PH26197A - Yeast hybrid vectors and their use in the production of polypeptides - Google Patents

Yeast hybrid vectors and their use in the production of polypeptides Download PDF

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PH26197A
PH26197A PH34737DA PH26197A PH 26197 A PH26197 A PH 26197A PH 34737D A PH34737D A PH 34737DA PH 26197 A PH26197 A PH 26197A
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dna
yeast
plasmid
fragment
promoter
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Albert Hinnen
Bern Meyhack
Francois Meyer
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Ciba Geigy Ag
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Priority claimed from GB838315145A external-priority patent/GB8315145D0/en
Priority claimed from PH29374A external-priority patent/PH25617A/en
Application filed by Ciba Geigy Ag filed Critical Ciba Geigy Ag
Publication of PH26197A publication Critical patent/PH26197A/en

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Description

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Field of the invention
The invention relates to DNA fragments containing the promoters of the yeast acid phosphatase genes, hybrid vectors containing said promoters capable of transforming yeast cells and yeast cells transformed with said hybrid vectors. The invention also provides processes for the prep— : aration of said DNA fragments, said hybrid vectors and said yeast cells, wherein recombinant DNA technology is applied. Furthermore, the in- vention concerns a process for the manufacture of polypeptides which are encoded by gene inserts in said hybrid vectors, and which are useful in the treatment of human and animal diseases, and of derivatives thereof.
Background of the invention
With the development of recombinant DNA technology, the controlled microbial production of useful polypeptides, especially such of med- . 15 ical interest, has become possible. Most of the recent work with re- - combinant DNA technology concerns prokaryotic organisms. Methods have been elaborated and are now well established to introduce into these organ- isms DNA which codes for eukaryotic proteins. Several bacterial species, especially strains of Escherichia coli, which have been mod- ified by this new technology, are now available and permit the com- mercial production of polypeptides of utmost importance, such as insulin, human leukocyte and fibroblast interferon and human growth hormone.
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However, for many purposes it will be desirable or necessary in future to use cukaryotic systems in the commercial preparation of proteins, especially of pharmacologically important proteins. Since yeasts arc eukaryotes they share many biological pathways with other eukaryotes, most importantly with mammalian cells. As many pharmacolo- gically important proteins are synthesized by mammalian cells, the related- ness of the two systems can be advantageous. Jor example, the secre- tory pathway of yeast resembles that of higher animal cells and it is known that yeast cells have the machinery for the cleavage of signal sequences (uncharged N-terminal part of a protein, usually split off during the secretory transport) (47). Associated with the secretory pathway is the glycosylation system. The basic steps leading to glyco- sylated proteins are similar in all eukaryotes and it is expected that yeast cells, contrary to prokaryotic cells, can produce proteins which
I5 are faithfully glycosylated (although some final steps in the pathway will have to be modified). }
Moreover, yeast cells are free of endotoxins. Contaminating endotoxins are often found in protein preparations from E. coli and have to be removed through expensive purification steps. :
Since yeast is a microorganism, yeast cells are easy to cultivate.
The cell mass obtainable per volume of culture fluid is considerably higher for yeast than for E. coli. In addition, the fermentational behaviour of yeast is well understood and conditions for large scale fermentations are already established.
In the last few years, baker's yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, has received increasing attention among molecular biologists from basic and applied research areas. To a large extent, this development is due to the establishment of a transformation system (Hinnen et al, (1); Beggs (2)) which allows this microorganism to be used for genetic manipulations, such as introduction and cloning of heterolo-
- 4 = . 26197 gous DNA. Similar to the prokaryotic systems, plasmids are the pre- terred vectors used to transform yeast cells, i.e. to introduce re- combinant DNA into yeast cells.
There are various patent applications and other publications which relate to vectors, suitable for transforming yeast cells, yeasts trans- formed with said plasmids, polypeptides produced by said transformed yeasts and processes for the production thereof:
The general yeast transformation protocol is disclosed by Hinnen et al. (1), Beggs (2), Hicks et al. (3) and Struhl et al. 4).
Expression of a human interferon gene linked to DNA fragments of the 5'-flanking sequences of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae alcohol dehydrogenase 1 (ADH1) gene in a plasmid and transformed into yeast cells is described by Hitzeman et al. (5),
The transformation of Saccharomyces cerevisiae with a plasmid contain- ing the chromosomal rabbit B-globin gene is reported by Beggs et al. (6). As set forth in the publication, the gene is incorrectly transcribed and no splicing of the primary f-globin transcripts could be detected. . . . . . Lo . : Te . i . oy ] . . . .
Eukaryotic cells, such as yeast and especially mammalian cells, co- : transformed with foreign DNA coding for a polypeptide and linked with : an inducible promoter, and with unlinked DNA which permits the iden- tification of the transformed cells, and a process for the production thereof is described in PCT patent application 81-02425 (7).
A DNA sequence coding for a eukaryotic replication site, eukaryotic vectors conferring mitotic stability at low copy number and contain- ing a eukaryotic replication site, and yeast cells transformed with said vectors are disclosed in European patent application 48081 (8).
Hybrid DNAs comprising, inter alia, a eukaryotic host autonomously replicating segment, a method for the production thereof and a method for high-frequency transforming eukaryotic cells, e.g. yeast, with said hybrid DNAs is disclosed in European patent application 5S 45573 (9). :
Plasmids comprising the ovalbumin géne controlled by the promoter of the Escherichia coli p-lac Z gene and capable of being transformed into yeast cells are described in German Offenlegungsschrift 2923297 (10) and French patent application 2458585 (11).
Hybrid plasmids comprising DNA of a bacterial plasmid, whole or part of the DNA of the yeast 2u plasmid and the yeast URA3 gene and yeasts transformed with said hybrid plasmids are disclosed in
European patent application 11562 (12).
Object of the invention
During the last years, there was great progress in the field of genetic engineering, and the first systems using genetically manipulated micro- organisms, especially strains of the enterobacteria Escherichia coli, are now working. However, there exists a need for additional aud im- proved systems, especially eukaryotic systems, such as yeasts, which are suitable for the economic and large-scale production of proteins in industry. At present, various yeast vectors are available for : gene cloning. For the efficient expression of foreign genes in yeast structural coding scquences will have to be combined with strong yeast promoters which, advantageously, should show regulatory features which would allow exogenous control of gene expression. It is an object of . the present invention to provide yeast promoters meeting these re- quirements. It is also an object of the present invention to provide hybrid vectors containing said promoters and foreign structural genes controlled by said promoters. f———
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Detailed description of the invention 1. DNA fragments containing yeast acid phosphatase promoters and their preparation
The present invention provides newly isolated yeast promoters having im- proved expression properties and a process for the production thereof.
The yeast promoters according to the present invention are derived from the genomic DNA of yeast, especially of Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
At least two structural genes (PHo3 and PHOS) and several regulatory genes (P1102, Puo4, Priio8o, PHO81, PHO85) are involved in the expression of acid phosphatase in yeast (for reference, see, for example, (13)).
PHOS and PHO3 code for a repressible (regulated) and a constitutive yeast acid phosphatase, respectively. The PHO5 gene is repressed at high concentrations of inorganic phosphate and turned on (derepressed) under inorganic phosphate starvation (usually to a high extent under appropriate physiological conditions), whereas the PIIO3 gene is ex- pressed constitutively at low levels. The repressible enzyme is glyco- sylated and has a molecular weight of about 490 Kilodaltons (14). .
The promoters controlling the acid phosphatase genes have not been isolated or used in prior art recombinant DNA ‘technology: and. hegce : their nucleotide sequences have not been elucidated: In contrast. to RE other yeast promoters used in recent recombinant DNA technology (e.g. : ADIL), the DNA sequences directly following the yeast acid phosphatase promoters code for signal peptides which are thought to be involved in the secretion process. It would be advantageous to link a foreign protein coding region to a yeast signal sequence ensuring in vivo transport of the protein across the yeast cell membrane. This would result in a reduction of product degradation and contamination of the product by host cell material and would facilitate product recovery.
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It is a disadvantage of the promoters hitherto used in recombinant
DNA technology that the respective genes are transcribed constitu- tively. The expressed polypeptide may be either toxic to the yeast cell (fungicidal activity) or may at least inhibit cell proliferation (fungistatic activity), or the polypeptide may be enzymatically digested within the cell, especially if it is exposed to yeast prote- ases for a long time. In all cases mentioned, thé yield of the desired polypeptide would be low. These disadvantages can be avoided by using the PHOS promoter and vectors containing said promoter. The PHO5 promoter can be repressed or turned on (derepressed) at the will of the experimentator, solely by increasing or decreasing the concentra=: tion of inorganic phosphate in the medium. Thus, the promoter can be repressed during the exponential growth phase of the yeast and may be turned on only during early stationary phase at maximal cell density allowing expression of the gene controlled by the PHOS promoter. This property combined with a high level of transcription makes the PHOS promoter the preferred one in the present invention,
The present invention relates especially to a DNA fragment comprising a yeast acid phosphatase promoter, such as the pHo3 promoter or, . preferably, the PlIOS5 promoter, and flanking sequences.
Optionally, the yeast acid phosphatase promoter is followed by all or part of the signal sequence of the yeast acid phosphatase coding region naturally linked to said promoter. In addition, said DNA fragment may contain sequences which are required for efficient translation of mRNA. Also enclosed are those mutants of said DNA fragment which retain the promoter function.
A DNA fragment according to: the invention may be prepared, for example, by } (A) preparing an acid phosphatase gene by complementing an acid phos- phatase deficient yeast strain by transformation with plasmid
DNA from a yeast gene library containing the wild-type copy of said gene and isolating said gene, [ a rune ea ae gg It NERF FC .
oC 26197 (B) preparing subclones of the obtained gene, and (C) identifying the location of the promoter region of the above subclones and isolating DNA fragments comprising the acid phosphatase promoter.
More especially, the following steps are involved in the preparation of said DNA fragment: : (1) A yeast gene library is constructed using wild-type yeast DNA cloned into a hybrid bacterial (especially Escherichia coli)-yeast plasmid carrying appropriate markers capable of expression in both the bacterial and yeast cell (for suitable markers, see below). (2) Clones containing a yeast acid phosphatase gene are selected by transformation of an acid phosphatase deficient yeast strain using plasmid pools of the above library. . (3) Plasmids containing an acid phosphatase gene are isolated from the transformed yeast and amplified by transforming back into E. coli “selecting for the phenotypic property of the bacterial marker (e.g. ampicillin resistance). : (2') In an alternative approach the gene library is divided into sub- pools which are used to transform acid' phosphatase ‘deficient’ yedst strains, and (3') positive sub-pools are again sub-divided and trans- } formed as above until a single clone is identified. (4) The plasmid DNA of the identified clone is isolated, digested with suitable restriction endonucleases and the fragments are recloned into an appropriate yeast vector. : (5) DNA fragments containing a yeast acid phosphatase gene can be identified by transforming yeast acid phosphatase deficient yeast strains with said vectors. By mcans of this procedure the boundaries of the acid phosphatase genes can be determined with a precision of approximately 300 base pairs.
BAD ORIiGinA.L . Jj or 26197 (6) DNA scquencing of the identified fragments serves to locate the promoter regions, the acid phosphatase protein coding regions and, additionally, the restriction site(s) which may be useful in further processing, for example, for cutting off DNA sequences which are not neccessary for promoter function, with restriction endonucleases. ’
Dependinijon the choice of the restriction endonucleases, the DNA frag- ments coirtaining the acid phosphatase promoter may also include at the
Co 3" and 5' termini original flanking DNA sequences which do not affect the promoter function and may be used as connecting sequences in the sub- sequent cloning procedures. If desired, these additional sequences can be shortened by digestion with a restriction endonuclease (if possible) or with a suitable exonuclease, for example Bal3l. In addition, the fragments can be ligated to chemically synthesized
DNA linkers which preferably include the recognition sequence of an appropriate restriction endonuclease. This allows a convenient connec- tion of the acid phosphatase promoter with foreign polypeptide coding regions. It is also possible to isolate and/or construct a DNA fragment which contains the yeast acid phosphatase promoter and_ part or all of the adjacent signal sequence from the acid phosphatase protein coding region. When ligated to an appropriately cut foreign polypeptide coding region, the resulting hybrid DNA will be expressed in yeast to yield polypeptides with acid phosphotase signal sequences or fused signal sequences. oo . | - RES
The yeast acid phosphatase promoters according to the present inven- ’ 25 tion may be used to control the expression of a yeast or a non-yeast polypeptide coding region in a yeast hybrid vector. - 2. Hybrid vectors containing yeast acid phosphatase promoters and their preparation = ee
The present invention also relates to hybrid vectors comprising a yeast acid phosphatase promoter and a yeast or a non-yeast polypeptide coding region which is controlled by said promoter. [= LY
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The terms "vector", "hybrid vector", “DNA sequences’ etc. used in the present application relate in particular to double stranded DNAs. lowever, single stranded DNAs are also comprised. Vectors and hybrid vectors may be present in linear or, preferably, circular form.
A yeast acid phosphatase promoter is especially one of those described in chapter 1 and refers preferably to the regulated acid phosphatase promoter PHOS.
The yeast or non-yeast polypeptide coding region (gene) controlled by one of the above promoters may be derived from genomic DNA or from cDNA pre- pared via the mRNA route or may be synthesized chemically. The non-yeast polypeptide coding regions (genes) originate from viruses, prokaryotic cells or eukaryotic cells, including from higher eukaryétic cells, espe- cially from human cells. When expressed in the host yeast cell, these genes can provide for the productionof a wide variety of polypeptides including glycosylated polypeptides, such as enzymes which can be used, for example, for the production of nutrients and for performing enzy- matic reactions in chemistry, or non-enzymatic polypeptides, for example hormones, polypeptides with immunomodulatory, anti-viral and anti-cancer properties, antibodies, viral antigens, vaccines, clotting factors, foodstuffs and the like. For example, such genes code for amylases, proteases, lysozyme, viral thymidine kinase, rennin, Co
Bp-lactamase, glucose isomerase; secretin, thymosin, relaxin, Co - calcitonin, somatostatin, human ,»r bovine growth hormone, insulin, ’ luteinizing hormone, parathyroid hormone, adrenocorticotropin,
B-endorphin, melanocyte-stimulating hormone, B-lipotropin, urogastrone; interferon, such as human interferon, e.g. a human interferon-a or -B polypeptide derived from human leukocyte, lymphoblastoid or fibroblast cells, or human interferon-y; lymphokines, tumour necrose factor; anti-rennin antibody, hepatitis A virus antigen, hepatitis B virus (HBV) surface or core antigens, hepatitis non-A non-B virus antigen, human histocompatibility antigens, food and mouth disease virus antigen, influenza haemagglutinin, fowl pest virus haemag- : Ce TAT GW AY FAME SE DEER Tu A oh RTE TRL KITT TE ST et
£ et 26197 glutinin; serum albumin, ovalbumin, thaumatin, eglins or plasminogen activators.
A chosen polypeptide coding region may optionally include a signal sequence or a part thereof. As indicated above, this can give rise to a fused protein containing the PHO5 signal sequence or a hybrid signal sequence containing part of the PHOS signal sequence and part of the signal sequence of the foreign polypeptide together with the foreign mature polypeptide. In both instances, those combinations are Favoured which lead to the cleavage of the signal sequence upon maturation of the foreign polypeptide.
Apart from an acid phosphatase promoter and a yeast or a non-yeast poly- peptide coding region, the hybrid vectors according to the invention may contain additional DNA sequence(s) which are inessential or less im- portant for the function of the promoter, i.e. for the expression of the polypeptide coding region, but whichmay perform important functions, for example, in the propagation of the yeast cells transformed with said hybrid vectors. The additional DNA sequence(s) may be derived from prokaryotic and/or eukaryotic cells and may include chromosomal and/or extra~chromosomal DNA sequences. For example, the additional DNA - sequences may stem from (or consist of) plasmid DNA, such as bacterial or cukaryotic plasmid DNA, viral DNA and/or chromosomal DNA, such as bacterial, yeast or higher eukaryotic chromgsomal DNA. Preferred hybrid vectors contain additional DNA sequences derived from bacterial plasmids, especially Escherichia coli plasmid pBR322 or related : 25 plasmids, bacteriophage As yeast 2p plasmid, and/or yeast chromosomal
DNA.
