IE47332B1 - Purification of nucleotide sequences suitable for expression in bacteria - Google Patents

Purification of nucleotide sequences suitable for expression in bacteria

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Publication number
IE47332B1
IE47332B1 IE1054/78A IE105478A IE47332B1 IE 47332 B1 IE47332 B1 IE 47332B1 IE 1054/78 A IE1054/78 A IE 1054/78A IE 105478 A IE105478 A IE 105478A IE 47332 B1 IE47332 B1 IE 47332B1
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dna
sequence
fragments
cdna
specific
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IE1054/78A
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IE781054L (en
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Univ California
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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07KPEPTIDES
    • C07K14/00Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof
    • C07K14/435Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from animals; from humans
    • C07K14/575Hormones
    • C07K14/61Growth hormones [GH] (Somatotropin)
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07KPEPTIDES
    • C07K14/00Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof
    • C07K14/435Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from animals; from humans
    • C07K14/575Hormones
    • C07K14/57518Placental lactogen; Chorionic somatomammotropin
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07KPEPTIDES
    • C07K14/00Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof
    • C07K14/435Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from animals; from humans
    • C07K14/575Hormones
    • C07K14/62Insulins
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12NMICROORGANISMS OR ENZYMES; COMPOSITIONS THEREOF; PROPAGATING, PRESERVING, OR MAINTAINING MICROORGANISMS; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING; CULTURE MEDIA
    • C12N15/00Mutation or genetic engineering; DNA or RNA concerning genetic engineering, vectors, e.g. plasmids, or their isolation, preparation or purification; Use of hosts therefor
    • C12N15/09Recombinant DNA-technology
    • C12N15/10Processes for the isolation, preparation or purification of DNA or RNA
    • C12N15/1096Processes for the isolation, preparation or purification of DNA or RNA cDNA Synthesis; Subtracted cDNA library construction, e.g. RT, RT-PCR

Abstract

Recombinant DNA transfer vectors containing codons for human somatomammotropin and for human growth hormone. [US4363877A]

Description

The invention, relates to a method of purifying a fragment of a specific deoxyribonucleotide sequence, to recombinant DNA transfer vectors comprising such a fragment -and microorganism strains containing such a fragment or such a DNA transfer vector.
Proteins and peptides are synthesized in almost endless variety by living organisms. Many have proven to have medical, agricultural or industrial utility. Some proteins are enzymes, useful as specific catalysts for complex chemical reactions. Others function as hormones, which act to affect the growth or development of an organism or to affect the function of specific tissues-in medically significant ways. Specific binding proL. . may have commercial significance for the isolation and purification of trace substances and for the removal of contaminating substances. Both proteins and peptides are composed of linear chains of amino acids, the latter term being applied to short, single-chain sequences, the former referring to long-chain and multi-chain substances. The principles of tin present invention apply equally to both proteins and peptides.
Proteins and peptides are generally high molecular weight substances, each having a specific sequence of amino acids. Except for the smaller peptides, chemical synthesis of peptides and proteins is frequently impractical, costly and time consuming, if not impossible. In the majority of' instances, in order to make practical use of a desired protein, it must first be isolated from the organism which makes it. Frequently, the desired protein is present only in miniscule amounts. Often, the source organism cannot be obtained in quantities sufficient to provide an adequate amount of the desired protein. Consequently, many potential agricultural, industrial and medical applications for specific proteins are known, but remain undeveloped simply because an adequate supply of the desired proteiA or peptide does not exist.
Recently developed techniques have made it possible to employ microorganisms, capable of rapid and abundant growth, for the synthesis of commercially useful proteins and peptides, regardless of their source in nature. These techniques make it possible to genetically endow a suitable microorganism with the ability to synthesize a protein or peptide normally made by another organism. The technique makes use of a fundamental relationship which exists in all living organisms between the genetic material, usually DNA, and the proteins synthesized by the organism. This relationship is such that the amino acid sequence of the protein is reflected in the nucleotide sequence of the DNA. There are one or more trinucleotide sequence groups specifically related to each of the twenty amino acids most commonly occuring in proteins. The specific relationship between each given trinucleotide sequence and its corresponding amino acid constitutes the genetic code. The genetic code is believed to be the same or similar for all living organisms. As a consequence, the amino acid sequence of every protein or peptide is reflected by a corresponding nucleotide sequence, according to a well understood relationship. Furthermore, this sequence of nucleotides can, in principle, be translated by any living organism.
TABLE 1 Genetic Code Phenylalanine(Phe) TTK Histidine(His) CAK Leucine(Leu) XTY Glutamine(Gin) CAJ Xsoleucine(Ile) ATM Asparagine(Asn) AAK Methionine(Met) ATG Lysine(Lys) AAJ Valine(Val) GTL Aspartic acid(Asp) GAK Serine(Ser) QRS Glutamic acid(Glu) GAJ Proline(Pro) CCL Cysteine(Cys) TGK Threonine(Thr) ACL Tryptophan(Try) TGG Alanine(Ala) GCL Arginine (Arg) WGZ Tyrosine(Tyr) TAK Glycine(Gly) GGL Termination signal TAJ Termination signal TGA Key: Each 3-letter triplet represents a trinucleotide of DNA, having a ' end on the left and a 3' end on the right. The letters stand for the purine or pyrimidine bases forming the nucleotide sequence.
A = adenine J = A or G G = guanine K = T or C C = cytosine L = A, T, C or G T = thymine M = A, C or T X = T or C if Y is A or G X = C if Y is C or T Y = A, G, C or T if X is C Y = A or G if X is T W = C or A if Z is A or G W = C if Z is C or T Z = A, G, C or T if W is C Z = A or G if W is A QR = TC if S is A, G, C or T QR = AG if S is T or C S = A, G, C or T if QR is TC S = T or C if QR is AG The trinucleotides of Table 1, termed codons, are presented as DNA trinucleotides, as they exist in the genetic material of a living organism. Expression of these codons in protein synthesis requires the intermediate formation of messenger RNA (mRNA), as described more fully, infra. The mRNA codons have the same sequences as the DNA codons of Table 1, except that uracil (D) is found in place of thymine. Conplernentary trinucleotide DNA sequences having opposite strand polarity are functionally equivalent to the codons of Table 1, as is understood in the art. An important and well known feature of the genetic code is its redundancy, whereby, for most of the amino acids used to make proteins, more than one coding nucleotide triplet may be employed. Therefore, a number of different nucleotide sequences may code for a given amino acid sequence. Such nucleotide sequences are considered functionally equivalent since they can result in the production of the same amino acid sequence in all organisms, although certain strains may translate some sequences more efficiently than they do others. Occasionally, a methylated variant of a purine or pyrimidine may be found in a given nucleotide sequence. Such methylations do not affect the coding 'relationship in any way.
In its basic outline, a method of endowing a microorganism with the ability to synthesize a new protein involves three general steps: (1) isolation and purification of the specific gene or nucleotide sequence containing the genetically coded information for the amino acid sequence of the desired protein, (2) recombination of the isolated nucleotide sequence with an appropriate transfer vector, typically the DNA of a bacteriophage or plasmid, and (3) transfer of the vector to the appropriate microorganism and selection of a strain of the recipient microorganism containing the desired genetic information.
A fundamental difficulty encountered in attempts to exploit commercially the above-described general process lies in the first step, the isolation and purification of the desired specific genetic information.
DNA exists in all living cells in the form of extremely high molecular weight chains of nucleotides. A cell may contain more than 10,000 structural genes, coding for the amino acid sequences of over 10,000 specific proteins, each gene having a sequence many hundreds of nucleotides in length. For the most part, four different nucleotide bases make up all the existing sequences. These are adenine (A), guanine (G) , cytosine (C), and thymine (T). The long sequences comprising the structural genes of specific proteins are consequently very similar in overall chemical composition and physical properties. The separation of one such sequence from the plethora of other sequences present in isolated DNA cannot ordinarily be accomplished by conventional physical and chemical preparative methods.
Messenger RNA functions in the process of converting the nucleotide sequence information of DNA into the amino acid sequence structure of a protein. In the first step of this process, termed transcription, a local segment of DNA having a nucleotide sequence which specifies a protein to be made, is first copied into RNA. RNA is a polynucleotide similar to DNA except that ribose is substituted for deoxyribose and uracil is used in place of thymine. The nucleotide bases in RNA are capable of entering into the same kind of base pairing relationships that are known to exist between the complementary strands of DNA. A and U (T) are complementary, and G and C are complementary. The RNA transcript of a DNA nucleotide sequence will be complementary to the copied sequence. Such RNA is termed messenger RNA (mRNA) because of its status as intermediary between the genetic apparatus of the cell and its protein synthesizing apparatus. Generally, the only mRNA sequences present in the cell at any given time are those which correspond to proteins being - 5 actively synthesized at that time. Therefore, a differentiated cell v;hose function is devoted primarily to the synthesis of a single protein will contain primarily the RNA species corresponding to that protein. In those instances where it is feasible, the isolation and purification of the appropriate nucleotide sequence coding for a given protein can be accomplished by isolating mRNA coding for the specialized synthesis of such protein in differentiated cells.
A major disadvantage of the foregoing procedure is that it is applicable only in the relatively rare instances where cells can be found engaged in synthesizing primarily a single protein. The majority of proteins of commercial interest are not synthesized in such a specialized way. The desired proteins may be one of a hundred or so different proteins being produced by the cells of a tissue or organism at a given time. Nevertheless, the mRNA isolation technique is potentially useful since the set of RNA species present in the cell usually represents only a fraction of the total sequences existing in the DNA, and thus provides an initial purification. Xn order to take advantage of such purification, however, a method is needed whereby sequences present in low frequencies, such as a few percent, can be isolated in high purity.
The present invention provides a method whereby nucleotide sequences can be isolated and purified even when present at a frequency as low as 2% of a heterogeneous population of mRNA sequences. Furthermore, the method may be combined with known methods of fractionating mRNA to isolate and purify sequences present in even lower frequency in the total RNA population as initially isolated. The method is generally applicable to mRNA species extracted from virtually any organism and is therefore expected to provide a powerful basic.tool for the ultimate production of proteins of commercial and research interest, in useful quantities.
Human growth hormone has medical utility in the treatment of defective pituitary function. Animal growth hormones have commercial utility in veterinary medicine and in agriculture, particularly in the case of animals - 6 47332 used as food sources, where large size and rapid maturation are desirable attributes. Human chorionic somatomammotropin is of medical significance because of its role in the foetal maturation process.
The method of the present invention takes advantage of certain structural features of mRNA and DNA, and makes use of certain enzyme catalyzed reactions. The nature of these reactions and structural details as they are understood in the prior art are described herewith. The symbols and abbreviations used herein are set forth in the following table: TABLE 2 DNA - deoxyribonucleic acid RNA - ribonucleic acid cDNA - complementary DNA (enzymatically synthesized) from an mRNA sequence) mRNA - messenger RNA dATP - deoxyadenosine triphosphate dGTP - deoxyguanosine triphosphate dCTP - deoxycytidine triphosphate HCS - Human Chorionic Somatomammotropin TCA - Trichloroacetic acid HGH - Human Growth Hormone As a consequence of the known base-pairing A - Adenine T - Thymine G - Guanine C - Cytosine U - Uracil Tris - 2-Amino-2-hydroxyethyl1,3-propanediol EDTA - ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid ATP - adenosine triphosphate dTTP - thymidine triphosphate dCMP - deoxycytidine monophosphate relationships that govern DNA replication and transcription, isolating the mRNA which contains the nucleotide sequence coding for the amino acid sequence of a particular protein is equivalent to the isolation of the same sequence, or gene, from the DNA itself. If the mRNA is retranscribed to form DNA complementary thereto (cDNA), the exact DNA sequence is thereby reconstituted and can, by appropriate techniques, be inserted into the genetic material of another organism. The two complementary versions of a given sequence are therefore interconvertible, and functionally equivalent to each other.
