971 resultados para Recombinant Protein Yields
Resumo:
Leptospirosis is a zoonosis with multisystem involvement caused by pathogenic strains of the genus Leptospira. OmpL1 is an outer membrane protein of Leptospira spp. that is expressed during infection. In this work, we investigated novel features of this protein. We describe that OmpL1 is a novel leptospiral extracellular matrix (ECM)-binding protein and a plasminogen (PLG) receptor. The recombinant protein was expressed in Escherichia coli BL21(DE3) Star/pLysS as inclusion bodies, refolded, and purified by metal-chelating chromatography. The protein presented a typical beta-strand secondary structure, as evaluated by circular dichroism spectroscopy. The recombinant protein reacted with antibodies in serum samples from convalescent leptospirosis patients with a high specificity compared to serum samples from individuals with unrelated diseases. These data strengthen the usefulness of OmpL1 as a diagnostic marker of leptospirosis. The characterization of the immunogenicity of recombinant OmpL1 in inoculated BALB/c mice showed that the protein has the capacity to elicit humoral and cellular immune responses, as denoted by high antibody titers and the proliferation of lymphocytes. We demonstrate that OmpL1 has the ability to mediate attachment to laminin and plasma fibronectin, with KD (equilibrium dissociation constant) values of 2,099.93 +/- 871.03 nM and 1,239.23 +/- 506.85 nM, respectively. OmpL1 is also a PLG receptor, with a KD of 368.63 +/- 121.23 nM, capable of generating enzymatically active plasmin. This is the first report that shows and characterizes OmpL1 as an ECM-interacting and a PLG-binding protein of Leptospira spp. that may play a role in bacterial pathogenesis when expressed during infection.
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LigB is an adhesin from pathogenic Leptospira that is able to bind to extracellular matrix and is considered a virulence factor. A shotgun phage display genomic library was constructed and used for panning against Heparan Sulfate Proteoglycan (HSPG). A phage clone encoding part of LigB protein was selected in panning experiments and showed specific binding to heparin. To validate the selected clone, fragments of LigB were produced as recombinant proteins and showed affinity to heparin and to mammalian cells. Heparin was also able to reduce the binding of rLB-Ct to mammalian cells. Our data suggests that the glycosaminoglycan moiety of the HSPG is responsible for its binding and could mediate the attachment of the recombinant protein rLB-Ct. Thus, heparin may act as a receptor for Leptospira to colonize and to invade the host tissue. (C) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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Lactic acid bacteria (LAB) are an attractive and safe alternative for the expression of heterologous proteins, as they are nonpathogenic and endotoxin-free organisms. Lactococcus lactis, the LAB model organism, has been extensively employed in the biotechnology field for large-scale production of heterologous proteins, and its use as a "cell factory" has been widely studied. We have been particularly interested in the use of L. lactis for production of heat shock proteins (HSPs), which reportedly play important roles in the initiation of innate and adaptive immune responses. However, this activity has been questioned, as LPS contamination appears to be responsible for most, if not all, immunostimulatory activity of HSPs. In order to study the effect of pure HSPs on the immune system, we constructed recombinant L. lactis strains able to produce and properly address the Mycobacterium leprae 65-kDa HSP (Hsp65) to the cytoplasm or to the extracellular medium, using a xylose-induced expression system. Approximately 7 mg/L recombinant Hsp65 was secreted. Degradation products related to lactococcal HtrA activity were not observed, and the Limulus amebocyte lysate assay demonstrated that the amount of LPS in the recombinant Hsp65 preparations was 10-100 times lower than the permitted levels established by the U. S. Food and Drug Administration. These new L. lactis strains will allow investigation of the effects of M. leprae Hsp65 without the interference of LPS; consequently, they have potential for a variety of biotechnological, medical and therapeutic applications.