Preferably, the additional DNA sequences carry a yeast replication origin and a selective genetic marker for yeast. Hybrid vectors con- taining a yeast replication origin, e.g. the chromosomal autonomously replicating segment (ars), are extrachromosomally maintained within the yeast cell after transformation and are autonomously replicated upon }
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Ya mitosis. Hybrid vectors containing sequences homologous to yeast 2p plasmid DNA can be used as well. These hybrid vectors will get integrated by recombination into 2p plasmids already present within the cell or will replicate autonomously. 2p sequences are especially suitable for high-frequency transformation plasmids and can give rise to high copy numbers.
In addition, the hybrid vectors according to the invention may include a DNA sequence of a gene present in the host yeast chromosome (e.g.
Hos), the promoter of which may be linked to the yeast or non-yeast polypeptide coding region. By virtue of the homologous sequence the whole vector can be stably introduced into the host chromosome by recombination. Thus, during propagation the progeny cells will retain the introduced genetic material even without selective pressure.
As to the selective gene marker for yeast, any marker gene can be used which facilitates the selection for transformants due to the pheno~ typic expression of the marker. Suitable markers for yeast are - particularly those expressing antibiotic resistance or, in the case of auxotrophic yeast mutants, genes which complement host lesions.
Corresponding genes confer, for example, resistance to the antibiotic cycloheximide or provide for prototrophy in an auxotrophic yeast mutant, for example the URA3, LFY2, HIS3 or TRP]l gene. It is also possible to employ as markers structural genes which are associated : with an autonomously replicating segment providing that the host to : be transformed is auxotrophic for the product expressed by the marker.
Advantageously, the additional DNA sequences which are present in the hybrid vectors according to the invention may also include a replica- tion origin and a selective genetic marker for a bacterial host, especially
Escherichia coli. There are useful features which are associated with the presence of an E. coli replication origin and an E. coli marker a EAE SPEIER 2S LY in a yeast hybrid vector: Firstly, large amounts of hybrid vector
DNA can be obtained by growth and amplification in E. coli and, secondly, the construction of hybrid vectors is conveniently done in
E. coli making use of the whole repertoire of cloning technology based on E, coli. E. coli plasmids, such as pBR322 and the like, con- tainboth E.coli replication origin and E.coli genetic markers confer- ring resistance to antibiotics, for example tetracycline and ampicillin, and are advantageously employed as part of the yeast hybrid vectors.
The additional DNA sequences which contain, for example, replication : origin and genetic markers for yeast and a bacterial host (see above) are hereinafter referred to as "vector DNA" which together with the acid phosphatase promoter and the yeast or non-yeast polypeptide coding region is forming a hybrid vector according to the invention.
The hybrid vectors can be prepared by methods known in the art, for example by introducing into a vector DNA a yeast acid phosphatase promoter and a yeast or a non-yeast polypeptide coding region which is controlled by said promoter.
Conveniently mapped linear or, preferably, circular vector DNA, for example bacterial plasmid DNA or the like (see above), having at least one restriction site, preférably two or more restriction sites, : can be employed. Advantageously, the vector DNA already contains replication origins and gene markers for yeast and/or a bacterial host. : The vector DNA is cleaved using an appropriate restriction endonuclease.
The restricted DNA is ligated to the DNA fragment containing the acid phosphatase promoter and to the DNA segment coding for a yeast or non- yeast polypeptide. Prior to or after linking of the promoter and the polypeptide coding region (or simultaneously as well), it is also possible to introduce replication origins and/or markers for yeast or a bacterial host. At all events, the restriction and annealing conditions are to be chosen in such a manner that there is no interference with w- 26197 . Py the essential functions of the vector DNA and of the promoter. The hybrid vector may be built up scquentially or by ligating two DNA segments comprising all sequences of interest.
Various techniques may be used to join DNA segments in vitro.
Blunt ends (fully base-paired DNA duplexes) produced by certain restriction endonucleases may be directly ligated with T4 DNA ligase.
More usually, DNA segments are linked through their single-stranded cohesive ends and covalently closed by a DNA ligase, e.g. T4 DNA ligase. Such single-stranded "cohesive termini" may be formed by cleav- ing DNA with another class of endonucleases which produce staggered ends (the two strands of the DNA duplex are cleaved at different points at a distance of a few nucleotides). Single strands can also be formed by the addition of nucleotides to blunt ends or staggered : ends using terminal transferase ('"homopolymeric tailing") or by simply chewing back one strand of a blunt-ended DNA segment with a suitable exonuclease, such as A -exonuclease. A further approach to the pro- duction of staggered ends consists in ligating to the blunt-ended DNA segment a chemically synthesized linker DNA which contains a recogni- tion site for a staggered-end forming endonuclease and digesting the resulting DNA with the respective endonuclease.
In order to be efficiently expressed, the gene aoding fot ‘a’yeast or a non-yeast protein must be properly located with respect to sequences oo containing transcriptional (acid phosphatase promoter) and transla-. - : tional functions (ribosome binding sites). Firstly, the ligation of the
DNA segment comprising the promoter with the polypeptide coding region has to be achieved in the proper orientation. If two orientations are possible the correct one can be determined by conventional restriction analysis. Hybrid vectors containing an incorrectly oriented gene insert can be re-oriented by excising the gene insert with a suitable restriction endonuclease and re-ligating the gene with the hybrid vector fragment. In any case improper orientation can be avoided by ligating two DNA segments éach with different restriction sites at their ends. Furthermore, the construction of the hybrid vector should be done in such a way that it allows correct transcription initiation and termination. As to the latter point, the transcript should preferably end in a DNA sequence derived from yeast chromosomal
DNA or yeast 2p plasmid. Advantageously, the transcript ends in a
DNA sequence containing transcription termination signals of a yeast gene, e.g. of PHOS or PHO3. Secondly, a proper reading frame must be established. Ordinarily, the nucleotide sequence of both pro- moter region and polypeptide coding region is known prior to ligation : or can easily be determined (e.g. (15)) so that there are no problems in establishing the correct reading frame. In addition, specific second- ary DNA structures might be needed for even more efficient expression of the gene.
A preferred region for joining the acid phosphatase promoter to a foreign coding sequence is between the major acid phosphatase mRNA start and the ATG of the acid phosphatase coding region, for example, when using the PIIOS5 promoter, within a stretch of about 40 bp between the major PHOS mRNA start and the ATG of the PHO5 acid phos- phatase coding region. For a junction in this region the foreign coding sequence should have its own ‘ATG for transPation initiation or else it has to be provided by an additional synthetic oligonucleo- tide. ‘
Since many polypeptides of higher organisms are primarily expressed as pre-polypeptides consisting of signal peptides attached to the
N-termini of the mature polypeptides, it may be useful to include a signal sequence in the gene insert. Suitable signal sequences are those naturally linked to the polypeptide gene to be expressed or to the acid phosphatase promoter. Alternatively, fused signal sequences may be constructed by ligating part of the acid phosphatase signal sequence with part of the polypeptide signal sequence. If the
-16-~ or 26197 , direct expression of a mature polypeptide is desired, signal sequences or parts thereof optionally following the promoter region or optionally preceding the mature polypeptide coding region have to be eliminated, for example by digestion with an exonuclease, e.g. with Bal3l.
Intermediate products, such as vectors still lacking one or more essential functions, as well as the final hybrid vectors according to the invention may be transformed into a bacterial host, especially
E. coli, for the above reasons (e.g. production of large amounts of intermediate products and hybrid plasmids, respectively). Bacterial vectors, such as the E. coli plasmid pBR322 and those fragments : thereof which contain a bacterial replication origin and gene marker (s) are the most preferred vectors for that reason. When using such a : bacterial vector, the final steps for the preparation of the yeast hybrid vectors preferably also include the introduction of a genetic marker and a replication origin for yeast.
DNA segments, which may be inserted into the bacterial vector in order to produce the hybrid vectors according to the invention, such as an autonomously replicating segment (ars, cf. (4)), sequences of : yeast 2p plasmid (2) or yeast marker DNA (cf. 16), can be isolated from yeast chromosomal DNA and yeast 2p plasmid DNA, respectively, in a conventional manner. The gene .coding fora yeast or a nop-yeast Co oo polypeptide may be isolated from chromosomal or extrachromosomal DNA, oC } derived from cDNA prepared via the mRNA route (see above) using con- ventional techniques (e.g. 17, 18) or may be synthesized chemically.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the method for the : preparation of the hybrid vectors comprises the steps of (1) constructing a yeast gene library using wild-type yeast DNA, (2) isolating the acid phosphatase gene, especially the PHOS gene, and cloning it into a bacterial plasmid, such as pBR322, or a biologically functional, in particular an intact replication origin and selection marker containing fragment thereof,
: -17 - ~ 26197 .- (3) inserting into said plasmid a genetic marker for yeast, cuch as the TRP1 gene, and a yeast: replicationorigin, such as a chromosomai autonomous ly replicating segment or alternatively yeast 2p plasmid sequences into an appropriate restriction site, (4) inserting a DNA segment coding for a yeast or a non-yeast poly- peptide, such as human interferon or HBV surface antigen, in such a manner that the acid phosphatase promoter controls said poly- peptide coding segment, and (5) optionally inserting a DNA sequence containing transcription termination signals of a yeast gene, e.g. of PHOS, downstream from the polypeptide coding region.
It is likewise possible to alter the order of steps, such as steps 3 to 5, for example, by first introducing the polypeptide coding segment and subsequently inserting the genetic marker and the replication origin for yeast into the recombinant plasmid obtained as a product of step 2,
Prior to inserting a gene marker for yeast, a yeast replication origin and a polypeptide coding segment, inessential functions, such asthe acid phosphatase Structural gene, may optionally be excised from the recombinant plasmid obtained in step 2,
Especially, the DNA segment coding for a yeast or non-yeast poly~ peptide is joined to the acid phosphatase promoter (step 4) in the region between the major acid phosphatase mRNA start and the ATG of the acid phosphatase coding region. Optionally, a synthetic linker containing an appropriate restriction site is introduced to allow a junction between said DNA segment and the acid phosphatase promoter,
Intermediate hybrid vectors comprising the yeast acid phosphatase promoter and still lacking the yeast or non-yeast polypeptide coding sequence are also an object of the present invention and can be
Prepared by the above successive steps (1), (2), (3) and optionally (5), wherein the acid phosphatase promoter is preferably terminated in the region between the major acid phosphatase mRNA start and the ATG of
-e- 26197 the acid phosphatase gene and/or, optionally, a synthetic linker con- taining -an appropriate restriction site is introduced to allow the insertion of a DNA segment coding for a yeast or non-yeast polypeptide. 3. Transformation of yeast with hybrid vectors containing yeast acid phosphatase promoters
Another aspect of the present invention involves a process for the production of transformed yeast cells capable of producing yeast or non- yeast polypeptides, which processcomprises transforming yeast with any of the hybrid vectors described in chapter 2.
Useful yeasts include species of the genera Saccharomyces, Schizo- saccharomyces, Torulopsis and related genera (cf. (19)), especially strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
The transformation of yeast with the hybrid vectors may be accomplished by procedures known from the literature, e.g. according to the method described by Hinnen et al (1). This method can be divided into three steps: (1) Removal of the yeast cell wall. - (2) Treatment of the "naked" yeast cells (spheroplasts) with the. transforming DNA in the presence of PEG (polyethyleneglycol) and cat ions. (3) Regeneration of the cell wall and selection of.the transformed : cells in a solid layer of agar. oo Co
Preferred methods: ad (1): The yeast cell wall is removed enzymatically using various preparations of glucosidases, such as snail gut juices (e.g.
Glusulase®d or Helicase) or enzyme mixtures obtained from micro- organisms (e.g. Zymolyase ®y in osmotically stabilized solutions (e.g. 1 M sorbitol).
- 19 - | : 2619 . vo ) ad (2): The yeast spheroplasts aggregate in the presence of PEG and local fusions of the cytoplasmic membranes are induced. The generation of "fusion-like'" conditions is crucial and many transformed yeast cells will become diploid or even triploid during the process of trans- formation. Procedures which allow selection of fused spheroplasts can be used to enrich for transformants, i.e. transformed cells can easily be screened for among preselected fusion products.
P ad (3): Since yeast cells without cell wall do not divide the cell wall has : to be regenerated. This regeneration is conveniently done by embedding the spheroplasts into agar. For example,molten agar (about 50°C) is mixed with the spheroplasts. Upon cooling the solution to yeast growth temperatures (about 30°C), a solid layer is obtained. This agar layer is to prevent rapid diffusion and loss of essential macromolecules from the spheroplasts and thereby facilitates regeneration of the cell wall. lowever, cell wall regeneration may also be obtained (although at lower efficiencies) by plating the spheroplasts onto the surface of preformed agar layers. )
Preferably, the regeneration agar is prepared in a way to allow : regeneration and selection of transformed cells at the same time.
Since yeast genes coding [dr enzymes of amino acid biosynthetic path- ways are generally used as selective markers (cf, chapter 2), the. regeneration is preferably performed in yeast minimal oo co _ medium agar. However, if very high efficiencies of regeneration are required a two step procedure might be advantageous: (1) regeneration of the cell wall in a rich complex medium, and (2) selection of the transformed cells by replica plating the cell layer onto selective agar plates. . mr mee aL RE EEE
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If the hybrid vector does not contain any marker gene the transformed cells can also be identified by means of alternative methods. Such methods include, for example, in situ hybridization with a labeled
DNA fragment homologous to sequences of the hybrid vector (e.g. accord- ing to Hinnen et al. (1)), in situ immunoassays provided that the antibody of the product of the introduced gene is available, or other screening methods which measure gene products encoded by the trans- forming plasmid(s). . Alternatively, the yeast can be co-transformed with a hybrid vector according to the invention and n,second vector containing a genetic marker for yeast. If the two different vectors have DNA sequences in common (these can be bacterial sequences present on the vectors), recombination can take place leading to a fused selectable hybrid molecule.
The invention also relates to yeast hosts transformed with hybrid vectors containing a yeast acid phosphatase promoter and a yeast or a non-yeast polypeptide coding region. . 4. Cultivation of transformed yeast cells and induction of poly- . peptide synthesis
To a varying extent, yeast cells transformed with autonomously repli- cating plasmids, for example, plasmids containing yeast 2p plasmid
DNA, tend to lose the introduced hybrid plasmid (cf. (16)). :
For this reason, such yeast cells have to be grown under selective conditions, i.e. conditions which require the expression of a plasmid- encoded gene for growth. Most selective markers currently in use are genes coding for enzymes of amino acid or purine biosynthesis. This makes it necessary to use synthetic minimal media deficient in the corresponding amino acid or purine base. However, some genes conferring antibiotic resistance may be used as well (e.g. genes conferring resistance to cycloheximide or to the amino-glycoside G 418 (21)). Yeast cells transformed with vectors containing antibiotic resistance genes may t ( . 0 » . i . be grown in complex media containing the corresponding antibiotic whereby faster growth rates and higher cell densities can be reached.
Yeast cells transformed with DNA integrating into the chromosomes do . not require selective growth conditions. These transformed cells are sufficiently stable to allow growth without selective pressure. For the above reason, these cells are advantageously grown in complex media.
Yeast cells containing hybrid plasmids with a constitutive acid phos- phatase promoter (e.g. P03) express the yeast or non-yeast protein gene attached to said promoter without induction. However, if the yeast or non-yeast protein gene is under the control of the regulated acid phosphatase promoter PIO5, the composition of the growth medium has to be adapted in order to obtain maximum levels of mRNA transcripts, i.e. the growth medium must contain low concentration of inorganic phosphate for derepression of the PHO5 promoter. 5. Isolation and purification of the expressed polypeptide
P p polypep
The invention also concerns a method for producing a yeast or a non- yeast polypeptide, such as human interferon or HBV surface antigen, comprising the steps of (1) culturing a yeast strain transformed with a hybrid vector 'con=.’ taining a yeast acid phosphatase promoter and a yeast or a non-yeast oe polypeptide coding region under appropriate nutrient conditions, and (2) isolating and purifying said polypeptide.