The nucleotide subunits of DNA and RNA are linked together by phosphodiester bonds between the 5' position of one nucleotide sugar and the 3' position of its’ next neighbor. Reiteration of such linkages produces a linear polynucleotide which has polarity in the sense that one end can be distinguished from the other. The 3' end may have a free 3'-hydroxyl, - 7 47332 ox the hydroxyl may be substituted with a phosphate or a more complex structure. The same is true of the 5' end. In eucaryotic organisms, i.e., those having a defined nucleus and mitotic apparatus, the synthesis of functional mRNA usually includes the addition of polyadenylic acid to the 3' end of the mRNA. Messenger RNA can therefore be separated from other classes of RNA isolated from an eucaryotic organism by column chromatography on cellulose to which is attached polythymidylic acid.
See Aviv, H., and Leder, P., Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 69, 1408 (1972). Other chromatographic methods, exploiting the base-pairing affinity of poly A for chromatographic packing materials containing oligo dT, poly U, or combinations of poly T and poly U, for example, poly U-Sepharose, are likewise suitable (Sepharose is a trade mark).
Reverse transcriptase catalyzes the synthesis of DNA complementary to an RNA template strand in the presence of the RNA template, a primer which may be any complementary oligo nucleotide or polynucleotide having a 3'-hydroxyl and the four deoxynucleoside triphosphates, dATP, dGTP, dCTP, and dTTP.
The reaction is initiated by the non-covalent association of the oligodeoxynucleotide primer near the 3' end of mRNA followed by stepwise addition of the appropriate deoxynucleotides, as determined by base-pairing relationships with the mRNA nucleotide sequence, to the 3' end of the growing chain. The product molecule may be described as a hairpin structure in which the original RNA is paired by hydrogen bonding vrith a complementary strand of DNA partly folded back upon itself at one end. The DNA and RNA strands are not covalently joined to each other. Reverse transcriptase is also capable of’ catalyzing a similar reaction using a single-stranded DNA hairpin having a loop of single-stranded DNA joining one set of ends.
See Avid, H. and Leder, P., Proc. Nat'l. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 69, 1408 (1972) and Efstratiadis, A., Kafatos, F.C., Maxam, A.M., and Maniatis, T., Cell 7, 27! (1976).
Restriction endonucleases are enzymes capable of hydrolyzing phosphodiester bonds in DNA, thereby creating a break in the continuity of the DNA - 8 47332 strand. If the DNA Is in the form of a closed loop, the loop is converted to a linear structure. The principal feature of a restriction enzyme is that its hydrolytic action is exerted only at a point where a specific nucleotide sequence occurs. Sudi a sequence herein is termed the restriction site or recognition site for the restriction endonuclease. Restriction endonucleases fran a variety of sources have been isolated and characterized in terms of the nucleotide sequence of their restriction sites. When acting on doublestranded DNA, some restriction endonucleases hydrolyze the phosphodiester bonds on both strands at the same point, producing blunt ends. Others catalyze hydrolysis of bonds separated hy a few nucleotides from each other, producing free single-stranded regions at each end of the cleaved molecule. Such single-stranded ends are self-complementary, hence cohesive, and may be used to rejoin the hydrolyzed DNA. Since any DNA susceptible to cleavage by such an enzyme must contain the same recognition site, the same cohesive ends will be produced, so that it is possible to join heterogeneous sequences of DNA which have been treated with restriction endonuclease to other sequences similarly treated. See Roberts, R.J., Crit. Rev. Biochem 4, 123 (1976).
It has been observed that restriction sites for a given enzyme are relatively rare and are nonuniformly distributed. Whether a specific restriction site exists within a given segment is a matter which must be empirically determined. However, there is a large and growing number of restriction endonucleases, isolated from a variety of sources with varied site specificity, so that there is a reasonable probability that a given segment of a thousand nucleotides will contain one or more restriction sites. - 9 47332 The present invention now provides a method for purifying a fragment of a specific deoxyribonucleotide sequence for recombination with a DNA transfer vector, and transfer to a microorganism, from a population of polyribonucleotides heterogeneous in length and sequence, comprising: (a) providing a population of cDNA transcripts of the polyribonucleotides, at least a portion of said cDNA transcripts having at least two restriction sites, (b) subjecting the cDNA transcripts to the action of a restriction endonuclease preparation capable of catalyzing the hydrolysis of the cDNA transcripts at each of the two restriction sites in order to produce a fragment of a specific deoxyribonucleotide sequence which is homogeneous in length, (c) fractionating the fragments produced by restriction endonuclease action according to their length, thereby separating the homogeneous length fragments of the specific deoxyribonucleotide sequence from cDNA transcripts of different length, whereby a fragment of the specific deoxyribonucleotide sequence is purified for recombination with a DNA transfer vector and transfer to a microorganism.
The invention also provides a method of further purifying linear DNA of specific nucleotide sequence containing a restriction site from a population of essentially homogereous length fragments of specific deoxyribonucleotide sequence, prepared according to the aforesaid method of this invention, comprising: (d) treating the DNA in said fragments to remove any 51 phosphate end groups, (e) incubating the DNA with a restriction endonuclease capable of acting on the specific desired nucleotide 47333 sequence to produce two linear sub-fragments thereof, (f) fractionating the sub-fragments according to their length, (g) isolating the two sub-fragments, (h) rejoining the sub-fragments covalently, in a DNA ligase catalyzed reaction, to reconstitute the original specific sequence, and (i) fractionating the rejoined DNA molecules according to their length, whereby the specific sequence is purified from a population of DNA molecules of essentially homogeneous length, for recombination with a DNA transfer vector and transfer to a microorganism.
The invention also provides a recombinant DNA transfer vector comprising a fragment of a specific deoxyribonucleotide sequence prepared by either of the aforesaid methods.
The invention also provides a microorganism strain modified to contain (a) such a DNA transfer vector or (b) a fragment of a specific deoxyribonucleotide sequence prepared by either of the aforesaid purification methods.
A particular recombinant DNA transfer vector, according to the invention, comprising codons for HCS, comprises the nucleotide sequence: '-G 6εβ24ΑΤΜ256ΑΚ26Α^27ΤΑΚ2&ΟΑσ29ΟΑσ3οΤΤΚ31ΟΑΠ32ΟΑσ33ΑΟΣ34 ^AR35A™36CCI’37AA,^38GA^39CA'^4OAAJ41TAX42®R43S43TTK44X45TY45 cak46gak47qr48s48caj49acl50qR51s5:lttk52tgk53ttk54qr55s55gaK560Κ57557Α™58εεΐ'59Α<'Ι,6θε<::ΐ,610Κ62562ΑΑΚ63ΑΤ6646Ασ65<3Α'Τ66Α(::ΐ,67 CAJ68CAJ69AAJ7oQR71S71AAK72X73TY73GAJ74X75TY75X76TY76W77GZ77 ATM78QR79S79X8OTY8OX81TY81X82TY82ATM83GAJ84QR85S85TG(86X87TY87 ^A^88GGA89iGZ9iTTK92x93TY93W94GZ94QR98S9gATGggTTK97 6019θΑΑΚ99ΑΜ100Χ101ΤΥ101ΟΤΒ102ΤΑΚ1036ΆΚ104Α<2υ105Οϊ41063105GAK1O7QR1O8S1O8GAK1O9GAK11OTAK111CAK112X113TY113X114TY114 ΑΑιΤ115(3ΑΚ116Χ117ΤΥ117(3Ασΐ18(3Ασΐ1966Ι·ΐ2ΟΑ™12ΐεΑσΐ22ΑεΙ·ΐ23 X124TY124ATG125GGL126W127GZ127X128TY128GAJ129GAK13OGGL131QR132 S132W133GZ133li134GZ134ACL135GGL136CAJ137A™138X139TY139AAJ14O εΑσΐ41Αειΐ42ΤΑΚ143δΕ144δ144ΑΑσΐ45ΤΤΚ146εΑΚ147Αεΐ'ΐ48ΑΑΚ149 QR15OS15OCAK151AAK152CAK153GAK154GCL155X156TY156X157TY157 ^158^159^160^161^62^162^^163^163^164^165^166 W167GZ167AAJ168GAK169ATG17OGAK171AAJ172GTL173GAJ174ACL175 TTK176X177TY177W178GZ178ATG179CTL18OCAJ181TGK182W183GZ183QR184 S184GTL185GAJ186GGL187QR188S188TGK189GGI,19OTTK191 TAGGTGCCCGAGTAGCATCCTGTGACCCCTCCCCAGTGCCTCTCCTGGCC - 3' wherein A is deoxyadenyl, G is deoxyguanyl, C is deoxycytosyl, T is thymidyl, J is A or G; K is T or C? L is A, T, C or G; M is A, C or T; is T or C, if YR is A or G, and C if is C or T; Yn is A, G, C or T, if Xn is C, and A or G is is T; Wnis C or A, if Zn is G or A, and C if ZR is C or T; z is A, G, C or T, if W is C, and A or G if W is A; n n n QRn is TC, if S n is A, G, C or T, and AG if Sn is T or C;Sn is A, G, C or Tr if QRn is TC, and T or C if QRn is AG and subscript numerals, n, refer to the amino acid position in human chorionic somatomammotropin, for which the nucleotide sequence corresponds, according to the genetic code, the amino acid positions being numbered from the amino end.
This DNA transfer vector may contain a plasmid, for example pBR-322. A suitable microorganism that can be modified to contain the DNA transfer vector is a bacterium, e.g. Escherichia coli X-1776.
By means of this invention, the purification of cDNA of desired nucleotide sequence complementary to an individual mRNA species can be effected. The 47333 method employs restriction endonuclease cleavage of cDNA transcribed from a complex mixture of mRNA. The method does not require any extensive purification of RNA but instead makes use of transcription of RNA into cDNA, the sequence specific fragmentation of this cDNA with one or two restriction endonucleases, and the fractionation of the cDNA restriction fragments on the basis of their length. The use of restriction endonucleases eliminates size heterogeneity and produces homogeneous length DNA fragments from any cDNA species which contains at least two restriction sites. From the initially heterogeneous population of cDNA transcripts, uniform size fragments of desired sequence are produced. The fragments may be several hundred nucleotides in length and may in some instances include the entire structural gene for the desired protein. The length of the fragments depends on the number of nucleotides separating the restriction sites and will usually he different for different regions of DNA. Fractionation hy length enables purification of a homogeneous population of fragments having the desired sequence. The fragments will be homogeneous in size and highly pure in terms of nucleotide sequence.
Current separation and analysis methods enable the isolation of such fragments from a corresponding mRNA species representing at least 27a of the mass of the RNA transcribed. The use of prior art RNA fractionation methods to prepurify the mRNA before transcription will result in lowering the actual lower limit of detection to less than 27. of the total mRNA isolated from the organism.
Specific sequences purified hy the procedure outlined above may be further purified by a second specific cleavage with a restriction endonuclease capable of cleaving the desired sequence at an internal site.
This cleavage results in formation of two sub-fragments of the desired sequence, separable on the basis of their lengths. The sub-fragments are separated from uncleaved and specifically cleaved contaminating sequences having substantially the same original size. The method is founded upon the rarity and randomness of placement of restriction endonuclease recognition sites, which results in an extremely low probability that a contaminant having the same original length will be cleaved by the same enzyme to yield fragments having the same length as those yielded by the desired sequence. After separation from the contaminants, the sub-fragments of the desired sequence may be rejoined using techniques known in the art, to reconstitute the original sequence. The two subfragments must be prevented from joining together in the reverse order of their original sequence. A method is disclosed whereby the sub-fragments can only join to each other in the proper order.
