| Literature DB >> 18662403 |
Julio Villatoro-Hernandez1, Maria J Loera-Arias, Anali Gamez-Escobedo, Moises Franco-Molina, Jorge G Gomez-Gutierrez, Humberto Rodriguez-Rocha, Yolanda Gutierrez-Puente, Odila Saucedo-Cardenas, Jesus Valdes-Flores, Roberto Montes-de-Oca-Luna.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chemokines are a large group of chemotactic cytokines that regulate and direct migration of leukocytes, activate inflammatory responses, and are involved in many other functions including regulation of tumor development. Interferon-gamma inducible-protein-10 (IP-10) is a member of the C-X-C subfamily of the chemokine family of cytokines. IP-10 specifically chemoattracts activated T lymphocytes, monocytes, and NK cells. IP-10 has been described also as a modulator of other antitumor cytokines. These properties make IP-10 a novel therapeutic molecule for the treatment of chronic and infectious diseases. Currently there are no suitable live biological systems to produce and secrete IP-10. Lactococcus lactis has been well-characterized over the years as a safe microorganism to produce heterologous proteins and to be used as a safe, live vaccine to deliver antigens and cytokines of interest. Here we report a recombinant strain of L. lactis genetically modified to produce and secrete biologically active IP-10.Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18662403 PMCID: PMC2503953 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2859-7-22
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Cell Fact ISSN: 1475-2859 Impact factor: 5.328
Figure 1Schematic design of IP-10 expression system for production and secretion by . The scheme represents the final construction of the IP-10 inducible expression system carried by Lactococcus lactis (pSEC:huIP-10). The diagram shows the nisin-inducible promoter PnisA, the ribosome binding-site of usp45 (RBS), the usp45 signal peptide of the usp45 gene (SPusp), and the coding region for the mature moiety of IP-10. The open circle represents a rho-independent trpA transcription terminator fused just downstream to the IP-10 gene (not to scale).
Bacterial strains and plasmids.
| Wild type, plasmid free | |||
| Wild type, plasmid free | Gasson, 1983 | ||
| MG1363 ( | Kuipers et al., 1998 | ||
| NZ(pSEC:huIP-10) | MG1363 ( | This work | |
| pCR:TOPO | ori pUC | Apr | Invitrogen |
| pCR:huIP-10 | ori pUC | Apr, DNA fragment encoding the IP-10 mature moiety | This work |
| pSEC:E7 | pWV01 | Cmr; gene expressed from PnisA encodes SPUsp- | Bermúdez-Humarán et al., 2002 |
| pSEC:huIP-10 | pWV01 | Cmr; gene expressed from PnisA encodes SPUsp- | This work |
Figure 2Expression analysis of IP-10 secretion by recombinant . Protein extracts from induced and noninduced cultures of recombinant Lactococcus lactis NZpSEC:huIP-10 were prepared from cell-free samples and analyzed by Western blotting using anti-IP-10. Mature IP-10 was detected in all the induced (+) cultures in the 10 kDa range as expected. No signal was found for noninduced cultures (-) of recombinant L. lactis NZpSEC:huIP-10. No immature or incomplete forms of IP-10 were detected. M, protein molecular marker.
Figure 3De novo secreted IP-10 in the absence of nisin. Three separate cultures (A, B, and C) of NZpSEC:huIP-10 were induced with 10 ng/ml of nisin for 1 hour. Culture A was in the presence of nisin all the time; culture B washed and suspended in fresh medium without inducer at hour 1 and 3, and culture C was washed and suspended in fresh medium without inducer only at hour 1. All cultures were grown a total of 6 hours. Protein extracts were analyzed by Western blot at hour 1, 3, and 6. The band in culture B at hour 6 (asterisk) represents the IP-10 "de novo" specifically secreted from hour 3 to 6 in the total absence of nisin demonstrating the ability of Lactococcus lactis to keep expressing and producing IP-10 for at least three hours.
Figure 4Secreted IP-10 by . Chemoattraction of L. lactis-secreted IP-10 was determined by using a Boyden chamber for chemotaxis. T lymphocytes obtained directly from human peripheral blood were stimulated with human IL-2 for 12 days. Chemotaxis assays using Boyden chambers were made with supernatants sterilized by filtration of both recombinant and wild-type Lactococcus lactis. To determine the number of chemoattracted cells, the membranes were stained with hematoxylin and the cells counted by using light microscopy at 1000 × (A). Cells in the lower chamber were incubated with specific anti-CD3+ and counted by FACS analysis (B). Supernatants of wild-type (WT) L. lactis and PBS were used as negative controls and Zymosan-activated serum (S+) as a positive control.