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A High Yield and Cost-efficient Expression System of Human Granzymes in Mammalian Cells

Authors :
Luis Filgueira
Farokh Dotiwala
Denis Martinvalet
Isabelle Fellay
Judy Lieberman
Michael Walch
Source :
Journal of Visualized Experiments.
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
MyJove Corporation, 2015.

Abstract

When cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) or natural killer (NK) cells recognize tumor cells or cells infected with intracellular pathogens, they release their cytotoxic granule content to eliminate the target cells and the intracellular pathogen. Death of the host cells and intracellular pathogens is triggered by the granule serine proteases, granzymes (Gzms), delivered into the host cell cytosol by the pore forming protein perforin (PFN) and into bacterial pathogens by the prokaryotic membrane disrupting protein granulysin (GNLY). To investigate the molecular mechanisms of target cell death mediated by the Gzms in experimental in-vitro settings, protein expression and purification systems that produce high amounts of active enzymes are necessary. Mammalian secreted protein expression systems imply the potential to produce correctly folded, fully functional protein that bears posttranslational modification, such as glycosylation. Therefore, we used a cost-efficient calcium precipitation method for transient transfection of HEK293T cells with human Gzms cloned into the expression plasmid pHLsec. Gzm purification from the culture supernatant was achieved by immobilized nickel affinity chromatography using the C-terminal polyhistidine tag provided by the vector. The insertion of an enterokinase site at the N-terminus of the protein allowed the generation of active protease that was finally purified by cation exchange chromatography. The system was tested by producing high levels of cytotoxic human Gzm A, B and M and should be capable to produce virtually every enzyme in the human body in high yields.

Details

ISSN :
1940087X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Visualized Experiments
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....871bf717296eca92e19f0efcac63c387
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3791/52911