The transformed yeast strains according to the present invention are cultured in a liquid medium containing assimilable sources of carbon and nitrogen and inorganic salts.
Cresta Cr ad ahead! ep RAR
CR ESR, SR
.
Various carbon sources can be used. Examples of preferred carbon sources are assimilable carbohydrates, such as glucose, maltuse, mannitol or lactose, or an acetate, which can be used cither alone or in suitable mixtures. Suitable nitrogen sources include, for example, amino acids, such as casamino acids, peptides and proteins and their degradation products, such as tryptone, peptone or meat extracts, furthermore yeast extract, malt extract, corn steep ‘ liquor, as well as ammonium salts, such as ammonium chloride, sulphate or nitrate, which can be used either alone or in suitable mixtures. Inorganic salts which may be used include, for example sulphates, chlorides, phosphates and carbonates of sodium, potassium, magnesium and calcium.
Additionally, the nutrient medium may also contain growth promoting substances and/or substances exerting a selection pressure in order to prevent the loss of the hybrid plasmid. Substances which promote growth include, for example, trace elements, such as iron, zinc, manganese and the like, or individual amino acids. .
If the hybrid plasmid contains a gene conferring resistance to an antibiotic substance, cells containing such a hybrid plasmid will
Co 20 survive in a medium supplemented with the antibiotic substance whereas cells which have lost said hybrid plashid as weld as contaminating | i antibiotic-sensitive microorganisms will not. If the hybrid ‘plasmid } contains a gene providing for prototrophy in an auxotrophic yeast mutant, e.g. the LEU2 or HIS] gene, a selection pressure can be exerted by omitting the gene product, such as leucine or histidine, in the nutrient medium.
Lf the cultured yeast strain has been transformed with a hybrid plasmid containing the regulated acid phosphatase promoter PHO5, the content of inorganic phosphate must be reduced in the nutrient medium after the pre-culture phase in order to ensure maximum levels of mRNA transcripts and, consequently, maximum yields of polypeptides.
The cultivation is carried out employing conventional techniques. : The culturing conditions, such as temperature, pH of the medium and fermentation time are selected in such a way that maximal levels of polypeptides are produced. A chosen yeast strain is preferably grown under aerobic conditions in submerged culture with shaking or stirring at a temperature of about 25° to 35°C, preferably at about 30°C, at a pH value of from 4 to 8, for example at approximately pit 7, and for about 4 to 20 hours, preferably until maximum yields of polypeptides are reached,
After the transformed yeast cells have been grown to a satisfactbry cell density, the first step for the recovery of the expressed poly- peptide consists in liberating the polypeptide from the cell interior.
In most procedures the cell wall is first removed by enzymatic diges- tion with glucosidases (cf. section 3). Subsequently, the resulting : spheroplasts are treated with detergents, such as Triton. Alterna- ’
tively, mechanical forces, such as shearing forces (for example
X-press, French press) or shaking with glass beads, may be used to break cells. The resulting polypeptide mixture can be enriched for the desired polypeptide by conventional means, such as precipitation with ammonium sulphate or trichloroacetic acid, gel electrophoresis, dialysis, chromatography, for example, ion exchange chromatography, size-exclusion chromatography, HPLC or reverse phase HPLC, and the like.
The final purification of the pre-purified product can be achieved, for example, by means of antibody affinity chromatography. In principle, the purification steps (except the lysis of the cells) can be accom- plished according to the method of Staehelin et al. (22) developed for the purification of human leukocyte interferon.
For example, the isolation and purification of the desired polypeptide - can be performed using the following steps: (1) lysis of the yeast cells with glucosidase, (2) treatment with a detergent, . (3) removal of most of the non-proteinaceous material by treatment with polyethyleneimine, (4) precipitation of the polypeptides by saturating the solution with ammonium sulphate, La fa (5) dialysis in an appropriate buffer mixture, ’ oo Co oo . (6) column chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, (7) affinity chromatography on a monoclonal antibody column, and (8) molecular sizing on a suitable sephadex O- column.
In order to obtain a sufficiently pure product additional purification steps may turn out to be necessary, e.g. cation or anion exchange chromatography, adsorption on hydroxylapatite,reverse phase HPLC etc.
On the other hand, one or more of the above steps may be omitted if possible, or the order of steps may be altered.
In the case where the desired polypeptide is secreted by the yeast cell into the periplasmatic space, a simplified protocol can be used:
The polypeptide may be recovered without cell lysis by enzymatic re~ moval of the cell wall or by treatment with chemical agents, €.g- thiol reagents OL EDTA, which give rise to cell wall damages permitting the polypeptide to be relcased. In the case where the poly~ peptide is secreted into the culture broth, it can be recovered directly therefrom. ’
The polypeptides obtainable according to the present invention are useful and valuable in the treatment of human and animal diseases OT in preventing them (e.g. interferon, HBV surface antigen, etc.) or can be used as foodstuffs, feed, feed additives or in enzymatic reactions (see 2 above). It is to be understood that the production of naturally occurring derivatives of said polypeptides, such as proteolytically cleaved polypeptides and/or glycosylated polypeptides, is also com~ prised by the present invention. ’
The invention concerns furthermore polypeptides and naturally oceurring derivatives thereof, whenever prepared according to the methods of the present invention. 90 The invention concerns also the new polypeptides per se obtainable according to the jnventive process. ! | . ceo
The invention concerns especially the DNA fragments, the hybrid vectors, the transformed yeast, the polypeptides and the processes for their preparation as described in the Examples.
Cv en EE REAR (YOR
~- 26 ~ =» 26197
Brief description of the drawings
In the following experimental part various embodiments of the present invention are described with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
Figure 1 is a partial restriction endonuclease map of che plasmids pJDB207/PHO5, PHO3 and pBR322-PHO5Bam—-Sal used as sources of the PHOS gene or for DNA sequencing, respectively. :
Figure 2 shows the localization of the PHOS and the PHO3 acid phospha- tase genes within a 5.1 Kb BamHI fragment isolated from a yeast gene library.
Figures 3a and 3b provide the DNA sequences of the promoter region of
PHOS5 and PHO3, respectively.
Figure 4 is a schematic diagram showing the construction of the plasmids p30IFN2(8)) and P3OLFN2'(8)). :
Figure 5 illustrates the ligation of the PHOS promoter DNA with the.
IFN-8] cDNA in the construction of plasmid p3OIFN1(8,).
Figure 6 schematically illustrates the tonstruction. of plasmid = , : pJDB207/LFN2' (8). BE co . ’ Figure 7 is a schematic outline of the construction of recombinant
DNA molecules containing MNamalwa ¢cDNA.
Figure 8 schematically illustrates the techniques used to synthesize the IFN mRNA specific 13mer DNA primer.
Figure 9 is a schematic diagram showing the identification of clones containing human lymphoblastoid IFN cDNA.
*
Figure 10 to 14 provide the DNA and corresponding amino acid sequences of the cDNA inserts of the plasmids CG-pBR322 HLycIFN-1'b, “B,> “41 -8; and 5,
Figure 15 depicts the construction of the plasmid CG-pBR(AP)/LyIFN-a-1 and figure 16 shows the DNA and the amino acid sequences of its cDNA insert,
Figure 17 depicts the construction of the plasmid CG-pBR(AP) /LyIFN-a~3 and figure 18 shows the DNA and the amino acid sequences of its cDNA insert.
Figure 19 shows the DNA and the amino acid sequences of the cDNA insert of the plasmid CG-pBR(AP) /LyIFN-a-2.
Figure 20 is a schematic outline of the construction of plasmid p31 containing a PHOS termination fragment.
Figure 21 shows the nucleotide sequence of the Sau3A-Pstl PHOS transcription termination fragment.
Figure 22 is a schematic outline of the construction of plasmids . P3IFL(S)), p3LAF2(5)), p3L/IF(S)) and p3L/IF2(1'D). SE
Figure 23 is a schematic diagram showing the construction of the : . plasmid p31/IF(8]).
Figure 24 schematically illustrates the construction of a correct
PIOS-HBVs junction in plasmid pBR322/PHOS5/HBVsAl4.
Figure 25 shows the DNA sequence in the vicinity of the PHO5 promoter and HBVs coding region fusion point in plasmid pBR322/PHO5/HBVs.
Figure 26 is a schematic diagram showing the construction of the yeast expression plasmids pJDB207,/PHO5/1BVsAl4 and pJDB207/PHOS/1BVsAl4t.
= 96197
Figure 27 is a schematic diagram showing the construction of the yeast expression plasmids pJDB207/1F2(1'b)A and pJDB207/1F2(5,)A72.
Figure 28 displays the nucleotide sequences of plasmids pJDB207/1F2(5,) £72 and pJDB207/1F2(5,)A82 around the XhoI junction between the 3' nontranslated region of IFN-5, and the PHO5 transcription termination region.
Figure 29 is a schematic diagram showing the construction of plasmid
CG-pBR322/HLycIFN (a-3)-252.
Figure 30 shows the structures of plasmids CG-pBR322/HLycIFN(a-2)-261 and CG-pBR322/HLycIFN(a-1)-258.
Figure 31 displays a schematic outline of the process for deleting the PHO5 signal sequence in expression plasmid p31 and specifically shows the construction of plasmid p31l/R.
Figure 32 schematically shows the collection of clones obtained in the process outlined in fig. 31. .
Figures 33 and 34 display the nucleotide sequences of the BamHI-EcoRI restriction fragments containing the ,PHO5/R and PHO5/Y promoter : : mt >. : . . a regions. - oo :
Figures 35 to 37 schematically display the process of inserting
IFN-a-3, -a-2 and -a-1 DNA into plasmid p31l/R.
Figure 38 is a schematic diagram showing the construction of plasmid pJDB207R/IF (a-3) ,
The following Examples serve to illustrate the present invention but should not be construed as a l1initation thereof. a Ce 1 at mT ARAB PF AT oP EPKEAREQRY TS PF ch La MMs Tm ey
’ 29 - 26197
Experimental part to
The following abbreviations are used in the Examples:
EtBr: ethidium bromide
BSA: bovine serum albumin :
DIT: 1,4-dithiothreitol (1,4-dimercapto-2,3-butanediol)
EDTA: ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid
SDS: sodium dodecyl sulphate
TNE: solution containing 100 mM NaCl, 10 mM Tris HCl (pH 7.5), and 1 mM EDTA.
TriseliCl:: tris- (hydroxymethyl) -aminomethane, pH adjusted with HCl
PMSF: : phenylme thanesulphonylfluoride
TE: " golution containing 10 mM Tris<HCl (pil 7.5) and 1 mM EDTA
Example 1: Construction of a yeast gene library :
Thirty pg of total high molecular weight yeast DNA (23) from wild type Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain §288C is incubated for 30 min at 37°C with 2 units of EcoRI methylase (New England Biolabs) in 250 pl of EcoRI methylation buffer as recommended by the supplier.
DNA is precipitated by ethanol, resuspended in 500 pl of 25 mM
TrissHCl pH 8.5, 2 mM MgCl, (EcoRL* huffer) (24) and digested: with
EcoRI (Boehringer) until the size distribution of the DNA frag™ = . ments has a maximum in the 30-50 kb range (a Xhol digest of A DNA provides appropriate 33 kb and 17 kb markers). The yeast DNA di- gested under EcoRL* conditions is size-fractionated on a sucrose gradient (5-207 sucrose in 10 mM Tris-HCl ptt 7.5, 1 mM EDTA) for 6 hrs at 38'000 rpm in a SW 40 rotor. Thirty fractions of 0.4 ml each are collected from the top of the gradient. Fraction 16 con- : tains DNA fragments of 30-40 kb in size. The DNA of this fraction (3 pg) is precipitated with ethanol and ligated for 16 hours at «aa hy AY EA FEA TAR TT -
- 30 - ° 26197 15°C in a total volume of 15 pl to 1 ug of cosmid vector pYecl (25), linearized by EcoRI. Ligation is carried out with 300 U T4
DNA ligase (New England Biolabs) using the buffer system described by the supplier. The DNA is packaged in vitro into bacteriophage A (26) and the assembled phages are used to transduce E. coli strain
HnBplo1 (r,, m., leu, pro , recA). The efficiency of transduction is about 5000 ampicillin-resistant colonies per ug of pYcl vector. 3000 ampR colonies are picked and grown individually in the wells of microtiter dishes in LB medium [10 g Bacto-Tryptone (Difco), 5 g Bacto Yeast Extract (Difco), 10 g NaCl] containing 100 4g ml ampicillin.
Example 2: Isolation of the regulated acid phosphatase gene PHOS
Replicas of the gene library are grown on LB agar plates (LB medium plus 15 g/1 agar) containing 100 pg/ml ampicillin. The cell material from 500 colonies is washed off the plates and pooled. DNA is isol- ated from individual pools using the following protocol: .
The cells are harvested by centrifugation (Sorvall, GSA rotor, 10 min at 6000 rpm, 4°C), resuspended in 100 ml TE (10 mM Tris.HCl, . 1 mM EDTA, pH 8.0) and centrifuged again under the above conditjons.
The cell pellet is resuspended in 3 ml Tsuc [50 mM Tris+HC1, pH 7.5, : 257 (w/v) sucrose] and transferred to SS-34 polypropylene Sorvall . tubes. All subsequent steps are carried out on ice: 0.3 ml of lyso- zyme solution (10 mg/ml, purchased from Worthington, 11'000 U/mg) is added, after 5 min 1.2 ml EDTA (500 mM, pll 8.0), and after another 5 min 4.8 ml detergent [0.12 Triton X-100 (Merck), 50 mM EDTA, 50 mM Tris<HCl, pH 8.0] are added. After 5 min the lysate is centri- fuged in a precooled SS-34 rotor for 40 min at 4°C. The supernatant is carcfully removed and solid CsCl is added (8.3 g CsCl to 8.7 ml of supernatant). After the addition of ethidium bromide (Sigma)
~~ 3a 26197 (final concentration 1 mg/ml supernatant) the solution is trans- ferred to 13.5 ml Quick Seal polyallomer tubes (Beckman) and centrifuged in a Beckman Ti50 rotor for 40 hrs at 40'000 rpm. Two fluorescent bands can be visualized with long wave UV (366 nm). The lower band contains supercoiled plasmid DNA which is collected by puncturing the tube from the side with a 2 ml syringe (18G needle).
The ethidium bromide is removed by extracting 5 times with equal volumes of isopropanol (saturated with CsCl) and the product is transferred to 30 ml Corex tubes. 2.5 volumes of TE is added and the DNA is precipitated with ethanol. The solution is then kept for 12-15 hrs at -20°C. The precipitated DNA is collected by centrif- ugation in a Sorvall HB-4 rotor for 30 min at 12'000 rpm at 0°C and redissolved in 200 pl of TE. 50-100 pg of hybrid plasmid DNA are recovered from a 100 ml culture. . plasmid DNA from these pools is used to transform §S. cerevisiae strain
A216 (a, his3, leud, pho3, pho5) according to the procedure described by Hinnen et al. ( 1 ). Yeast transformants are replica- plated on low P,-minimal medium [as "Difco yeast minimal medium with- out amino acids' supplemented with 20 g~1 glucose, but prepared from the components according to the recipe of Difco (Difco Manual,
Difco Laboratories, Detroit, USA) except that 0.03 g/l KH, PO, plus 1 g/l KCl is used instead of 1 g/l KH,PO,] and gtained for acid phos- phatase activity by overlayering them with staining agar [17 Difco : agar in 100 mM acetate buffer pH 4.0, 2 mg/ml Fast Blue B Salt (Serva) and 0.2 mg/ml a-naphthyl phosphate (Serva)]. Colonies with a functional PHOS gene stain red upon derepression of the gene on low P,-medium. By repeated subpooling (17) of the gene library 3 independent clones exhibiting repressible acid phosphatase activity are obtained.
