화학공학소재연구정보센터
Protein Expression and Purification, Vol.19, No.2, 304-311, 2000
Expression of an anti-CD3 single-chain immunotoxin with a truncated diphtheria toxin in a mutant CHO cell line
ADP-ribosylating immunotoxins are generally expressed in Escherichia coil and then refolded in vitro, Because the efficiency of the in vitro refolding process decreases with the number of protein domains and internal disulfide bonds, these immunotoxins have been generally limited to single-chain monovalent structures. We now show that using the hamster cell line CHO K1 RE1.22c (J, M. Moehring and T. J. Moehring, 1979, Somat. Cell Genet. 5, 453-468) that has been mutated to ADP-ribosylation insensitivity, a level of 4 mu g/ml of a truncated anti-T cell immunotoxin, DT390-scFvUCHT1, can be secreted into the medium. This immunotoxin is glycosylated at the two potential N-linked glycosylation sites in the toxin moiety: positions 16-18 in the A chain and residues 235-237 in the B chain. The glycosylated immunotoxin is relatively nontoxic (IC50 4.8 x 10(-10) M). Removal of the N-linked oligosaccharides by N-glycosidase F treatment or mutations at the two N-linked glycosylation sites results in a highly active immunotoxin with an IC50 of 4 x 10(-12) M toward CD3(+) Jurkat cells. This is a 12-fold increase in toxicity over the same immunotoxin harvested from E. coli periplasm without refolding. A single Asn(235) Ala mutation that removed the B chain glycosylation was nearly as toxic as the double mutant. This suggests that B chain glycosylation is the major cause for the loss of toxicity.