The above-recited methods may be used in combination with the appropriate labelling techniques to obtain accurate, quantitative measurements of the purity of the isolated sequences. The combined techniques have been applied to produce a known nucleotide sequence with greater than 99% purity.
The cDNA isolated and purified by the described methods may be recombined with a suitable transfer vector and transferred to a suitable host microorganism by known methods. Novel plasmids have been produced, containing the nucleotide sequences coding for the major portions of human chorionic somatomammotropin and human growth hormone, respectively. Novel microorganisms have been produced having as part of their genetic makeup the major portion of HCS and the major portion of HGH, respectively. The disclosed techniques may be used for the isolation and purification of growth hormones from other animal species and for the construction of novel transfer vectors and microorganisms containing these genes.
The present invention may ertploy, as starting material, a polyadeny lated, crude or partially purified messenger RNA, which may be heterogeneous in sequence and in molecular size. The selectivity of the RNA isolation procedure is enhanced by any method which results in an enrichment of the desired mRNA in the heterodisperse population of mRNA isolated. Any such prepurification method may be employed in conjunction with the method 7 332 of the present invention, provided the method does not introduce endonucleolytic cleavage of the mRNA. An important initial consideration is the selection of an appropriate source tissue for the desired mRNA. Often, this choice will he dictated hy the fact that the protein ultimately to be produced is only made by a certain specialized tissue of a differentiated organism. Such is the case, for example, with the peptide hormones, such as growth hormone or HCS. In other cases, it will be found that a variety of cell types or microbial species can serve as a source of the desired mRNA. In those cases, some preliminary experimentation will be necessary in order to determine the optimal source. Frequently, it will he found that the proportion of desired mRNA can be increased by taking advantage of cellular responses to environmental stimuli. For example, treatment with a hormone may cause increased production of the desired mRNA. Other techniques include growth at a particular temperature and exposure to a specific nutrient or other chemical substance.
Prepurification to enrich for desired mRNA sequences may also be carried out using conventional methods for fractionating RNA, after its isolation from the cell. Any technique which does not result in degradation of the RNA may be employed. The techniques of preparative sedimentation in a sucrose gradient and gel electrophoresis are especially suitable.
The mRNA must be isolated from the source cells under conditions which preclude degradation of the mRNA. The action of RNase enzymes is particularly to be avoided because these enzymes are capable of hydrolytic cleavage of the RNA nucleotide sequence. The hydrolysis of one bond in the sequence results in disruption of that sequence and loss of the RNA fragment containing the original 5' end of the sequence. A suitable method for inhibiting RNase during extraction from cells is disclosed in Patent Specification No. 47274 . The method involves the I use of 4M guanidinium thiocyanate and 1 M S-iRercaptoethanol during the cell disruption step. In addition, a low tenperature and a pH near 5.0 are helpful in further reducing RNase degradation of the isolated RNA.
Prior to application of the method of the present invention, mRNA must be prepared essentially free of contaminating protein, DNA, polysaccharides and lipids. Standard methods are well known in the art for accomplishing such purification. RNA thus isolated contains non-messenger as well as messenger RNA. A convenient method for separating the mRNA of eucaryotes is chromatography on columns of oligo-dT cellulose, or other oligonucleotide-substituted column material such as poly U-Sepharose, taking advantage of the hydrogen bonding specificity conferred hy the presence of polyadenylic acid on the 3' end of eucaryotic mRNA.
The initial step in the method of the present invention is the formation of DNA complementary to the isolated heterogeneous sequences of mRNA. The enzyme of choice for this reaction is reverse transcriptase, although in principle any enzyme capable of forming a faithful complementary DNA copy of the mRNA template could be used. The reaction may be carried out under conditions described in the prior art, using mRNA as a template and a mixture of the four deoxynucleoside triphosphates dATP, dGTP, dCTP and dTTP, as precursors for the DNA strand. Xt is convenient to provide that one of the deoxynucleoside triphosphates be on labeled with a radioisotope, for example P in the alpha position, in order to monitor the course of the reaction, to provide a tag for recovering the product after separation procedures such as chromatography and electrophoresis, and for the purpose of making quantitative estimates of recovery. See Efstratiadis, A., et al., supra.
The cDNA transcripts produced by the reverse transcriptase reaction are somewhat heterogeneous with respect to sequences at the 5’ end and the 3' end due to variations in the initiation and termination points of individual transcripts, relative to the mRNA template. The variability at the 5' end is thought to be due to the fact that the oligo-dT primer - 17 47332 used to initiate synthesis is capable of binding at a variety of loci along the polyadenylated region of the mRNA. Synthesis of the cDNA transcript begins at an indeterminate point in the poly-A region, and a variable length of poly-A region is transcribed depending on the initial binding site of the oligo-dT primer. It is possible to avoid this indeterminacy by the use of a primer containing, in addition to an oligo-dT tract, one or two nucleotides of the RNA sequence itself, thereby producing a primer which will have a preferred and defined binding site for initiating the transcription reaction.
The indeterminacy at the 3’-end of the cDNA transcript is due to a variety of factors affecting the reverse transcriptase reaction, and to the possibility of partial degradation of the RNA template. The isolation of specific cDNA transcripts of maximal length is greatly facilitated if conditions for the reverse transcriptase reaction are chosen which not only favor full length synthesis but also repress the synthesis of small DNA chains. Preferred reaction conditions for avian myeloblastosis virus reverse transcriptase are given in the examples section. The specific parameters which may be varied to provide maximal production of long-chain DNA transcripts of high fidelity are reaction temperature, salt concentration, amount of enzyme, concentration of primer relative to template, and reaction time.
The conditions of temperature and salt concentration are chosen so as to optimize specific base-pairing between the oligo-dT primer and the polyadenylated portion of the RNA template. Under properly chosen conditions, the primer will he able to bind at the polyadenylated region of the RNA template, but non-specific initiation due to primer binding at other locations on the template, such as short, A-rich sequences, will he substantially prevented. The effects of temperature and salt are interdependent. Higher temperatures and lower salt concentrations decrease the stability of specific base-pairing interactions. The reaction time is kept as short as possible, in order to prevent non-specific initiations and to minimize the opportunity for degradation. Reaction times are - 18 47332 interrelated with temperature, lower temperatures requiring longer reaction times. At 42°C., reactions ranging from 1 min. to 10 minutes are suitable. The primer should be present in 50 to 500-fold molar excess over the RNA template and the enzyme should be present in similar molar excess over the RNA template. The use of excess enzyme and primer enhances initiation and cDNA chain growth so that long-chain cDNA transcripts are produced efficiently within the confines of the short incubation times.
In many cases, it will be possible to carry out the remainder of the purification method of the present invention using single-stranded cDNA sequences transcribed from mRNA. However, as discussed below, there may be instances in which the desired restriction enzyme is one which acts only on double-stranded DNA. In these cases, the cDNA prepared as described above may be used as a template for the synthesis of doublestranded DNA, using a UNA polymerase such as reverse transcriptase and a nuclease capable of hydrolyzing single-stranded DNA. Methods for preparing double-stranded DNA in this manner have been described in the prior art. See, for example, Ullrich, A., Shine, J., Chirgwin, J., Pictet, R., Tischer, E., Rutter, W.J., and Goodman, H.M., Science 196, 1313 (1977).
Heterogeneous cDNA, prepared by transcription of heterogeneous mRNA sequences, is then treated with one or two restriction endonucleases. The choice of endonuclease to be used depends in the first instance upon a prior determination that recognition sites for the enzyme exist in the sequence of the cDNA to be isolated. The method depends upon the existence of two such sites. If the sites are identical, a single enzyme will be sufficient. The desired sequence will be cleaved at both sites, eliminating size heterogeneity as far as the desired cDNA sequence is concerned, and creating a population of molecules, termed fragments, containing the desired sequence and homogeneous in length. If the restriction sites are different, two enzymes will be required in order to produce the desired homogeneous length fragments. - 19 4733.2 The choice of restriction enzyme(s) capable of producing an optimal length nucleotide sequence fragment coding for all or part of the desired protein must he made empirically. If the amino acid sequence of the desired protein is known, it is possible to compare the nucleotide sequence of uniform length nucleotide fragments produced by restriction endonuclease cleavage with the amino acid sequence for which it codes, using the known relationship of the genetic code common to all forms of life. A complete amino acid sequence for the desired protein is not necessary, however, since a reasonably accurate identification may be made on the basis of a partial sequence. Where the amino acid sequence of the desired protein is not knoxjn, the uniform length polynucleotides produced hy restriction endonuclease cleavage may be used as probes capable of identifying the synthesis of the desired protein in an appropriate in vitro protein synthesizing system. Alternatively, the mRNA may be purified by affinity chromatography. Other techniques xzhich may be suggested to those skilled in the art will be appropriate for this purpose.
The number of restriction enzymes suitable for use depends upon whether single-stranded or double-stranded cDNA is used. The preferred enzymes are those capable of acting on single-stranded DNA, which is the immediate reaction product of mRNA reverse transcription. The number of restriction enzymes now known to be capable of acting on single-stranded DNA is limited. The enzymes HaelTI, Hhal and Hin(f)I are presently knoxra to he suitable. In addition, the enzyme MboII may act on singlestranded DNA. Where further study reveals that other restriction enzymes can act on single-stranded DNA, such other enzymes may appropriately be included in the list of preferred.enzymes. Additional suitable enzymes include those specified for double-stranded cDNA. Such enzymes are not preferred since additional reactions are required in order to produce double-stranded cDNA, providing increased opportunities for the loss of longer sequences and for other losses due to incomplete recovery. The - 20 47332 use of double-stranded cDNA presents the additional technical disadvantage that subsequent sequence analysis is more complex and laborious.
For these reasons, single-stranded cDNA is preferred, but the use of double-stranded DNA is feasible.
The cDNA prepared for restriction endonuclease treatment may be radioactively labeled so that it may be detected after subsequent separation steps. A preferred technique is to incorporate a radioactive 32 label such as P in the alpha position of one of the four deoxynucleoside triphosphate precursors. Highest activity is obtained when the concentration of radioactive precursor is high relative to the concentration of the non-radioai tive form. However, the total concentration of any deoxynucleoside triphosphate should be greater than 30,/lM, in order to maximize the length of cDNA obtained in the reverse transcriptase reaction. See Efstratiadis, A., Maniatis, 1., Kafatos, F.C., Jeffrey, A., and Vournakis, J.N., Cell 4, 367 (1975). For the purpose of determining the nucleotide sequence of cDNA, the 5' ends may be conveniently labeled with P in a reaction catalyzed by the enzyme polynucleotide kinase. See Haxam, A.M. and Gilbert, W., Proc. Nat'l. Acad. Sci. USA 74, 560 (1977).
Fragments which have been produced by the action of a restriction enzyme or combination of two restriction enzymes may be separated from each other and from heterodisperse sequences lacking recognition sites by any appropriate technique capable of separating polynucleotides on the basis of differences in length. Such methods include a variety of electrophoretic techniques and sedimentation techniques using an ultracentrifuge. Gel electrophoresis is preferred because it provides the best resolution on the basis of polynucleotide length. In addition, the method readily permits quantitative recovery of separated materials. Convenient gel electrophoresis methods have been described by Dingman, C.W., and Peacock, A.C., Biochemistry 7, 659 (1968), and by Maniatis, T., Jeffrey, A. and van de Sande, H., Biochemistry 14, 3787 (1975). - 21 47332 Prior to restriction endonuclease treatment, cDNA transcripts obtained from most sources will be found to be heterodisperse in length.