One of these clones (pG7) is further analysed. The hybrid plasmid has a size of 42 kb. EcoRI and Bamlll fragments of pG7 are subcloned ] en ve ie WEEE WE Karle RY IE J yeh GLEN 3 WON 1 A II WE Tati
-32- ° ’ 26197 in pBR322/HIS3 (16) and pJDB207 (28 ) respectively. Restriction digests are as reccommended by the supplier (New England Biolabs) and ligations are performed in 20 ul with 150 U T4 DNA ligase (New
England Biolabs) and 20 ug/ml of the individual digested plasmids (conditions as suggested by New England Biolabs). A 5.1 kb BamHI frag- ment which is part of a 8 kb EcoRI fragment is subcloned in yeast vector pJDB207 and, upon transformation of yeast strain AH216, this hybrid plasmid (pJDB207/PHOS,PHO3, -see fig. 1) elicites high phosphatase activity under derepressed (low P.-) conditions (PHOS gene) and low levels of activity in normal yeast minimal medium (expression of the PHQ3 gene).
Example 3: Localisation of the PHOS and PHOJ genes and DNA sequence analysis a. The PHOS gene
For the localisation of PUO3 and PHOS within the BamHI fragment advan- tage is taken of the pattern of Sau3A restriction sites and a unique PstI site. Digestion of the BamHI fragment with restriction } endonuclease Sau3A (New England Biolabs) gencrates 6 fragments (A-F, fig. 2). Subcloning of a partial Sau3A digest into the BamHI site of self-replicating yeast vector pJDB207 leads to plasmids with different combinations of Sau3A fragments. These plasmids are then used to transform the pho3, phoS mutantiyeast S. cerevisiae AH216. Trans- formants are checked for acid phosphatase activity after growth on either nu low P, or normal minimal medium plates. Clones containing at least Sau3A fragments A and B (fig. 2, No. 1-4) express acid phosphatase at the same level (qualitative estimates after overlayering with acid phos- phatase staining agar, as described in Example 2) as the entire5.1kb
BamllI fragment. Expression is regulated normally by the concentra= tion of inorganic phosphate in the medium. Clones with Sau3A-fragment
A only (fig. 2, No.5, 6) express low levels of acid phosphatase, which is not influenced by the inorganic phosphate concentration in the medium. This indicates that information carried by the Sau3A fragment A is sufficient for constitutive acid phosphatase (PHO3)
expression. Sau3A fragment B (fig. 2, No. 7) alone does not lead to any expression of acid phosphatase under cither repressed or de- repressed conditions. However, a subclone with the complete se- quence between the BamHI and Pstl sites (fig. 2, No. 10) shows regu- lated, but not constitutive synthesis of acid phosphatase. This subclone must therefore contain the yeast POS gene (16) .
The exact localisation of the PHO5 gene is determined by DNA sequenc— ing using the method of Maxam and Gilbert (15). A 623bp BamHI-Sall restriction fragment is cloned into plasmid pBR322 (see fig. 1), replacing the BamHI-Sall fragment which extends from position 375
Co to 650 (pBR322 nomenclature), using digestion and ligation conditions as described above (all enzymes are from New England Biolabs). DNA fragments of the BamlI-Sall DNA insert are asymmetrically labelled at their 5' ends at the following sites: BamHI (~ 541), Sau3A (-200) and Sall (+82), (for numbering see fig. 3a). The nucleotide sequence of the 623bp BamHI-Sall DNA insert is jlepicted in fig. 3a. It reveals that the insert contains the PHO5 promoter region and part of the PHO3 phosphatase protein coding region. - b. The PHO3 gene : 20 The exact localisation of the PHO3 gene is determined by DNA sequence analysis according to the manual "M13 cloning and DNA sequencing. system" published by New England Biolabs. A 416 bp (5')PstI-Rsal(3') fragment is subcloned in vectors M13mp8 and M13mp9 (49), using unique
PstI and Smal restriction sites. The nucleotide sequence of the 416 bp PstI-Rsal DNA insert is shown in fig. 3b. It reveals that the insert contains the PHO3 promoter region and part of the PHO3 acid phosphatase protein coding sequence. et eee mame tid ro GEA ET FR 0 RANE TRIP er rn
- 34 - 2 6 1 9 7
Example 4: Construction of plasmid p30 (see fig. 4) a) Elimination of the Ball restriction site in plasmid pBR322
The scheme outlined in fig. 4 requires elimination of the unique Ball restriction site in plasmid pBR322. 3 pe of pBR322 are digested to completion with restriction endonucleases Ball (BRL) and Pvull (Bio- labs) according to the recommendations of the suppliers. The Ball/
Pvull double digest of pBR322 results in two restriction fragments of 3738 bp and 622 bp in size, The two fragments are separated on a 12 low melting agarose gel (Sigma) in TBE (90 mM Tris+HC1l pH 8.3, 2.5 mM EDTA, 90 mM boric acid) buffer. The DNA bands are stained : with ethidiumbromide and visualized under long wave UV light at 366 nm. The piece of agarose containing the 3738 bp fragment is cut out from the gel, liquified at 65°C, adjusted to 500 mM NaCl and incubated at 65°C for 20 min. One volume of phenol (equilibrated with 10 mM Tris<HCLl pH 7.5, 1 mM EDTA, 500 mM NaCl) is added. The aqueous phase is reextracted twice with phenol and once with chloroform. The DNA is precipitated with 2.5 volumes of cold absolute ethanol and collected by centrifugation. The DNA pellet is washed with cold 802 ethanol and then dried in vacuum. The DNA is resuspend- ed in TE at a concentration of 0.15 mg/ml.
The isolated 3738 bp DNA fragment has: two blunt ends resulting from the Ball and Pvull double digests. The DNA is circularized by blunt - end ligation. 0.6 ug of DNA are incubated over night at room tem- ’ perature in 30 ul of 60 mM Tris+HC1l pH 7.5, 10 mM MgCl,, 10 mM DTT, 4 mM ATP, and 900 U of T4 DNA ligase (Biolabs). 5 pl aliquots of the ligation mixture are added to 50 pl of calcium treated, transforma- tion competent E. coli HB10Ol cells, prepared by the method of Mandel et al. (29). The mixture is kept on ice for 5 min, then incubated for 2 min at 37°C and left 10 min at room temperature before plating on LB agar plates containing 100 ug/ml of ampicillin. Six amp® colonies are picked and grown individually in 100 ml of LB (as above but with- out agar) medium containing 100 pg/ml ampicillin. Plasmid DNA is .
Cn ase een ht pelea BL SEA YR a TALS a ry aw SVR gb EME TANITA TT SO BRR gy ge TL a a prepared from the cells using the procedure described in Example 2.
Restriction digests with Haelll (purchased from Biolabs, digestion conditions as suggested by supplier), Pvull and Ball of the plasmids are analyzed on a 1.5% agarosc gel in TBE buffer. The restriction pattern and the predicted size of the newly formed junction frag- ment indicates that the plasmids are identical and contain all of the pBR322 sequences except for the Ball - Pvull fragment. These plasmids lack the Ball restriction site and are referred to as pBR322ABall. lo b) Cloning of a yeast 5.1 kb BamHI restriction fragment containing
PIIO5 and PIIO3 into pBR322aBall pJDB207/PHO5,PHO3 (see fig. 1) contains a yeast 5.1 BamHI insert with ~ the genes for regulated and constitutive yeast acid phosphatase (PHOS and PHO3). pJDB207/PHO5,PHO3 as well as plasmid pBR322ABall are di- gested with restriction endonuclease BamHI. After complete digestion the enzyme is inactivated for 2 min at 65°C. Both DNAs are precipi- tated by ethanol and resuspended in 10 mM TriseHCl pH 8.0 at a con- centration of 0.2 mg/ml each. 0.5 ug of cach of the two BamHI-di- gested DNAs are combined and ligated in 20 pl of ligation buffer (as suggested by New England Biolabs), containing 300 U of T4 DNA ligase, for 20 hrs at 15°C. 5 pl aliquots of the ligation mixture are added to 50 pl of calcium-treated E. coli IIB101l cells and transformation is carried out as described in Example 4a: The ttans- formed E. coli cells are tested for their resistance towards ampi-. cillin and tetracyclin. Eight amp’, tet colonies are isolated and grown in 100 ml of LB medium containing 100 pg/ml of ampicillin,
Plasmid DNA is isolated from the cells (see Example 2). Restric- tiondigests with BamHI show that 4 plasmids contain a 5.1 kb insert besides the 3.7 kb vector fragment (pBR322aBall). Restriction di- gests with Sall (New England Biolabs) determine the orientation of the inserted 5.1 kb fragment: two plasmids have the insert orient- ed as shown in figure 4. One of them is referred to as p30. The direction of transcription of the PHO5, PHO3 genes in the 5.1 kb insert is anticlockwise as indicated in figure 4. . ee NY EAR AE 4 ar TEN MERE OTT
- 36 ~ : 26197 ,
Example 5: Insertion of foreign DNA into p30 (see fig. 4) a) lsolation of a 3.9 kb EcoRI-Ball fragment of p30 (fragment A) 10 mg of p30 DNA are digested with restriction endonuclease Ball.
After extraction with phenol/chloroform, the DNA is precipitated with ethanol. The DNA is resuspended in 100 ul TE buffer. The restriction fragments are separated on a preparative 0.87 low melting agarose gel (Sigma). A 5.1 kb fragment, containing the vector part of p30 is cluted from the gel as described in Example 4a. The DNA is purified } by adsorbing the DNA on a DE52 (Whatman) ion exchange column in a low salt buffer (150 mM NaCl, 10 wM Tris *HCLl pH 8.0, 1 mM EDTA) and then eluting it with a high salt buffer solution (1.5 M NaCl, 10 mM
Trise+HCl pH 8.0 and 1 mM EDTA). The DNA is precipitated with ethanol and then further digested with EcoRI (Boehringer). The 3.9 kb EcoRI-
Ball restriction fragment is again separated on a preparative 0.8% low melting agarose gel recovered as described in Example 4a and ethanol precipitated. This DNA fragment is called fragment A. ’ b) Isolation of a 602 bp HaeIIl-EcoRl fragment of CG-pBR322/HLycIFN-81 (fragment B)
E.coli strain HB-101 CG-pBR322MLycIFN-8] (see Example 10E) is grown in 100 ml LB medium supplemented with 10 pg/ml tetracyclin and plasmid DNA is isolated as described in Example 2. Nine pg of HLycIEN-8] :
DNA are completely digested with restriction endonuclease Haelll. BE
The restriction fragments are separated on a preparative 0.87 low : : melting agarose gel. A 940 bp Haelll fragment is cut out and eluted from the agarose gel as described in Example 4a. The DNA is purified on DE52 as described in Example 5a and then further digested with
EcoRI. The 602 bp EcoRI-Haelll fragment is again separated on a preparative 0.8% low melting agarose gel, recovered as described in
Example 4a and ethanol precipitated. This DNA fragment is called fragment B.
¢) Ligation of fragments A and B (sce fig. 5)
The two restriction fragments can be ligated enzymatically via the
EcoRI sticky ends and the blunt ends of Ball and Haelll respectively, thus creating a circular molecule with a unique EcoRI site and a
BalI-HacIIl junction which is cleavable with HaeIII (but not with
Ball).
The ligation is carried out in a buffer system containing 60 mM
Tris+HCl pH 7.5, 10 mM MgCl,, 10 mM DTT, 4 mM ATP, 300 units of
T4 DNA ligase for 16 hrs at 23°C at a DNA concentration of 20 gg ml . of fragment A and 3 mg/ml of fragment B in a total volume of 10 zd. d) Transformation of E. coli 11B101 with the ligated fragments 2 pl aliquots of the ligation mixture (sce Example 5c) are added to 50 pl of calcium-treated E. coli HB10l cells (see Example 4a).
The mixtures are then plated on LB agar plates supplemented with 100 pg/ml ampicillin. The plates are incubated at 37°C for 16 hrs.
About 300 ampicillin resistant colonies of E. coli HB1Ol are pre- pared. Plasmid DNA from eight ampicillin resistant colonies is isolated, analysed and their structure is determined by comparing the mobility of the restriction fragments obtained after cleavage with EcoRI and HaelIl with standard DNA [bacteriophage A DNA di- gested with HindIII (New England Biolabs), p30 plasmid DNA digested with Haelll and EcoRI]. After verification of the structure of the junctions, 5 plasmids are obtained which have the correct structure.’ - } One of these plasmids containing the PHOS promoter linked to the 8)-interferon polypeptide coding region (see fig. 5) is called p30IFN1(8}).
Example 6: Addition of replication origin and selective marker for yeast (see fig. 4) - a) Isolation of a 1.5 kb EcoRI fragment from plasmid Yrp7 and its ligation into plasmid p301FN1(8.)
In order to facilitate the ligation reaction the 1.5 kb EcoRI restric- tion fragment is purified. Plasmid Yrp?7 (4 ) is cut with EcoRI, ’
R i ie na eh HBA Matt mies 3EAL x neta Ee Bd sath PT ETM SP aT BPN A PT TIIAITE YS Fa a et
- 38 - 9 61 9 7 \ vo the two fragments obtained are separated on a 0.87 agarose gel and the 1.5 kb fragment containing a yeast autonomously replicating segment and the yeast TRP1 gene is purified and isolated as describ- ed in Example 4a. Ligation is carried out (as suggested by New England
Biolabs) with 20 mg/ml of EcoRI cut p30IFN1(8,) and 10 pg/ml of the 1.5 kb
EcoRI restriction fragment from Yrp7; 100 units of T4 ligase are used. b) Transformation of E. coli JA 194 with the ligated fragments
Plasmids containing the TRP1l yeast gene are directly selectable by transformation of the E. coli trpC mutant strain JA 194 (trpC, leuB,
Bl). The E. coli trpC gene colas for the E. coli N-(5'-phosphorihosyl)— anthranilate isomerase. E. coli trpC mutants can be complemented by the yeast TRP1 gene (4). Transformation of E. coli strain JA 194 is carried out as described for E. coli 1IB101 (see Example 4a) except for the following modification: before plating the mixtures onto agar plates the cells are allowed to recover in 1 ml of LB medium at 37°C for 60 min; the cells are washed once with E. coli M9 minimal med ium (30) and plated onto M9 minimal medium plates supplemented with } vitamine Bl (1 je/ml) and L-leucine (20 mg/ml). The plates are in-: cubated for 2 days at 37°C. Approximately 1000 tryptophan prototrophic
E. coli colonies are recovered.
Ct « SE <0 ) a. c) Isolation and characterization of hybrid plasmids = _
Trp’ colonies are purified on LB plates supplemented with 100 pg/ml - ampicillin. Individual colonies are picked and plasmids are isolated as described in Example 2, Purified plasmids are analyzed by measur- ing the size of the restriction fragments generated after cleavage with EcoRI, HindIII, PstI and BglII (Biolabs). Two different types of plasmids are obtained which contain the 1.5 kb EcoRI restriction fragment in the two possible orientations (see fig. 4). They are named p30IFN2(8.) and p30OIFN2'(8,) as indicated in figure 4.
Example 7: Transformation of Saccharomyces cerevisiae RH971 and induction of interferon production
Plasmids p30OIFN2(8)) and p3OLFN2' (8) are each introduced into Saccharo- myces cerevisiae strain RHI71 (a, trpl, leu2, his4) in analogy as described by Himnen et al. (1).0ne pg of plasmid DNA is added to 100 pl of a spheroplast suspension and the mixture is treated with polyethylene glycole as described (1). The spheroplasts are mixed with 10 ml regen— cration agar and plated onto yeast minimal medium plates without leucine. After incubation for 3 days at 30°C, about 1000 trans formed cells are obtained.
One single yeast colony from the yeast transformation plates [named
Saccharomyces cerevisiae Ri1971/p30IFN2(8)) and /p30IFN2' (8) respectively] is picked into 10 ml of ycast minimal medium in a 100 ml
Erlenmeyer flask, and grown at 30°C at 200 rpm for 24 hrs to a density of about 2-3x10’ cells/ml. The cells are washed once with 20 ml of
Low-p, minimal medium. Three ml of the resuspended cells arc used to inoculate 300 ml low-P, minimal medium and 300 ml normal minimal medium, respectively, in 1000 ml ‘Erlenmeyer flasks. Incubation is at 30°C at 160 rpm. Induction of the PIIOS promoter is followed by measuring the appearance of acid phosphatase activity in whole cells as described by Toh-e et al. (31). The cells are grown to about : 1-2x10’ cells/ml (26-30 hrs of incubation).
