| United States Patent Application |
20200010808
|
| Kind Code
|
A1
|
|
Durocher; Yves
;   et al.
|
January 9, 2020
|
Enhanced Production of Recombinant Proteins By Transient Transfection of
Suspension-Growing Mammalian Cells
Abstract
Disclosed is a new process for the production of recombinant proteins, by
transient transfection of suspension-grown human embryonic kidney cells
(293 cell line and its genetic variants) with an expression vector, using
polyethylenimine (PEI) as a transfection reagent. In a preferred
embodiment, the process uses 293E cells expressing the Epstein-Barr virus
(EBV) EBNA 1 protein, in combination with an oriP-based episomal
expression vector having an improved cytomegalovirus expression cassette
comprising the CMV5 promoter. The process combines in a single step the
cell growth, transfection and protein expression, is carried out without
changing the culture medium, and allows to achieve high expression levels
in a short period of time. The process may be carried out in a
serum-free, low-protein culture medium, is easily scalable, compatible
with continuous production processes, and fully adapted to
high-throughput production of milligram quantities of recombinant
proteins.
| Inventors: |
Durocher; Yves; (Montreal, CA)
; Kamen; Amine; (Montreal, CA)
; Perret; Sylvie; (Montreal, CA)
; Pham; Phuong; (Montreal, CA)
|
| Applicant: | | Name | City | State | Country | Type | NATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL OF CANADA | OTTAWA | |
CA | | |
| Assignee: |
NATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL OF CANADA
OTTAWA
CA
|
| Family ID:
|
23108658
|
| Appl. No.:
|
16/552093
|
| Filed:
|
August 27, 2019 |
Related U.S. Patent Documents
| | | | |
|
| Application Number | Filing Date | Patent Number | |
|---|
| | 10477148 | Jul 22, 2004 | 10421950 | |
| | 16552093 | | | |
|
|
| Current U.S. Class: |
1/1 |
| Current CPC Class: |
C12N 2840/203 20130101; C12N 15/85 20130101; C12N 2800/108 20130101; C12N 2840/44 20130101; C12N 2500/90 20130101; C12N 2510/02 20130101; C12N 2710/16122 20130101; C12P 21/02 20130101; C07K 14/05 20130101; C12N 2840/20 20130101; C12N 5/0686 20130101 |
| International Class: |
C12N 5/071 20060101 C12N005/071; C12P 21/02 20060101 C12P021/02; C12N 15/85 20060101 C12N015/85 |
Claims
1-50. (canceled)
51. An expression vector comprising a CMV5 promoter for driving
expression of a recombinant protein and further comprising the nucleotide
sequence set forth in SEQ ID NO: 1 or a fragment thereof comprising 9 to
20 EBNA1 binding sites, wherein each of the EBNA1 binding sites is
selected from the group consisting of nucleotides 36-53 of SEQ ID NO: 1,
nucleotides 66-83 of SEQ ID NO: 1, nucleotides 126-143 of SEQ ID NO: 1,
nucleotides 276-293 of SEQ ID NO: 1 and nucleotides 302-319 of SEQ ID NO:
1; and the size of the expression vector is about 5925 base pairs or
less.
52. The expression vector of claim 51, wherein the size of the expression
vector is from about 4185 base pairs to about 5925 base pairs.
53. The expression vector of claim 51, wherein the fragment of SEQ ID NO:
1 consists of a BxtXI-EcoRI FR fragment consisting of nucleotides 5 to
299 of SEQ ID NO: 1.
54. The expression vector of claim 51, wherein the fragment of SEQ ID NO:
2 consists of a BxtXI FR fragment consisting of nucleotides 300 to 595 of
SEQ ID NO: 1.
55. The expression vector of claim 51, further comprising an antibiotic
resistance gene and a bacterial origin of replication, wherein the
antibiotic resistance gene and the bacterial origin of replication are
located between SEQ ID NO: 1 or the fragment thereof and the 5' end of
the CMV5 promoter.
56. The expression vector of claim 55, wherein the bacterial origin of
replication is pMB1 and/or the antibiotic resistance gene is an
ampicillin resistance gene.
57. The expression vector of claim 51, further comprising a nucleotide
sequence encoding a recombinant protein, wherein the nucleotide sequence
encoding the recombinant protein is under control of the CMV5 promoter.
58. A process for preparing a recombinant protein, the process comprising
transfecting human kidney cells of the 293 cell line with the expression
vector of claim 57 and culturing the transfected cells to allow
expression of the recombinant protein by the transfected cells.
59. The process of claim 58, wherein the cells stably express EBNA1.
60. The process of claim 58, wherein the cells are human kidney cells
designated 293SFE and deposited under IDAC Accession No. 020502.
61. The process of claim 58, wherein transfection of the cells is carried
out in the presence of polyethylenimine (PEI) as a transfection reagent.
62. The process according to claim 61, wherein the polyethylenimine is a
linear polyethylenimine or a branched polyethylenimine.
63. The process according to claim 62, wherein the average molecular
weight of the polyethylenimine is from about 10 to about 100 kDa.
64. The process according to claim 62, wherein the average molecular
weight of the polyethylenimine is about 25 kDa.
65. The process according to claim 58, wherein the cells are cultured in
a serum-free culture medium.
66. The process according to claim 58, wherein the cells are cultured in
a culture medium comprising a serum or a subfraction thereof.
67. The process according to claim 58, wherein the cells are cultured in
a culture medium comprising a peptone.
68. The process according to claim 67, wherein the peptone is the gelatin
peptone N3.
69. The process according to claim 58, wherein the process is carried out
in a culture medium without changing the culture medium.
Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] The invention relates to processes for producing recombinant
proteins, in particular to a new process for an enhanced transient
expression of a recombinant protein in host mammalian cells, and to new
expression vectors, cell lines and culture media adapted to carrying out
the process.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] Mammalian cells are an established expression system in the
biotechnology industry for the production of recombinant proteins
(r-proteins). In contrast to lower eukaryotes or prokaryotes, mammalian
cells provide active r-proteins that possess relevant post-translational
modifications. However, in order to obtain sufficient amount of protein
for structure/activity analyses or high-throughput screenings, one needs
to go through the long and tedious process of stable transfectoma
isolation and characterization. As an alternative, the small-scale,
transient transfection of mammalian cells grown in monolayers can
generate significant amount of r-proteins (Cullen B. R., Methods
Enzymol., 152, 684-704 (1987); Blasey H. D. et al., Cytotechnology, 18,
183-192 (1996); Cachianes G. et al., Biotechniques, 15, 255-259 (1993)),
but scalability of this process is limited by culture surface
availability. The use of the well-established calcium phosphate
precipitation technique or the recently described cationic polymer
polyethylenimine (PEI) (Boussif O. et al., Proc, Natl. Acad. Sci. USA,
92, 7297-7301 (1995)) provides cost-effective ways of introducing plasmid
DNA into mammalian cells. A major breakthrough has recently emerged for
the fast production of milligram amounts of recombinant proteins when
these gene transfer vehicles were shown to be effective for large-scale
transient transfection of mammalian cells grown in suspension culture
(Jordan M. et al., Cytotechnology, 26, 39-47 (1998); Schlaeger E-J. et
al, Cytotechnology, 30, 71-83 (1999); Wurm F. et al., Curr. Opin.
