Huether C M, Lienhart O, Baur A, Stemmer C, Gorr G, Reski R, Decker E L
Plant Biotechnology, Faculty of Biology, University of Freiburg, Schänzlestrasse 1, 79104 Freiburg, Germany.
Plant Biol (Stuttg). 2005 May;7(3):292-9. doi: 10.1055/s-2005-837653.
The commercial production of complex pharmaceutical proteins from human origin in plants is currently limited through differences in protein N-glycosylation pattern between plants and humans. On the one hand, plant-specific alpha(1,3)-fucose and beta(1,2)-xylose residues were shown to bear strong immunogenic potential. On the other hand, terminal beta(1,4)-galactose, a sugar common on N-glycans of pharmaceutically relevant proteins, e.g., antibodies, is missing in plant N-glycan structures. For safe and flexible production of pharmaceutical proteins, the humanisation of plant protein N-glycosylation is essential. Here, we present an approach that combines avoidance of plant-specific and introduction of human glycan structures. Transgenic strains of the moss Physcomitrella patens were created in which the alpha(1,3)-fucosyltransferase and beta(1,2)-xylosyltransferase genes were knocked out by targeted insertion of the human beta(1,4)-galactosyltransferase coding sequence in both of the plant genes (knockin). The transgenics lacked alpha(1,3)-fucose and beta(1,2)-xylose residues, whereas beta(1,4)-galactose residues appeared on protein N-glycans. Despite these significant biochemical changes, the plants did not differ from wild type with regard to overall morphology under standard cultivation conditions. Furthermore, the glyco-engineered plants secreted a transiently expressed recombinant human protein, the vascular endothelial growth factor, in the same concentration as unmodified moss, indicating that the performed changes in glycosylation did not impair the secretory pathway of the moss. The combined knockout/knockin approach presented here, leads to a new generation of engineered moss and towards the safe and flexible production of correctly processed pharmaceutical proteins with humanised N-glycosylation profiles.
目前,由于植物与人蛋白质N-糖基化模式存在差异,利用植物商业化生产源自人类的复杂药用蛋白受到限制。一方面,植物特有的α(1,3)-岩藻糖和β(1,2)-木糖残基具有很强的免疫原性。另一方面,植物N-糖基结构中缺少末端β(1,4)-半乳糖,而β(1,4)-半乳糖是药用相关蛋白(如抗体)N-聚糖上常见的一种糖。为了安全、灵活地生产药用蛋白,植物蛋白N-糖基化的人源化至关重要。在此,我们提出一种方法,该方法结合了避免植物特异性糖基化和引入人源聚糖结构。通过在苔藓植物小立碗藓的两个植物基因中靶向插入人β(1,4)-半乳糖基转移酶编码序列(敲入),敲除α(1,3)-岩藻糖基转移酶和β(1,2)-木糖基转移酶基因,从而创建了转基因株系。转基因植物缺乏α(1,3)-岩藻糖和β(1,2)-木糖残基,而β(1,4)-半乳糖残基出现在蛋白质N-聚糖上。尽管发生了这些显著的生化变化,但在标准培养条件下,这些植物在整体形态上与野生型并无差异。此外,糖基工程改造的植物分泌的瞬时表达重组人蛋白血管内皮生长因子的浓度与未修饰的苔藓相同,这表明所进行的糖基化变化并未损害苔藓的分泌途径。本文提出的敲除/敲入相结合的方法,带来了新一代的工程苔藓,并朝着安全、灵活地生产具有人源化N-糖基化谱且加工正确的药用蛋白迈进。