| Literature DB >> 30382415 |
Diego G Módolo1,2, Cynthia S Horn3, José S M Soares1, José A Yunes4, Leila M Lima5, Sylvia M de Sousa6, Marcelo Menossi7.
Abstract
The glycoprotein APA (Alanine- and Proline-rich Antigen, a 45/47 kDa antigen complex, Rv1860) is considered as a major immunodominant antigen secreted by M. tuberculosis. This antigen has proved to be highly immunogenic in experimental models and humans, presenting a significant potential for further development of a new vaccine for tuberculosis. Glycosylation plays a key role in the immunogenicity of the APA protein. Because plants are known to promote post-translational modification such as glycosylation and to be one of the most economic and safe hosts for recombinant protein expression, we have over expressed the APA protein in transgenic tobacco plants aiming to produce a glycosylated version of the protein. Seeds are known to be a well-suited organ to accumulate recombinant proteins, due to low protease activity and higher protein stability. We used a seed-specific promoter from sorghum, a signal peptide to target the protein to the endoplasmic reticulum and ultimately in the protein storage vacuoles. We show that the recombinant protein accumulated in the seeds had similar isoelectric point and molecular weight compared with the native protein. These findings demonstrate the ability of tobacco plants to produce glycosylated APA protein, opening the way for the development of secure, effective and versatile vaccines or therapeutic proteins against tuberculosis.Entities:
Keywords: 45/47 kDa; APA; Alanine- and Proline-rich antigen; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Seed; Tobacco
Year: 2018 PMID: 30382415 PMCID: PMC6209126 DOI: 10.1186/s13568-018-0708-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AMB Express ISSN: 2191-0855 Impact factor: 3.298
Fig. 1Structure of the pCam-PSC-APA vector used for tobacco genetic transformation. The M. tuberculosis APA gene (APA) was fused with α-coixin signal peptide (PSC) under the control of γ-kafirin promoter (pGK) and the 35S terminator (t35S). The BAR and GUS genes are under the control of the 35S promoter (p35S) and the terminator from the NOS gene (tNOS). LB and RB are the borders of the expression vector
Fig. 2Detection of the APA gene in transgenic tobacco plants. Genomic DNA was amplified with specific primers to detect an 871 bp fragment (indicated by an arrow) corresponding to the APA gene. a Lane 1: negative control; Lanes 2 and 3: transgenic plants; Lane 4: DNA size marker; Lane 5: positive control. b Lane 1: negative control; Lanes 2–5: transgenic plants; Lane 6: positive control; Lane 7: DNA size marker. The negative control was the amplification of the genomic DNA from wild-type plants; the positive control was the amplification from pCam-PSC-APA plasmid DNA and the DNA size marker used was the Gene Ruler 1 kB (Fermentas, USA)
Fig. 3Detection of the APA recombinant protein in tobacco plants. An anti-APA polyclonal antibody was used to detect the APA protein. Lane 1: 500 ng of APA purified from M. tuberculosis as positive control. Lane 2: Empty lane; Lanes 3–9: protein extracts from transgenic seeds. Lane 10: protein extract from wild-type Nicotiana tabacum seeds (negative control). The positions of the expected bands of 47 and 45 kDa are indicated on the left
Fig. 4Silver-staining SDS-PAGE from tobacco proteins purified with concanavalin affinity chromatography. Lane 1: Low molecular weight marker (GE Healthcare, UK); lane 2: total soluble proteins from transgenic tobacco seeds (event T-APA1); lane 3: eluted fraction after ConA Sepharose purification; lane 4: 500 ng of purified native APA protein from M. tuberculosis. The position of the recombinant APA protein is indicated with an arrow
Fig. 5Western blot of two-dimensional electrophoresis of affinity chromatography purified recombinant APA protein. The electrofocusing was performed on a linear IPG (pH 3.0 to 10.0). The pH gradient is indicated on the top of the figure and the molecular size marker on the left