Biotechnol., 10, 156-159 (1999)).
[0003] For an optimal large-scale transient transfection and r-protein
expression in mammalian cells, four key aspects are to be taken into
account, namely 1) the cell line, 2) the expression vector, 3) the
transfection vehicle and 4) the culture medium. The human 293 cell line
(a human embryonic kidney cell line containing the E1 region of human Ad5
adenovirus DNA) is widely used for r-protein production as it offers many
advantages, such as high transfection yields with most common gene
transfer vehicles, is easily grown in suspension culture, and can be
adapted to serum-free media. Moreover, two genetic variants of the 293
cell line, the 293E and 293T cell lines, expressing the Epstein-Barr
virus (EBV) Nuclear Antigen 1 (EBNA1) and the SV40 large-T antigen,
respectively, allow episomal (extrachromosomal) amplification of plasmids
containing the viral EBV (293E) or SV40 (293T) origins of replication.
These cell lines are therefore expected to increase r-protein expression
levels, by permitting more plasmid copies to persist in the transfected
cells throughout the production phase (Van Craenenbroeck H. et al., Eur.
J. Biochem., 267, 5665-5678 (2000)).
[0004] The second important issue for high level r-protein expression is
the use of vectors having promoters that are highly active in the host
cell line, such as the human cytomegalovirus (CMV) promoter (Foecking M.
K. et al, Gene, 45, 101-105 (1985)). This promoter is particularly
powerful in 293 cells, where it has been shown to be strongly
transactivated by the constitutively expressed adenovirus E1a protein
(Gorman C. M. et al., Virology, 171, 377-385 (1989)). Moreover, a highly
efficient expression cassette using this promoter has been recently
described that provides adenovirus-mediated transgene expression levels
reaching up to 20% of total cell proteins (TCP) (Massie B. et al., J.
Virol., 72, 2289-2296 (1998); Massie B. et al., Cytotechnology, 28, 53-64
(1998)).
[0005] The third aspect is related to gene transfer reagent efficacy. Even
though many highly effective gene transfer reagents are commercially
available, only few are cost-effective when considering operations at the
multi-liters scale. For large-scale transient transfection applications,
these reagents should also be simple to use, effective with suspension
growing cells and have minimal cytotoxic effects. PEI satisfies most of
these criteria, as it has high gene transfer activity in many cell lines
while displaying low cytotoxicity (Boussif O., supra), is cost-effective,
and efficiently transfects suspension growing 293 cells (Schlaeger E-J.,
supra). This polymer is available as both linear and branched isomers
with a wide range of molecular weights and polydispersities, which
physicochemical parameters are critical for efficient gene transfer
activity (Godbey W. T. et al., J. Control Release, 60, 149-160 (1999).
[0006] The last key aspect for efficient r-protein expression by transient
transfection relates to the culture medium. Some gene transfer reagents
work only in serum-free media whereas others are less sensitive to the
presence of serum. Also, as the presence of cellular by-products in
conditioned medium is associated with poor transfection yield, it is
often necessary to perform a complete medium change prior to
transfection. However, this step does not satisfy the need for a robust
large-scale transient transfection process.
[0007] Transient protein expression system are known in the prior art, for
example the transient expression system disclosed in U.S. Pat. No.
5,024,939. However, these systems generally suffer from the
above-discussed and other drawbacks and limitations and are not well
suited to large-scale, high-throughput production of r-proteins. The
present invention provides a transient expression system and process
which is free of many such prior art limitations.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0008] The invention provides a new process for the production of
recombinant proteins, by transfection of suspension-growing eukaryotic
cells with an expression vector comprising a first DNA sequence coding
for the desired protein, said first DNA sequence being under control of a
suitable promoter, and a second DNA sequence enhancing transcriptional
activity of the promoter and increasing nuclear import of the expression
vector. In a preferred embodiment, the second DNA sequence additionally
supports an episomal replication of the vector in the transfected cells.
The eukaryotic cells are preferably mammalian cells, more preferably the
human embryonic kidney 293 cell line and its genetic variants, more
preferably genetic variants stably expressing the EBNA1 protein or a
fragment thereof. The expression vector is preferably a plasmid,
comprising the first DNA sequence as a part of an expression cassette,
the cassette further comprising the promoter, preferably a
cytomegalovirus (CMV) promoter, most preferably the CMV5 promoter. The
second DNA sequence is preferably of a viral origin, more preferably the
oriP sequence of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) or a fragment thereof. The
transfection is preferably carried out using polyethylenimine (PEI) as a
transfection reagent, more preferably using the 25 kDa linear isoform of
PEI. The process combines in a single step the cell growth, transfection
and protein expression, is carried out using suspension-growing cells
without changing the culture medium, and allows to achieve high
expression levels in a short period of time. The process may be carried
out in a serum-free culture medium, is easily scalable, compatible with
continuous production processes, and fully adapted to high-throughput
production of milligram quantities of recombinant proteins.
[0009] Thus, according to one aspect, the invention provides a process for
the preparation of a recombinant protein, said process comprising the
steps of: providing eukaryotic host cells suspension-growing in a culture
medium; transfecting the host cells in the presence of a transfection
reagent with an expression vector, said vector comprising a first DNA
sequence encoding the recombinant protein, said first DNA sequence being
under control of a promoter; culturing the transfected cells under
conditions favoring expression of the recombinant protein, and harvesting
the expressed protein.
[0010] According to another aspect, the invention provides an expression
vector for an enhanced expression of a recombinant protein in a mammalian
cell, said vector comprising a first DNA sequence encoding the
recombinant protein, said first DNA sequence being under control of a
promoter, said expression vector further comprising a second DNA sequence
enhancing the transcriptional activity of the promoter and increasing the
nuclear import of the expression vector.
[0011] According to still another aspect, the invention provides a human
embryonic kidney cell line derived from the 293SF-3F6 cell line (ATCC
Accession No. CRL-12585), said line constitutively expressing the EBNA1
protein or a fragment thereof.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0012] FIG. 1 is a graph showing effects of DNA to PEI ratio on
transfection efficiency. 293E cells were transfected with linear (A) or
branched (B) 25 kDa PEI at various DNA (pGFP plasmid) concentrations, as
described in Material and Methods. DNA concentration (.mu.g ml.sup.-1)
used were: 0.25 (circles), 0.50 (squares), 1.0 (closed diamonds), 1.5
(triangles), and 2.0 (open diamonds). Transfection efficiencies were
determined by flow cytometry analysis 72 hpt.
[0013] FIG. 2 is a graph showing effects of cell line and vector on
transient SEAP expression. (A) shows genetic maps of pCEP5 (left) and pTT
(right) vectors drawn to scale. The pCEP5 vector backbone is identical to
pCEP4 vector except for the transgene expression cassette. The pTT vector
was obtained following removal of the hygromycin and EBNA1 expression
cassettes and replacement of the ColE1 origin for the pMB1 or, as
described in Material and Methods. TPL: tripartite leader, enh MLP: major
late promoter enhancer SD: splice donor SA: splice acceptor DS: dyad
symmetry; FR: family of repeats. (B) Cells were transfected with 1 .mu.g
of DNA and 2 .mu.g of linear PEI and SEAP activity measured 72 hpt. The
pGFP plasmid (0.1 .mu.g) was also added in each condition to monitor for
transfection efficiency and SEAP activities were normalized accordingly.
