Literature DB >> 8344955

Influence of different signal peptides and prosequences on expression and secretion of human tissue plasminogen activator in the baculovirus system.

D L Jarvis1, M D Summers, A Garcia, D A Bohlmeyer.   

Abstract

Foreign secretory pathway proteins are often produced in surprisingly low amounts in the baculovirus/insect cell expression system. One possible reason for this is that heterologous signal peptides might be inefficiently recognized by the insect cell protein translocation machinery. This idea was supported by a recent study showing that secretion of a plant protein in the baculovirus system was enhanced when its signal peptide was replaced with an insect-derived signal peptide (Tessier, D. C., Thomas, D. Y., Khouri, H. E., Laliberte, F., and Vernet, T. (1991) Gene (Amst.) 98, 177-183). We have extended these observations by measuring the effects of different signal peptide and signal peptide-prosequence combinations on baculovirus-mediated expression and secretion of human tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA). Replacement of the native prepropeptide with signal peptides from a lepidopteran insect secretory protein (cecropin B), a major baculovirus structural glycoprotein (64K), or an abundant, highly conserved lumenal protein of the rough endoplasmic reticulum (GRP78/BiP, a 78-kDa glucose-regulated protein/immunoglobulin heavy chain-binding protein), had no significant effect on t-PA expression or secretion. The same results were obtained with the signal peptide from honeybee prepromellitin, which was able to enhance secretion of plant propapain (Tessier et al., 1991 (above)). Similar results were obtained when heterologous signal peptides were combined with the native prosequence or when the intact cecropin B preprosequence was used. Translational initiation at an upstream, in-frame ATT, which could functionally inactivate any signal peptide, did not explain the low efficiency of t-PA secretion. Finally, deletion of the native signal peptide, prosequence, or both, failed to increase t-PA production. These results showed that insect-derived signal peptides and/or prosequences cannot always enhance the expression and/or secretion of foreign secretory pathway proteins in the baculovirus system. They also suggested that the inability of insect cells to recognize the processing signals in human t-PA efficiently is probably not the major factor preventing its high level production in this system.

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Year:  1993        PMID: 8344955

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  11 in total

1.  Chaperone and foldase coexpression in the baculovirus-insect cell expression system.

Authors:  M J Betenbaugh; E Ailor; E Whiteley; P Hinderliter; T A Hsu
Journal:  Cytotechnology       Date:  1996-01       Impact factor: 2.058

2.  New ligation-independent cloning vectors compatible with a high-throughput platform for parallel construct expression evaluation using baculovirus-infected insect cells.

Authors:  William Clay Brown; James DelProposto; J Ronald Rubin; Kelly Lamiman; Jacob Carless; Janet L Smith
Journal:  Protein Expr Purif       Date:  2011-01-22       Impact factor: 1.650

3.  Enhanced protein secretion from insect cells by co-expression of the chaperone calreticulin and translation initiation factor eIF4E.

Authors:  Chao-Yi Teng; Shou-Lin Chang; Monique M van Oers; Tzong-Yuan Wu
Journal:  Mol Biotechnol       Date:  2013-05       Impact factor: 2.695

4.  Isolation and analysis of a baculovirus vector that supports recombinant glycoprotein sialylation by SfSWT-1 cells cultured in serum-free medium.

Authors:  Daniel R Hill; Jared J Aumiller; Xianzong Shi; Donald L Jarvis
Journal:  Biotechnol Bioeng       Date:  2006-09-05       Impact factor: 4.530

Review 5.  Genetic modification of baculovirus expression vectors.

Authors:  Shu-fen Li; Hua-lin Wang; Zhi-hong Hu; Fei Deng
Journal:  Virol Sin       Date:  2012-04-11       Impact factor: 4.327

6.  Expression of Manduca sexta serine proteinase homolog precursors in insect cells and their proteolytic activation.

Authors:  Zhiqiang Lu; Haobo Jiang
Journal:  Insect Biochem Mol Biol       Date:  2007-10-04       Impact factor: 4.714

7.  Genomic Analysis and Isolation of RNA Polymerase II Dependent Promoters from Spodoptera frugiperda.

Authors:  Maren Bleckmann; Markus H-Y Fritz; Sabin Bhuju; Michael Jarek; Margitta Schürig; Robert Geffers; Vladimir Benes; Hüseyin Besir; Joop van den Heuvel
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-08-11       Impact factor: 3.240

8.  Optimization of canine interleukin-12 production using a baculovirus insect cell expression system.

Authors:  Cristiane Garboggini Melo de Pinheiro; Mayara de Oliveira Pedrosa; Naiara Carvalho Teixeira; Ana Paula Dinis Ano Bom; Monique M van Oers; Geraldo Gileno de Sá Oliveira
Journal:  BMC Res Notes       Date:  2016-01-22

9.  Conventional and unconventional secretory proteins expressed with silkworm bombyxin signal peptide display functional fidelity.

Authors:  Sungjo Park; D Kent Arrell; Santiago Reyes; Enoch Y Park; Andre Terzic
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-11-03       Impact factor: 4.379

10.  Large scale expression and purification of secreted mouse hephaestin.

Authors:  Chandrika N Deshpande; Vicky Xin; Yan Lu; Tom Savage; Gregory J Anderson; Mika Jormakka
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-09-07       Impact factor: 3.240

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