By the action of a properly chosen restriction endonuclease, or pair of endonucleases, polynucleotide chains containing the desired sequence will be cleaved at the respective restriction sites to yield polynucleotide fragments of uniform length. Upon gel electrophoresis, these will be observed to form a distinct band. Depending on the presence or absence of restriction sites on other sequences, other discrete bands may be formed as well, which will most likely be of different length than that of the desired sequence. Therefore, as a consequence of restriction endonuclease action, the gel electrophoresis pattern will reveal the appearance of one or more discrete bands, while the remainder of the cDNA will continue to be heterodisperse. In the case where the desired cDNA sequence comprises the major polynucleotide species present, the electrophoresis pattern will reveal that most of tho cDNA is present in the discrete band.
Although it is unlikely that two different sequences will be cleaved by restriction enzymes to yield fragments of essentially similar length, a method for determining the purity of the defined length fragments is desirable. Sequence analysis of the electrophoresis band may be used to detect impurities representing 10Z or more of the material in the band. A method for detecting lower levels of impurities has been developed, as part of the present invention, founded upon the same general principles applied in the initial isolation method. The method requires that the desired nucleotide sequence fragment contain a recognition site for a restriction endonuclease not employed in the initial isolation. Treatment of polynucleotide material, eluted from a gel electrophoresis band, with a restriction endonuclease capable of acting internally upon the desired sequence will result in cleavage of the desired sequence into two sub-fragments, most probably of unequal length. These sub-fragments upon electrophoresis will form two discrete bands at positions corresponding to their respective lengths, the sum of which will equal the - 22 47332 length of the polynucleotide prior to cleavage. Contaminants in the original band that are not susceptible to the restriction enzyme may he expected to migrate to the original position. Contaminants containing one or more recognition sites for the enzyme may be expected to yield two or more sub-fragments. Since the distribution of recognition sites is believed to be essentially random, the probability that a contaminant will also yield sub-fragments of the same size as those of the fragment of desired sequence is extremely low. The amount of material present in any hand of radioactive]y labeled polynucleotide can be determined by quantitative measurement of the amount of radioactivity present in each hand, or by any other appropriate method. A quantitative measure of the purity of the fragments of desired sequence can be obtained by comparing the relative amounts of material present in those bands representing sub-fragments of the desired sequence with the total amount of material.
Following the foregoing separation, the desired sequence may be reconstituted. The enzyme DNA ligase, which catalyzes the end-to-end joining of DNA fragments, may he employed for this purpose. The gel electrophoresis bands representing the sub-fragments of the desired sequence may be separately eluted and combined in the presence of DNA ligase, under the appropriate conditions. See Sgaramella, V., Van de Sande, J.H., and Khorana, H.G., Proc, Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 67, 1468 (1970). Where the sequences to be joined are not blunt-ended, the ligase contained from E. Coli may be used, Modrich, P., and Lehman, I.R., J. Biol. Chem. 245, 3626 (1970).
The efficiency of reconstituting the original sequence from suhfragments produced by restriction endonuclease treatment will be greatly enhanced hy the use of a method for preventing reconstitution in improper sequence. This unwanted result is prevented by treatment of the.homogenous length cDNA fragment of desired sequence with an agent capable of removing the 5'-terminal phosphate groups on the cDNA prior to cleavage of the homogenous cDNA with a restriction endonuclease. - 23 47332 The enzyme, alkaline phosphatase, is preferred. The 5'-terminal phosphate groups are a structural prerequisite for the subsequent joining action of DNA ligase used to reconstitute the cleaved sub-fragments. Therefore, ends which lack a 5'-terminal phosphate cannot he covalently joined. The DNA sub-fragments can only be joined at the ends containing a 5’-phosphate generated by the restriction endonuclease cleavage performed on the isolated DNA fragments. The method is essentially that described in detail in Patent Specification No. i 05.5/78The majority of cDNA transcripts, under the conditions employed, are derived from the mRNA region containing the 5T-end of the mRNA template hy specifically priming on the same template with a fragment obtained hy restriction, endonuclease cleavage. In this way, the above-described method may be used to obtain not only fragments of specific nucleotide sequence related to a desired protein, but also the entire nucleotide sequence coding for the protein of interest.
The purification method is of a special significance In the cloning of human genes, which, under u.S. Federal Regulations, can only be put into recombinant DNA and then into bacteria after the genes have been very carefully purified, or if the experiments are carried out in special highrisk (P4) facilities. See federal Register, Vol. 41, No. 131, July 7, 1967, pp. 27902-27943. The present method has enabled the production of sufficiently pure human genes, comprising the majority of the structure of HCS and HGH. Human genetic material, isolated and purified as described above, may be incorporated into recombinant plasmids or other transfer vectors. Double stranded chemically synthesized oligonucleotide linkers, containing the recognition sequence for a restriction endonuclease, may be attached to the ends of the isolated cDNA, to facilitate subsequent enzymatic removal of the human gene portion from the transfer vector DNA. See Scheller, R.H., et al., Science 196, 177 (1977). The transfer vector DNA is converted from a continuous loop to a linear form hy treatment with an appropriate restriction endonuclease. The ends thereby formed are treated with alkaline phosphatase to remove 5'-phosphate end groups so that the - 24 47332 transfer vector DNA may not reform a continuous loop in a DNA ligase reaction without first incorporating a segment of the human DNA. The cDNA, with attached linker oligonucleotides, and the treated transfer vector DNA are mixed together with a DNA ligase enzyme, to join the cDNA to the vector DNA, forming a continuous loop of recombinant vector DNA having the cDNA incorporated therein. Where a plasmid transfer vector is used, usually the closed loop will be the only form able to transform a bacterium. Transformation, as is understood in the art and used herein, is the term used to denote the process whereby a microorganism incorporates extracellular DNA into its own genetic constitution. Plasmid DNA in the form of a closed loop may be so incorporated under appropriate environmental conditions.
The incorporated closed loop plasmid undergoes replication in the transformed cell, and the replicated copies are distributed to progeny cells when cell division occurs. As a result, a new cell line is established, containing the plasmid and carrying the genetic determinants thereof. Transformation by a plasmid in this manner, where the plasmid genes are maintained in the cell line by plasmid replication, occurs at high frequency when the transforming plasmid DNA is in closed loop form, and does not or rarely occurs if linear plasmid DNA is used. Once a recombinant transfer vector has been made, transformation of a suitable microorganism is a straightforward process, and novel microorganisms strains containing the human gene may readily be isolated, using appropriate selection techniques, as understood in the art.
Using the above-described methods for purification and analysis, a desired nucleotide sequence containing most of the structural gene for HCS has been isolated and shown to be greater than 99% pure. The structural gene for HGH has been isolated to a comparable degree of purity.
Novel plasmids containing the isolated HCS or HGH sequences have been synthesized. Novel microorganisms containing the isolated HCS or HGH sequences as part of their genetic material have been produced. - 25 47333 The accompanying figures and drawing are provided to demonstrate the results obtained in the specific examples illustrating the invention.
Figure 1 is an autoradiogram of a series of gel electrophoresis 32 runs of P-labeled cDNA, as described in detail in example 1.
Figure 2 is a schematic representation of the nucleotide sequence coding for HCS, showing the relative locations of various restriction sites, as described in detail in example 1.
Figure 3 is an autoradiogram of gel electrophoresis results using 32 P-labeled cDNA, as described in detail in example 2.
Figures 4 and 5 are autoradiograms of gel electrophoresis results using P-labeled cDNA, as described in detail in example 3.
Unless otherwise indicated or clear from the context, percentages in the examples are by volume.
EXAMPLE 1 The general procedure for isolating a specific cDNA sequence has been demonstrated by isolating a sequence comprising a portion of the coding region for HCS, extracted from placental tissue. mRNA Extraction From Placenta Human term placentas obtained from Caesarean section were quickfrozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at -60°C. For extraction of total RNA, 40g of the frozen placental tissue was broken into small pieces and dissolved with the aid of a blender in 140 ml of freshly prepared 7 M guanidinium-HCl (Cox, R.A., Methods in Enzymology 12, 120 (1968), mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 1 mM EDTA, 1¾ (w/v) Sarcosyl (Trade Mark, CibaGeigy Corp., Greenboro, N.C.) at 0°C. After adding O.5g CsCl to each ml, the dark brown solution was heated at 65°C. for 5 min., quick-cooled in ice, layered on top of a 5 ml cushion of 5.7 M CsCl, 10 nM Tris-HCl, ph 7.5, 1 m'4 EDTA in 1 in. x 3-1/2 in. nitrocellulose tubes and centrifuged· in an SW27 rotor (Beckman Instruments Corp., Fullerton, California) at 27,000 rpn for 16 hr.at 15°C. (Glisin, V., Crkvenjakov, R., and Ryus, C., Biochem. 13, 2633 (1974).
After centrifugation, the tube contents were decanted, the tubes were - 26 47332 drained, and the bottom 1/2 cm containing the clear RNA pellet was cut off with a razor blade. Pellets were transferred into a sterile erlenmeyer flask and dissolved in 20 ml 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7,5, 1 mM EDTA, 5% (w/v) Sarcosyl and 5% phenol. The solution was then made 0.1 M in NaCl and vigorously shaken with 40 ml of a 50% phenol-502 chloroform mixture.
RNA was precipitated from the aqueous phase with ethanol in the presence of 0.2 M Na-acetate pH 5.5. RNA pellets were washed with 95% ethanol, dried, and dissolved in sterile water. Usually 40g of placental tissue yielded about 30rag of RNA from which approximately 300 ug of polyadenylated RNA was obtained after twice chromatographing on oligo-dT cellulose.
See Aviv, and Leder, supra.
Synthesis of cDNA.
Analytical reactions were performed in 5 a>1 containing 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.3; 0.1 mM EDTA; 7 mM M.;Cl2; 20 mM KCl; 10 mM raercaptoethanol; 40/iM dCTP (50,000 cpm ^2p per pmole); 500 ziM each dCTP, dATP, and dTTP; 100/ig/ml of polyadenylated RNA; 20 ug/ml oligo-dT^y-lS obtained from Collaborative Research, Waltham, Mass.; and 100 units/ml reverse transcriptase from avian myeloblastosis virus. The enzyme is available from Dr. D.J. Beard, Life Science Incorporated, St. Petersburg, Florida, who produces the enzyme under contract with the National Institutes of Health, by the procedure of Kacian, D.L. and Spiegelman, S., in Methods in Enzymology 29, L. Grossman, and K. Moldave, eds., Academic Press, N.Y. (1974), ρ. 150. Reactions were started by the addition of enzyme at 0°C and synthesis was for 6 6 32 rain at 42°C. Under these conditions approximately 10° cpm P were incorporated into TCA-precipitable material and each ug of RNA yielded about 50 ng of cDNA. To obtain enough cDNA for sequence analysis, the reaction volumes were increased to 100 yul and the dCTP concentration was raised to 250 yuM (specific activity of 500 cpm ^2p per pmole). Under 32 these conditions about 200,000 cpm of P-labeled dCMP were incorporated into cDNA.
Restriction Endonuclease Treatment.
