| Literature DB >> 31137908 |
Tina Vida Plavec1,2, Milan Kuchař3, Anja Benko4,5, Veronika Lišková6, Jiří Černý7, Aleš Berlec8,9, Petr Malý10.
Abstract
Lactococcus lactis, a probiotic bacterium of food origin, has recently been demonstrated as a suitable strain for the production and in vivo delivery of therapeutically important proteins into the gut. We aimed to engineer recombinant L. lactis cells producing/secreting REX binding proteins that have been described as IL-23 receptor (IL-23R) blockers and IL-23R antagonists suppressing the secretion of cytokine IL-17A, a pivotal step in the T-helper Th17-mediated pro-inflammatory cascade, as well as in the development of autoimmune diseases, including inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). To reach this goal, we introduced cDNA sequences coding for REX009, REX115, and REX125 proteins into plasmid vectors carrying a Usp45 secretion signal, a FLAG tag sequence consensus, and a LysM-containing cA surface anchor (AcmA), thus allowing cell-surface peptidoglycan anchoring. These plasmids, or their non-FLAG/non-AcmA versions, were introduced into L. lactis host cells, thus generating unique recombinant L. lactis-REX strains. We demonstrate that all three REX proteins are expressed in L. lactis cells and are efficiently displayed on the bacterial surface, as tested by flow cytometry using an anti-FLAG antibody conjugate. Upon 10-fold concentration of the conditioned media, a REX125 secretory variant can be detected by Western blotting. To confirm that the FLAG/non-FLAG REX proteins displayed by L. lactis retain their binding specificity, cell-surface interactions of REX proteins with an IL-23R-IgG chimera were demonstrated by flow cytometry. In addition, statistically significant binding of secreted REX009 and REX115 proteins to bacterially produced, soluble human IL-23R was confirmed by ELISA. We conclude that REX-secreting L. lactis strains were engineered that might serve as IL-23/IL-23R blockers in an experimentally induced mouse model of colitis.Entities:
Keywords: IL-23 cytokine; IL-23R; albumin-binding domain; binding protein; lactococcus; surface display
Year: 2019 PMID: 31137908 PMCID: PMC6560508 DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms7050152
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microorganisms ISSN: 2076-2607
Strains, plasmids, and primers used in the study. Restriction recognition sites are underlined.
| Strain, Plasmid, or Gene | Relevant Features or Sequence (5’–3’) | Ref. or Source |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
|
| ||
| DH5α | endA1 glnV44 thi-1 recA1 relA1 gyrA96 deoR F- Φ80d | Invitrogen |
| TOP10 | F– mcrA Δ(mrr-hsdRMS-mcrBC) Φ80lacZΔM15 ΔlacX74 recA1 araD139 Δ(ara leu) 7697 galU galK rpsL (StrR) endA1 nupG | Life technologies |
| BL21 λ(D3) | E. coli B F – dcm ompT hsdS (rB– mB–) gal λ(DE3) | [ |
|
| ||
| NZ9000 | MG1363 | [ |
|
| ||
| pNZ8148 | pSH71 derivative, P | [ |
| pSDBA3b | pNZ8148 containing gene fusion of Usp45 signal peptide, B domain, and cA | [ |
| pET-REX009 | pET28b containing a fusion gene of REX009, tolA protein, and AviTag consensus | [ |
| pET-REX115 | pET28b containing a fusion gene of REX115, tolA protein, and AviTag consensus | [ |
| pET-REX125 | pET28b containing a fusion gene of REX125, tolA protein, and AviTag consensus | [ |
| pSD-REX009 | pNZ8148 containing gene fusion of Usp45 signal peptide, REX009, and cA | This work |
| pSD-REX115 | pNZ8148 containing gene fusion of Usp45 signal peptide, REX115, and cA | This work |
| pSD-REX125 | pNZ8148 containing gene fusion of Usp45 signal peptide, REX125, and cA | This work |
| pSD-REX009-FLAG | pNZ8148 containing gene fusion of Usp45 signal peptide, FLAG tag, REX009, and cA | This work |
