Hollister Jason, Grabenhorst Eckart, Nimtz Manfred, Conradt Harald, Jarvis Donald L
Department of Molecular Biology, University of Wyoming, Laramie 82071, USA.
Biochemistry. 2002 Dec 17;41(50):15093-104. doi: 10.1021/bi026455d.
Insect cells, like other eucaryotic cells, modify many of their proteins by N-glycosylation. However, the endogenous insect cell N-glycan processing machinery generally does not produce complex, terminally sialylated N-glycans such as those found in mammalian systems. This difference in the N-glycan processing pathways of insect cells and higher eucaryotes imposes a significant limitation on their use as hosts for baculovirus-mediated recombinant glycoprotein production. To address this problem, we previously isolated two transgenic insect cell lines that have mammalian beta1,4-galactosyltransferase or beta1,4-galactosyltransferase and alpha2,6-sialyltransferase genes. Unlike the parental insect cell line, both transgenic cell lines expressed the mammalian glycosyltransferases and were able to produce terminally galactosylated or sialylated N-glycans. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the structures of the N-glycans produced by these transgenic insect cell lines in further detail. Direct structural analyses revealed that the most extensively processed N-glycans produced by the transgenic insect cell lines were novel, monoantennary structures with elongation of only the alpha1,3 branch. This led to the hypothesis that the transgenic insect cell lines lacked adequate endogenous N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase II activity for biantennary N-glycan production. To test this hypothesis and further extend the N-glycan processing pathway in Sf9 cells, we produced a new transgenic line designed to constitutively express a more complete array of mammalian glycosyltransferases, including N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase II. This new transgenic insect cell line, designated SfSWT-1, has higher levels of five glycosyltransferase activities than the parental cells and supports baculovirus replication at normal levels. In addition, direct structural analyses showed that SfSWT-1 cells could produce biantennary, terminally sialylated N-glycans. Thus, this study provides new insight on the glycobiology of insect cells and describes a new transgenic insect cell line that will be widely useful for the production of more authentic recombinant glycoproteins by baculovirus expression vectors.
昆虫细胞与其他真核细胞一样,通过N - 糖基化修饰许多蛋白质。然而,昆虫细胞内源性的N - 聚糖加工机制通常不会产生复杂的、末端唾液酸化的N - 聚糖,如在哺乳动物系统中发现的那些。昆虫细胞和高等真核生物在N - 聚糖加工途径上的这种差异,严重限制了它们作为杆状病毒介导的重组糖蛋白生产宿主的应用。为了解决这个问题,我们之前分离出了两种转基因昆虫细胞系,它们分别含有哺乳动物β1,4 - 半乳糖基转移酶或β1,4 - 半乳糖基转移酶和α2,6 - 唾液酸转移酶基因。与亲本昆虫细胞系不同,这两种转基因细胞系都表达了哺乳动物糖基转移酶,并且能够产生末端半乳糖基化或唾液酸化的N - 聚糖。本研究的目的是更详细地研究这些转基因昆虫细胞系产生的N - 聚糖的结构。直接结构分析表明,转基因昆虫细胞系产生的加工最广泛的N - 聚糖是新颖的单天线结构,仅α1,3分支有延长。这导致了一个假设,即转基因昆虫细胞系缺乏足够的内源性N - 乙酰葡糖胺转移酶II活性来产生双天线N - 聚糖。为了验证这个假设并进一步扩展Sf9细胞中的N - 聚糖加工途径,我们构建了一个新的转基因细胞系,旨在组成性表达更完整的一系列哺乳动物糖基转移酶,包括N - 乙酰葡糖胺转移酶II。这个新的转基因昆虫细胞系命名为SfSWT - 1,其五种糖基转移酶活性水平高于亲本细胞,并且能支持杆状病毒在正常水平复制。此外,直接结构分析表明,SfSWT - 1细胞能够产生双天线、末端唾液酸化的N - 聚糖。因此,本研究为昆虫细胞的糖生物学提供了新的见解,并描述了一种新的转基因昆虫细胞系,它将广泛应用于通过杆状病毒表达载体生产更接近天然的重组糖蛋白。