| Literature DB >> 22430811 |
Bieke Nagels1, Els J M Van Damme, Nico Callewaert, Lennart Zabeau, Jan Tavernier, Joris R Delanghe, Annemie Boets, Alexandra Castilho, Koen Weterings.
Abstract
In the past two decades plants have emerged as a valuable alternative for the production of pharmaceutical proteins. Since N-glycosylation influences functionality and stability of therapeutic proteins, the plant N-glycosylation pathway should be humanized. Here, we report the transient magnICON(®) expression of the erythropoietin fusion protein (EPO-Fc) in Nicotiana benthamiana plants that produce multi-antennary N-glycans without the plant-specific β1,2-xylose and α1,3-fucose residues in a stable manner (Nagels et al., 2011). The EPO-Fc fusion protein consists of EPO with a C-terminal-linked IgG-Fc domain and is used for pulmonary delivery of recombinant EPO to patients (Bitonti et al., 2004). Plant expressed EPO-Fc was quantified using a paramagnetic-particle chemiluminescent immunoassay and shown to be active in vitro via receptor binding experiments in HEK293T cells. Mass spectrometry-based N-glycan analysis confirmed the presence of multi-antennary N-glycans on plant-expressed EPO-Fc. The described research is the next step towards the development of a production platform for pharmaceutical proteins in plants.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22430811 DOI: 10.1016/j.jbiotec.2012.03.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biotechnol ISSN: 0168-1656 Impact factor: 3.307