Empty boxes: pcDNA3.1/SEAP; hatched boxes: pCEP4/SEAP; gray boxes:
pCEP5/SEAP; black boxes: pTT/SEAP vector.
[0014] FIG. 3 is a graph showing effects of serum on transgene expression.
293E cells were transfected with pTT/GFPq (A) or pTT/SEAP (B) vectors
using 1.0 .mu.g of DNA and 2.0 .mu.g of linear PEI (hatched boxes) or 1.5
.mu.g and 2.0 .mu.g of branched PEI (gray boxes) in fresh serum-free or
serum-supplemented media. In one experiment (0.fwdarw.1%), cells were
transfected in serum-free media and serum was added 3 hours later to a
final concentration of 1%. GFP-positive cells and SEAP activity were
measured 72 hpt.
[0015] FIG. 4 is a graph illustrating the progress of transfection of
suspension growing cells. Cells were resuspended in 10 ml of fresh HSFM
containing 1% BCS to a density of 1.times.10.sup.6 ml.sup.-1 in 125 ml
Erlenmeyer flask. Three hours later, 1 ml of the DNA-PEI complexes were
added and the culture incubated for an additional 3 h. The volume was
then completed to 20 ml with fresh culture medium. The DNA-PEI complexes
were as follows: 40 .mu.g of linear or branched PEI was added to 1 ml of
HEPES-supplemented HSFM containing 18 .mu.g of pTT/SEAP and 2 .mu.g of
pEGFP or 27 .mu.g of pTT/SEAP and 3 .mu.g of pEGFP, respectively. Open
symbols: linear PEI; closed symbols: branched PEI. Circles: SEAP
activity; squares: % GFP-positive cells.
[0016] FIG. 5 is a graph showing effects of cell density and of
conditioned medium. (A) Transfection efficiency and relative total GFP
expression (in percent) obtained following transfection using standard
conditions (hatched bars: 10 ml of cells at 1.times.10.sup.6 ml.sup.-1
followed by addition of 10 ml of fresh medium 3 h after transfection) or
using cells at 5.times.10.sup.5 ml.sup.-1 in 20 ml of culture medium
(gray bars). GFP was monitored 72 hpt. Relative total GFP was obtained
following multiplication of percent GFP-positive cells by the mean
fluorescence intensity. (B) Cells were seeded in 20 ml of 1%
BCS-supplemented HSFM at a density 2.5.times.10.sup.5 ml.sup.-1 24 h
before transfection. The medium was then left unchanged (conditioned:
open circles) or replaced with 20 ml of fresh medium (closed circles).
Three hours later, cells were transfected by the addition of 2 ml of
DNA-PEI complexes (20 .mu.g of pTT/SEAP and 40 .mu.g of linear PEI).
[0017] FIG. 6 is a graph showing the contribution of FR and DS domains on
transient gene expression. The pTT(delta DS) vector was obtained by ApaI
digestion and re-circularisation. The pTT(delta FR) was obtained by
MluI-EcoRI digestion, fill-in and re-circularisation. The pTT(delta oriP)
vector was obtained by ApaI-EcoRI digestion, fill-in and
re-circularisation. The cDNAs encoding GFP and SEAP were cloned into
these vectors, followed by transfection of 293E cells. SEAP and GFP were
measured 3 days post-transfection.
[0018] FIG. 7 is a graph showing the effect of various onP truncations on
transient gene expression. The pTTm/GFP vector was obtained by digesting
pTT/GFP vector with EcoRV-MluI, followed by fill-in and
re-circularisation. In this construct, the oriP still contains the
complete FR and DS domains. The pTTn/GFP vector was obtained by digesting
pTTm/GFP vector with BstXI, followed by re-circularisation. This
construct has an FR fragment containing only 9 EBNA1 binding sites (see
FIG. 8). The pTTo/GFP vector was obtained by digesting pTT/GFP vector
with BspMI-EcoRV. This construct contains intact FR and DS domains. 293E
cells were transfected with these constructs and GFP levels measured 3
days later. Results are expressed relative to pTT/GFP vector.
[0019] FIG. 8 shows the sequence of the oriP's Family of Repeats (FR). The
FR contains 20 EBNA1 binding sites (EBS) (boxed). Spacers between EBS are
shadowed. Doubly underlined regions indicate BstXI restriction sites.
Nucleotide in bold font indicate mutations in the EBS. Shadowed box
indicates EcoRI site.
[0020] FIG. 9 is a graph showing the effect of the presence of various FR
fragments on transient gene expression. The FR vector constructs used are
shown in panel A. The pTT(delta oriP)/GFP vector was derived from pTT/GFP
vector following EcoRI-ApaI digestion, T4 DNA polymerase treatment and
re-circularisation. The pTT4a/GFP vector contains the BstXI FR fragment
(containing 10 EBS) cloned in the EcoRI site of pTT(delta oriP)/GFP
vector. The pTT4b/GFP vector contains the BstXI FR fragment cloned in the
SalI site of pTT(delta oriP)/GFP vector. The pTT4c/GFP vector contains an
FR fragment containing 9 EBS and was derived from pTT(delta oriP)/GFP
vector by BstXI-ApaI digestion, T4 DNA polymerase treatment and
re-circularisation. 293E cells were transfected with vectors shown in
panel A and with pTT/GFP vector. GFP was analyzed by flow cytometry 72
hours later and values expressed relative to the value obtained with
pTT/GFP vector (containing the complete oriP) are shown in panel C.
[0021] FIG. 10 is a graph showing the effect of oriP on nuclear import of
plasmids and gene expression. 293E cells were transfected with pcDNA3.1
plasmid encoding SEAP with or without various ratio of pTT.DELTA. vector
(containing the oriP) or pTT-.DELTA..DELTA. vector (no oriP). SEAP
activity was measured 72 hours later.
[0022] FIG. 11 is a graph showing the effect of peptones on 293E-GFP cells
growth. Peptones were tested at 1% (w/v) in HSFM/1% serum. Cells (293E
cells stably expressing GFP) were seeded at 1000 cells/well in 96-well
plates and fluorescence was monitored daily using a fluorescence
microplate reader. Increases in fluorescence indicate cell growth.
Control is without peptones. MP: meat peptones; CP: casein peptones; TN:
tryptone; GP: gelatin peptones; SP: soy peptones; WP: wheat peptones; ME:
malt peptones; PP: plant peptones; YE: yeast extract.
[0023] FIG. 12 is a graph showing the effect of peptones and their
concentration on transient transfection of SFE cells. Peptones were first
tested at 1% (w/v) in HSFM. The effect of concentration of selected
peptones was then tested at concentrations 0.5%, 1.0% and 1.5%. GFP was
monitored 72 hours later by flow cytometry. Cell agglomeration was
significant when using meat and casein peptones (data not shown). Control
is without peptone or serum addition.