For restriction endonuclease digestions the analytical reactions were stopped by the addition of 20 fil of ice-cold water, boiled for 2 min, quick-cooled on ice, and made 7 mM in MgC^. Aliquots (5 yul, about 2 x lO^cpm) were digested using an excess amount of restriction - 27 47332 endonuclease(s) HaeXII or Ithal or both, for 1 hr at 37°C. Haelll was prepared according to the method of Middleton, J.H., Edgell, M.H., and Hutchinson, C.A. Ill, J.Vlrol. 10, 42 (1972). Hhal and Hpall were obtained from Sew England Bio-Labs, Beverly, Mass. Haelll is also available from the latter source. The amount of enzyme used was empirically determined to be in excess of the amount needed to completely digest an equivalent amount of restriction-sensitive DNA under identical reaction conditions. Reactions were stopped with ^ul of 20 irM EDTA, 20% (w/v) sucrose, 0.05% (w/v) brcmophenol blue, heated to 100°C for 1 min and then analyzed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.
The products were separated on a composite 4.52 - 10 w/v polyacrylamide slab gel for 2.5 hr at 150V in Tris-Borate-l-EDTA buffer (Dingman, C.W· and Peacock, A.C., supra) and visualized by autoradiography of the dry gel.
Figure 1 shows the results of gel electrophoresis and autoradiography of 32p-labeled cDNA, prepared as described above. The samples were initially spotted at the origin and migrated electrophoretically through 4.5% w/v acrylamide and then through 10% w/v acrylamide. A bar is placed on the left-hand side of the figure to indicate the position of the boundary between the two gel regions. Lane A represents the electrophoretic migration of the total cDNA transcript. Lane B shows the migration of Hhal treated cDNA. Lane C shows the migration of Haelll treated cDNA. Lane D shows the electrophoretic migration of total cDNA treated with both Hhal and Haelll. Lane E demonstrates the electrophoretic migration of the material isolated from the prominent hand in Lane C. Lane F shows electrophoretic migration of isolated material from the prominent band of Lane C after treatment with Hhal. Lane G 32 shows the electrophoretic migration of Haelll cleaved 5 - P end-labeled single-stranded p'hage M13 DNA used as a size standard, according to Horiuchi, Κ., and Zinder, N.D., Proc.Nat.Acad.Sci. USA 72, 2555 (1975).
The approximate lengths in nucleotides of these DNA fragments are indicated by the numbers on the right. - 28 47332 The result in Lane Λ demonstrates that the cDNA transcript from terra placental mRNA is heterodisperse. Treatment with Hhal, Lane B or Haelll, Lane C results in the accumulation of polynucleotides of discrete length. The production of such discrete bands indicates the presence, in a heterogeneous population of cDNA transcripts, of at least one sequence present in multiple copies and having two restriction sites for Hhal and Haelll, respectively. Cleavage with Hhal produces a fragment of about 470 nucleotides, and Haelll digestion produces a fragment of approximately 550 nucleotides in length. Digestion by both enzymes yields three fragments designated A, 90 nucleotides long, B, 460 nucleotides long, and C, approximately 10 nucleotides long. Due to its small size, fragment C migrated off the gel under the conditions used in figure 1.
The band of material appearing at the interface between 10% w/v and 4.5% w/v gel represents heterogeneous material which was too large to enter the 10% gel and therefore accunmulated at the interface. As judged from the simple band pattern of Lane D, fragments A and B seem to originate from the same cDNA molecule. This conclusion was confirmed by elution of the larger Haelll fragment from the gel, migrating as shown in Lane E, followed by redigestion with Hhal. Such treatment produced two fragments comigrating with the bands released by combined Haelll and Hhal digestion of the total cDNA, as seen by comparing Lanes D and F. In the total cDNA digest, Lane D, the autoradiographic density, which is a measure of the total radioactivity present in the band, is greater for fragment A than fragment B, although the reverse may be expected on the basis of size differences. This observation suggests that fragment A is transcribed from a region closer to the 3'-end of the mRNA than is fragment B.
Figure 2 is a schematic representation of the cDNA molecule showing the relative locations of the Haelll and Hhal restriction sites. DNA fragments A and B, derived from the same cDNA molecule, were ordered on the basis of their relative intensity on the autoradiogram shown in figure 1, Lane D. The existence of DNA fragment C was inferred from the difference in the electrophoretic mobility of the band appearing in Lane - 29 47332 B and Lane D of figure 1. The size of DNA fragment Λ is known exactly from a determination of its nucleotide sequence hy the method of Maxam, A. and Gilbert, W., supra. The size of DNA fragment B was determined by · comparison with the M13 DNA size markers ihown in figure 1, Lane G.
The nucleotide sequences of DNA fragment A and a portion of the 5'end of fragment B were determined by the procedure of Maxam, A. and Gilbert, W., supra. Since the amino acid sequence of HCS is known, the nucleotide sequence of the two fragments could be compared with the amino acid sequence, using the known relationships of the genetic code.
On the basis of these relationships it was demonstrated that the specific sequences did in fact code for portions of the HCS molecule, and further confirmed the ordering of these fragments shown in figure 2.
EXAMPLE 2 - . .
The ability of the process of the present invention to purify a desired nucleotide sequence that is a minority proportion of the total population of nucleotide sequences is demonstrated in the following reconstruction experiment. Defined RNA mixtures containing purified rabbit globin RNA and human polyadenylated placental RNA were used as template for reverse transcriptase in the presence of alpha-32p dCTP, final specific activity, 10^ cpra per pmole. The cDNA products were cleaved with endonuclease Haelll and the cleavage products were separated on 4.5Z - 10°; w/v composite polyacrylamide slab gel. The cDI®. fragments were visualized by autoradiography of the dried gel.
Figure 3 shows the results of the experiments. The gels were run essentially as described in example 1. Size markers prepared by 32 endonuclease Haelll cleavage of phage Ml3 DNA and 5'- P end labelling of the fragments thereby produced, were run in lanes A and H. The approximate lengths in nucleotides of these DNA fragments are indicated by the numbers on the left. Lanes B-G show the electrophoresis patterns produced by initiating the foregoing sequence of reactions with mixtures of globin RNA and placental RNA in varying proportions, as shown in the following table. - 30 4 7332 Lane Globin RNA nanogranis Placental RNA nanograins B 300 0 C 60 2Λ0 D SO 270 E 15 285 F 7.5 292.5 G 0 300 It can be seen that a 320 nucleotide long Haeltl fragment is derived from globin cDNA. The globin cDNA transcript can still be detected if globin RNA represents as little as 2-5¾ by weight of the total RNA.
If an RNA species is present as isolated in too low a copy number to be amenable to this mode of analysis, it can be first partially purified by any one of the known RNA purification schemes until it represents 2-5¾ by weight of the remaining species mixture.
EXAMPLE 3 The purification of a nucleotide sequence fragment approximately 550 base-pairs in length comprising a portion of the coding region for HCS is described, together with a method of measuring the purity of the isolated sequence. The purified fragment is demonstrated to be greater than 99% pure.
Purification of HCS cDNA Polyadenylated placental RNA isolated as described in example 1 was enriched for HCS mRNA by sedimentation in a 5% to 20% (w/v) sucrose gradient at 4°C in the SW 27 rotor of a Beckman Instruments ultracentrifuge at 25,000 rpm for 16 hours. The 11S-14S region of the gradient was pooled and 100 ^g of this RNA used for the synthesis of double-stranded cDNA as described by Ullrich, A., et al., supra.
Synthesis of the second strand was stopped by extraction of the reaction mixture with one volume of ethanol at -70^0. Digestion of the cDNA with Haelll endonuclease was carried out in 50 jftl· of 6 mM Tr is-HcL, pH 7.5, 6 mM MgCl.,, '6 mM ^-mercaptoethanol with 2 units of HajHII enzyme at 37°C for two hours, following which 0.1 units of bacterial alkaline phosphatase (type BAPF, Worthington Biochemical Corp., Freehold, N.J., units as defined by manufacturer) were added and digestion continued at 60°C for ten minutes. Following extraction with one volume of - 31 47332 phenol-chloroform, the DNA was precipitated with two volumes of ethanol at -70°C, dissolved in 20^1 of 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8, 1 mM EDTA, and subjected to electrophoresis on a 6Z (w/v) polyacrylamide gel. Figure 4(F) shows the electrophoresis pattern of the foregoing reaction mixture, which reveals a prominent band corresponding to a nucleotide sequence approximately 550 base-pairs in length. The 550 base-pair fragment was excised from the gel, and eluted electrophoretically, with the result shown in figure 4(E).
The remaining material corresponding to the 550 base-pair fragment shown in figure 4(E) was digested with 4 units of Hhal endonuclease in 50^.1 of the same buffer used for digestion with HaeTII endonuclease, at 37°C for 2 hours. Following phenol-chloroform extraction and ethanol precipitation, the digestion products were separated by electrophoresis on a 6% (w/v) polyacrylamide gel. The result is shovm in figure 4(D).
The two fragments were eluted electrophoretically, combined and rejoined by incubation in 20^ς1 of 66 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.6, 6 mM MgClj, irM dithiothreitol, 1 mM ATP containing 20 / The reconstituted 550 nucleotide fragment was excised from the gel and eluted electrophoretically. The electrophoresis pattern of - 32 47332 the eluted material b. shown in figure 4(B). Figure 4(A) represents the electrophoresis pattern of P-labeled Haelll digest of double-stranded >113 DNA used as a size marker. The electrophoretic analyses were conducted in a 6% (w/v) polyacrylamide gel in 50 mM Tris-borate, pH 8, 1 mM EDTA at 100 volts for two hours. Following electrophoresis, the gel was dried and exposed to Kodak HS2T-x-ray film (“Kodak is a trade mark) to produce the autoradiograms.
Purity of Reconstituted 550 Nucleotide Fragment of HCS cDNA.
The isolated reconstituted HCS cDNA Haelll fragments was labeled 32 with P at its 5' ends using the enzyme polynucleotide kinase obtained from bacteriophage T4-infected Jl. Coli by the method of Panet, A., et al., Biochemistry 12, 5045 (1973), Polynucleotide kinase is also commercially available from P-I. Biochemical, Milwaukie, Wisconsin. The fragment was then digested with either llhal or lipalf in 50/jl of 6 nil Tris-Hcl, pH 7.6, 6 m>l MgClg, 6 mM -mercaptoethanol at 37’C for two hours. Following extraction with ar equal volume of phenol-chloroform, the DMA was precipitated with two volumes of ethanol at -70,C, rcsiisp.-nded in 20 jul, 10 m>! Tris-HCl, pH 8, 1 mM F.DTA and subjected to electrophoresis, the gel was exposed to x-ray film to visualize the labeled fragments, as described previously.
Results arc shown in figure 5. Figures 5(B) and 5(E) represent duplicate runs of the 550 nucleotide fragment prior to restriction enzyme digestion. Figure 5(C) represents the pattern resulting from lihal cleavage and figure 5(D) represents the pattern resulting from Hpall cleavage.
The purity of the 550 nucleotide fragment was measured by scanning the autoradiogram of the restriction enzyme cleavage products and by quantitation of the distribution of radioactivity in each of the two restriction endonuclease digests. Such measurements reveal that the purified human HCS cDNA reconstituted Haelll fragment was greater than 99% homogeneous. - 33 47332 EXAMPLE 4 Synthesis of a plasmiil containing a nucleot ide sequence of 550 base-pairs comprising the majority of the coding region for HGS is described.