Example 8: Preparation of yeast cell extracts and determination of the oC interferon titer oo
Cells from the 300 ml culture medium (see Example 7) at a density of 1-2x10 /m1 are collected by centrifugation in a Sorvall GSA rotor for 5 min at 8000 rpm at 4°C. The cells are washed once with 100 ml 1,0, resuspended in 6 ml ice cold lysis mix [0.1 M potassium phos~ phate buffer pH 7.4, 1% (v/v) Triton X-100,0.0001M PMSF (Merck) } and transferred to a 30 ml corex tube. The suspension is centrifuged again for 5 min in a Sorvall SS-34 rotor at 8000 rpm at 4°C and re- suspended in 3 ml lysis mix at 0°C. Four g of glass beads (0.4 mm in diameter) are added to the cells and the suspension is shaken on a
0 - 26197
Vortex Mixer (Scientific Instruments Inc., USA) at full speed for 30 sec and then cooled for 1 min in an ice bath. This shaking procedure is repeated 5 to 10 times until more than 907 of the ; cells are broken (check under light microscope). Cell debris and glass beads are removed from the solution by centrifugation for min at 8000 rpm at 4°C in a Sorvall HB-4 rotor. The supernatant is transferred to Eppendorf tubes, frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at -60°C. Interferon activity is determined according to the procedure of Armstrong (32) using human CCL-23 cells and vesicular 10 stomatitis virus (VSV) as the challenge virus. The results are summarized in Table 1.
Table 1
Interferon activity in Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain RH971 after transformation with the recombinant plasmids p30IFN2(8,) and p3OIFN2'(8)), respectively, and also with plasmid pJDB207/IFN2' (8) (see Example 9)
Interferon activity expressed in : units/ml yeast cell extract ‘ plasmid p3OIFN2(8,) p30IFN2' (87) | paoB207/1EN2" (81) repressed conditions 0 30 100 (normal phosphate content) derepressed conditions 700 tt 7000 , ‘50000 +: (low phosphate content) oo
Example 9: Insertion of the interferon gene into the high copy number yeast 2u vector pJDB 207 (sec Fig. 6)
Plasmid p3OIFN2' (8) is digested with restriction endonucleases HindIII and BamHI according to the specifications of the supplier (Biolabs).
Two fragments are generated of the size of 4.0 kb and 2.0 kb. The 2.0 kb restriction fragment is separated and purified by low melting agarose gel electrophoresis as described under step 4a. ’
or 26197 ,
Plasmid pJDB207 (28) is digested with restriction endonucleases Hind
III and BamHl. Three fragments are generated. The 6.5 kb restriction fragment is separated as above. 0.3 mg of the 2.0 kb fragment (containing the PHO5 promoter linked to the interferon protein coding region) is ligated for 15 hrs to the 6.5 kb vector fragment in a total volume of 20 ul using 300 U T4 DNA ligase under conditions described by the supplier (Biolabs). E. coli
HB10l cells are transformed and ampicillin resistant colonies are selected. The plasmid DNA is isolated and the correct structure of the isolated plasmid DNA is verified by restriction digestions using
HindIII and BamHI, with p30LFN2' (8,) and pJDB207 digested with the same enzymes as molecular weight standards. The new plasmid obtained is called pJDB207/IFN2' (8). plasmid pJDB207/IFN2' (8)) is transformed into S.cerevisiae strainRH971 in analogy as described (1) selecting for leucine prototrophic colonies, ‘ | One single leucine prototrophic yeast colony [named Saccharomyces cerevisiae RH971/pJDB207/IFN2'(8))] is picked and grown as described in Example 7. The interferon titer is determined as described in .
Example 8. The results are depicted in Table 1.
Cy . Le : a AE ETS Tey. «SRL Cr iTS 5 CLA AIMS I YAIR es EL
Example 10: Production of E.coli strains transformed with recombinant plasmids containing the coding regions for human lymphoblastoid
A. Isolation of poly(A) RNA enriched for HuIFN mRNA (figure ND a) Induction of the Namalwa cells
Namalwa cells are grown in culture medium RPMI 1640 containing 10% fetal calf serum at 37°C. When a cell density of 3+10° cells/ml is reached, the suspension is centrifuged at 800 x g for 10 minutes at : room temperature. The collected cells are resuspended in 200 ml of culture medium containing glutamine (0.027% by volume), penicillin (200 units/ml) and streptomycin (50 pg/ml). The cells are incubated for 90 minutes at 37°C with Newcastle disease virus (NDV 110) at a ratio of 190 av/10° cells (HAU: haemagglutination units). By adding fresh culture medium the cell density is adjusted to 1.3-10° cells/ml . and the cell suspension is shaken at 34°C at 100 rpm. After 12 h, . 610° cells are harvested and resuspended in 50 ml phosphate-buffered saline ("'PBS"; 1 1 PBS contains 80 g NaCl, 2 g KCl, 14.4 g Na,liFO, and 2 g KH,PO,) .Before harvesting tife cells,a sample is removed and the interferon activity is determined according to the procedure of
Armstrong (32) using human CCL-23 cells and vesicular stomatitis virus : (VSV) as the challenge virus. 4300 IFN units/ml are found. oo oo b) Disruption of the cells and deproteinization
The cell suspension (6°10° cells in 50 ml PBS) is added at room : temperature to 800 ml lysis buffer consisting of 0.05 M Tris-«liCl (pit 7.5), 0.1 HM NaCl, 5 mM EDTA and 2% SDS (cryst. research grade,
Serva). The lysate is digested with 0.2 mg/ml of preincubated (2 h at 37°C) protease (Protease P, type VI, Sigma) at room temperature for 1 h while stirring the solution. The solution is deproteinized by extracting 3 times with 500 ml phenol satured with TNE and 5 times with 500 ml chloroform. 500 mg of nucleic acids are obtained as measured by absorbance at 260 nm.
c) Removal of contaminating DNA and RNA
The slightly viscous dqueous solution obtained as described above (step Ab) is adjusted to 0.3 M NaCl and 1 g of oligo(dT) cellulose (type 7, P-L Biochemicals) is added. After stirring for 30 min at toom temperature the suspension is centrifuged in 1 1 Sorvall bottles in a Sorvall RC-3 centrifuge at 4000 rpm for 10 min at room temperature and the oligo(dT) cellulose slurry is washed twice with 40 m1 2 x TNE containing 0.5% SDS. The bound poly(A) RNA is then eluted by five successive washes with 2.5 ml 11,0. The yield is 720 pug poly(A) RNA as determined by measuring the optical density. The supernatant RNA solution from the first adsorption is adsorbed a second time to 1 g } of oligo(dT) cellulose and eluted as described above, yielding 320 pg poly(A) RNA. The eluates are pooled, adjusted to TNE and the poly(A)
RNA is precipitated with 677 ethanol at -20°C for 10 hours. The RNA is collected by centrifugation at 10 000 rpm in a Sorwall RC-5B centrifuge for 10 min at 0°C. The precipitate (1 mg) is redissolved in 1 ml of 1 mM EDTA.
The RNA is assayed for NuIFN mRNA activity by injection into oocytes of Xenopus laevis as follows: : 50 nl of the RNA solution is injected into each of 20 oocytes. The oocytes are incubated in Barth medium ( 2 mM Tris, 88 mf NaCl, 1, mM.
KCL, 0.33 mM Ca(N03) 51,0, 0.41 mi CaCl, +210, 0.82 mt MgSO, +711,0, 2.4 mM NaliCo,, 0.01 mg/ml penicillin, 0.01 mg inl streptomycin; the solution is adjusted to pH 7.6 with UCL) according to Gurdon (33),
Barth (34) and Colman et al. (35). The injected oocytes are incubated ’ for 42-48 hours and the incubation medium is removed, centrifuged for 5 min in an Eppendorf centrifuge, and the supernatant is stored at ~20°C or -80°C until it is used for assay. The IFN activity is assayed essentially according to Armstrong (32) except that vsy is used as the challenge virus on Hep-2-cells (Flow Laboratories). The oocyte extract has a specific activity of 600 IU interferon per ng RNA in- jected, /
Et a IR eek 0 pi ag A Le ie tt dna a ots vs
4) Enriching the poly(A) RNA fou’ MuTFN_mRNA_
The poly(A) RNA is passed through a Chelex-100 column (200-400 mesh,
Bio-Rad) ‘of 0.5 ml bed volume. The column is rinsed with 1 ml of 1 mM
EDTA. :
The cluate (1 mg poly(A) RNA in 2 ml EDTA) is heated for 2 min at 100°C and subjected to centrifugation through a sucrose density gra- dient ( 6 14 ml sucrose solutions increasing in sucrose concen- tration from 57 to 237 (mv) and containing 50 mM TriselICL [pH 7.5], 0.2 M NaCl and 1 mM EDTA). The centrifugation is carried out in a .
TST 41 rotor (Kontrom AG) at 35 000 rpm for 16 h at 5°C. 0.3 ml fractions are collected with an ISCO gradient collector. 2 volumes of cthanol are added to each fraction and the solution is allowed } to stand for 10 h at -20°C. The precipitated mRNA is collected by centrifugation (Sorvall, HB-4 rotor at 0°C, 10 000 rpm for 10 min).
The precipitate of each fraction is redissolved in 25 plof 1 mM EDTA and cach fraction is assayed for human IFN mRNA activity as described above (step Ac), except that only 10 oocytes are injected per RNA sample instead of 20. The results are given in table 2.
Co a rR EE Gs GE eI
- 45 ~ 26197
Table 2:
MULFN mRNA activity from fractions of sucrose-density gradient. fraction No, IFN activity (units/ml) 1-18 = 19 162 20 162 21 162 22 162 23 not tested 24 729 25 not tested 26 405 27 not tested 28 486 29 not tested 30 162 31 not tested ’ 32 162 | . 33 not tested 34 54 35-40 ‘not tested . TT : . The fractions 23-29 are pooled and the poly(A) RNA is purified ; further as follows: ; :
The poly(A) RNA solution is adjusted to 2 x INE in 0.5% SbS and applied on a 200 pl oligo(dT) cellulose column. The column is washed b with 2 ml of 2 x TNE in 0.5% SDS and the poly(A) RNA is eluted by 5 washes with 0.5 ml ,0. The eluate is adjusted to TNE and the solu- tion is extracted twice with an equal volume of phenol (saturated in
THE) and twice with an cqual volume of chloroform. The poly(A) RNA {
AD ORIGINAL 9)
- 45 -- 9 6197 is precipitated with 2 volumes of ethanol at -20°C for 10 hours and collected by centrifugation in a lIB-4 rotor as described before.
The poly(A) RNA is dissolved in 100 pl of 0.5 mM EDTA. The yicld is 40 pg as determined by measuring the optical density.
A portion of the poly(A) RNA is assayed for human IFN activity as described above by using 20 oocytes per assay. The poly(A) RNA pre- paration has a specific activity of 8100 IU interferon per ug RNA,
B. Preparation of double-stranded cDNA (figure 7)
Poly(A) RNA enriched for HuIFN wRNA (see step Ad) is used as a template to prepare double-stranded cDNA essentially as described by Efstra- tiadis et al. (36), Maniatis et al. (37) and Hoeijmakers et al. (38). a) First strand synthesis : 250 nl reaction mixture containing 40 mM TriseliCl (pH 7.5), 30 mM NaCl, 5 mi MgCl, , 0.5 mM DTT (Calbiochem.), 1 mM dGTP, dCTP, dTTP (P-L Bio- chemicals) and 1 mM 32p_daTp (Amersham, specific activity 50 000 cpm snwole) , 20 ug/ml oligo(dT), ,g (P-L Biochemicals), 40 jig/ml poly(A)
RNA and 100 units of avian myeloblastosis virus (AMV) reverse trans- criptase (Life Sciences, Inc., St. Petersburg, Florida) are incubated for 80 min at 37°C. The reaction is terinated by «adjusting the solu- tion to 10 mM EDTA and 0.1% SDS. The mixture is extracted once with co 1 volume of phenol. The aqucous phase is reextracted with 1 volume of chloroform and applied on a 3 ml Sephadex G-50 (Pharmacia, fine) column. 0.1 ml fractions are collected. The radioactivity of cach fraction is determined by measuring the Cerenkov radiation. Radio- active fractions are pooled and the nucleic acids are precipitated with 2 volumes of ethanol at -20°C for 10 h. The sample is centri- fuged in a lB-4 rotor for 20 min at 10 000 rpm at 0°C. The precipitate is dissolved in 95 ul of H,0. 5 pl of 10N NaOH is added and the mixture is incubated at 25°C for 40 min. After neutralization with SM
Se BAD ORIGINAL 9
I. . . baa aThde gL fant J amg tC pet BR RTH ENE LY RY pe nl Le mp Egle, 1 CINE CARAS TR PI PERS WL aT oe FTA a ay acetic acid, 50 pl H,0 and 2 volumes of cthanol are added and the sample 1s stored at -20°C for 10 hrs. The precipitate is collected by centrifugation as described before find redissolved in 200 nl of 0.1 mM EDTA. The yield of single-stranded cDNA is 3.7 Hg. The size of : the ¢bNA is 700-1500 nucleotides in length, as determined from its clectrophoretic mobility in a 6% polyacrylamide pel in Tris-borate-
EDTA (108 g of Tris, 9.3 8 of disodium EDTA, aud 55 g of boric acid per one 1 solution of pH 8.3) containing 7 M urea relative to marker DNAs of known length (39). b) Second strand synthesis and S, endonuclease digestion
The obtained cDNA solution is heated at 100°C For 90 sec, chilled and incubated in a 400 pl reaction mixture comprising 0.1 M potassium phosphate buffer (pH 6.9), 10 mM MC, , 10 mM DTT (Calbiochem),
LI mM dATP, 1 mM dCTP, 1 mM dTTP (P-L, Biochemicals), 1 mM 3i-deTP (Amersham, specific activity 94 000 cpm/nmole) and 165 units/ml of
E.coli DNA polymerase I (Biolabs, New England) for 8 h at 15°C. The reaction is terminated by adding EDTA and SDS to final concentrations of 10 mM and 0.17%, respectively. The mixture is extracted with phenol and chloroform, chromatographed over Senhadex G-50 (Pharmacia, fine, 2 ml bed volume) and ethanol precipitated as described above (step Ba).
The resulting DNA is treated in a 50 ,ul incubation mixture containing 0.25 M NaCl, 50 mM sodium acetate (pH 4.5) and 1 mM*ZnSo, with 6 = °° : } units of 5 endonuclease (P-L Biochemicals) at 37°C for 30 min. The reaction is stopped with 0.1 Z SDS and 10 mM EDTA. The reaction mixture is deproteinized with 1 volume of phenol (saturated in 50 mM sodium acetate, pH 4.5) and chloroform. The aqueous phase is chromatographed on a 2 ml Sephadex G-50 (Pharmacia, fine) column in TNE. 100 ul fractions are collected and the Cerenkov radiation of each fraction is determined. The excluded fractions are pooled and the DNA is preci~ pitated with 2 volumes of ethanol at -20°C for 10 h as described above.
The precipitate is centrifuged in a HB-4 rotor (see above) and the collected precipitate is dissolved in a 100 ul solution containing
LO ml Tris<HC1 (pH 7.5) and 0.5 mM EDTA. 4 ng of DNA are obtained. ————r a i - —y -. ro ORIGINAL J ro ea re
Ct me a a te ie EEE, | abate rite nh 5 ev © 1 RSS tres re mean ee
The DNA is fractionated through a sucrose density gradient (5-23 %) in 50 md Tris-fCl (pit 7.5) and 1 mM EDTA in a TST-60 rotor (Kontron AG).
