| Literature DB >> 26908053 |
Debra T Hansen1,2,3,4, Mark D Robida1,4, Felicia M Craciunescu1,2,4, Andrey V Loskutov1, Katerina Dörner3,4, John-Charles Rodenberry1, Xiao Wang1, Tien L Olson1, Hetal Patel1, Petra Fromme2,3,4, Kathryn F Sykes1,4.
Abstract
Antibodies are essential for structural determinations and functional studies of membrane proteins, but antibody generation is limited by the availability of properly-folded and purified antigen. We describe the first application of genetic immunization to a structurally diverse set of membrane proteins to show that immunization of mice with DNA alone produced antibodies against 71% (n = 17) of the bacterial and viral targets. Antibody production correlated with prior reports of target immunogenicity in host organisms, underscoring the efficiency of this DNA-gold micronanoplex approach. To generate each antigen for antibody characterization, we also developed a simple in vitro membrane protein expression and capture method. Antibody specificity was demonstrated upon identifying, for the first time, membrane-directed heterologous expression of the native sequences of the FopA and FTT1525 virulence determinants from the select agent Francisella tularensis SCHU S4. These approaches will accelerate future structural and functional investigations of therapeutically-relevant membrane proteins.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26908053 PMCID: PMC4764931 DOI: 10.1038/srep21925
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1In vitro generation of purified membrane protein antigen.
(a) Schematic of the IVT-HMB method for expression and purification of membrane proteins. (b) Generation of full-length proteins for 15 targets in the form of fusions to green fluorescent protein (GFP). (c) Generation of partial-length proteins for F. tularensis FTT0759 (305 amino acids) and ASFV CD2v (360 amino acids) in the form of fusions to thioredoxin. Shown are SDS-PAGE visualized by Coomassie stain (left panel of b) or silver stain (remaining panels in b,c) and containing, per lane, magnetic-bead purified fractions from 10 μL of IVT-HMB. Molecular weight (MW) in kDa is indicated, and arrowheads indicate the predicted migration position. BSA, bovine serum albumin.
Figure 2Production of high-specificity polyclonal antibodies for membrane proteins from F. tularensis and ASFV.
(a) Overview of DNA-gold micronanoplex bullet production. (b,c) Genetic immunization vectors pCMVi-LSrCOMPTT (b) and pCMVi-UB35 (c). (d) Representative Westerns on IVT-HMB target protein using immunizations with pCMVi-LSrCOMPTT, except for (*) which used pCMVi-UB. Positive immunoblots were for 5 out of 5 mice and using a serum dilution of 1:2000 unless noted. Individual Western and ELISA results are in Supplementary Fig. 1a–q.
Figure 3Western analyses of tag-free F. tularensis membrane proteins identifies membrane-targeting upon recombinant expression.
(a) Immunoblots probed with 1:2000 dilution of serum. IVT-HMB samples contain 100–200 ng of target protein, or beads from an equivalent reaction volume lacking template DNA. Total protein and detergent-solubilized samples contain protein from 16 μL of culture in which the target protein or an unrelated target was expressed. DDM, n-dodecyl β-D-maltoside. The unrelated targets used in the blots were, from top to bottom: PilQ, OMEP, FTT1525, and TolC. (b) Western analyses of the membrane fraction, cytosolic fraction, and detergent-solubilized proteins of the membrane fraction upon expression of F. tularensis BamA containing the signal sequence (ss) from E. coli BamA. The BamA protein is identified (yellow triangles). Lanes contain protein from the equivalent of 100 μL of culture. Serum dilution was 1:500. LDAO, N,N-dimethyldodecylamine N-oxide.