Resumo:
A cDNA coding for a digestive cathepsin L, denominated Sl-CathL, was isolated from a cDNA library of Sphenophorus levis larvae, representing the most abundant EST (10.49%) responsible for proteolysis in the midgut. The open reading frame of 972 bp encodes a preproenzyme similar to midgut cathepsin L-like enzymes in other coleopterans. Recombinant Sl-CathL was expressed in Pichia pastoris, with molecular mass of about 42 kDa. The recombinant protein was catalytically activated at low pH and the mature enzyme of 39 kDa displayed thermal instability and maximal activity at 37 degrees C and pH 6.0. Immunocytochemical analysis revealed Sl-CathL production in the midgut epithelium and secretion from vesicles containing the enzyme into the gut lumen, confirming an important role for this enzyme in the digestion of the insect larvae. The expression profile identified by RT-PCR through the biological cycle indicates that Sl-CathL is mainly produced in larval stages, with peak expression in 30-day-old larvae. At this stage, the enzyme is 1250-fold more expressed than in the pupal fase, in which the lowest expression level is detected. This enzyme is also produced in the adult stage, albeit in lesser abundance, assuming the presence of a different array of enzymes in the digestive system of adults. Tissue-specific analysis revealed that Sl-CathL mRNA synthesis occurs fundamentally in the larval midgut, thereby confirming its function as a digestive enzyme, as detected in immunolocalization assays. The catalytic efficiency of the purified recombinant enzyme was calculated using different substrates (Z-Leu-Arg-AMC, Z-Arg-Arg-AMC and Z-Phe-Arg-AMC) and rSl-CathL exhibited hydrolysis preference for Z-Leu-Arg-AMC (k(cat)/K-m = 37.53 mM S-1), which is similar to other insect cathepsin L-like enzymes. rSl-CathL activity inhibition assays were performed using four recombinant sugarcane cystatins. rSl-CathL was strongly inhibited by recombinant cystatin CaneCPI-4 (K-i = 0.196 nM), indicating that this protease is a potential target for pest control. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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Hek-293 cell line presents good production platform for recombinant therapeutic proteins, however little is known about the components that contribute to the cellular control of recombinant protein production. In this study, we generated a Hek-293 producing recombinant factor VIII (FVIII) and we evaluated the immunoglobulin-binding protein (BiP) and phytanoil-CoA α-hydroxylase (PAHX) expression levels which are known for diminishing FVIII production. Our analyses showed that the recombinant cell population expresses 3.1 ± 1.4 fold of BIP mRNA (P = 0.0054) and 97.8 ± 0.5 fold of PAHX mRNA (P = 0.0016) compared to nontransduced cells. The amount of these proteins was inversely correlated to the secreted FVIII. In conclusion, BIP and PAHX expression are augmented in human cells producing FVIII and they antagonize the amount of therapeutic factor VIII in the cell culture.
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Background Up-regulation of S100A7 (Psoriasin), a small calcium-binding protein, is associated with the development of several types of carcinomas, but its function and possibility to serve as a diagnostic or prognostic marker have not been fully defined. In order to prepare antibodies to the protein for immunohistochemical studies we produced the recombinant S100A7 protein in E. coli. mRNA extracted from human tracheal tumor tissue which was amplified by RT-PCR to provide the region coding for the S100A7 gene. The amplified fragment was cloned in the vector pCR2.1-TOPO and sub-cloned in the expression vector pAE. The protein rS100A7 (His-tag) was expressed in E. coli BL21::DE3, purified by affinity chromatography on an Ni-NTA column, recovered in the 2.0 to 3.5 mg/mL range in culture medium, and used to produce a rabbit polyclonal antibody anti-rS100A7 protein. The profile of this polyclonal antibody was evaluated in a tissue microarray. Results The rS100A7 (His-tag) protein was homogeneous by SDS-PAGE and mass spectrometry and was used to produce an anti-recombinant S100A7 (His-tag) rabbit serum (polyclonal antibody anti-rS100A7). The molecular weight of rS100A7 (His-tag) protein determined by linear MALDI-TOF-MS was 12,655.91 Da. The theoretical mass calculated for the nonapeptide attached to the amino terminus is 12,653.26 Da (delta 2.65 Da). Immunostaining with the polyclonal anti-rS100A7 protein generated showed reactivity with little or no background staining in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma cells, detecting S100A7 both in nucleus and cytoplasm. Lower levels of S100A7 were detected in non-neoplastic tissue. Conclusions The polyclonal anti-rS100A7 antibody generated here yielded a good signal-to-noise contrast and should be useful for immunohistochemical detection of S100A7 protein. Its potential use for other epithelial lesions besides human larynx squamous cell carcinoma and non-neoplastic larynx should be explored in future.