Centrifugation is carried out at 55 000 rpm for 5 h at 15°C. The DNA, which sediments faster than a 800 base pair marker DNA, run in a parallel gradient, is pooled, adjusted to TNE and precipitated with 67 Z cthanol at -20°C for 10 hrs. 0.4 ng double-stranded cDNA are ob- tained. :
C. Preparation of pBR 322 - linked cDNA (figure 7) a) Preparation of dChP-clongated cDNA }
The 3'-termini of 0.1 pg of the obtained ds cDNA are provided with poly(dC) tails in a 10 pl reaction volume containing 100 mM sodium cacodylate (pH 7.2), 2.5 mM CoCL,, 50 pug BSA (Calbiochem.) per ml,
L mM dCTP and 10 units of terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (P-L Biochemicals) per ug of ds cDNA. After incubation (20 min at 27°C), EDTA is added to 10 mM and the sample is stored at -20°C until * use, . b) Preparation of Pst I cleaved, dGMP elongated pBR 322 10 ug of pBR 322 plasmid DNA is digtsted with 10 units of Pst I endo- nuclease (Biolabs) in a 100 pl solution containing 50 mM NaCl, 6 mM
Traise<ilCl (pH 7.5), 6 mM MgCl, 6 mM 2-mercaptocthanel and 100 pg/ml gelatine for 1 hat 37°C. The solution is extracted with 1 volume of phenol and chloroform. The solution is adjusted to TNE and the linearized DNA is precipitated with 2 volumes of ethanol at -20°C for 5 h.
The lincarized plasmid DNA is elongated with dGMP in a 200 ul reaction volume containing 100 mM sodium cacodylate (pH 7.2), 5 mi MgCl, 20 wi Nall, ro, , 50 ug BSA per ml, 1 mM dGTP and 100 units of terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (P-L Biochemicals). After incubation for 20 min at 37°C, EDTA is added to 10 mM and the reaction mixture is . frozen at -20°C until use. -
PF Co BAD ORIGINAL 9 c) Annealing of dGxP-elonpated pBR 322 to dCMP-clonzated ds cDNA
A mixture of dCMP~elongated double-stranded cDNA (0.1 ned and dGCMP- tailed linearized pBR 322 (0.5 pg) in 500 nl TNE buffer is incubated at 65°C for one hour, at 46°C for one hour, at 37°C for one hour and at 20°C for one hour. The solution containing the pBR 322~linked cDNA is put on ice and used immediately for transformation.
D. Transformation of KE. coli IIB 101 with the annealed hybrid plasmid
Calcium treated E. coli IIB 101 is prepared for transformation by the method of Mandel et al. (29). 10 pl of the reaction mixture containing the annealed pBR 322 hybrid plasmid DNAs prepared as described above (step Cc) are added to a mixture containing 150 ul calcium-treated E. coli HB 101 in 10 mM
MgCl, , 10 mM CaCl, and 10 mM Tris+HCl (pl 7.5) in a total volume of 200 pl.
The mixture is cooled in ice for 20 min, heated to 42°C for 1 min and incubated at 20°C for 10 min. 1 ml of tryptone medium (tryptone medium contains 10 g Bacto-Trypton (Difco); 1 g yeast extract (Difco); . 1 g glucose; 8 g NaCl and 294 mg CaCl, «2 H,0 in 1 1 of distilled water) is added and the mixture is incubated for 30 min at 37°C by, . shaking at 300 rpm. The mixture is plated onto 2 agar plates | - oo (Mc Conkey agar, Difco; 0,6 ml plate) supplemented with 10 pg/ml of . tetracycline (Sigma). The plates are incubated at 37°C for 12-17 hrs.
About 5600 tetracycline resistant colonies of transformed E.coli HB
LOL ave prepared.
E. ldentification of clones containing HuLFN cDNA a) Synthesis of a 13-mer oligodcoxynucleotide primer (figure 8)
Anoligodeoxynucleotide complementary to .a stretch of 13 nucleotides which both HuIFN-a, and HulFN-B mRNA share in common is chemically synthesized by the phosphotriester method (cf. Itakura cot al. (40), [rome i.
BAD ORIG; J
LL I",
de Pooij et al (41)). The individual steps of the synthesis are out- lined in figure 8. The starting materials indicated in line 1 of figure 8 (mono- and dideoxynucleot’ides carrying protective groups) are known from the literature. The protective groups are split off by the methods described by Itakura et al.: the deblocking of 5'-monomethoxy- trityl (M) or dimethoxytrityl (ND) substituted hydroxyl groups is per- formed with acetic acid (80%) at room temperature, and the f(~cyano-— ethyl phosphate groups are cleaved with 0.1 N sodium hydroxide in dioxane-water (4:1) at room temperature. The condensation of the building blocks is accomplished by using triisopropylbenzenesulfonyl chloride as an activating agent to afford oligodcoxynucleotides up to the fully protected l3-mer primer represented in line 7 of figure 8.
The last step (complete removal of all protective groups) is achieved in the following manner:
A solution containing 64.6 mg of the fully protected 13-mer oligodeoxy- nucleotide in 3 ml dioxane and 1 ml acetonitrile is treated with 200 mg syn-p-nitrobenzaldoxime and 124 mg n,n nN NP -tetramethylguanidine and allowed to stand for 27 hours. 10 ml ammonia (25%) is added and - the solution is stored for 24 hours at 50°C. After the solvent has becn evaporated in vacuo, the residue is dissolved in water, adjusted to pH 4 with acetic acid and the solution is extracted 20°: times with chloroform. The aqueous solution is evaporated in vacuo - and the residue 1s dissolved in 1 ml acetic acid (807%). The solution is allowed to stand for 1 hour, diluted with 6 ml water, extracted 3 times with chloroform and lyophilized. The third part of the raw product obtained is purificd by chromatography on DEAE-Sephadex A 25 (column size: 10+1.3 cm) through a 200 ml 0.2-1.2 M triethylammonium bicarbonate gradient. Elution of the main fraction occurs at a gradient concentration of 0.87 M. The main fraction, which consists of the pure product as indicated by a HPLC test, is evaporated 3 times with water, filtered through 10 ml Dowex 50 W (NH, -salt) and - « ano ORIGINAL J lyophilized. ILC (permaphase AAX, column size 90.0.3 cm, 60°C, 2 ml/min; gradient: A = 0.005 M Kit, ro, , B = 0.5M KH,PO,, 0.5 M KCl, pill 4.55 20% A —— 100% B in 30 min): tr 11.8 min. b) Preparation of a 2*p-labeled human 1FN-a and IFN-f specific cDNA probe (figure 9) 40 pmol of the synthetic Ll3-mer oligodcoxynucleotide primer (cf. step
Ea) aud 40 pmol of [y=>2p]-ATP (5700 Ciommol T, Amersham) are com-— bined in 100 pul of 50 mM Tris-UCl (pit 9.5), 10 mM MgCl, and 5 mM DIT. 50 units of I, polynucleotide kinase (P-L Biochemicals) are added and after 30 min at 37°C additional 20 units of the enzyme are added, and incubation is continued for another 15 min at 37°C. The aqucous solution containing the 325 1abeled primer is purified by phenol extraction. Further purification is accomplished by chromatography on a 4 ml Sephadex G-50 (Pharmacia, fine) column in 1 mM TriseHCl (pit 8.0). 0.1 ml fractions are collected. The radioactivity of each fraction is determined by measuring the Cerenkov radiation. A specific activity of 410° Cerenkov cpm per pmole of oligodeoxynucleotide is obtained. The 3p t1abeled primer (40 pmol) is lyophilized, resuspended in 91 nl of 1,0 containing 14 ng of poly(A) RNA (from induced Namalwa cells, prepared as described in step A) and heated for 60 sec at 100°C. 9 pl of 4 M KCl is added aitd the mixture is incubated at 25°C for 60 minutes. 450 ul reverse transcriptasc mix is added such that : the réaction volume comprises 40 mM TriseHClL (pH 8), 4 mM MgCl, , ] 1 mM DTT (Calbiochem, Inc.), 74 mM KCl, 1 mM each of JATP, dGTP, dCTP, dTTP (P-L Biochemicals) and 90 units of avian myeloblastosis virus (AMV) reverse transcviptase. The incubation is continued for 1 h at 37°C. The solution is extracted with 1 volume of phenol (saturated in TNE) and the nucleic acids are precipitated with 2 volumes of ethanol at -20°C for 10 h. The precipitate is collected by centrifugation (HB=4 rotor, 20 min, 10 000 rpm, 0°C) and dis- solved in 20 ul dye mix containing 90% (v/v) formamide (Merck, pro analysis), 1 mM EDTA, 0.057 bromophenol blue and 0.057 xylene cyanol an ORIGINAL 9
L. d rr ENR Le OTANI ENR RR blue. The sample is heated at 90°C for 2 min and applied on a 57 poly- acrylamide gel in Tris--borate-EDTA (cf. Peacock et al. (39). A single band 1s visible on the autoradiogram which migrates between the 267 bp and 435 Lp 3p labeled marker DNA fragments obtained from the llae III digest of the plasmid pBR 322. The 325 Jabeled cDNA fragment is oo extracted from the gel and purified as described by Mueller et al. (42). 20 000 Cercnkov cpm of the 32) Jabeled human IFN-a and IFN- specific cDNA probe are obtained. : c) Screening for colonies containing HuIFN cDNA (figure 9) 1650 of the transformant colonies prepared as described above (step D) are transferred to nitrocellulose Filters BA 85 (Schleicher & Schuell, 8 cm diameter). The cells are lysed and their DNA is denatured and fixed to the filters in situ, according to Grunstein and Hogness (20).
The filters bearing the colonies are prehybridized in 4 x SET (a solu- tion containing 0.15 M NaCl, 30 mM Tris<HCl (pH 8.0), 1 mM EDTA) 0.1% (w/v) Ficoll 400 (Pharmacia), 0.1% (w/v) polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP-360,Sigma), 0.1% (v/v) BSA, 0.5% SDS, 50 pg/ml denatured calf- thymus DNA (prepared as follows: 5 mg calf-thymus DNA (type I, Sigma) is boiled for 10 min in 0.5 M NaOH to shear the DNA, ncutralized with 5 M acetic acid and precipitated with 2 volumes of ethanol at -20°C.
The precipitate is collected by ceéntrifygation in a HB-4 rotor. for . 10 min at 0°C and redissolved in 500 pl 0.5 mM EDTA) at 65°C for 4h using 20 ml mixtures per filter and hybridized with 10° Cerenkov cpm of the 32h labeled probe per nitrocellulose filter in 5 x SET, 0.027% (wv) Ficoll, 0.01% polyvinylpyrrolidone, 0.02% (v/v) BSA, 0.2% SDS and 50 pg/ml denatured calf-thymus DNA. The hybridization is per- formed at 65°C for 36 h.
The filters are rinsed once in chloroform, twice in SET,0.5% SDS at room tempcrature and twice in SET, 0.57 SDS for 1 h at 60°C and once with 3nM Trizma base at room temperature for 1 h. The filters are dried by blotting on 3 MM-paper (Whatman), and an X-ray film leno ORIGINAL J - oo i eh a a meee at i rt he Sai Eo a elon] CIC ARVO AE TY EPL NI SRN TS ey rt a Ry
53 - 26197 ' (Fuji) is cuposed to the [ilters using a screen (Ilford intensifying screen) at -80°C for 72 h.
Nine positive colonies are identified on the autoradiogram and are used for further investigation. ‘
Since the primary clones of transformed cells occasionally contain more than one species of recombinant DNA molecules, the hybrid plasmid DNAs are isolated from the 9 positively hybridizing clones and used to retransform E. coli BB 101 as described before.
The hybrid plasmid DNA is isolated as follows: 1 colony is used to inoculate 10 ml of tryptone medium, supplemented with 10 jig/ml of tetracycline as above in a 25 ml Erlenmeyer flask. The culture is shaken for 15-18 hrs at 37°C at 300 rpm. The cells are harvested by centrifugation (Sorvall, 1IS-4 rotor, 10 min at 4000 rpm, 4°C).
About 0.1 g of cells are obtained and are resuspended in 1 ml 50 mM
Trise«lCl (pH 8.0). 0.25 ml of lysozyme solution (10 mg/ml in 50 mi{
Tris=HCL (pil 8.0) ,lysozyme is purchased from Sigma) , are added and after incubation at 0°C for 10 min, 0.15 ml of 0.5 M EDTA (pH 7.5) : is added. After another 10 min at 0°C, 60 pl of 27 Triton X-100 (Merck) is added. After 30 min at 0°C, the sample is centrifuged for ] 30 min at 15 000 rpm and 4°C in a Sorvall SA-600 rqtor. The super—- - natant is deproteinized with 1 volume of phenol (saturated in TNE). - oo
The phases are separated by centrifugation (Sorvall HB-4 rotor) for ’ 10 min at 5000 rpm at 4°C. The upper phase is extracted twice with 1 volume of chloroform. Pancreatic RNAse A (Sipma; 10 mg/ml in TNE, preheated 10 min at 85°C) is added to a fiual concentration of 25 pg/ml and the mixture is incubated for 40 min at 37°C. The solution 1s then adjusted to 1 M NaCl and 10% polyethylene glycol 6000 (Fluka, autoclaved for 20 min at 120°C) and incubated at -10°C for 2 brs. The precipitate is collected in a Sorvall HB-4 rotor (20 min at 10 000 rpm, 0°C) and redissolved in 100 pl of TNE. The DNA solution is extracted vith 1 volume of phenol and the DNA is precipitated with 2 volumes of cthanol at -30°C for 10 min.
BAD ORicu. A,
The precipitate is collected by centrifugation in an Eppendorf cen- trifuge and the DNA is redissolved in 20 pl of 10 mM Tris-HCl (pil 7.5) and 0.5 mM EDTA. 8-10 ng of hybrid plasmid DNA are cecovered from a 10 ml culture. }
E. coli HB 101 is transformed with cach of the nine isolated hybrid
DNAs and the transformed cells are plated on agar plates containing tetracycline, as described before (step D). From cach transformation, 3 tetracycline resistant clones are picked, 10 ml cultures are pre- . pared and the hybrid DNAs are isolated from the cultures as described before.
All the DNA samples before and after retransformation are analyzed by cleavage with Pst I endonuclease and electrophoresis through a 17% agarose gel in 50 mM Tris-acetate (pH 7.8) and 1 mM EDTA. All the samples display identical cleavage patterns before and after re- transformation.
One of the recloned recombinant DNA molecules gives 2 bands, one with the mobility of Pst I-cleaved pBR 322, the other with a mobility corresponding to about 1000 bp. It is denoted CG-pBR 322/HLycIFN-1'b.
Another recombinant DNA gives 3 bands, one with the mobility of Pst I- cleaved pBR 322, one with a mobility of about 600 bp and one with a : mobility of about 150 bp. The recombinant DNA molecule in this clone is designated CG-pBR 322/NLycIFN-B, . : d. Characterization of the clones CG-pBR 322/lLycIFN-1'b and
CG-pBR 322/MLycIFN-B,
The rccombinant plasmid DNAs of the clones CG-pBR 322/HLycIFN-1'b and
CG-pBR 322AILycIFN-B, are isolated from the cultures as described above (step Ec) aud characterized by establishing the nucleotide sequence of the cDNA insért using the method described by ifaxam and
Gilbert (15). Basically, the follouing approach is used: . Co | A ’ } BAD urine pp ln Ao tim itll
LL ie era at EEE met Pn are ate hv enimtng lr Be BSCR AY UA NAT SE A BL LV FEIN EP rome RL ee 0 26197 '
The isolated recombinant plasmid DNA is digested with various restric- tion cudonucleases. The enzymes are applied essentially as described by the supplier (New England Biclabs), except that BSA is replaced by selatin in the cunzyme buffers. The solution containing the restricted
DNA is deproteinized with phenol (saturated with TNE). The DNA is pre- cipitated with ethanol, redissolved in 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0) at a
DNA concentration of 50 ug/ml and incubated with 0.1 units of calf intestinal alkaline phosphatase (Bochringer) per pmole DNA 5' ends for 30 min at 37°C. The enzyme is Inactivated by heating the solution for 60 win at 65°C. The DNA is purified by DEAE-cellulose chromatography as described by Mucller et al.(42) and precipitated with ethanol. The
DNA is then 5'-terminally labeled with [y-22p]-aTP & 5000 Ci/mmole,
Amersham) and T4 polynucleotide Kinase (P-L Biochemicals) essentially as described by Maxam and Gilbert (15) except that the DNA is not de- natured before the Kinase reaction. In general, the specific activities amount to 1-3-10° cpm/pmole 5'-ends.
