| Literature DB >> 12947202 |
Stephen R Hamilton1, Piotr Bobrowicz, Beata Bobrowicz, Robert C Davidson, Huijuan Li, Teresa Mitchell, Juergen H Nett, Sebastian Rausch, Terrance A Stadheim, Harry Wischnewski, Stefan Wildt, Tillman U Gerngross.
Abstract
We report the humanization of the glycosylation pathway in the yeast Pichia pastoris to secrete a human glycoprotein with uniform complex N-glycosylation. The process involved eliminating endogenous yeast glycosylation pathways, while properly localizing five active eukaryotic proteins, including mannosidases I and II, N-acetylglucosaminyl transferases I and II, and uridine 5'-diphosphate (UDP)-N-acetylglucosamine transporter. Targeted localization of the enzymes enabled the generation of a synthetic in vivo glycosylation pathway, which produced the complex human N-glycan N-acetylglucosamine2-mannose3-N-acetylglucosamine2 (GlcNAc2Man3GlcNAc2). The ability to generate human glycoproteins with homogeneous N-glycan structures in a fungal host is a step toward producing therapeutic glycoproteins and could become a tool for elucidating the structure-function relation of glycoproteins.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 12947202 DOI: 10.1126/science.1088166
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728