| pSD-REX115-FLAG | pNZ8148 containing gene fusion of Usp45 signal peptide, FLAG tag, REX115, and cA | This work |
| pSD-REX125-FLAG | pNZ8148 containing gene fusion of Usp45 signal peptide, FLAG tag, REX125, and cA | This work |
| pSC-REX009 | pNZ8148 containing gene fusion of Usp45 signal peptide and REX009 | This work |
| pSC-REX115 | pNZ8148 containing gene fusion of Usp45 signal peptide and REX115 | This work |
| pSC-REX125 | pNZ8148 containing gene fusion of Usp45 signal peptide and REX125 | This work |
| pSC-REX009-FLAG | pNZ8148 containing gene fusion of Usp45 signal peptide, FLAG tag, and REX009 | This work |
| pSC-REX115-FLAG | pNZ8148 containing gene fusion of Usp45 signal peptide, FLAG tag, and REX115 | This work |
| pSC-REX125-FLAG | pNZ8148 containing gene fusion of Usp45 signal peptide, FLAG tag, and REX125 | This work |
|
| ||
| ILP030-F | T | This work |
| Rex009-R-Eco | A | This work |
| Rex009-R-Xba | A | This work |
| Rex115-R-Eco | A | This work |
| Rex115-R-Xba | A | This work |
| Rex125-R-Eco | A | This work |
| Rex125-R-Xba | A | This work |
| Usp1-NcoI | ATAA | [ |
| FLAG_Bam_R | [ | |
Figure 1Scheme of genetic constructs for display (pSD) and secretion (pSC) of REX binders.
Figure 2Detection of FLAG-tagged REX fusion proteins in the cell lysate of L. lactis. (A) SDS-PAGE stained with Coomassie Brilliant Blue. (B) Western blotting with an anti-FLAG-tag antibody. REX proteins are in fusion with the Usp45 secretion signal (Secretion), or with the Usp45 secretion signal and a cAcmA surface anchor (Display).
Figure 3Western blot of 10-fold concentrated conditioned media of L. lactis cultures expressing FLAG-tagged REX variants.
Figure 4Flow cytometry of L. lactis cells displaying or secreting FLAG-tagged REX variants, detected with an anti-FLAG antibody. Control: L. lactis containing an empty plasmid of pNZ8148. (A) Mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) or (B) the shift in fluorescence intensity of representative measurements are depicted. Error bars denote standard deviations. Significant differences (** p < 0.005, *** p < 0.001; Student’s t-test) are marked with an asterisk.
Figure 5Flow cytometry of L. lactis cells displaying or secreting FLAG-tagged REX variants, detected with IL-23R-Fc fusion proteins. Control: L. lactis containing an empty plasmid of pNZ8148. (A) Mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) or (B) a shift in fluorescence intensity of representative measurements are depicted. Error bars denote standard deviations. Significant differences *** p < 0.001; Student’s t-test) are marked with an asterisk.
Figure 6Binding of secreted REX variants in ELISA. The 96-well plate was coated with recombinant IL-23Rex protein, and samples of the medium with secreted REX proteins were applied (A). Purified protein REX115–TolA diluted in PBSTB was used as a positive control (B). The binding of REX proteins to IL-23Rex, and to BSA as a negative control, was detected by anti-DDDDK tag antibody [M2] conjugated with horseradish peroxidase (HRP) (A), or by streptavidin with HRP (B). Each bar represents the mean value with standard deviation and significant differences between mean values of the negative control (no REX), and the samples were analyzed by ANOVA (*** p < 0.004, **** p < 0.001, ns: no significant difference).
Figure 7Predicted binding mode of ABD variants to the IL-23R. (A) The crystal structure of human IL-23/IL-23R complex (pdb id 5mzv) [29] showing the IL-23R in magenta, the IL-23 subunit p19 in green, and the IL-12 subunit p40 of IL23 in red. (B) The most probable predicted binding mode of the REX115 (yellow) to the murine IL-23 model (blue) overlapping with the position of IL-23 (grey) from the human IL-23/IL-23R complex. (C) The most probable predicted binding mode of the REX125 (orange) to the murine IL-23 model (blue).