A 550 nucleotide fragment of HCS cDNA of greater than 99Z purity was prepared as described in example 3. Terminal 5' phosphate end groups were restored in a reaction mixture containing 50 mM Tris-KCl, pH 8.5, 10 mM MgC^, 0.1 mM spermidine, 5 ¢1 -mercaptoethanol, 52 (w/v) glycerol, 333 pmole ATP, 5 units of T4 polynucleotide kinase incubated in a final volume of 40 jul at 37°C for two hours. DNA was separated from the reaction mixture hy phenol extraction followed by ethanol precipitation. Synthetic decanucleotide linkers having restriction site specificity for EcoRI and having the sequence, 5'-CCGAATTCGG-31, prepared according to Scheller, et al., supra, were then ligated to the HCS DMA in a molar ratio of approximately 50:1 in 50/jl of 66 mM TrisHCl, pH 7.6, 9 mM MgCl7> 15 mM dithiothreitol, 1 mM ATP and 20 jig/ral T4 DMA ligase. Linkers are commercially available from Collaborative Research, Waltham, Massachusetts. After incubation at 4°C for 18 hours, the reaction was stopped hy extraction with phenol-chloroform. The ligation products were precipitated’with ethanol, redissolved in 50jul 100 mM NaCl, 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.6, 7 mM MgC^, and digested with 50 units EcoRI endonuclease at 37°C for 2 hours. Digestion with the endonuclease I resulted in cleavage at the EcoRI site of the decamers giving rise to HCS cDNA with EcoRI cohesive ends as well as cleaved unreacted decanucleotides and self-ligated decanucleotides. As the cleaved decamers also contained EcoRI termini and would compete with the HCS cDNA for recombination with the similarly cleaved plasmid, the HCS cDNA was isolated hy gel electrophoresis before reaction with the transfer vector.
The use of the foregoing decanucleotide linker has the advantage that the HCS cDNA fragment may be reisolated from the plasmid in a form identical to that of the original fragment.
The transfer vector employed was the bacterial plasmid pMB-9, a 3.5 x IO*’ molecular weight molecule containing a single EcoRI site, - 34 47333 prepared as described by Rodriguez, R.i.., Bolivar, F., Goodman, H.M., Boyer, H.W, and Betlach, M. in IC.N-UCLA Symposium On Molecular and Genetic Biology, D.P. Wierlich, W. J. Rutter, and C.F. Fox, Eds. (Academic Press, Hew York, 1976), pp 471-477. The plasmids pMB-9 and pBR-322 (Example 5) are commercially available from Bethesda Research Labs, Rockville, Maryland. Infection of Escherichia Coli with pMB-9 confers resistance to tetracycline. Incorporation of DNA into the EcoRI site of ρΙ'β-9 does not affect the tetracycline resistance or any other known property of the plasmid. Consequently, there are no phenotypic differences between recombinant and normal plasmids. Therefore the EcoRI cut pMB-9 was first treated with alkaline phosphatase, according to a method described in detail in Patent Specification No. 47274 . See also, Ullrich, et al., supra. Alkaline phosphatase treatment removes the 5' phosphates from the EcoRI generated ends of the plasmid and prevents self-ligation of the plasmid DNA, insuring that circle formation and hence transformation is dependent on the insertion of a DNA fragment containing 5' phosphorylated termini.
The alkaline phosphatase treatment was carried out in a reaction mixture at the level of 1.0 enzyme units/mg of plasmid DNA in 25 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8, for 30 minutes at 65°C, followed by phenol extraction to remove the phosphatase, and ethanol precipitation of the DMA. Ligation of HCS CDNA to pMB-9 treated as described was carried out in 50 31I reactions containing 60 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8, 10 mM -mercaptoethanol, 3 mM M3CI2, between 10 and 50 ng of the purified HCS cDNA and (approximately 500 ng of EcoRI-eleaved 5' dophosphorylated plasmid DNA. Reactions were begun hy addition of T4 DNA ligase to 5 jug/ml, allowed to proceed at 15’C for 1 hour and mixture diluted to 0.25 ml with 120 mM NaCl, 1 mil EDTA. The diluted reaction mixture was used directly for transformation of Ji. Coli X-1776.
EL Coli X-1776 is a host strain especially developed for recombinant DNA work, certified by NIH as an EK-2 host under the Federal guidelines.
The strain is available from Dr. Roy Curtiss III, University of Alabama, Department of Microbiology, Birmingham, Alabama. The bacteria were grown in 150 ml of nutrient broth .supplemented with 100 jug/ml diaminopimelic - 35 47332 Q (DAP) and 40 yig/ml thymine to a cell density of approximately 2 x 10 cells/ml The cells were harvested by centrifugation and washed in 60 ml of 10 ml! NaCl, recentrifuged and resuspended in 60 ml of transformation buffer containing 10 mM Tris-UCl, pH 8, 140 mM NaCl, 75 mM CaC^- The cell suspension was kept on ice for 15 minutes, the cells collected by centrifugation and resuspended in 1.5 ml of the same transformation buffer. The cell suspension, 0.5 ml, was added to 0.25 ml of diluted ligation reaction mixture and incubated on ice for 15 minutes, then transferred to 25°C for 4 minutes, then on ice again for 30 minutes. The cell suspension, 0.2 ml, was plated directly onto nutrient agar plates supplemented with 100 yig/ml DAP and 40 >ug/ml thymine and 20 /jg/nl tetracycline. Four transformants were obtained, all of which contained a 550 base-pair insertion which was released from the plasmid DNA by either EeoRI or Haelll endonuclease digestion.
A transformant clone designated pHCS-1 was selected for sequence analysis E. Coli X-1776—pHCS-1 was grown in suitable nutrient medium, plasmid DNA was isolated therefrom and cleaved with EcoRI endonuclease. The 550 base-pair insertion was isolated from linear pMB-9 by electrophoresis in a 6% polyacrj laraide gel and subjected to a DNA sequence analysis using the procedure of Maxam and Gilbert, supra. Sub-fragments of the HCS DNA were prepared by incubation with Hpall restriction endonuclease and the 5' termini were oh labtled using ·/ JP-ATP and polynucleotide kinase. Following the sequence analysis procedure of Maxam and Gilbert, the nucleotide sequence of cloned HCS-ONA was determined. By comparison with the known amino acid sequence of HCS, the 557 nucleotide sequence represented that portion of the coding region of HCS mRNA from amino acids 24 to 191, plus 50 nucleotides of the 3'untranslated region. ’See Niall, H.D., Hogan, M.L., Sauer, R-, Rosenblum, I.Y. and Greenwood, F.C., Proc.Nat.Acad.Sci. HSA 68, 866 (1971). The primary structure of HCS mRNA as determined from the DNA sequence of cloned fragment pHCS-1 is shown in Table 3, together with the amino acid sequence predicted SG therefrom on the basis of the known genetic code. The amino acid sequence determined from the nucleotide sequence is identical with the previously published amino acid sequence determined by chemical means. This demonstrates that the initially isolated HCS mRNA has been copied in vitro with high fidelity and that the cloned HCS DNA fragment was replicated with high fidelity In the transformed bacteria. - 36 47332 Table 3 Nucleotide sequence of one strand of HCS DNA from cloned pHCS-1.
The numbers refer to the amino acid sequence beginning at the amino terminus. The DNA sequence shown corresponds to the mRNA sequence for HCS, except that U replaces T in the mRNA. The amino acid sequence from positions 1 through 23 is also shown.
Val-Gln-Thr-Val-Pro-Leu-Ser-Arg-Leu-Phe-Asp-His-Ala-Met-Leu-Glu-Ala-Kis-Arg-Ala-His-Gln-Leu Cl μ CJ □ CJ CO &4 a CJ ω < < CD ω Η < Κ CJ 3 CD Φ Η kJ CJ Φ CJ 42 £-> P-4 Η Μ CD Φ CJ CO Η μ >, Ε- Ε-· ω CJ r-4 3 β CD r-4 <3 CJ CJ CL CJ ω < < CD cn CD < kJ a ^3 μ CJ P< CJ φ CJ r-4 Ε- k4 <2 S4 Η >> <3 Η )4 CJ 42 CJ H β r-4 <3 3 CJ CD 3 <3 r-4 <ί CJ CJ ω Η 42 Η Pu Η 3 CD pH CJ CD a Ο r-4 < CJ CJ μ CJ <2 Η Η μ CJ 42 ο Η < Ο- CJ Ο) <3 <2 CJ φ Eh γ-4 Η Μ <3 rt r-4 o CJ CD cj 3 φ kJ CJ EH CJ μ Eh Eh Eh Cu CJ cn < < o 3 CJ r4 CJ3 “3 Φ fru β Eh t-4 < >4 CJ > e CJ CJ 3 CJ 3 CJ 3 CJ pH <2 Φ Eh Φ Eh CD CJ kJ CJ kJ CJ 3 < Ο β CJ eo CJ Φ H o « <2 μ cj CJ rH <2 <2 <2 3 H β CJ >4 O cn <2 Ul <3 r-4 CJ <; CJ CJ μ CJ β CJ U CJ φ CJ r-4 CJ Φ E-i co L·· <3 CJ 4U “mJ 03 Φ CJ 3 CJ >4 <2 42 Eh Φ H kJ Ph Eh kJ o β CJ 44 CJ μ cj «—1 Φ Eh 42 CJ CJ CJ >7 < H < ΰ μ H C < r-4 < Φ CJ rH <2 CJ δ co < CJ CJ μ CJ co cj Φ CJ 42 CJ μ cj r-4 H Η < < < H < 3 < 3 a O hQ r-4 < Φ Eh OJ Γ-4 CJ CJ CJ kJ CJ rH 3 CJ Φ CJ 3 <2 i-4 43 H rH «3 CJ Ph Eh CJ CJ w CJ 00 CJ 3 CJ Φ £h μ CJ rH < <3 CJ CJ CJ β CJ r-4 CJ 3 «2 Ul «’Eh Φ Eh .J > CJ -J CJ CJ O CJ a. cj φ CJ μ cj cn Eh P-. CJ <2 CJ Ο CJ 3 CJ CO CJ β CJ r4 < Ρ< CJ CJ CJ kJ < μ C 3 CJ 3 < CJ Φ Eh Φ Eh Η < kJ CJ kJ CJ ο CJ Cu CJ 3 CJ μ CJ μ cj Φ £h PU CJ Η H r-J CJ φ f4 μ CJ cn cj «-4 Ei Φ CJ •H < Μ < CO Eh W cj μ £h 3 CJ μ tn Φ CJ r-4 <3 t>> <2 CO H CJ CJ Eh Eh D« CJ Φ CJ cu cj tn t—J £h cn <2 < CJ HH < <2 cj μ <3 3 CJ CU Eh φ CJ Φ Eh « co kJ CJ <2 CJ φ CJ 3 CJ μ cj 42 Eh Φ Eh Φ CJ Ρ4 H kJ CJ co <3 ω CJ 3 CJ CU CJ >> CJ Ο Φ Eh cn < a H 00 r-4 CJ < CJ Φ CJ μ cj μ cj 4 Eh Φ CJ .Φ CJ Pm H CO Eh CO Eh μ CJ Φ CJ μ CJ Φ CJ 1-t H 42 CJ co H H < H *2 μ o CO CJ CX CJ 42 CJ μ cj tn <3 H <5 <2 CJ <2 CJ 3 CJ μ h Φ H Φ CJ r-4 CJ CO H 3 CJ eo cj Φ £h μ CD kJ CJ <2 cj β <2 03 CJ r-4 CJ CD <2 CJ CJ Eh cu o β CD 03 <3 rH <3 <2 CJ CJ CJ 03 Eh o rH CJ •H co β Eh w cj rH > CD β CJ U CD CO cn < < < Φ Eh 3S < 03 CJ CO CJ •H <3 μ cd K CJ < CJ μ CJ 3 O CJ Φ CJ Φ H CJ CO £h rJ CJ CD CJ β CJ Φ CJ H w <3 42 fn CJ < 4 (X, H CJ £_< μ <2 μ <2 o 42 CJ .3 CJ £h h <; [H <3 CJ O CU CJ 3 CD CJ tn <2 r-4 <2 H <3 o CD CD CD <2 Φ Eh rH CJ CJ 42 Eh β Eh CJ Cu Eh > CD o 03 CJ CO CJ Eh «2 >r -2 CJ J -3 kJ CJ μ o CX CJ CJ Φ CJ tn < CO <2 CD CD Eh μ cj 'j CJ >1 < Φ ί-Η H H Eh *2 <3 CJ CJ μ CJ P. CJ 42 O 03 -< <3 H <3 < CD CJ CD β CJ 03 CJ -2 rH <2 Eh CJ CJ CJ tn o eo cd CJ <2 μ cd CJ r-J < < < CJ 3 CJ Φ CJ CD Φ 3J 43 Eh EH r-4 CJ Pu Eh CJ Φ CJ β CJ ϋ t-4 Eh ^C5 «33 h <2 CJ fcH Eh β CJ μ O rU Φ CJ rH < >·>< eft 42 Eh CJ CJ EH &4 r-4 Pm Eh >. CJ 3 CJ >> CJ r-4 CJ Φ DJ rH CD CD CJ kJ CJ CJ CJ μ E4 3 CD W 42 CJ Φ Eh o Η < U CJ CJ Eh eo cj CJ μ CJ μ cj r4 CJ φ CD <3 Cj CJ CJ CO <2 eo cj o μ CD o μ cj -3 >» < r-4 CJ <2 cj r-4 Η H CJ CD μ cj β CJ 3 CJ Φ CJ « <3 t-4 < to <2 <2 CJ CJ >. CJ 03 CD r-4 CJ •-4 CJ Ph <2 β Eh CJ CD r-J < > CJ EXAMPLE 5 The purification of DNA whose nucleotide sequence comprises most of the coding region for UGH is described, together with the synthesis of a plasmid transfer vector containing the purified DNA and the construction of a microorganism strain having the DNA as part of its genetic makeup.
