transgenic tobacco plants. We targeted the protein using two different signal sequences for either vacuolar retention or secretion. In both cases, an active glycosylated recombinant protein was obtained. The recombinant enzymes and the native enzyme displayed similar properties including acid resistance and acidic optimum pH. The proteolytic maturation and the specific activity of the recombinant proteins, however, were found to be dependent on subcellular compartmentalization. Expression levels of recombinant dog gastric lipase were about 5% and 7% of acid extractable plant proteins for vacuolar retention and secretion respectively. This expression system already has allowed the production of tens of grams of purified lipase through open-field culture of transgenic tobacco plants.  相似文献   

15.
16.
The cholera toxin B subunit (CTB) contains five identical polypeptides and targets glycosphingolipid receptors on eukaryotic cell surfaces. Increased expression of CTB in plants is critical for the development of edible vaccines. In this study, the coding sequence of the CTB gene was optimized, based on the modification of codon usage to that of tobacco plant genes and the removal of mRNA-destabilizing sequences. The synthetic CTB gene was cloned into a plant expression vector and expressed in tobacco plants under the control of the CaMV 35S promoter. The recombinant CTB protein constituted approximately 1.5% of the total soluble protein in transgenic tobacco leaves. This level of CTB production was approximately 15-fold higher than that in tobacco plants that were transformed with the bacterial CTB gene. The recombinant CTB produced by tobacco plants demonstrated strong affinity for GM1-ganglioside, which indicates that the sites required for binding and proper folding of the pentameric CTB structure were conserved. This is the first report on the optimization of the CTB-coding sequence to give a dramatic increase in CTB expression in plants.  相似文献   

17.
Plants have been recognized as a promising production platform for recombinant pharmaceutical proteins. The human immunodeficiency virus Gag (Pr55gag) structural polyprotein precursor is a prime candidate for developing a HIV-1 vaccine, but, so far, has been expressed at very low level in plants. The aim of this study was to investigate factors potentially involved in Pr55gag expression and increase protein yield in plant cells. In transient expression experiments in various subcellular compartments, the native Pr55gag sequence could be expressed only in the chloroplast. Experiments with truncated subunits suggested a negative role of the 5′-end on the expression of the full gene in the cytosol. Stable transgenic plants were produced in tobacco by Agrobacterium-mediated nuclear transformation with protein targeted to plastids, and biolistic-mediated plastid transformation. Compared to the nuclear genome, the integration and expression of the gag transgene in the plastome resulted in significantly higher protein accumulation levels (up to 7–8% TSP, equivalent to 312–363 mg/kg FW). In transplastomic plants, a 25-fold higher protein accumulation was obtained by translationally fusing the Pr55gag polyprotein to the N-terminus of the plastid photosynthetic RbcL protein. In chloroplasts, the Pr55gag polyprotein was processed in a pattern similar to that achieved by the viral protease, the processing being more extended in older leaves of mature plants. The Gag proteins produced in transgenic plastids were able to assemble into particles resembling VLPs produced in baculovirus/insect cells and E. coli systems. These results indicate that plastid transformation is a promising tool for HIV antigen manufacturing in plant cells. Electronic supplementary material  The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. IGV publication no. 330  相似文献   

18.
Production of recombinant proteins in tobacco guttation fluid   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
Guttation, the loss of water and dissolved materials from uninjured plant organs, is a common phenomenon in higher plants. By using endoplasmic reticulum signal peptides fused to the recombinant protein sequences, we have generated transgenic tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv Wisconsin) plants that secrete three heterologous proteins of different genetic backgrounds (bacterial xylanase, green fluorescent protein of jellyfish [Aequorea victoria], and human placental alkaline phosphatase) through the leaf intercellular space into tobacco guttation fluid. Production rates of 1.1 microg/g of leaf dry weight per day were achieved for alkaline phosphatase with this protein comprising almost 3% of total soluble protein in the guttation fluid. Guttation fluid can be collected throughout a plant's life, thus providing a continuous and nondestructive system for recombinant protein production. Guttation fluid has the potential of increasing the efficiency of recombinant protein production technology by increasing yield, abolishing extraction, and simplifying its downstream processing.  相似文献   

19.
Lettuce and tobacco chloroplast transgenic lines expressing the cholera toxin B subunit–human proinsulin (CTB-Pins) fusion protein were generated. CTB-Pins accumulated up to ~16% of total soluble protein (TSP) in tobacco and up to ~2.5% of TSP in lettuce. Eight milligrams of powdered tobacco leaf material expressing CTB-Pins or, as negative controls, CTB–green fluorescent protein (CTB-GFP) or interferon–GFP (IFN-GFP), or untransformed leaf, were administered orally, each week for 7 weeks, to 5-week-old female non-obese diabetic (NOD) mice. The pancreas of CTB-Pins-treated mice showed decreased infiltration of cells characteristic of lymphocytes (insulitis); insulin-producing β-cells in the pancreatic islets of CTB-Pins-treated mice were significantly preserved, with lower blood or urine glucose levels, by contrast with the few β-cells remaining in the pancreatic islets of the negative controls. Increased expression of immunosuppressive cytokines, such as interleukin-4 and interleukin-10 (IL-4 and IL-10), was observed in the pancreas of CTB-Pins-treated NOD mice. Serum levels of immunoglobulin G1 (IgG1), but not IgG2a, were elevated in CTB-Pins-treated mice. Taken together, T-helper 2 (Th2) lymphocyte-mediated oral tolerance is a likely mechanism for the prevention of pancreatic insulitis and the preservation of insulin-producing β-cells. This is the first report of expression of a therapeutic protein in transgenic chloroplasts of an edible crop. Transplastomic lettuce plants expressing CTB-Pins grew normally and transgenes were maternally inherited in T1 progeny. This opens up the possibility for the low-cost production and delivery of human therapeutic proteins, and a strategy for the treatment of various other autoimmune diseases.  相似文献   

20.
Chloroplast transformation is a promising approach for the commercial production of recombinant proteins in plants. However, gene containment still remains an issue for the large-scale cultivation of transplastomic plants in the field. Here, we have evaluated the potential of using tobacco transplastomic cell suspensions for the fully contained production of a modified form of the green fluorescent protein (GFP+) and, a vaccine antigen, fragment C of tetanus toxin (TetC). Expression of these proteins in cell suspension cultures (and calli) was much less than in leaves, reaching 0.5%-1.5% of total soluble protein (TSP), but still produced 2.4-7.2 mg/L of liquid culture. Much better expression levels were achieved with a novel protein production platform in which transgenic cell suspension cultures were placed in a temporary immersion bioreactor in the presence of Thidiazuron to initiate shoot formation. GFP+ yield reached 660 mg/L of bioreactor (33% TSP), and TetC accumulated to about 95 mg/L (8% TSP). This new production platform, combining the rapid generation of transplastomic cell suspension cultures and the use of temporary immersion bioreactors, is a promising route for the fully contained low-cost production of recombinant proteins in chloroplasts.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号