[0024] FIG. 13 is a graph illustrating a transient transfection in a
3.5-liters bioreactor. (A) 293E cells were seeded at a density of
2.5.times.10.sup.5 ml.sup.-1 in 2.85 l of fresh HSFM supplemented with 1%
BCS. Twenty-four hours later, the transfection mixture (6 mg of linear
PEI added to 150 ml HSFM containing 2.85 mg pTT/SEAP and 150 .mu.g pEGFP
plasmids) was added to the bioreactor (solid lines). One hour later, 25
ml of culture was withdrawn from the bioreactor and transferred in a
shake flask as a control (dashed lines). SEAP activity (circles) and
GFP-positive cells (squares) were determined as described in Materials
and Methods. (B) Growth curves (diamonds), viability (triangles) and
yO.sub.2 (gray line) in the 3.5-l bioreactor (solid lines) and shaker
flask (dashed lines).
[0025] FIG. 14 is a photograph showing results of SEAP purification and
production of other secreted and intracellular r-proteins. (A) SEAP
purification by IMAC. One liter of culture medium from the 3.5-l
bioreactor harvest (FIG. 13) was loaded onto a TALON.TM. IMAC column (10
ml bed volume). Following extensive washing, bound material was eluted
with 150 mM imidazole (20 ml). Ten microliters of culture medium (lane
1), flow-through (lane 2) and eluted material (lane 3) were resolved in
duplicate on a 3-8% NuPAGE Tris-acetate gradient gel. One half of the gel
was directly stained with Coomassie blue R-250 (left panel) whereas the
other half was transferred onto a nitrocellulose membrane and probed with
anti-Myc antibody (right panel). (B) Expression of secreted C-terminal
Myc-(His).sub.6-tagged r-protein in a 14-1 bioreactor. Lane 1, human
Neurophilin (1-824; upper band) and VEGF (1-165; lower band)
co-transfection in a 1:1 ratio; lane 2, human Tie2 (1-723); lane 3, human
Cripto (1-173); lane 4, human c-Met (1-931). Transfections were performed
as described in Materials and Methods and culture medium harvested 120
hpt. Fifteen microliters of culture medium were loaded per lane and
tagged proteins detected using anti-Myc antibody. (C) Expression of
intracellular r-proteins. Lane 1, pTT/sgGFP; lane 2, pTT/RR1; lane 3, pTT
empty vector; lane 4, pcDNA3.1/G; lane 5, pTT/G.sub.aq; lane 6,
pTT/p27.sup.Kip1; lane 7, pTT/PYC; lane 8, pTT/E1B.sup.19K; lane 9,
pTT/hexokinase; lane 10, pTT/glucokinase. Cells were harvested 72 hpt,
rinsed with PBS and solubilized in NuPAGE sample buffer followed by
sonication (lanes 1-5) or extracted in lysis buffer (lanes 6-10) as
indicated in Materials and Methods. Proteins were resolved on a 4-12%
Bis-Tris NuPAGE gradient gel and stained with Coomassie blue R-250.
[0026] FIG. 15 is a graph showing the effect of an antibiotic resistance
cassette added to a vector. When an antibiotic resistance cassette is
added to the vector (in this example the pTTz vector and a zeocin
expression cassette) and the antibiotic is added to the cell culture
after transfection, a stable population of cells expressing the transgene
(in this example GFP) can be obtained is less than a month.
[0027] FIG. 16 is a graph showing transient gene expression levels reached
in various SFE clones compared to the parental 293SF-3F6 cell line (ATCC
Accession No. CRL-12585). Cells were transfected with the pTT/SEAP
plasmid. SFE clones were obtained following transfection of the 293SF-3F6
cell line with the pIRES-neo (Clontech) vector encoding the full-length
EBNA1 protein and selection using 50 .mu.g/ml of geneticin for two weeks.
Resistant cells were seeded at 1 cell/well in 96 well plates and emerging
clones amplified and tested for transient gene expression. Of the 20
clones so isolated, only four are shown in the graph, the clone 41
(deposited under IDAC Accession No. 020502) being the one showing the
highest transgene expression.
[0028] FIG. 17 is a graph showing the effect of the addition of serum
sub-fractions on transient gene expression. Panel A shows the bovine calf
serum (BCS, Hyclone) protein profile following gel filtration
chromatography using a Superdex 200 HR 16/60 column. Fractions were
tested at a final concentration of 40% (v/v). Panel B, 293E cells were
transfected with the pTT/SEAP vector and SEAP measured 72 hours later.
Active fractions were pooled for further analysis (11-14: "fraction A"
and 24-25: "fraction B").
[0029] FIG. 18 is a graph showing the effect of the combination of serum
"fraction A" and "fraction B" on transient gene expression. 293E cells
were transfected with pTT/SEAP in the absence or presence of various
ratio of "fraction A" and "fraction B" (see FIG. 17B). SEAP activity was
measured 96 hours later. Positive control was medium with 1% BCS and
negative control was plain medium.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0030] The present invention provides a new process for an enhanced
transient expression of recombinant proteins (r-proteins) in eukaryotic
cells, preferably in mammalian cells, most preferably in
suspension-growing 293 cell lines.
[0031] The process was developed and optimized by investigating the
effects of various parameters of the process on r-protein expression, by
transient transfection of suspension-growing cells using the polycationic
polymer polyethylenimine (PEI) as transfection reagent. In a preferred
embodiment, by combining the optimized oriP-containing pTT expression
plasmid with the 293E cell line, expression levels of intracellular
r-protein representing up to 20% of total cellular proteins (TCP) have
been achieved. To the inventors' knowledge, such high expression levels
have never been achieved in 293 cells using transient transfection and
these levels rival those obtained using virus-mediated transgene
expression (Massie B. et al., Cytotechnology, 28, 53-64 (1998)).
Expression of the human placental secreted alkaline phosphatase (SEAP)
protein, one of several proteins expressed using the process of the
present invention was found to be at levels exceeding 20 mg/l.
[0032] It would be obvious to persons skilled in the art that many
different eukaryotic cell lines, in particular mammalian and human cell
lines, could be transfected using PEI as transfecting agent and that such
cell lines could be used for the process of the invention. However, the
efficacy of transfection, and protein expression levels as a result, vary
considerably for various cell lines (see, for example Boussif et al.,
Gene Therapy, 3, 1074-1080 (1996)) and is one of the highest for human
embryonic kidney (HEK) 293 cell line. Also the activity of the CMV
promoter appears to be one of the highest for HEK 293 cell line, as
compared with other mammalian cell lines, which considerably improves
expression levels of the recombinant protein when this promoter is used
in combination with a human embryonic kidney (HEK) cell line. An
additional improvement may be achieved by using the HEK 293E cell line (a
genetic variant of 293 cell line, constitutively expressing the
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) EBNA1 protein), in combination with an
expression vector comprising the EBV oriP-sequence or a fragment thereof
containing EBNA1 binding sites (see FIG. 2B).
[0033] Particularly advantageous for carrying out the process of the
invention proved to be the SFE cell line, a derivative of the cell line
HEK293SF-3F6 (ATCC Accession No. CRL-12585) stably expressing the EBNA1
protein. The SFE cell line was developed by transfecting the 293SF-3F6
cell line with the pIRES-neo vector encoding the full-length EBNA1
protein and isolating and amplifying geneticin-resistant clones so
obtained, following procedures well known to those skilled in the art.
The isolated clones were then tested for transient expression of the SEAP
gene. A clone (clone 41) showing the highest expression levels (see FIG.
