Co-expression of sulphydryl oxidase and protein disulphide isomerase in Escherichia coli allows for production of soluble CRM 197

To investigate the production of soluble cross-reacting material 197 (CRM ) in Escherichia coli, a safe and effective T-cell-dependent protein carrier for polysaccharides used in the manufacture and application of multivalent conjugate vaccines. The use of co-expression of a sulphydryl oxidase (SOX)...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of applied microbiology 2017-05, Vol.122 (5), p.1402-1411
Hauptverfasser: Roth, R, van Zyl, P, Tsekoa, T, Stoychev, S, Mamputha, S, Buthelezi, S, Crampton, M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:To investigate the production of soluble cross-reacting material 197 (CRM ) in Escherichia coli, a safe and effective T-cell-dependent protein carrier for polysaccharides used in the manufacture and application of multivalent conjugate vaccines. The use of co-expression of a sulphydryl oxidase (SOX) and protein disulphide isomerase for the production of soluble CRM in E. coli is described. CRM contains two disulphide bonds, which are normally unable to form in the reducing environment of the E. coli cytoplasm. It was found that co-expression yielded soluble CRM , at a production rate ~10% of the production of insoluble CRM , in equivalent small-scale cultures. Structural analysis of the purified CRM compared to CRM commercially produced in cultures of recombinant Pseudomonas fluorescens indicated that the E. coli soluble protein compares favourably on all structural levels. SOX and protein disulphide isomerase are enzymes involved in the formation of intra-protein disulphide bonds, and can influence the tertiary structure of the protein being produced, resulting in increased solubility due to the correct folding of the protein. Their use enabled the production of soluble untagged CRM in E. coli, which was previously unachievable. Previous literature reports have shown that CRM can be expressed in E. coli, though only in an insoluble form, or in soluble form as a fusion protein. It is currently commercially produced in cultures of recombinant P. fluorescens. The use of a widely used, well-characterized expression host such as E. coli, rather than P. fluorescens broadens the applicability of the production technology, and the production system described here is worthy of further investigation for scaled up manufacture of CRM .
ISSN:1364-5072
1365-2672
DOI:10.1111/jam.13441