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The recombinant expression of 19 different substructures of KLH in the prokaryotic sys-tem E. coli has been successfully achieved: each one of the eight single FUs a to h of both isoforms, KLH1 and KLH2, two substructures consisting of two consecutive FUs (KLH1-bc and KLH1-gh) as well as a cDNA encompassing KLH1-abc. All recombinant proteins, fused to an N-terminal 6xHis tag, have successfully been detected by immuno precipitation using monoclonal α-His-antibodies and polyclonal α-KLH1- and α-KLH2-antibodies. One exception remained: SP-KLH2-a, which was not detected by the α-His-antibodies. This allows speculations as to whether the coexpressed signal peptide can lead, at one hand, to the secretion of the recombinant protein, and on the other to the simultaneous cut-off of the leader peptide, which results in the splitting off of even more N-terminal 6xHis tag, leading to failed recognition by the appropriate antibodies. The comparison of native KLH with recombinantly expressed prokaryotic (E. coli) and eukaryotic (Sf9 insect cells) KLH was done using FU-1h. The weak detection by the polyclonal α-KLH1-antibodies of both recombinantly expressed proteins showed that the native protein was the best recognized. For the prokaryotic one, both the denaturation applied for solubilisation of the bacterial inclusion bodies and the inability of bacterial cells to add N-linked glycosylation, are the reason for the poor hybridization. In contrast, KLH1-h expressed in eukaryotic insect cells is likely to be glycosylated. The incubation with the α-KLH1-antibodies resulting in the same weak detection, however, revealed that the linked carbohydrate side chains are not those expected. The establishment of SOE-PCR, together with further improvement, has enabled the generation of a clone encompassing the complete subunit KLH1-abcdefgh. The se-quence analysis compared to the original KLH1 sequence showed, however, that the resulting recombinant protein is defective in two histidines, required for the copper bind-ing sites in FU-1b and FU-1d and in three disulfide bridges (FU-1a, FU-1b and FU 1g). This is due to polymerase-related nucleotide exchanges, resulting in a changed amino acid sequence. Nevertheless, all eight potential N-glycosylation sites are present, leading to the speculation that the recombinant protein can in theory be fully glycosylated, which is the most important aspect for the clinical applicability of recombinant KLH as an im-munotherapeutic agent. The improvement of this method elaborated during the present work indicates bright prospects for the future generation of a correct cDNA sequence encoding for the complete KLH2 subunit.
Resumo:
Das WSCP (water-soluble chlorophyll protein) der Brassicaceen ist das einzig bekannte Chlorophyll-bindende Protein, welches keine Carotinoide bindet. Es ist ein wasserlösliches, ca. 80 kDa großes Homotetramer mit 1-4 gebundenen Chlorophyllen. Das Protein ist äußerst stabil und vermag die gebundenen Chlorophylle vor Photooxidation zu schützen. Seine Funktion in der Pflanze ist bis heute ein Rätsel und sollte in dieser Arbeit zusammen mit seinen biochemischen Eigenschaften weiter aufgeklärt werden. Es wurden Versuche durchgeführt mit nativem und rekombinantem WSCP aus Blumenkohl (BoWSCP bzw. BoWSCPhis) und aus Arabidopsis thaliana (AtWSCP bzw. AtWSCPhis). Die Expressionsausbeute von BoWSCPhis konnte verbessert werden und zusätzlich wurde die Rekonstitutionsmethode für das rekombinante WSCP optimiert, sodass das pigmentierte Protein mit hoher Ausbeute und großer Reinheit gewonnen werden konnte. Zudem wurde ein neuer WSCP-Klon hergestellt, mBoWSCPhis, der in seiner Sequenz dem maturen nativen BoWSCP entspricht und weitaus weniger Aggregationsprobleme zeigte als BoWSCPhis. Weiterführende Versuche zur Stabilität und dem Oligomerisierungsgrad von WSCP haben die neue Erkenntnis erbracht, dass die Phytolschwänze der von WSCP gebundenen Chlorophylle zwar essentiell sind für die Stabilität von WSCP-Oligomeren, nicht aber für die Oligomerisierung selbst, wie es in der Literatur bislang postuliert wurde. Zusätzlich zu ihrer außerordentlichen Hitzestabilität