16) was deposited under IDAC Accession No. 020502. The SFE cell line
offers the advantage over the commercially available HEK 293E cell line
of being capable of growing in a serum-free medium. Production of
secreted r-proteins in a serum-free medium considerably facilitates their
subsequent purification.
[0034] The use of amplifiable expression cassettes in mammalian cells,
such as the dihydrofolate reductase or glutamine synthetase systems, have
been shown to result in the isolation of stable call lines showing very
high levels of r-protein expression. As an alternative to these stable
amplified systems, vectors with viral-derived elements that allow for
episomal replication and amplification, such as the large-T antigen/SV40
on, or the EBNA1/oriP, are well suited when using transient expression
systems (Van Craenenbroeck K. et al., Eur. J. Biochem., 267, 5665-5678
(2000)). Although plasmid DNA containing the SV40 on was shown to
replicate in the large-T antigen expressing 293T cell line (Heinzel S. S.
et al., J. Virol., 62, 3738-3746 (1988)), it was now shown that it did
not provide higher transgene expression in 293T cells when compared with
the 293 parental cell line. In contrast, the use of oriP-containing
plasmids in 293E cells significantly increased transgene expression
compared with the non-permissive 293 cells. This suggests that the
increased transgene expression obtained using EBV replicon-containing
plasmids might be mediated by a phenomenon distinct from its ability to
support episomal replication. This is further supported by the fact that
removal of DS domain of oriP, which is responsible for initiation of DNA
replication in EBNA1 positive cells (Wysokensky D. A. et al., J. Virol.,
63, 2657-2666 (1989)), did not significantly reduce transgene expression
(see FIG. 6). One likely mechanism for this oriP-mediated increased
expression could arise from the described EBNA1-dependent enhancer
activity of oriP (Reisman D. et al., Moll. Cell. Biol., 6, 3838-3846
(1986); Sugden B. et al., J. Virol., 63, 2644-2649 (1989); Gahn T. A. et
al., J. Virol., 69, 2633-2636 (1995)). The EBV oriP contains 24 EBNA1
binding sites (Mackey D. et al., Methods Enzymol., 306, 308-328 (1999)).
As EBNA1 has an efficient nuclear localization signal (Ambinder R. F. et
al., J. Virol., 65, 1466-1478 (1991); Langle-Rouault F. et al., J.
Virol., 72, 6181-6185 (1998)), its binding to plasmids bearing oriP may
also increase their nuclear import, thus enhancing transgene expression.
This effect is illustrated in FIG. 10, where co-transfection of the
pcDNA3.1/SEAP plasmid (no oriP) with an oriP empty vector in a ratio of
only 1:9 maintained specific SEAP production. In contrast, a
co-transfection using the same ratio with an empty vector without oriP
lead to a five-fold decrease in specific SEAP production. This suggests
that the presence of an oriP vector in PEI-DNA complexes is sufficient to
increase nuclear import of non-oriP vectors that are present in the same
complexes, thus increasing protein expression. Indeed, the most important
barrier to transfection seems to be the limited migration of plasmid DNA
from the cytoplasm to the nucleus (Zabner J. et al., J. Biol. Chem., 270,
18997-19007 (1995)). Contribution of this mechanism to the enhanced
transgene expression could be partially hindered when using PEI as the
transfection reagent, as this polymer was also shown to actively undergo
nuclear localization (Pollard H. et al., J. Biol. Chem., 273, 7507-7511
(1998); Godbey W. T. et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 96, 5177-5181
(1999)). However, data presented in FIG. 9 clearly show a significant
contribution of oriP to an enhanced nuclear transport of plasmid DNA.
[0035] Whereas linear 25 kDa PEI was reported to efficiently mediate gene
transfer in the presence of serum (Boussif O. et al., Gene Ther., 3,
1074-1080 (1996)), transgene expression mediated by the branched Isoform
was shown to be reduced 3-fold in its presence (Schlaeger E-J. et al.,
Cytotchnology, 30, 71-83 (1999)). This contrasts with findings of the
present invention showing that gene transfer was also significantly
increased using the branched 25 kDa PEI.
[0036] A positive effect of serum as a component of the culture medium on
transfection efficiency and protein expression was also observed (see
FIG. 3). The mechanism by which serum increases gene delivery and/or
transgene expression is not yet clear. Serum might contribute to augment
transcriptional activity of the promoter as the CMV immediate early
enhancer contains multiple binding sites for serum-activated
transcription factors (Boshart M. et al., Cell, 41, 521-530 (1985);
Brightwell G. et al., Gene, 194, 115-123 (1997)). However, only a partial
recovery of transgene expression was obtained when serum was added to the
cells 3 hrs after their transfection in serum-free medium. This suggests
that, in addition to the potential serum-mediated CMV promoter
transcription activation, some serum component(s) might increase
transfection efficacy of DNA-PEI complexes. The results shown in FIGS. 17
& 18 demonstrate that following serum fractionation, inhibitory
components (such as BSA) can be removed, and fractions enhancing
transfection and/or transgene expression can be isolated. Further
purification of the active components will allow to obtain an additive
with minimal protein content (compared to whole serum), that will greatly
increase production yields.
[0037] As attempts to adapt the commercially available 293E cell line to
serum-free medium were unsuccessful, it was decided to create an
EBNA1-expressing cell line growing in a serum-free medium by stably
transfecting the serum-free adapted 293SF-3F6 clone with an EBNA1
expression plasmid (pIRESneo/EBNA1). Among multiple clones tested, the
clone 41 showed the highest transgene expression following transient
transfection of the pTT/SEAP plasmid (a ten-fold increase in SEAP
expression compared to the 293SF-3F6 parental clone; see FIG. 16). Using
this clone, the serum-free medium formulation was further improved in
order to reach higher transient gene expression. Of various peptones
tested as additives to the serum-free medium, the gelatin peptones GPN3
proved to be the most suitable for this purpose. Other peptones were
similarly effective (see FIG. 12), but induced significant cell
agglomeration, an undesirable phenomenon in suspension cultures. BSA was
removed form the culture medium, as this protein proved to significantly
inhibit the transfection and gene expression (data not shown).
[0038] A major drawback of using polycations or cationic lipids is the
inhibitory effect of conditioned medium on gene delivery. In the case of
cationic lipids, this inhibition was shown to be mediated by the presence
of secreted glycosaminoglycans (Rupoen M. et al., Biochim. Biophys. Acta,
1415, 331-341 (1999); Belting M. et al., J. Biol. Chem., 274, 19375 0
19382 (1999)), which are expected to efficiently displace DNA from lipid
complexes. Whereas it was shown that conditional medium adversely reduced
PEI-mediated transfection of 293E cells (Schlaeger E-J. et al., supra),
no significant effect was observed by the inventors. The reason for this
discrepancy is not clear, but might result from the type of culture
medium used, the age of the culture, or from the cells themselves. The
fact that, according to the invention, transfection of cells in their 24
hr-conditioned medium does not reduce gene transfer and expression,
greatly simplifies process scale up.