HGH was purified essentially as described for HCS in Example 3, except as noted below.
Five benign human pituitary tumors, quick-frozen in liquid nitrogen after surgical removal, weighing 0.4 g co 1.5 g each were thawed and homgenized in 4 M guanidinium thiocyanate containing 1 M mercaptoethanol buffered to pH 5.0 at 4°C. Tha homogenate was layered over 1.2 ml 5.7 !1 CsCl containing 100 mM EDTA and centrifuged for 18 hours at 37,000 rpra in the SW 50.1 rotor of a Beckman· (Trademark) ultra-centrifuge at 15°C (Beckroan Instrument Company, Fullerton, California). RNA travelled to the bottom of the tube. Further purification, using an oligo-dT column and sucrose gradient sedimentation was as described previously in Examples 1 and 3. About 10% by weight of the ESA thus isolated coded for growth hormone, as judged by incorporation of a radioactive amino acid precursor into anti-growth hormone precipitable material in a cell-free translation system derived froi wheat germ. See Roberts, B.E. and Patterson, B.M., Proc .Nat .Acad.
Sci USA 70, 2330 (1973). Single-stranded cDNA and double-stranded cDNA were synthesized as described in Example 3. HGH cDNA was then treated with restriction endonuclease HaeTII and alkaline phosphatase as described in Example 3, then fractionated by gel electrophoresis. A distinct band in a position corresponding to about 550 nucleotides in length was observed, and isolated for further purification.
For further purification, the previously described technique of dividing the DNA into sub-fragments and separately purifying and recombining the sub-fragments was carried out a·; previously described, except that for HGH, the restriction endonuclease PvuII was used to produce two sub-fragments of approximately 490 and approximately 60 nucleotides length, respectively. All restriction enzymes used herein are commercially - 38 47332 available from ,'tev England Biolabs, Beverly, Massachusetts. The religated product, about 550 base-pairs in length, was greater than 992 pure as judged by sub-fractionation in four separate restriction endonuclease systems.
Synthesis of a recombinant transfer vector containing HGil DMA was carried out essentially as described in Example 4 except that the decanucleoti.de linkers and plasmid employed were different. A decanucleotide linker having Hind. Ill specificity was employed, sequence 5'CCAAGCTTGfi-31 . Treatment with tlsiii, yielded Hell cDNA with cohesive ends. Hsiil and Hind 11.1 have the same site specificity rind may be used interchangeably. The plasmid pBR-322 was used as the transfer vector.
This plasmid conf el’s host resistance to the antibiotics ampicillin and tetracycline. DNA insertions into the Hind III site have been found to reduce or abolish tetracycline resistance. Recombinants were therefore selected by growth on nutrient plates containing ampicillin, and by their inability to grow on 20 /ig/ml of tetracycline. HGK-cDNA was recombined with Hsul-eleaved alkaline phosphatase-treated pBR-322, under conditions essentially as described in Example 4.
Products of the ligase reaction were used to transform _E. Coli X1776 under conditions as described in Example 4. Seven colonies were isolated based upon their ability to grow in the presence of ampicillin and their inability to grow in the presence of tetracycline. Five of the seven colonies carried the recombinant plasmid containing the approximately 550 base-pair portion of HGH DNA. One of the bacterial strains, pHGH-1, carrying HGH DNA as part of its genetic makeup, was grown in quantity to provide a source of plasmid DNA from which the HGH DNA could be reisolated hy treatment with Hind III or Usui. This isolated HGH DNA, having undergone many replications, was subjected to sequence analysis as described in Example 4. The remits are shewn in Table 4. - 39 47332 Table 4 Nucleotide sequence of one strand of UGH-DNA of cloned pHClI-1. Thu numbers refer to the amino acid sequence of IIGH beginning at the amino ter minus. The DNA sequence shown corresponds to the mRNA sequence for HGH, except that U replaces T in the mRNA. c o Ή < O O ο a μ o PU o β CJ rH < o a a a h o o a χ: h μ < Cl CJ o H Ej Η H W ζ? $5c o O T-t < -TOO < H < O O w a < u < o < μ o P- o H < o a Φ H χ: h P- sM O «4 <2 a o C CJ r-l CJ E-t r-J o CJ Cl EH h3 O O ι-H <3< o o <2 ty =-i ►4 O c o μ o φ o CQ H w 3 ϋ o μ < x U E-t < o o U r—t <2 a o 350 in a < <2 o in <2 < < μ O o o CQ H O O μ O P- O μ <2 0-3 0 νώ Σ-. < ο ο μ ο ρμ Ο QJ Η Η Η <2 μ η aj ο ω Ή ο γ4 <2 ο ο μ < φ ο CQ Η < Η Φ ο E-t Ο Ρ-» Η Ο ιη Η Ο SO Ο·Η ο 3 Ο Ε-< Φ ΕΗ ►4 Ο Η E-t μ ο Ο Φ Ο CO Η Ο υ μ ο ο ι χ: ο Η < i-r Ο Ο- Ο >>< ιη <1 Ε-t Η < Ο ι4 Ο 3 < β Η γΗ <2 > Ο ο ο 3 Ο 3 ο Φ Η φ Η η3 Ο t-3 ο β Ο ω ο « < μ ο < <2 << <ί β ο ϊη ο ω < r—1 ο <2 <2 Ο ο 3 Ο μ CJ γ—f ο Φ Η < Ο 22 ο ο 3 ο χ: γη SJ Η Ρη ε-< U Ο Η Ο μ Ο 3 E-t Ο > Ο 6-« <2 μ Η C Φ ο r—t < CQ < υ ο too φ ο μ ο γΗ Η < < Η < a α Ο ?-» Ο ci Η . CS ι-Ι Ο u ο —( ο Ο □ ο 3 *3 Η r-i < Η - Ο Ο R Ο 3 ο t-t <2 t—1 <2 Ο ο Ο Ο ι—I Ο 3 <4 β Ε-Η Φ Η > Ο »-4 Ο 0 ο η. Ο μ ο ιη <2 Ρ, ο 'μ Ο 3 ο ω Ο r-i <5 >. < ο ο η3 <2 3 Ο 3 <2 Ο Η Φ Η «4 Ο γ4 Ο C4 U 3 Ο μ cj Φ =-< Εη εγ* .-4 Ο μ ο ρ. Ο QJ ο ιη <1 CQ Η < ο C ο μ Ε-» γη <2 >><2 ο ο Η Η <υ ο ι—Ι Ο Η Η nJ c-< Μ < ϊ> Ο 3 Ο β Ο Ο Η ω ►4 Ο <2 < 3 Ο μ Ο QJ Η Φ Ο U Ο ω <2 3 Ο ο. Ο ϋ Η αι <2 ΧΙΟ < Ο μ ο φ ο CQ E-t Μ < too μ ο < ϋ μ £-* Φ ο CO Η GJ Ο r-l Ο < ο ^>ο r-t ο ο ο 3 Φ η4 Ο Η Ο μ φ ιη Η Ο Η 3 <ς to ο φ Η μ Ο XI Ο <2 Ο Φ *4 ω Ο ι—Ι ο <1 ο ο ε-* Ρ. ο β Ο φ <2 r-ί <2 < CJ ο Ο ιη Η ο ι—Ι Ο •Η <ί co β Ε-* 32 Ο »—1 Ο β ο φ Ο ιη < Ι“ί Η < ω ο - to Ο •rl <3 μ ϋ 32 Ο < ο μ 3 ο Φ Ο Φ ω Η .4 ο j- Ο Φ ο ιη <2 X Ε— <2 <2 Ρη Ε-* μ <4 μ -? Ο ^2 Ο Η < Η <2 ο. ο 3 ϋ ιη *4 ι4 <4 <2 Ο CJ C5 Φ Ο ι—1 Ο Γ— Φ =4 Ρ- Ε- > Ο ω Ο ω Ο >4 >» ί μ ο ρ. ο Φ ο ω <2 ω <2 *4 Ο μ Ο 4-1 ο . ?η < Φ ί-* Η E-t X < μ Ο ¢. Ο Χ2 Ο ω Η <ί <2 ο β Ο ω ο r-i Ο ο γ4 < ω ο too >> <2 μ ο >4 < < Φ ο φ ο X! E-t r* Μ ρμ E-t Ρ« Κ φ Ο ω Ο ι—Ι ΕΗ Η <2 ο Η β Ο μ Ο ι—Ι <2 < ϋ ϋ Η Η ο 3 Ο (—ι ο Φ Η ο ο I-J Ο μ Η 3 Ο χ: Ο Φ Η Η <2 «4 Ο to Ο μ ο ι—t Ο <4 ο Ο Ο ο ο ο μ ο μ ο ν£> Ρ- ο ·—I Η Η μ ο β Ο φ ο ω < CQ <2 < < ϊηΟ «Ί Ο Ο CJ ω ο ι-3 < Ο Ο ο ο ο ο ο Η Ο < ο ο ο ο Η < Ο Η Ο Ο ο ο ο ο υ Η Ο Ο < £Η ι—t ς» Ο σ> χ: Η «-· Ρ- Η ?>νθ τ-< Ο ο ο ω E-t Ο Ο Η X Ο γ-( Ο Ο Ο Ο «-Η <2 CJ Ο Η Ο β Η > Ο - 40 47332 The inetnoa of the present invention provides for the first time a method of general applicability for purifying desired specific nucleotide sequences. These sequences may be correlated with the production of a specific protein of commercial or medical significance. The disclosed method results in the purification of nucleotide sequences which may be fragments of a larger sequence coding for the desired protein. The present method may be used in combination with known ancillary procedures to produce the entire nucleotide sequence coding for a specific protein.
In addition, a method has been disclosed whereby a nucleotide sequence of specific length, however derived, may be highly purified.
A method for measuring the degree of purity of .sue'] fragments is also disclosed. By these means, a nucleotide sequence coding for a portion of human HCS has been isolated, purified and shown to he at least 99/ (by weight) pure.