erwiesen sich die Chl-WSCP-Komplexe als stabil in einem breiten pH-Spektrum. AtWSCPhis besaß eine vergleichbare Stabilität, und auch das Oligomerisierungsverhalten zeigte Ähnlichkeiten zu BoWSCPhis. Im Rahmen einer Forschungskooperation mit dem Institut für Optik und Atomare Physik der TU Berlin wurden zeitaufgelöste Absorptionsspektren sowie Tieftemperatur-Fluoreszenzspektren an Chl-WSCP-Komplexen gemessen. Die Ergebnisse zeigten deutlich, dass die WSCP-gebundenen Chlorophylle excitonisch gekoppelt sind und wiesen zudem auf unterschiedliche Chl-Bindungsmodi hin. Aufgrund seines einfachen Aufbaus und seines geringen Chlorophyllgehalts hat sich WSCP bei diesen Versuchen als sehr geeignetes Modellsystem erwiesen, um Messungen zur Chlorophyllbindung mit Vorhersagen aus theoretischen Modellen zu vergleichen. Bei den Experimenten zur biologischen Funktion wurden einerseits Arabidopsis thaliana WSCP-„knock-out“-Pflanzen unter verschiedenen Bedingungen charakterisiert, andererseits wurden Experimente mit rekombinantem WSCP durchgeführt, um eine mögliche Interaktion mit anderen Proteinen zu detektieren. Die vegetativen Stadien der Mutante zeigten keinen Phänotyp; das native Arabidopsis-WSCP konnte später bei der Wildtyp-Pflanze ausschließlich in jungen Schoten lokalisiert werden, was eine Erklärung hierfür lieferte. Rekombinantes WSCP konnte Chlorophylle aus nativem LHCII entfernen, eine Interaktion mit Chlorophyllase konnte jedoch nicht nachgewiesen werden; daher konnte auch die Hypothese, WSCP sei ein Chl-Carrier beim Chl-Abbau, nicht untermauert werden. Bei den durchgeführten Enzym-Assays wurde eine geringfügige Inhibition der Cysteinprotease Papain beobachtet, aber keine Inhibition der Serinprotease Trypsin, obwohl Blumenkohl-WSCP N-proximal das Motiv der Künitz-Proteaseinhibitoren besitzt. Die Frage nach der biologischen Funktion von WSCP bleibt also weiterhin offen.
Resumo:
Wie alle Eukaryoten besitzen auch höhere Pflanzen ein mikrotubuläres Cytoskelett. Einige Funktionen dieses Cytoskeletts sind relativ stark konserviert, andere dagegen scheinen sehr pflanzenspezifisch zu sein. Dies betrifft insbesondere charakteristische mikrotubuläre Netzwerke, die bei der Neubildung und der Verstärkung der Zellwände wichtige Rollen übernehmen. Wie der Aufbau dieser Netzwerke kontrolliert wird, ist bisher relativ unklar. Typische Mikrotubuli organisierende Zentren (MTOC), insbesondere Centrosomen oder Spindelpolkörper, sind bei höheren Pflanzen nicht beobachtet worden. Von pilzlichen und tierischen Organismen weiß man, dass gamma-Tubulin (gTUB) mit seinen assoziierten Proteinen in den MTOC bei der Nukleation von Mikrotubuli eine Schlüsselfunktion hat. Dieses Mitglied der Tubulin-Superfamilie wird aber auch in Pflanzen gefunden, dessen genaue Funktion bisher unbekannt ist. Zu Beginn der Arbeit wurden mittels in silico Berechnungen Strukturmodelle des pflanzlichen gTUBs aus Nicotiana tabacum erarbeitet, da die Struktur, die zu einem Verständnis der pflanzlichen Wachstumsregulation beitragen könnte, bisher unbekannt ist. Auf Grundlage der bioinformatischen Daten konnte für weitere Studien eine notwendige gTUB-Deletionsmutante entwickelt werden. Für Röntgendiffraktionsstudien und gTUB-Interaktionspartneranalysen war die Verfügbarkeit verhältnismäßig großer Proteinmengen notwendig. Die Expression der gTUB-Volllängensequenz in gelöster und aktiver Form stellte einen immanent wichtigen Zwischenschritt dar. Das Escherichia coli T7/lacO-Expressionssystem lieferte, trotz vielversprechender Erfolge in der Vergangenheit, kein gelöstes rekombinantes gTUB. So wurden zwar verhältnismäßig hohe Expressionsraten erzielt, aber das rekombinante gTUB lag quantitativ als Inclusion bodies vor. Eine Variationen der Expressionsparameter sowie umfangreiche Versuche mittels verschiedenster Konstrukte sowie potentiell die Löslichkeit erhöhenden Tags gTUB in gelöster Form in E. coli zu exprimieren blieben erfolglos. Eine Denaturierung der Inclusion bodies und Rückfaltung wurde aufgrund der wohl bei der Tubulinfaltung notwendigen komplexeren Chaperone sowie thermodynamischer Überlegungen ausgeschlossen. Die höher evolvierte Chaperonausstattung war ein Hauptgrund für die Verwendung