[0039] In conclusion, a significant improvement in transgene expression
following transient transfection of suspension-growing cells using PEI
was obtained by combining optimized parameters, such as the pTT
expression vector, the 293E or 293SFE cell lines, the culture medium, and
the transfection process. Under these conditions, .about.60 mg of
purified SEAP could be obtained from a 3-l culture following a single
IMAC purification step. Volumetric expressions of the intracellular
proteins GFP and RR1 were, respectively, 20 and 50 mg/l at 72 hpt,
representing up to 20% of TCP. As this technology is robust, inexpensive
and easy to perform, it is fully adapted for high-throughput production
of milligram quantities of r-proteins needed for biochemical or
structural studies and high-throughput screenings.
Experimental
Materials and Methods
Chemicals
[0040] A 25 kDa branched PEI was obtained from Aldrich (Milwaukee, Wis.)
and 25 kDa linear PEI from Polysciences (Warrington Pa.). Stock solutions
(1 mg ml.sup.-1) were prepared in water, neutralized with HCl, sterilized
by filtration (0.22 .mu.m), aliquoted and stored at -80.degree. C.
Cell Culture
[0041] Human embryonic kidney 2938 (293) cells (Cote J. et al.,
Biotechnol. Bioeng., 59, 567-5765 (1998)) and genetic variants stably
expressing EBNA1 (293E) (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, Calif.) or the large-T
antigen (293T) (DuBridge R. B. et al., Mol. Cell. Biol., 7, 379-387
(1987)) were adapted to suspension culture in low-calcium-hybridoma
serum-free medium (HSFM) (Cote J. et al., supra) supplemented with 1%
bovine calf serum (BCS), 50 .mu.g ml.sup.-1 Geneticin (for 293E and 293T
cells), 0.1% Pluronic F-68 (Sigma, Oakville, Ontario, Canada) and 10 mM
HEPES. For culture in bioreactors, HEPES was omitted from the medium.
Cells were cultured in Erlenmeyer flasks (50 or 125 ml) using 15-25% of
the nominal volume at 110-130 r.p.m. (Thermolyne's BigBill orbital
shaker, TekniScience Inc., Terrebonne, Quebec, Canada) under
standard-humidified conditions (37.degree. C. and 5% CO.sub.2).
Vectors
[0042] The pIRESpuro/EGFP (pEGFP) and pSEAP basic vectors were obtained
from Clontech (Palo Alto, Calif.), and pcDNA3.1, pcDNA3.1/Myc-(His).sub.6
and pCEP4 vectors were from Invitrogen. The SuperGlo GFP variant (sgGFP)
was from Q Biogene (Carlsbad, Calif.). Construction of pCEP5 vector was
as follows: the CMV promoter and polyadenylation signal of pCEP4 were
removed by sequential digestion and self-ligation using SalI and XbaI
enzymes, resulting in plasmid pCEP4A. A BglII fragment from pAdCMV5
(Massie B. et al., J. Virol., 72, 2289-2296 (1998) 11) encoding the
CMV5-poly(A) expression cassette was ligated in BglII-linearized
pCEP4.DELTA., resulting in pCEP5 vector. The pTT vector was generated
following deletion of the hygromycin (BsmI and SalI excision followed by
fill-in and ligation) and EBNA1 (ClaI and NsiI excision followed by
fill-in and ligation) expression cassettes. The ColE1 origin (FspI-SalI
fragment, including the 3' end of -lactamase ORF) was replaced with a
FspI-SalI fragment from pcDNA3.1 containing the pMB1 origin (and the same
3' end of -lactamase ORF). A Myc-(His).sub.6 C-terminal fusion tag was
added to SEAP (HindIII-HpaI fragment from pSEAP-basic), following
in-frame ligation in pcDNA3.1/Myc-His (Invitrogen) digested with HindIII
and EcoRV. To insert a SV40 promoter-zeocin-SV40 polyA expression
cassette into the pTT vector (resulting in pTTz vector), the cassette was
first amplified from pZeo(SV2+) vector (Invitrogen) using primers with
BspHI sites at their extremities. The amplified cassette was then ligated
between the BspHI sites of pTT vector. All plasmids were amplified in
Escherichia coli (DH5a) grown in LB medium and purified using MAXI prep
columns (Qiagen, Mississauga, Ontario, Canada). For quantification,
plasmids were diluted in 50 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.4 and the absorbances at 260
and 280 nm measured. Only plasmid preparations with A.sub.260/A.sub.280
ratios between 1.75 and 2.00 were used.
Small-Scale Transient Transfections
[0043] Three hours before transfection, cells were centrifuged and
resuspended in fresh HSFM medium supplemented with 1% BCS at a density of
1.0.times.10.sup.6 cells ml.sup.-1. Five hundred microliters, or 10 ml,
of cell suspension was distributed per well of a 12 well plate, or in a
125 ml shaker flask, respectively. DNA was diluted in fresh serum-free
HSFM (in a volume equivalent to one-tenth of the culture to be
transfected), PEI was added, and the mixture immediately vortexed and
incubated for 10 min at room temperature prior to its addition to the
cells. Following a 3 h incubation with DNA-PEI complexes, culture medium
was completed to 1 ml (12-well plate) or 20 ml (shaker flask) by the
addition of HSFM supplemented with 1% BCS.
Transfection in Bioreactors
[0044] A 3.5-l bioreactor containing 2.85 l of HSFM supplemented with 1%
BCS was seeded with 293E cells to obtain a final cell density of
2.5.times.10.sup.5 ml.sup.-1. Twenty-four hours later, cells were
transfected with 150 ml of a mixture of pTT/SEAP:pEGFP plasmids (19:1, 3
mg total) and PEI (6 mg). Agitation was at 70 r.p.m. using a helical
ribbon impeller (Kamen A. A. et al., Chem. Eng. Sci., 27, 2375-2380
(1992)). Dissolved oxygen was maintained at 40% by surface aeration using
a nitrogen/oxygen mixture (300 ml/min) and pH was maintained at 7.2 by
addition of CO.sub.2 in the head space and sodium bicarbonate (10% w/v in
water) injection in the culture medium. The same conditions were used for
transfection in 14-1 bioreactors.
Flow Cytometry
[0045] GFP was analyzed by flow cytometry using an EPICS Profile II
(Coulter, Hialeah, Fla., USA) equipped with a 15-mW argon-ion laser. Only
viable cells were analyzed for the expression of GFP. Data are
representative of at least two independent experiments. Error bars
represent .+-.SEM of one experiment done in duplicate
SEAP Analysis
[0046] Determination of SEAP activity was performed essentially as
previously described (Durocher et al., Anal. Biochem., 284, 316-326
(2000)). Briefly, culture medium was diluted in water as required
(typically 1/50 to 1/1000) and 50 .mu.l were transferred to a 96-well
plate. Fifty microliters of SEAP assay solution containing 20 mM
paranitrophenylphosphate (pNPP), 1 mM MgCl.sub.2, 10 mM 1-homoarginine
and 1 M diethanolamine pH 9.8 were then added and absorbance read at 410
nm at 1-2 min intervals at room temperature to determine pNPP hydrolysis
rates. Data are representative of at least two Independent experiments.
Error bar represent .+-.SEM of one experiment done in duplicate. For the
bioreactor run, error bars represent .+-.SEM of two SEAP measurements.
