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High throughput generation of a resource of the human secretome in mammalian cells

Authors :
Mathias Uhlén
Malin Westin
Andreas Hober
LanLan Xu
Björn Forsström
Bjørn G. Voldborg
Faranak Bidad
Siri Ekblad
Delaram Afshari
Lovisa Holmberg Schiavone
Hanna Tegel
Kalle von Feilitzen
Johan Rockberg
Jenny Ottosson Takanen
Fredrik Edfors
Sophia Hober
Anne-Sophie Svensson
Melanie Dannemeyer
Henric Enstedt
Magnus Lundqvist
Sinead Knight
Sven Göpel
Martin Zwahlen
Mona Moradi
Anna Berling
Rick Davies
Anna-Luisa Volk
Åsa Sivertsson
Lorenz M. Mayr
Sara Kanje
Source :
Tegel, H, Dannemeyer, M, Kanje, S, Sivertsson, Å, Berling, A, Svensson, A S, Hober, A, Enstedt, H, Volk, A L, Lundqvist, M, Moradi, M, Afshari, D, Ekblad, S, Xu, L L, Westin, M, Bidad, F, Schiavone, L H, Davies, R, Mayr, L M, Knight, S, Göpel, S O, Voldborg, B G, Edfors, F, Forsström, B, von Feilitzen, K, Zwahlen, M, Rockberg, J, Takanen, J O, Uhlén, M & Hober, S 2020, ' High throughput generation of a resource of the human secretome in mammalian cells ', New Biotechnology, vol. 58, pp. 45-54 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nbt.2020.05.002
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The proteins secreted by human tissues and blood cells, the secretome, are important both for the basic understanding of human biology and for identification of potential targets for future diagnosis and therapy. Here, a high-throughput mammalian cell factory is presented that was established to create a resource of recombinant full-length proteins covering the majority of those annotated as ‘secreted’ in humans. The full-length DNA sequences of each of the predicted secreted proteins were generated by gene synthesis, the constructs were transfected into Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells and the recombinant proteins were produced, purified and analyzed. Almost 1,300 proteins were successfully generated and proteins predicted to be secreted into the blood were produced with a success rate of 65%, while the success rates for the other categories of secreted proteins were somewhat lower giving an overall one-pass success rate of ca. 58%. The proteins were used to generate targeted proteomics assays and several of the proteins were shown to be active in a phenotypic assay involving pancreatic β-cell dedifferentiation. Many of the proteins that failed during production in CHO cells could be rescued in human embryonic kidney (HEK 293) cells suggesting that a cell factory of human origin can be an attractive alternative for production in mammalian cells. In conclusion, a high-throughput protein production and purification system has been successfully established to create a unique resource of the human secretome.

Details

ISSN :
18764347
Volume :
58
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
New biotechnology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ac3c343bc5f3f5e43bfd18155a712f5c