The labeled DNA fragments are cleaved with a second restriction endonuclease and the products are separated by clectrophoresis through a 6%, 8% or 10% polyacrylamide pel in Tris-borate-EDTA buffer. The
DNA (ragments are extracted from the gel and purified as described by Mueller et al. (42). For the determination of the nucleotide . . a. sequences, the DNA fragments are chemically degraded and the products no are separated by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis as described by : . Maxam and Gilbert (19),
In particular, the isolated plasmid DNAs of the clone CG-pBR 322/
HLycIFN-1"b are treated as follows. On the one hand, 5 1g of the plasmid DNA is digested with Bgl IT, 5' terminally labeled, and cleaved with Pva II. The Pvu II-Bgl II* (indicates the labeled site) and Bgl IT- Pvu II* DNA fragments are isolated on a 67 polyacrylamide 30gel. On the other hand, >
BAD Oi _ gH - . a ie mem rnd ee neds TRE A RAR de LEH UY TE Ra PL EI eT ee 26197 pg of the plasmid is digested with Alu I, 5'-terminally labeled, and cleaved with Pst I. The Pst I ~ Alu I* DNA fragment is isolated on a 8% polyacrylamide gel. The individual fragments are subsequently degraded and sequenced according to Maxam and Gilbert. The 5 nucleotide sequence obtained is depleted in figure 100 A stretch of about 25-35 deoxyguanosine residues is preceding at the 5'-end of the cDNA inscrt. The nucleotide scquence shown is somewhat similar to that of 1FN-a (type F) cDNA described by Goeddel et al. [(43), cf. also
Weissmann(44)], nevertheless displaying a lot of distinct deviations (point mutations) some of which are affecting the resulting amino acids (cf. £ig.10).
The isolated plasmid DNA of the clone CG-pBR 322MLycIFN-B, is treated in a similar manner. 5 pg of the plasmid is digested with )
Pvu IT and 5'-terminally labeled. One half of the mixture is cleaved with Pst I, and the rest with Bgl II. The Pst I-Pvu II* and Bgl II- .
Pvu [{* fragments are isolated by electrophoresis on a 6% polyacryl- amide gel and degraded as mentioned above. The nucleotide . sequence (N-terminal sequence) is depicted in figure 1land reveals ’ that the cDNA insert starts at nucleotide number 102 of the IFN-f, : ¢DNA as described by Taniguchi et al. (45). Therefore, the cDNA insert has the capacity to code for human IEN-f, lacking 11 amino acids at the N-terminus. The cDNA insert is flanked at its S'end by a stretch of about 20-25 deoxyguanosine residues and shows a point mutation at.® =. oC position 153, converting a C to a T residue without affecting the resulting amino acid. e. Identification of clones containing recombinant DNA molecules cross=hybridizing to the inserts of CC-pBR 322/1liLycIFR-1'b and
CG-pBR 322/1LycIFN-f,
The recombinant plasmid DNAs of the clones CC-pBR 322/HLycIFN-1'b and CC-pBR 322/MLyclFN-p, are isolated from the cultures as des- cribed above (step Ec). The CG-pBR 322/NLycIFN-1'b plasmid DNA (5 pg) ' - BAD Cruuitvnl > So le 26197 is digested with Bgl 1I, 5' terminally labeled, and cleaved with i
Pvu IT. Ou the other hand, the isolated CG-pBR 322/ULycIPN-B, plasmid
DNA (5 pg) is digested with Pvu II, 5'-terminally labeled, and cleaved with Bgl LI. The Pvu II-Bgl II% (351 bp) DNA fragment (probe A) and the Pvu LI%-Bgi II (368 bp) DNA fragment (probe B) are isolated from a 8% polyacrytamide gel as described above (step Ed) and used for in situ colony hybridization (see below). The restriction of the plasmid DNAs, the labeling, and the purification of the DNA fragments are accomplished in the same manner as described above (step Ed). 4000 of the transformant colonies prepared as described above (step D) are transferred to nitrocellulose filters BA 85 (Schleicher & Schuell, 8 cm diameter). The cells are lysed and their DNA is denatured and fixed to the filters in situ, according to Grunstein and Hogness (0).
Wybridizations to the probes A and B (both probes are mixed) are per- formed as described before (step Ec). 6 positive colonies are identi- fied by autoradiography, 3 of which, designated
E. coli HB 101 CG-pLR 322LycIFN-4, , | .
LE. coli HB 101 CG-pBR 322MLycIFN-5, and
EB. coli HB 101 CG-pBR 322/ULyclFN-8; are used for further investigatiof. The plasmid DNAs of these clones oo are isolated, retransformed, and re-isolated as described above (step Ec, Ed).
In order to establish the nature of the inserts of the recembinant
DNAs, the nucleotide sequences of the cDNA inserts (partial or complete) are cstablished by using the general approach as described above (step Ed).
In particular, Sng of the isolated plasmid DNAs CG-pBR 322/HLycIFN-4, } and CG-pBR 322/MLyc1FN-8) are cach digested with Pvu II, 5'-terminally laa ORIGINAL J 4 i ak a me et weit a Bel ane mTRiE Be BNA A TEVA EE INAS A gE cr Ce Te labeled and cleaved with Pst I. The DNA fragments are fractionated on a 87 polyacrylamide gel and the Pst I-Pvu II* (~120 bp) from 8)
DNA and Pst I-Pvu IL* (82 Lp) from 4 DNA are isolated as usual, oo
The isolated plasmid DNA CG-pBR 322/LycIFN-5, is treated as follows.
On the one hand, 5 pg of the plasmid DNA is digested with liae III, 5'-terminally labeled and cleaved with Pst I. The Pst I-Hae IIL* (57 Lp) DNA fragment is isolated on a 10% polyacrylamide gel. On the other hand, 5 pe of the plasmid is digested with EcoR I, 5'-tecrminally labeled and cleaved with Pst I, The Pst I-EcoR I* (235 bp) and EcoR I*-
Pst I (~700 Lp) DNA fragments are isolated on a 8% polyacrylamide gel.
The various DNA fragments are subjected to sequence analysis according : to Maxam and Gilbert (15).
The nucleotide sequences of the cDNA inserts are depicted in figures 12-14.In figure 12,a partial nucleotide sequence of the cDNA insert of CG-pBR 322/MLycIFN-4, is shown. The insert is flanked at the 5' end by a stretch of 23 deoxyguanosine residues and comprises part of the IFN-a, (Le) cDNA described by Streuli et al. (46) . In the 3'-extra- cistronic region, there are some minor deviations (point mutations) and a stretch of additional 318 nucleotides. The nucleotide sequence of + 20° the cDNA insert of CG-pBR 322/LycIFN-8] is depicted in figure 13.The insert is flanked at the 5' end by a stretch of 20-23 deoxyguanosine residues and is similar but not identical, to the IFN-a (type D) cDNA described.by. Goeddel et al. (43); cf. alsoMantei et al. (27)]. Apart from differences in the cDNA - regions preceding and following the IFN coding sequence, the IFN gene con- _— tains at positions 28-30 a GCC triplet and at positions 409-411 a GCG triplet coding for alanine instead of GTC and GIG, respectively, coding for valine.
Finally, the nucleotide sequence of the chNA insert of CG-pBR 322 HLyc
LFN-5, (see [igure l4)reveals a stretch of 17 deoxyguanosine residues at : the 5' end. The nucleotide sequence is related to that of IFN-a (type B)
CDNA described by Goeddel et al. (43). llowever, there are additional nu- cleotides at the 5' end of the ¢DNA insert of HLycIFN-5,, point mutations, excisions and insertions in the extracistronic region and in the IFN coding sequence, especially at positions 22 and 361-372, are evident as well.
LACT oxo omni 9
- 59 ~- 1 26197
F. Synthesis of human interferons by FE. coli containing human IFN- specific recombinant DNA molecules
The 5 clones which have been shown to contain human IFN specific re- combinant DNA molecules, namely .
FE. coli HIB 101 CG-pBR 322/HLycIFN-)'b
E. coli HB 101 CG-pBR 322/HLyclEN-4
E. coli HB 101 CG-pBR 322/1LycIFN=5,, ]
E. coli HB 101 CG-pBR 322/lLycIFN-8' , and
E. coli UB 101 CG-pBR 322AILycIFN-f , are tested for JIN activity, which, in cach case, is accomplished in the following manner:
Cultures of the corresponding E. coli clone (30 ml suspensions) are grown in tryptone medium to an optical density (op) of about 1. The cells are harvested and resuspended in 0.5 ml of an aqueous solution containing 30 mM NaCl and 50 md Tris-Cl (pli 8.0). Lysozyme (Sigma) : is added to 1 mg/ml. After 30 min at 0°C, the suspensions are frozen (liquid nitrogen) and thawed (at 37°C) 5 times, and centrifuged for min at 20 000 rpm in a SS 34 Sorvall rotor at 4°c. The supernatants are assayed for IFN activity using the cythopathic bioassay according 20 to Armstrong (32) as described in step Ac. The following activities are found:
Source of extract IFN activity Ca
E. coli HB 101 containing recombinant DNA (1u/ml) oo oo Co
CC-pBR 322/ULycIFN-1'D 0;0 - 25 CG-pBR 322/HLycIFN-4, 030
CG-pBR 322/MLycIFN=5, 10 000;10 000
CG-pBR 322 ALycIFN-8' 1 100;100
CG-pBR 322/HLycIFN-B, 030
Possibly, clones exhibiting no measurable IFN activities contain re- combinant DNAs in which the HuLyIFN-cDNA insert is in an improper orientation in regard to the direction of transcription. Therefore, the recombinant DNA of one such clone (CG-pBR 322/1LyclFN-1'bL) con- ano oni 9 otha [CTL 2 LOWS AY ALR IE Yd pS TTR
- 60 ~ taining a full length cDNA insert is reoriented as follows:
The plasmid DNA of the clone E. coli UB 101 CG-pBR 322 /HLycIFN-1'b is isolated as described above (step Ec) and cleaved with Pst I. 0.5 Me of the cleaved DNA in 20 pl of a buffer mixture, containing 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.8), 10 mM MgCl,, 10 mM DIT, 25 mM NaCl and 50 ye’ ml gelatin, is treated with 0.2 units of T4 DNA ligase (Biolabs) and 0.5 mM ATP for 2 h at 15°C. E coli IIB 101 is transformed with the cDNA mixture as described above (step D). Transformed colonies are selected on Mc Conkey agar plates supplemented with tetracycline and, subsequently, replica-plated to nitrocellulose filters. 4 bacterial ‘ colonies hybridizing to the 325 1aveled Pvu II-Bgl II* fragment (351 bp) of the recombinant DNA CG-pBR 322/liLycIFN-1'b (cf. step Ee) are designated E. coli HB 101 CG-pBR 322/ULycIFN-1'b, to -1'b,.
Extracts of the 4 clones are prepared and tested for IFN activity as . 15 described above. The following activities are found:
Source of extract IFN activity : FE. coli HB 101 containing recombinant DNA (IU/ml) © CG-pBR 322/MLycIFN-1'b, 0;0
CG-pLR 322/1ILycl¥N-1"b, 0;0
CG-pBR 322/HLycIFN-1'b, 0;0
CG-pBR 322/lLycIFN-1'b, 30330 oo i f . - ' . Coo Vo lence, the plasmid CG-pDR' 322/HLycIFN-1"D, contains a cDNA insert . capable of directing the synthesis of a polypeptide with IFN activity.
G. Construction of recombinant plasmids capable of producing high levels of polypeptides with IFN activity 1. Construction of CG-pBR (AP) /LyIFN-a-1 recombinant plasmid
In order to improve the IFN specific protein yield of the clone
E. coli HB 101 CG-pBR 322/HLycIFN-1'b, the following construction is performed as indicated schematically in figure 15,
CL Loe BAD ORIGINAL J re . fan B —
a. Preparation of the cDNA insert
The recombinant plasmid DNA (150 yg) of the clone E. coli HB 101 }
CG-pBR 322/ULycIFN-1'b is cleaved with Pst I (Biolabs) using standard procedures (cf. step Ed). Following phenol extraction and ethanol precipitation, the excised insert is isolated by mcans of sucrose density gradient centrifugation (5-237) in 50 mM Tris-1IC1 (pH 8.0) and 1 mM EDTA. The centrifugation is performed at 35 000 rpm in a TST 41 rotor (Kontron AG) at 15°C for 16 h. 0.3 ml fractions are collected with an ISCO gradient collector at 1 ml/min. The fractions con- taining the small fragment (i.e. the insert) are pooled, The DNA is precipitated with ethanol as usual, and the precipitate is collected by centrifugation in a HB-4 rotor (Sorvall) at 10 000 rpm at 0°C for 10 min. The precipitate is redissolved in 60 pl 10 mM Tris-HCH (pil 7.5) and 0.05 mM EDTA. 30 pg DNA are recovered as determinad by measuring the optical density.
The insert DNA (10 ug) is digested with Hae III (Biolabs) and the fragments are fractionated on a 2% agarose gel in a solution con- taining 50 mM Tris, 50 mM boric acid, 1 mM EDTA and 0.5 pg/ml ethidium bromide. The largest DNA fragments, Hae III-Pst I (869 bp) and
Hae II1I-Hae III (82 bp, - figure 15,fragments 3 and & respectively), are each excised from the gel, squirted! through a.thin needle ‘with, a syringe into Syl of 0.15 M NaCl, 50 mM Tris-lCl (pH 8.0), 1.mt a - EDTA, and ely Bdyovernight by shaking. The eluate is passed through ’ a 100 ul DE-52 (Wa tan) Pasteur-pipette column to adsorb the DNA.
The co lym is Washed with 2 ml of the same buffer and the DNA is eLutc@ vith 400 pl of a solution containing 1.5 M NaCl, 50 mM Tris (pH 8.0) and 1 mM EDTA. The DNA is precipitated with 2 volumes of ethanol at -20°C overnight. The precipitate is collected by centri- fugation in an Eppendorf centrifuge.
The Hae TII-Hae III DHA fragment (82 bp) is redissolved and digested with Sau 3A (Biolabs). The enzyme is heat-inactivated at 65°C for 30 min. 1 yg of the Hae I17-Pst I DNA fragment (869 bp) is added, [BAD Orval 9 ee eam gaara ea ee GG dN GE TECTIA SRR LY Ch
- 62 ~ the solution is adjusted to 10 mM MyCL,, 10 ml DIT and 0.5 mM ATP, and T4 DNA ligase (Biolabs) is added to 30 units/nl reaction volume.
The solution is incubated for 10 h at 15°C. Following extraction with phenol and chloroform, the mixture is fractionated on a 27 agarose gel in Tris-borate-EDTA in the presence of ethidium bromide. The Sau 3A-Pst I DNA fragment (cf. figure 15,fragment 5) is extracted as described before, precipitated with cthanol and redissolved in 10 pl of a solution containing 10 mM TriselCl (pH 7.5) and 0.05 mM EDTA. b. Preparation of the DNA fragment containing the f-lactamase regulatory region (ApPr) of pBR 322 .
The plasmid pBR 322 is cleaved with Pst I (cf. step Cb) and treated with 4 units/ml of the exonuclease Bal 31 (Bethesda Research Lab.) at 30°C for 4-10 min to remove the B-lactamase coding segment.
A chemical DNA linker of the formula 5'-ATCTGTGATCACACAT-3' . is synthesized using the method described above (step Ea). The linker is added to the Bal 31 treated pBR 322 DNA using conventional means.
The resulting hybrid molecule is cleaved with the restriction endo- . . . STE 0 i SA . A . , nucleases Bel I (Biolabs) and EcoR I. The digestidn products are’ : fractionated on a 8% polyacrylamide gel in Tris-borate-EDTA as’ TL EK : } described before (step Ba). DNA fragments (ApPr DNA fragments), migrating between 184 bp and 234 bp marker DNAs, are isolated as described above (step Ia), and precipitated with ethanol as usual.