Electrophoresis, Western Analyses and Quantification
[0047] Immunodetection of C-terminal Myc-(His).sub.6-tagged SEAP was done
using the anti-Myc 9E10 antibody (Santa Cruz). For analysis of
intracellular proteins, cells were directly lysed in NuPAGE sample buffer
(Novex) or extracted with lysis buffer (50 mM HEPES pH 7.4, 150 mM NaCl,
1% Thesit and 0.5% sodium deoxycholate). Insoluble material was removed
from lysates by centrifuagtion at 12 000 g at 4.degree. C. for 5 min.
Concentrated NuPAGE buffer (4.times.) was added to clear lysates. All
samples were heated for 3 min at 95.degree. C. Proteins were resolved on
4-12% Bis-Tris or 3-8% Tris-acetate NuPAGE gradient gels as recommended
by the manufacturer. GFP and other non-tagged proteins were quantified
relative to purified bovine serum albumin (BSA) following electrophoresis
and Coomassie blue R250 staining using the Kodak Digital Science Image
Station 440cf equipped with the Kodak Digital Science 1D image analysis
software version 3.0 (Eastman Kodak, NY, USA). RR1 was quantified by
slot-blot relatively to a homogeneity-purified RR1 standard detected by
using a monoclonal anti-RR1 antibody. Other Myc-(His).sub.6-tagged
proteins were quantified relative to purified SEAP-Myc-(His).sub.6.
Examples
[0048] Transfection with Linear and Branched 25 kDa PEI
[0049] Preliminary results showed that linear and branched 25 kDa PEI were
the most effective among various polymers tested (including branched 70
kDa, branched 50-100 kDa and branched 10 kDa; data not shown). In view of
the above, transfection of 293E cells was optimized with both linear or
branched 25 kDa PEI polymers using a plasmid encoding the enhanced GFP
(pEGFP). Transfections were performed using cells grown as monolayers in
12-well plates and GFP expression was measured 72 hours later by flow
cytometry. The effect of DNA to PEI ratios on transfection efficiency is
shown in FIG. 1 using linear (A) or branched (B) PEI. The indicated
amounts of DNA and polymers are for one well containing 5.times.10.sup.5
cells. Only 0.25 .mu.g of DNA per well was sufficient to reach a 50%
transfection efficiency when using linear PEI, whereas a minimum of 1.0
.mu.g was necessary using the branched isoform. Transfection efficiencies
of .about.70% were reached with both linear and branched polymers at
DNA:PEI (.mu.g:.mu.g) ratios of 1.0:1.5 and 1.5:2.0, respectively.
Increasing the amounts of both DNA and PEI did not lead to higher
transfection yield.
Cell Line and Expression Vectors
[0050] Two commercially available expression vectors containing viral
sequences allowing for episomal DNA replication in permissive cell lines
were tested. The first vector, pcDNA3.1, contains the SV40 origin of
replication that allows cellular polymerases to replicate the DNA up to
1000-copies in cells expressing the large T antigen (Chittenden T. et
al., J. Virol., 65, 5944-5951 (19991)). The second vector, pCEP4,
contains the EBV origin of replication oriP that replicates plasmid DNA
up to 90-copies in cells expressing the EBNA1 protein (Yates J. L. et
al., Nature, 313, 812-815 (1985)). Also generated was the pCEP5 vector
(FIG. 2A, left) by using an improved CMV expression cassette, as
described in the adenoviral transfer vector pAdCMV5 (Massie B. et al.,
Biotechnology, 13, 602-608 (1995)). This expression cassette has been
shown to confer very high levels of r-protein expression in 293 cells
(Massie B. et al., Cytotechnology, 28, 53-64 (1998) 12). The pCEP5 vector
was further modified (see Materials and Methods) to yield the pTT vector
(FIG. 2A, right) that is 4.6 kb smaller, hence providing more space for
large cDNA cloning. The cDNA encoding for the reporter protein SEAP was
then cloned in each of these four vectors and its expression level
monitored following transient transfection in 293, 293T or 293E cells. As
shown in FIG. 2B, transfection of 293T cell line with the SV40
ori-containing plasmid pcDNA3.1 did not translate into an increased
transgene expression when compared with transfection of the parental 293
cells. However, transfection of 293E cells with pCEP4 vector resulted in
a 2-3-fold increase in SEAP expression compared with transfection of 293
or 293T cells with the same vector. In addition, the use of pCEP5 vector
further increased SEAP expression by a factor of 2-6-fold, depending on
the cell line. Finally, the use of the pTT vector in 293E cells resulted
in a 33% increase in transgene expression compared with the pCEP5 vector.
The overall SEAP expression level in 293E cells was 10-fold higher with
the pTT vector compared with pcDNA3.1 vector.
Effect of Serum
[0051] The effect of serum on transfection efficiency (GFP) and r-protein
production (SEAP) mediated by both linear and branched PEI was evaluated.
FIG. 3 shows that when transfection mixture was added to cells in fresh
1% serum-containing medium, a 4-5-fold increase in SEAP activity 72 hpt
is obtained compared with its addition to cells in serum-free medium.
Increasing serum concentration to 5% further improved PEI-mediated
transfection efficiency and production. When transfection mixture was
added to cells in serum-free media followed 3 hours later by serum
addition to a concentration of 1% (0.fwdarw.1%), a 2-fold Increase in
transgene expression was obtained; however, this level was only 50% of
that obtained in 1% serum.
Process Optimization for Transfection in Suspension
[0052] Next evaluated was gene transfer efficiency of both linear and
branched PEI on suspension-growing 293E cells grown in 1%
BCS-supplemented HSFM. Shaker flask cultures were co-transfected with a
mixture of pTT/SEAP:pEGFP (9:1) plasmids (pEGFP was added to monitor for
transfection efficiency). With both linear and branched PEI, SEAP
accumulated in the culture medium for up to 96 hours post-transfection
(hpt) (FIG. 4), but gene transfer and expression level were 50% higher
using the linear isoform. These results clearly demonstrate that linear,
and to a lesser extent branched PEI are effective for gene transfer in
suspension-growing cells. In addition, SEAP expression levels obtained
with suspension-growing cells using linear PEI were comparable with those
obtained with adherent-growing cells. For all experiments discussed
below, only linear PEI was used.
[0053] In order to design a robust, simple and scalable transfection
process, two steps had to be simplified: the 3 hrs incubation of DNA-PEI
complexes with cells in a reduced culture volume, and the medium change 3
hrs prior to transfection. The first step was performed with the
assumption that it would promote interaction of the DNA-PEI complexes
with the cells and thus increase transfection efficiency. The second was
done according to reports showing deleterious effect of conditioned
medium on transfection efficiency (Schlaeger E-J. et al., Cytotechnology,
30, 71-83 (1999); Ruponen M. et al., Biochim. Biophys. Acta, 1415,
331-341 (1999)). Whereas medium exchange is simple to perform on a small
scale, this step represents a significant hurdle at scales greater than a
few liters.
[0054] The effect of cell density at the time of transfection was first
evaluated (FIG. 5A) by transfecting high density (hatched bars; 10 ml at
1.times.10.sup.6 cells ml.sup.-1) or low density cultures (gray bars; 20
ml at 2.5.times.10.sup.5 cells ml.sup.-1) in shaker flasks. Three hours
later, the high cell density flask was diluted to 5.times.10.sup.5 cells
ml.sup.-1 with fresh medium, and GFP expression monitored 72 hrs later.