der eukaryotischen Hefe-Expressionssysteme K. lactis und des S. cerevisiae-Stammes FGY217 zur gTUB-Expression. So konnten nach der Selektion nur transgene Hefe-Zellen dokumentiert werden, die die gTUB-Expressionskassette nachweislich an der vorgesehenen Zielposition in ihrem Genom integrierten, aber keine dokumentierbare Expression zeigten. Die wahrscheinlichste Begründung hierfür ist, dass ein erhöhter intrazellulärer gTUB-Titer mit dem Zellwachstum und der Zellteilung dieser eukaryotischen Organismen interferierte und durch Rückkopplungen die rekombinante gTUB-CDS aus N. tabacum ausgeschaltet wurde. Der Versuch einer transienten gTUB-Überexpression in differenzierten Blattgeweben höherer Pflanzen war eine logische Konsequenz aus den vorherigen Ergebnissen und lieferte, wenn auch nicht die für eine Proteinkristallisation notwendigen Mengen, gelöstes gTUB. Bestrebungen einer stabilen Transfektion von A. thaliana oder BY-2-Zellkulturen mit einer gTUB-CDS lieferten keine transgenen Organismen, was starke Interferenzen der rekombinanten gTUB-CDS in den Zellen vermuten lies. Transfektionsversuche mit nur GFP tragenden Konstrukten ergaben hingegen eine hohe Anzahl an transgenen Organismen, die auch verhältnismäßig starke Expressionsraten zeigten. Die erzielten Proteinmengen bei der transienten gTUB-Überexpression in N. benthamiana Blattgeweben, in Co-Expression mit dem Posttransriptional Gene Silencing-Suppressorprotein p19, waren für einen Pull-Down sowie eine massenspektroskopische Analyse der Interaktionspartner ausreichend und ergaben Befunde. Eine abschließende Auswertung des erarbeiteten massenspektroskopischen Datensatzes wird jedoch erst dann möglich sein, wenn das Tabak-Proteom vollständig sequenziert ist. Die Erweiterung der bestehenden pflanzlichen Vergleichsdatenbanken um das bisher bekannte Tabak-Proteom vervielfachte die Anzahl der in dieser Studie identifizierten gTUB-Interaktionspartner. Interaktionen mit dem TCP1-Chaperon untermauern die Hypothese der zur Faltung pflanzlichen gTUBs notwendigen Chaperone. Beobachtete gTUB-Degradationsmuster in Verbindung mit Interaktionen des 26S-Proteasoms deuten auf eine Gegenregulationen bei erhöhtem gTUB-Titer auf Proteinebene hin. Da Blattgewebe selbst nur noch über eine sehr geringe und inhomogene Teilungsaktivität verfügen ist diese Regulation hoch spannend. Auch konnte durch Co-Expression des PTGS-Suppressorproteins p19 gezeigt werden, dass bei der gTUB-Expression eine Regulation auf RNA-Ebene erfolgt.
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The in vitro production of recombinant protein molecules has fostered a tremendous interest in their clinical application for treatment and support of cancer patients. Therapeutic proteins include monoclonal antibodies, interferons, and haematopoietic growth factors. Clinically established monoclonal antibodies include rituximab (targeting CD20-positive B-cell lymphomas), trastuzumab (active in HER-2 breast and gastric cancer), and bevacizumab (blocking tumor-induced angiogenesis through blockade of vascular-endothelial growth factor and its receptor). Interferons have lost much of their initial appeal, since equally or more effective treatments with more pleasant side effects have become available, for example in chronic myelogenous leukaemia or hairy cell leukaemia. The value of recombinant growth factors, notably granulocyte colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) and erythropoietin is rather in the field of supportive care than in targeted anti-cancer therapy. Adequately powered clinical phase III trials are essential to estimate the true therapeutic impact of these expensive compounds, with appropriate selection of clinically relevant endpoints and sufficient follow-up. Monoclonal antibodies, interferons, and growth factors must also, and increasingly so, be subjected to close scrutiny by appropriate cost-effectiveness analyses to ensure that their use results in good value for money. With these caveats and under the condition of their judicious clinical use, recombinant proteins have greatly enriched the therapeutic armamentarium in clinical oncology, and their importance is likely to grow even further.