Transfer vectors containing most of the nucleotide sequence coding for 11CS and most of the sequence coding for IICH have been synthesized. Novel microorganism strains containing the foreppoing genes and portions of genes have been produced. The foregoing nucleotide sequences have been reisolated after many cycles of replication in the host microorganism and found to contain essentially the identical nucleotide sequence to that existing in the source organism.
On the basis of the genetic code, there exists a finite set of nucleotide sequences which can genetically code for a given ami.no acid sequence. All such equivalent nucleotide sequences are operable variants of the disclosed sequences, since all give rise to the same protein hormone, having the same amino acid sequence, during the course of i_n vivo transcription and translation. Consequently, all such variants are included in the scope of the present invention.

Claims (17)

1. CLAIMS:r
1. A method for purifying a fragment of a specific deb.-ς,'ribonucleotide sequence for recombination with a OXA transfer vector, and transfer to a microorganism, from a population of polyribonucleotides holero5 geneous in length and sequence, comprising: (a) providing a population of cDNA transcripts of the polyribonucleotides, at least a portion of said cDNA transcripts having at least two restriction sites, (b) subjecting the cDNA tr mscripts to the action of a restriction 10 endonuclease preparation capable of c.a< alyzing the hydrolysis of the cDNA transcripts at each of the two restriction sites in order io produce a fragment of a specific deoxyribonucleotide sequence which is homogeneous in length, (c) fractionating the fragments produced by restriction endonuclease action according to their length, thereby separating the homogeneous length 15 fragments of the specific deoxyribonucleotide sequence from cDNA iranscripis of different length, whereby a fragment of the specific deoxyrjbonucleotide sequence is purified for recombination with a DNA transfer vector and transfer to a microorganism.
2. A method of further purifying linear DMA of specific 20 nucleotide sequence containing a restriction site from a population of essentially homogeneous length fragments of specific deoxvribonucleotide seguence, -prepared according to the method of claim 1, canprising: (d) treating the DNA ±n said fragments to rarove any 5' phosphate end groups, (e) incubating the DNA with a restriction endonuclease capable of 25 acting on the specific desired nucleotide sequence to produce two linear subfragments thereof, (f) fractionating the sub-fragments according to theii· length, (g) isolating the two sub-fragments, (h) rejoining the sub-fragments covalently, in a DNA ligase catalyzed reaction, to reconstitute the original specific sequence, and (i) fractionating the rejoined DNA molecules according to their length, whereby the specific sequence is purified from a population of essentially homogeneous length fragments of specific deoxyribonucleotide sequence for recombination with a DNA transfer vector and transfer to a microorganism.
3. A method according to claim 2 wherein alkaline phosphatase is used to remove the 5'-phosphate groups.
4. A method according to claim 2 wherein fractionation by length is accomplished by gel electrophoresis.
5. A method according to any of claims 1 to 4 wherein the endonuclease is selected from the enzymes Hae III, Hha I and Hin (f) I.
6. A recombinant DNA transfer vector comprising a fragment of a specific deoxyribonucleotide sequence prepared by the method of claim 1.
7. A recombinant DNA transfer vector comprising a fragment of a specific deoxyribonucleotide sequence prepared by the method of claim 2.
8. The transfer vector of claim 6 transferred to and replicated in a microorganism.
9. The transfer vector of claim 7 transferred to and replicated in a microorganism.
10. A recombinant DNA transfer vector comprising codons for human chorionic somatomammotropin comprising the nucleotide sequence: 5'-g gcl 24 atm 25 gak 26 acl 27 tak 28 caj 29 gaj 30 ttk 31 gaj 32 gaj 33 acl 34 5 TAK 33 ATM 3 gCCL 37 AAJ 3 gGAK 39 CAJ 4 QAAJ 43 TAK 4 2QR 4 3S 43 TTK 44 X 43 TY 43 cak 46 gak 47 qr 48 s 48 caj 49 acl 50 qr 51 s 51 ttk 52 tgk 53 ttk 54 qr 55 s 55 gak 56 Q R 57 S 57 A ™58 CeL 59A CL 6O CCL 6lQ R 62 S 62 AftK 63 AT C64G A J65 GaJ 66 ACL 67 CAJ 68 CAJ 69 AAJ 7O QR 71 S 7l AAK 72 X 73 TY 73 GAJ 74 X 75 TY 75 X 76 TY 76 W 77 GZ 77 ATM 7g QR 7g S 7g X g0 RY 80 X 81 TY 81 X 82 TY 82 ATM 83 GAJ 84 QR 85 S 85 TGG 86 X 87 TY 87 10 GAJ 88 CCL 8g GTL go W gl GZ gl TTK g2 X g3 TY 93 W 94 GZ g4 QR g5 S 95 ATG 95 TTK 97 GCL g8 AAK 99 AAK 100 X 101 TY 101 GTL 102 TAK 103 GAK 104 ACL 105 QR 10 6 S 106 GAK 107 QR lO8 S lO8 GAK 109 GAK llO TAK lll CAK 112 X 113 TY 113 X 114 TY 114 AAJ 115 GAK 116 X 117 TY 117 GA ' ;r il8 GAJ 119 GGL 12O A ™121 CAJ 122 AGI ‘123 X 124 I,Y 124 ATG 125 GGL 126 W 127 GZ 127 X X28 TY 128 GAJ 129 GAK 13O GGL 131 QR 132 S 132 W 133 GZ 133 15 W 134 GZ 134 ACL 135 GGL 136 CAJ 137 A ™138 X 139 TY 139 AAJ 14O CAJ 141 ACI '142 TAK 143 QR 144 S i44 AAJ 145 TTK 146 GAK 147 ACL 148 AAK 149 QR 15O S 15O CAK 151 AAK 152 CAK 153 GAX 154 GG1 155 X 156 TY 156 X 157 TY 157 AAJ 158 AAX 159 TAR 16 O 6<3Ι -161 Χ 162 ΤΥ 162 Χ 163 ΤΥ 163 ΤΑΚ 164 Τ6Κ 165 ΤΤΚ 166 1ί 167 6Ζ 167 ΑΑσ ΐ68 6ΑΚ 169 ^170^171^172 GTL 173 GAJ 174 ACL 175 TTK 176 X 177 TY 177 W 178 GZ 178 20 ATG i79 GTL 18O CAJ 181 TGK 182 W 183 GZ 183 QR 184 S 184 GTL 185 GAJ 186 GGL 187 QR 188 S 188 TGK 189 GGL 19O TTK 191 TAGGTGCCCGAGTAGCATCCTGTGACCCCTCCCCAGTGCCTCTCCTGGCC - 3' wherein A is deoxyadenyl, G is deoxyguanyl, 25 C is deoxycytosyl, T is thymidyl, J is A or G; K is T or C; L is A, T, C or G; - 44 47332 M is A, C or T; X n is T or C, if Y n is A or G, and C if Y n is C or T; Y n is A,G,C or T, if X n is C, and A or G if X R is T; W n is C or A, if Z n is G or A, and C if Z n is C or T; Z n is A,G,C or T, if W n is C, and A or G if W n is A; QR is TC, if S is A,G,C or T, and AG if S is T or C; η η n S n is A, G, C or T, if QR n is TC, and T or C if QR n is AG and subscript numerals, n, refer to the amino acid position in human chorionic somatomammotropin, for which the nucleotide sequence corresponds, according to the genetic code, the amino acid positions being numbered from the amino end.
11. A DNA transfer vector according to claim 10 comprising a plasmid.
12. The DNA transfer vector of claim 1° wherein the plasmid is pBR-322.
13. The transfer vector of claim 10 transferred to and replicated in a microorganism.
14. The transfer vector of claim 10 transferred to and replicated in a bacterium.
15. The transfer vector of claim 10 transferred to and replicated in Escherichia coli X-1776 containing plasmid pBR-322.
16. A method according to claim 1 of purifying a fragment of specific deoxyribonucleotide sequence, being a method substantially as described in Examples 1,2,3 or 5.
17. a method according to claim 2 of purifying a fragment of a specific deoxyribonucleotide sequence, being a method substantially as described in Example 3 or 5.
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AU527165B2 (en) * 1977-02-08 1983-02-17 Genentech Inc. Method and means for microbial polypeptide expression; synthetic DNA and process therefor
US6270955B1 (en) 1978-12-22 2001-08-07 Biogen, Inc. Pharmaceutical compositions and methods for producing antibodies to hepatitis b virus and kits and methods for detecting antibodies to hepatitis b virus
ZA802992B (en) * 1979-06-01 1981-10-28 Univ California Human pre-growth hormone
US4342832A (en) * 1979-07-05 1982-08-03 Genentech, Inc. Method of constructing a replicable cloning vehicle having quasi-synthetic genes
US4530901A (en) * 1980-01-08 1985-07-23 Biogen N.V. Recombinant DNA molecules and their use in producing human interferon-like polypeptides
US6835557B1 (en) 1980-01-08 2004-12-28 Biogen, Inc. DNA sequences, recombinant DNA molecules and processes for producing human interferon-like polypeptides
IL59690A (en) 1980-03-24 1983-11-30 Yeda Res & Dev Production of bovine growth hormone by microorganisms and modified microorganisms adapted to produce it
PT72786B (en) 1980-04-03 1983-01-10 Biogen Nv Process for producing dna sequences recombinant dna molecules and human fibroplast interferon-like polypeptides
US4338397A (en) 1980-04-11 1982-07-06 President And Fellows Of Harvard College Mature protein synthesis
CH659826A5 (en) * 1981-06-02 1987-02-27 Wakunaga Yakuhin Kk PROCESS FOR OBTAINING A MICROORGANISM TRANSFORMED BY A PLASMID COMPRISING A GENE OF 27-DESAMIDOSECRETINE STRUCTURE.
US5670371A (en) * 1983-07-15 1997-09-23 Bio-Technology General Corp. Bacterial expression of superoxide dismutase

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NZ187300A (en) * 1977-05-27 1982-08-17 Univ California Dna transfer vector and micro-organism modified to contain a nucleotide sequence equivalent to the gene of a higher organism
IE47889B1 (en) * 1977-11-08 1984-07-11 Genentech Inc Synthetic dna and process tehrefor

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JPS5448775A (en) 1979-04-17
RO80006A (en) 1982-10-11
NZ187342A (en) 1983-09-02
AU3648978A (en) 1979-11-29
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FR2404013B1 (en) 1983-07-22
SE8305163L (en) 1983-09-23
AT369386B (en) 1982-12-27
ES470340A1 (en) 1979-09-16
AT375673B (en) 1984-08-27
FR2404013A1 (en) 1979-04-20
LU79938A1 (en) 1978-12-12
ZA782933B (en) 1979-05-30
ATA456678A (en) 1982-05-15
GB1568047A (en) 1980-05-21
FI64187B (en) 1983-06-30
NL7806358A (en) 1979-03-27
SE8305162D0 (en) 1983-09-23
IE781054L (en) 1979-03-23
PL209748A1 (en) 1979-12-03
AU519528B2 (en) 1981-12-10
PT68127A (en) 1978-07-01
ATA248881A (en) 1984-01-15
YU214378A (en) 1984-04-30
DK233378A (en) 1979-03-24
IT7824641A0 (en) 1978-06-16
FI781676A (en) 1979-03-24
FI64187C (en) 1983-10-10
RO78407A (en) 1982-02-26
IT1098340B (en) 1985-09-07
BE868853A (en) 1978-11-03
SE8305162L (en) 1983-09-23
IL54791A (en) 1983-07-31
SE7806087L (en) 1979-03-24
DD145917A5 (en) 1981-01-14
CS235069B2 (en) 1985-04-16
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SE8305163D0 (en) 1983-09-23
GR73558B (en) 1984-03-15

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