This experiment showed that cell concentrations prior to transfection
could be omitted, as only a slight decrease (<10%) in transfection
efficiency and a 15% decrease in GFP expression level was observed when
cells were transfected in a larger culture volume.
[0055] The next evaluated was the effect of conditioned medium on SEAP
expression using suspension growing cells. For this study, cells were
seeded in shaker flasks at a density of 2.5.times.10.sup.5 cells
ml.sup.-1. Twenty-four hours later, transfection was performed with or
without a complete medium exchange. As shown in FIG. 5B, no significant
difference in SEAP expression was observed when the transfection was
carried out in medium conditioned for 24 hrs, indicating that medium
exchange is not necessary.
Transfection in Bioreactors
[0056] To demonstrate the scalability of the process, a 3.5-1 bioreactor
culture was transfected with a mixture of pTT/SEAP:pEGFP plasmids (19:1).
One hour later, a sample (25 ml) was withdrawn and transferred into a
shaker flask as a control. In the bioreactor (FIG. 13A, solid lines),
SEAP (circles) accumulated up to 144 hpt and then reached a plateau,
whereas accumulation continued up to 216 hpt in the control shaker flask
(dashed lines). The percentage of GFP-positive cells (squares) at 96 hpt
reached 54 and 50% for the bioreactor and the shaker flask, respectively.
At the end of the culture, cell density was 4.1 and 4.7.times.10.sup.6
cells ml.sup.-1 with a viability of 62 and 72% for the bioreactor and the
shaker flask, respectively (FIG. 13B). Although viable cell density was
25% lower in the bioreactor compared with the shaker flask, volumetric
SEAP productivity was almost 2-fold higher. Similar results were
systematically observed in five independent experiments (results not
shown), indicating that the productivity of secreted proteins might be
increased when using a controlled environment.
Purification of SEAP and Production of Other r-Proteins
[0057] Purification of Myc-(His).sub.6-tagged SEAP harvested from the
bioreactor run (FIG. 13) by immobilized metal affinity chromatography
(IMAC) is shown in FIG. 14A. The left panel shows Coomassie blue-stained
protein pattern from the culture medium before loading on the column
(lane 1), flow-through (lane 2) and eluted material using 150 mM
imidazole (lane 3). The right panel shows immunodetection of SEAP in the
same fractions using anti-Myc antibody. This figure shows that all of the
His-tagged SEAP was retained on the column, whereas very few, if any,
serum protein bound to it (SEAP migrates with an apparent molecular
weight slightly higher than BSA). SEAP quantification in the eluted
fraction using the Lowry protein assay showed that .about.60 mg of
His-tagged SEAP could be recovered by IMAC from the 3-1 bioreactor
culture. As shown in FIG. 14B, high expression levels in bioreactor were
also obtained with other secreted r-proteins. Fourteen- (lanes 1, 3 and
4) or 3.5-liter (lane 2) bioreactors were transfected with pTT plasmids
encoding for Neurophilin-1 and VEGF (1:1 ratio, lane 1), Tie2 (lane 2),
Cripto (lane 3) and c-Met (lane 4). All cultures were harvested 5 days
post-transfection. With the exception of Cripto, which has been reported
highly glycosylated on serine, threonine and asparagine (Schiffer S. G.
et al., J. Biol. Chem., 276, 37769-37778 (2001) 22), glycosylation of the
expressed proteins appeared to be relatively homogenous, as suggested by
their migration behaviour following SDS-PAGE. High expression levels of
intracellular r-proteins were also obtained as shown in FIG. 14C. In this
experiment, 293E cells were transfected with pTT plasmids encoding for
sgGFP (lane 1), herpes simplex virus ribonucleotide reductase (RR1, lane
2), mouse G.sub.aq (lane 5), human p27.sup.Kip1 (lane 6), yeast pyruvate
carboxylase (PYC, lane 7), adenovirus E1B.sup.19K (lane 8), human
hexokinase 1 (HK, lane 9) and human glucokinase (GK, lane 10). Three days
after transfection, cells were rinsed with PBS, solubilized in sample
buffer (GFP, RR1 and G.sub..alpha.q) or extracted with lysis buffer
(p27.sup.Kip1, PYC, E1B.sup.1K, HK and GK), and proteins analyzed by
SDS-PAGE. Quantification of r-proteins shown in FIG. 14 is summarized in
Table 1.
TABLE-US-00001
TABLE 1
Summary of r-protein expression level
r-Protein Tag Localization Culture mode Concentration (mg/l)
Human SEAP Myc-(His).sub.6 Secreted 3-l bioreactor 20.sup.a
Human Neuropilin-1 Myc-(His).sub.6 Secreted 14-l bioreactor .sup. 8.sup.b
Human VEGF Myc-(His).sub.6 Secreted 14-l bioreactor .sup. 10.sup.b
Human Tie2 Myc-(His).sub.6 Secreted 3-l bioreactor 9
Human Cripto Myc-(His).sub.6 Secreted 14-l bioreactor 9
Human c-Met Myc-(His).sub.6 Secreted 14-l bioreactor 1
sgGFP None Intracellular Shaker flask 20
Herpes virus RR1 None Intracellular Shaker flask 50
Mouse G.alpha..sub.q None Membrane T-flask 16
Human p27.sup.Kip1 None Intracellular T-flask 14
Human hexokinase None Intracellular Shaker flask 40
Human glucokinase None Intracellular Shaker flask 30
Yeast PYC None Intracellular 1-l bioreactor 4
Adenovirus E1B.sup.19K None Intracellular T-flask 3
.sup.aAfter purification by IMAC
.sup.bNeurophilin-1 and VEGF were co-transfected
[0058] In the case of RR1, volumetric production was 50 mg/l, representing
20% of total cell protein (TCP). The mouse G.alpha..sub.q was expressed
at 16 mg/l, compared with a barely detectable level (by Coomassie
staining) when expressed from pcDNA3.1 vector (lane 4).
[0059] Although various particular embodiments of the present invention
have been described hereinbefore for purposes of illustration, it would
be apparent to those skilled in the art that numerous variations may be
made thereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the
Invention, as defined in the appended claims.
Sequence CWU
1
1
11623DNAEpstein-Barr Virus 1caagaattct catgtttgac agcttatcat cgtgaggata
gcatatgcta cccggataca 60gattaggata gcatatacta cccagatata gattaggata
gcatatgcta cccagatata 120gattaggata gcctatgcta cccagatata aattaggata
gcatatacta cccagatata 180gattaggata gcatatgcta cccagatata gattaggata
gcctatgcta cccagatata 240gattaggata gcatatgcta cccagatata gattaggata
gcatatgcta tccagatatt 300tgggtagtat atgctaccca gatataaatt aggatagcat
atactaccct aatctctatt 360aggatagcat atgctacccg gatacagatt aggatagcat
atactaccca gatatagatt 420aggatagcat atgctaccca gatatagatt aggatagcct
atgctaccca gatataaatt 480aggatagcat atactaccca gatatagatt aggatagcat
atgctaccca gatatagatt 540aggatagcct atgctaccca gatatagatt aggatagcat
atgctatcca gatatttggg 600tagtatatgc tacccatggc aac
623
* * * * *