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Structural analyses of heterologously expressed mammalian membrane proteins remain a great challenge given that microgram to milligram amounts of correctly folded and highly purified proteins are required. Here, we present a novel method for the expression and affinity purification of recombinant mammalian and in particular human transport proteins in Xenopus laevis frog oocytes. The method was validated for four human and one murine transporter. Negative stain transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and single particle analysis (SPA) of two of these transporters, i.e., the potassium-chloride cotransporter 4 (KCC4) and the aquaporin-1 (AQP1) water channel, revealed the expected quaternary structures within homogeneous preparations, and thus correct protein folding and assembly. This is the first time a cation-chloride cotransporter (SLC12) family member is isolated, and its shape, dimensions, low-resolution structure and oligomeric state determined by TEM, i.e., by a direct method. Finally, we were able to grow 2D crystals of human AQP1. The ability of AQP1 to crystallize was a strong indicator for the structural integrity of the purified recombinant protein. This approach will open the way for the structure determination of many human membrane transporters taking full advantage of the Xenopus laevis oocyte expression system that generally yields robust functional expression.
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NcMIC4 is a Neospora caninum microneme protein that has been isolated and purified on the basis of its unique lactose-binding properties. We have shown that this protein binds to galactosyl residues of lactose; antibodies directed against NcMIC4 inhibit host cell interactions in vitro, thus making it a vaccine candidate. Because of this feature, NcMIC4 was first purified on a larger scale in its native, functionally active form using lactose-agarose affinity chromatography. Second, NcMIC4 was expressed in Escherichia coli as a histidine-tagged recombinant protein (recNcMIC4) and purified through Ni-affinity chromatography. Third, NcMIC4 cDNA was cloned into the mammalian pcDNA3.1 DNA vector and expression was confirmed upon transfection of Vero cells in vitro. For vaccination studies, we employed the murine cerebral infection model based on C57Bl/6 mice, employing experimental groups of 10 mice each. Two groups were injected intraperitoneally with purified native NcMIC4 and recNcMIC4, respectively, employing RIBI adjuvant. The third group was vaccinated intramuscularly with pcDNA-NcMIC4. Control groups included an infection control, an adjuvant control, and a pcDNA3.1 control group. Following 3 injections at 4-wk intervals, mice were challenged by i.p. inoculation of 2 x 10(6) N. caninum tachyzoites (Nc-1 isolate). During the course of parasite challenge (3 wk), mice from the 3 different test groups showed varying degrees of symptoms bearing a semblance to neosporosis, i.e., walking disorder, rounded back, apathy, and paralysis of the hind limbs. Control groups showed no symptoms at all. Most notably, vaccination with pcDNA-MIC4 proved antiprotective, with 60% of mice succumbing to infection within 3 wk, and all mice lacking a measurable anti-NcMIC4 IgG response. NcMIC4 in its native form elicited a substantial humoral IgG1 immune response and a reduction in cerebral parasite load compared to the controls, but 20% of mice succumbed to infection. Vaccination with recNcMIC4 also resulted in 20% of mice dying; however, in this group, cerebral parasite load was similar to the controls, and recNcMIC4 vaccination elicited a mixed IgG1/IgG2 response. In conclusion, vaccines based on NcMIC4, especially pcDNA-NcMIC4, render mice more susceptible to cerebral disease upon challenge with N. caninum tachyzoites.
