Novel method for production and purification of untagged pneumococcal surface protein A from clade 1

Streptococcus pneumoniae can cause diseases with high mortality and morbidity. The licensed vaccines are based on capsular polysaccharides and induce antibodies with low cross reactivity, leading to restricted coverage of serotypes. For surpassing this limitation, new pneumococcal vaccines are neede...

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Veröffentlicht in:Applied microbiology and biotechnology 2024-12, Vol.108 (1), p.281-281, Article 281
Hauptverfasser: da Costa Rodrigues, Tasson, Zorzete, Patricia, Miyaji, Eliane Namie, Gonçalves, Viviane Maimoni
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Streptococcus pneumoniae can cause diseases with high mortality and morbidity. The licensed vaccines are based on capsular polysaccharides and induce antibodies with low cross reactivity, leading to restricted coverage of serotypes. For surpassing this limitation, new pneumococcal vaccines are needed for induction of broader protection. One important candidate is the pneumococcal surface protein A (PspA), which can be classified in 6 clades and 3 families. We have reported an efficient process for production and purification of untagged recombinant PspA from clade 4 (PspA4Pro). We now aim to obtain a highly pure recombinant PspA from clade 1 (PspA1) to be included, together with PspA4Pro, in a vaccine formulation to broaden response against pneumococci. The vector pET28a- pspA1 was constructed and used to transform Escherichia coli BL21(DE3) strain. One clone with high production of PspA1 was selected and adapted to high-density fermentation (HDF) medium. After biomass production in 6 L HDF using a bioreactor, the purification was defined after testing 3 protocols. During the batch bioreactor cultivation, plasmid stability remained above 90% and acetate formation was not detected. The final protein purification process included treatment with a cationic detergent after lysis, anion exchange chromatography, cryoprecipitation, cation exchange chromatography, and multimodal chromatography. The final purification process showed PspA1 purity of 93% with low endotoxin content and an overall recovery above 20%. The novel established process can be easily scaled-up and proved to be efficient to obtain a highly pure untagged PspA1 for inclusion in vaccine formulations. Key points • Purification strategy for recombinant PspA1 from Streptococcus pneumoniae • Downstream processing for untagged protein antigens, the case of PspA1 • Purification strategy for PspA variants relies on buried amino acids in their sequences
ISSN:0175-7598
1432-0614
1432-0614
DOI:10.1007/s00253-024-13098-2