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One full length cDNA clone, designated 3aH15, was isolated from a rat brain cDNA library using a fragment of CYP3A2 cDNA as a probe. 3aH15 encoded a protein composed of 503 amino acid residues. The deduced amino acid sequence of 3aH15 was 92% identical to mouse Cyp3a-13 and had a 68.4% to 76.5% homology with the other reported rat CYP3A sequences. Clone 3aH15 was thus named CYP3A9 by Cytochrome P450 Nomenclature Committee. CYP3A9 seems to the major CYP3A isozyme expressed in rat brain. Sexual dimorphism of the expression of CYP3A9 was shown for the first time in rat brain as well as in rat liver. CYP3A9 appears to be female specific in rat liver based on the standards proposed by Kato and Yamazoe who defined sex specific expression of P450s as being a 10-fold or higher expression level in one sex compared with the other. CYP3A9 gene expression was inducible by estrogen treatment both in male and in female rats. Male rats treated with estrogen had a similar expression level of CYP3A9 mRNA both in the liver and brain. Ovariectomy of adult female rats drastically reduced the mRNA level of CYP3A9 which could be fully restored by estrogen replacement. On the other hand, only a two-fold induction of CYP3A9 expression by dexamethasone was observed in male liver and no significant induction of CYP3A9 mRNA was observed in female liver or in the brains. These results suggest that estrogen may play an important role in the female specific expression of the CYP3A9 gene and that CYP3A9 gene expression is regulated differently from other CYP3A isozymes. ^ P450 3A9 recombinant protein was expressed in E. coli using the pCWOri+ expression vector and the MALLLAVF amino terminal sequence modification. This construct gave a high level of expression (130 nmol P450 3A9/liter culture) and the recombinant protein of the modified P450 3A9 was purified to electrophoretic homogeneity (10.1 nmol P450/mg protein) from solubilized fractions using two chromatographic steps. The purified P450 3A9 protein was active towards the metabolism of many clinically important drugs such as imipramine, erythromycin, benzphetamine, ethylmorphine, chlorzoxazone, cyclosporine, rapamycin, etc. in a reconstituted system containing lipid and rat NADPH-P450 reductase. Although P450 3A9 was active towards the catabolism of testosterone, androstenedione, dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) and 17β-estradiol, P450 3A9 preferentially catalyzes the metabolism of progesterone to form four different hydroxylated products. Optimal reconstitution conditions for P450 3A9 activities required a lipid mixture and GSH. The possible mechanisms of the stimulatory effects of GSH on P450 3A9 activities are discussed. Sexually dimorphic expression of P450 3A9 in the brain and its involvement in many neuroactive drugs as well as neurosteroids suggest the possible role of P450 3A9 in some mental disorders and brain functions. ^
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Progress toward elucidating the 3D structures of eukaryotic membrane proteins has been hampered by the lack of appropriate expression systems. Recent work using the Xenopus oocyte as a novel expression system for structural analysis demonstrates the capability of providing not only the significant amount of protein yields required for structural work but also the expression of eukaryotic membrane proteins in a more native and functional conformation. There is a long history using the oocyte expression system as an efficient tool for membrane transporter and channel expression in direct functional analysis, but improvements in robotic injection systems and protein yield optimization allow the rapid scalability of expressed proteins to be purified and characterized in physiologically relevant structural states. Traditional overexpression systems (yeast, bacteria, and insect cells) by comparison require chaotropic conditions over several steps for extraction, solubilization, and purification. By contrast, overexpressing within the oocyte system for subsequent negative-staining transmission electron microscopy studies provides a single system that can functionally assess and purify eukaryotic membrane proteins in fewer steps maintaining the physiological properties of the membrane protein.
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To better understand the mechanisms of how the human prostacyclin receptor (1P) mediates vasodilation and platelet anti-aggregation through Gs protein coupling, a strategy integrating multiple approaches including high resolution NMR experiments, synthetic peptide, fluorescence spectroscopy, molecular modeling, and recombinant protein was developed and used to characterize the structure/function relationship of important segments and residues of the IP receptor and the α-subunit of the Gs protein (Gαs). The first (iLP1) and third (iLP3) intracellular loops of the IP receptor, as well as the Gαs C-terminal domain, relevant to the Gs-mediated IP receptor signaling, were first identified by observation of the effects of the mini gene-expressed corresponding protein segments in HEK293 cells which co-expressed the receptor and Gαs. Evidence of the IP iLP1 domain interacted with the Gαs C-terminal domain was observed by fluorescence and NMR spectroscopic studies using a constrained synthetic peptide, which mimicked the IP iLP1 domain, and the synthetic peptide, which mimicked Gαs C-terminal domain. The solution structural models and the peptide-peptide interaction of the two synthetic protein segments were determined by high resolution NMR spectroscopy. The important residues in the corresponding domains of the IP receptor and the Gαs predicted by NMR chemical shift mapping were used to guide the identification of their protein-protein interaction in cells. A profile of the residues Arg42 - Ala48 of the IP iLP1 domain and the three residues Glu392 ∼ Leu394 of the Gαs C-terminal domain involved in the IP/Gs protein coupling were confirmed by recombinant proteins. The data revealed an intriguing speculation on the mechanisms of how the signal of the ligand-activated IP receptor is transmitted to the Gs protein in regulating vascular functions and homeostasis, and also provided substantial insights into other prostanoid receptor signaling. ^