The precipitate is redissolved in a solution containing 10 mM
Tris+HC1 (pH 7.5) and 0.05 mM EDTA. c. Ligation of the ApPr DNA fragment to the cDNA insert
The solutions containing the ApPr DNA fragments and the cDNA insert are pooled. The mixture is adjusted to 10 mM MgCl, , 10 mM DTT and ‘ 0.5 mM ATP, and incubated with 30 units/ul TA DNA ligase (Biolabs)
BAD ORIGINAL J ers (me Eye Ar ALT A AER PE SEE AE SHIM FRE DOC § 1 RN SM
- 63 ~ 26197 at 15°C for 12 h. Following extraction with phenol and chloroform, the mixture is fractionated on a 1% low melting agarose gel (biovad).
The obtained ApPr-cDNA fragment is juined to the large fragment of
PBR 322 cleaved with both Pst I (Biolabs) and EcoR I (Biolabs) in the following manner. The gel piece, containing the ApPr cDNA frag- ‘ment (about 20 pi) is mixed with the Pst I-FecoR I fragment of pBR 322, melted at 65°C for 2 min, cooled to 37°C, adjusted to 0.5 mM ATP, mM DTT and 10 mM MgCl,, and incubated with 30 units/nl of T4 DNA ligase (Biolabs) for 12 h at 15°C. ) 10 One tenth volume of a solution containing 100 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 100 mM CaCl, and 100 mM MgCl, is added, the solution is heated for 10 min at 65°C to inactivate /he ligase and cooled to 37°C. The solution is then taken to transform ca? -treated E. coli IIB 101 as described above (step D) and plated onto Mc Conkey agar plates supplemented with 10 pg/ml tetracycline. The transformed colonies are screened for IFN activity (cf. step F). The clone synthesizing the highest level of IFN activity is selected and designated E. coli HB 101 CG-pBR(AP)/LyIFN-a-1. An activity of 40000 (IU/ml) is found wiich represents a 1300 fold stimulation compared to the original clone
E. coli UB 101 CG-pBR322/HLycIFN-1'b. . The recombinant plasmid DNA of the clone CG-pBR (AP) LyIENza-1 ds Ce ee isolated from the culture as described above (step 3c). and character~ Co ized by establishing the nucleotide sequence of the cDNA insert (IFN : gene) and the p-lactamase regulatory region. The result is summarized in figure 16. 11. Construction of the recombinant plasmid CG-pBR (AP)/LyIFN-a-3 -_— Pr PRR Ayam
The IFN specific protein yields of the clone E. coli HB 101 CC-pBR 322
HLycIFN-8) is improved as follows (cf. fig. 17): a. Preparation of the DNA fragment containing the B-lactamase regulatory region from CG-pBR (AP) /TyIFN-a-1 a0 onic J
CC-pPR (AP) /LyIFN-a-1 DNA (100 pg) is cleaved with Hind ITI (Biolabs) and Bgl II (Biolabs). Following phenol extraction and cthanol pre- cipitation, the excised DNA fragment is isolated by means of sucrose density gradient centrifugation (5-237) in 50 mM Trise HCl (pH 8.0)
S and 1 mM EDTA. The centrifugation is performed at 58 000 rpm in a TST 60 rotor (Kontron AG) at 15°C for 4 hours. 0.2 ml fractions are collected as described before. The fractions containing the small fragment (Hind ITI-Bgl II) are pooled and the DNA is precipitated with ethanol as usual. The precipitate is redissolved in 80 pl 10 mM TriseHCl (pH 7.5) and 0.05 mM EDTA. 16 pg DNA are recovered as determined by measuring the optical density.
The DNA fragment (lind III-Bgl II) (4 pg) is cleaved with Sau 3A (Biolabs) and the digestion products are fractionated on a 67 poly- acrylamide gel in Tris-borate-EDTA as described before. The DNA frag- ments are stained in EtBr (0.5 pg/ml), the Hind III-Sau 3A DNA fragment (239 bp) is extracted and isolated as before. The DNA is precipitated with ethanol as usual. The precipitate is redissolved in 20 p1 10 mM Tris®
HCL (pH 7.5) and 0.05 mM EDTA. b. Preparation of the cDNA insert
The cDNA insert is excised from the redombinant plasmid CG-pBR 322 Lo lLycIFN-8) as described above (section Ia). | | cl Ss oo ) The cDNA insert (2 pg) is digested with 2.5 units of Sau 3A (Biolabs) in 10 pg/ml EtBr and incubated at 37°C for 60 min. The digests are phenol extracted and the DNA is precipitated in ethanol as above. The
DNA fragments are fractionated on a 1.27 agarose gel in a solution containing 50 mM Tris, 50 mM boric acid, 1mM EDTA and 0.5 pg/ml cthidium bromide. ’
The second largest DNA fragment (Sau 3A-PstI: 693 bp) is extracted from the gel and purified as described in section Ia). The DNA is re- ~ | eas REY
Pl i, \ : Lo a sem te Ay kf. ee RINT ITIANL AN cenlinel if BE IRE EER reps tae © WT Tee TE dissolved in 20 pl 10 mM Tris-liCcl (pl 7.5) aud 0.05 mM EDTA. c. Ligation of the Hind TII-Sau 3A DNA fragment to the cDNA iusert (Sau 3A-PstI) .
Equal amounts of both DNA fragments (~-50 ng) are incubated in a solution containing 10 md MgCl,, 10 mM DTT, 0.5 mM ATP and 30 units pl
T4 DNA ligase (Biolabs) at 15°C for 3 hours. The mixture is incubated for 15 min. at 80°C and adjusted to SO mM NaCl. The DNA mixture is digested with 0.5 units PstI (Biolabs) and 1 unit Hind III (Biolabs) for 20 min. at 37°C. The DNA is phenol extracted, ethanol precipitated and redissolved in 20 pul 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5) and 0.05 mM EDTA.
One half of the resulting mixture is ligated to the large Hind III-PstI
DNA fragment of the plasmid pBR 322 (+100 ng) in 10 mM MgCl, 10 mM
DIT, 0.5 mM ATP containing 30 units/ul of T4 DNA ligase (Biolabs) for 2h at 15°C.
One tenth volume of the solution is used to transform E. coli HB 101 as described in step D). The transformed colonies are used to test for
IFN activity as described earlier (cf. step fF).
The clone synthesizing the highest level of IFN activity is selected and designated E. coli lB 101 CG-pBR (AP)/LyIFN-a=3. . .. .. o.. ~~ : 20 The IFN activity is determined as described above (step F). An activity of 70000 (IU/ml) is found which represents a 700 fold stimulation com- pared to the original clone E. coli HB 101 CG-pBR 322/MycIFN-8, .
The recombinant plasmid DNA of the clone CG-pBR (AP) LyIFN-a-3 is isolated from the culture as described above (step Cc) and charac- terized by establishing the nucleotide sequence of the cDNA insert (IFN gene) and the p-lactamase regulatory region. The result is summarized in figure 18. . BAD tn A re ——— ent. ad
CST LA I LO SA SE Se REN VT GROA ET TT . LoTR vi sh 52s 5 Bele, hs Rr ve nas Freon eit Tend ho Ry aw iE
Lh Ce pi Wn CE a Sa y PR Rk we
The construction protocol For the plasmid CG-pBR (AP)/LyIFN-a-3 can be uscd for all a-IFN cDNA genes or appropriately cut chromosomal «-IFN genes in general.
For cxomple, starting from the plasmid CC-pBR 322/NLycIFN-5,, the plasmid
CG-pBR (AP)/LyIFN-a-2 is obtained in an identical manner as described for the plasmid CG-pBR(AP)/LyIFN-a-3. This new plasmid contains the
DNA insert of CG-pBR 322/MLycIFN-5, and the p-lactamase regulatory region from CG-pBR (AP) /LyIFN-a-1. A clone designated E. coli HB 101
CG-pBR (AP) /LyIFN-a-2 is selected as described above. An IFN activity of 50000 (IU/ml) is found which represents a 5 fold stimulation com pared to the original E, coli HB 101 CG-pBR 322/HLycTFN-5, . The nucleo- ’ tide sequence of the cDNA insert and the p-lactamase regulatory region of the plasmid CC-pBR (AP) /LyIFN-a-2 is established as described above and depicted in fig. 19. 1II. Deposition of prepared microorganisms
Micro-organisms and recombinant DNA molecules prepared as described in
Example 10 are exemplified by cultures deposited in the culture collec~ tion of the Agricultural Research Culture Collection (NRRL) on September 14, 1981 and are assigned the following accession numbers:
E. coli WB 101 CG-pBR 322/HLycIFN-f.: NRRL B-12528 ©
E. coli HB 101 CG-pBR 322/ULycIFN-4,: NRRL B-12529 :
E. coli HB 101 CG-pBR 322/HLycIFN-1'b: NRRL B-12530
E. coli UB 101 CG-pBR 322/lLycIFN-5,: NRRL B-12531 oo
E. coli HB 101 CG-pBR 322/1LyclFN-8,: NRRL B-12532 2
BAD Oniaunvac 9
Mle tian, Ti et aeean ye meray Mb EY MA A SETHI SAC & IACI SN Nh TE ST
~ 67 = - 26197
Example 11: The lymphoblastoid IFN-1'b and IFN-5, coding sequences of the E. coli plasmids CG-pBR322/HLycIFN-1'bL and -5, (cf. Example 10) can be subcloned in plasmid p30 (cf. Example 4) in an analogous manner as described for IFN-81 in Examples 5 and 6. A partial digestion with restriction endonuclease HaeIIl is required. The yeast hybrid plasmids obtained in this way are p30IFN2(1'b), p30IFN2'(1'b), p30IFN2(5,) and p30IFN2'(5,).
These obtained hybrid plasmids can be used to transform Saccharomyces cerevisiae RH971 as described in Example 7. The following colonies containing a hybrid plasmid with a lymphoblastoid IFN cDNA insert can be selected:
S. cerevisiae RII971/p30IFN2(1'b)
S. cerevisiae RH97L/p30IFN2'(1'b)
S. cerevisiae RH971/p30IFN2(5,)
S. cerevisiae R97 L/p30IFN2" (5,)
Example 12: In an analogous manner as described in Example 9, the following yeast hybrid plasmids can be obtained starting from the plasmids p30IFN2(1'b), -(5)7, -(8,) and p30IFN2'(1'b), =(5,), respectively: , . 20 pJDB207/1FN2(1'b), pJDB207/IFN2'(1'b), pJDB207/1FN2(5,), pJDB207/IFN2' (5,) and pJDB207/IFN2(8). Sou a
These hybrid plasmids can be transformed into S. cerevisiae strain
RHI71 selecting for leucine prototrophic colonies. The following colonies containing a hybrid plasmid with a lymphoblastoid IFN cDNA insert can be obtained:
S. cerevisiae RH971/pJDB207/IFN2(1'b)
S. cerevisiae RH97 L/pJDB207/1FN2' (1'b)
S. cerevisiae RH971/pJDB207/TIFN(5,)
S. cerevisiae RH971/pJDB207/1FN2'(5,)
S. cerevisiae RHS71/pIDB207/TFN2 (8) » eam wamea hd AML ae lenten yen Sy LY KE GA VL ION EL KAD GT EIR Sg fo fms
Example 13: Construction of an expression plasmid containing the PHOS promoter and PHO5 transcription termination signals (see fig. 20) a) Elimination of the EcoRI restriction site in plasmid p30:
The scheme outlined in fig. 20-22 requires elimination of the unique
EcoRI restriction site in plasmid p30. Five mg of p30 DNA (cf. . Example 4) are digested to completion with restriction endonuclease
EcoRI (Boehringer). In order to fill in the resulting sticky ends, 1 ug of EcoRI digested p30 in 50 mul of 50 mM NaCl, 10 mM TriseHC1 pH 7.5, 10 mM MgCl,, 1 mM DTT, 0.25 mM dATP and 0.25 mM dTTP is incubated for 30 min 37°C with 1 unit of DNA polymerase (Klenow large fragment, BRL). The DNA recovered from ethanol precipitation is ligated as usual and used for transformation of competent E., coli
HB101 cells as described in Example 4. Clones that are resistant to ’
EcoRI digest are referred to as p30/EcoRIN. b) Isolation of a 0.37 kb Sau3A-Pstl PHO5 transcription termination fragment: .
The PHOS transcript has been mapped by S1 nuclease mapping (48). The signals for transcription termination have been shown to be located in a 0.37 kb Sau3A-Pstl fragment of the PHO5 gene. The nucleotide sequence of the Sau3A-Pstl fragment is given in fig. 21. } } , | . - eth Tea } : Five ug of pJDB207/PHO5,PHO3 DNA (cf. Example 2) are digested to comple- . tion with restriction endonucleases Sau3A and PstI. The restriction fragments are separated on a vertical 1.57 low melting agarose gel in
TBE buffer. The 0.37 kb Sau3A-PstI fragment is localized by ethidiumbromide staining and a gel block as small as possible is cut out containing this DNA fragment. ¢) Cloning of the Sau3A-PstI PHOS fragment in M13mp9: eee beer ree Pe ee ree et ee a ET rr fm SSE :
M13mp9 phage DNA is a useful cloning vector with a cluster of unique restriction sites (49). Five ug of M13mp9 DNA are digested to completion with restriction endunucleases BamHI and PstI. The larger . a eas aE OEE UI Mt BTA ee CRORE SP EME Tt eT
7.2 kb DNA fragment is separated from a very small fragment (8 bp) on a 0.8% low melting agarose gel. The gel block containing the large
DNA fragment is cut out of the gel. Cel blocks with the 0.37 kb
Sau3A-Pstl fragment of pJDB207/PHO5,PHO3 (cf. Example 13b) and the 7.2 kb BamHI-PstI fragment of M13mp9 are liquefied at 65°C, mixed in about equimolar amounts and diluted with 1,0 to lower the agarose concentration to 0.3%. Ligation is carried out in a 200 aul solution containing 60 mM Tris.HCl pH 7.5, 10 mM MgCl, 10 mM DTT, 1 mM ATP and 600 units of T4 DNA ligase (Biolabs). Transduction of competent cells of the strain E. coli JM101 (Ca++) is done according to the manual "M13 cloning and DNA sequencing system published by New England Biolabs.
Phages from a number of white plaques are grown and analyzed for the size of their DNA insert by cledvage with restriction endonucleases
EcoRI and Pstl.
A M13mp9 derived clone containing the Sau3A-PstlI PHOS transcription termination fragment is isolated and referred to as M13mp9,/PHOS . (Sau3A-PstI). d) Cloning of the PHOS transcription temination fragment in p30/EcoRT:
The original PHOS transcription termination fragment cloned in phage
M13mp9 (M13mp9,PHOS(Sau3A-Pstl)) is recloned as a HaeIII-HindIII fragment in plasmid p30,/EcoRL cleaved with Balt and Hind ITT} RA
M13mp9,/PHO5 (Sau3A-PstI) DNA is cleaved to completion with restriction - i endonucleases HaelIl and HindIII. The resulting two DNA fragments are separated on a 1.5% vertical low melting agarose gel in TBE buffer.
The 0.39 kb fragment is isolated in a gel block cut out of the gel. p30,/EcoRL DNA is digested with Ball and HindIII. The large 3.98 kb fragment is separated on a 0.8% low melting agarose gel in TBE buffer and isolated by cutting a gel block containing the DNA fragment.
Gel blocks with the 0.39 kb HaeIII-HindIII PHOS transcription temination fragment and the 3.98 kb BalI-HindIII fragment of p30/
EcoRI are melted at 65°C and mixed in about equimolar amounts. Liga~ nee RAIS PTE AR TO RHEE | TEN SREP eT CRATER tion and transformation of competent E, coli HBLOL cells are as described in Example 4. DNA of transformed cells is analysed by cleavage with Balf und HaeIIl. A clone containing the PHOS transcrip- tion termination fragment is further analyzed and referred to as p3l (see Figure 20).
Expression plasmid p31 contains the PHO5 promoter region with part of the signal sequence of PHO5 and adjacent to it a DNA fragment with the PHOS transcription termination signals, Foreign coding sequences to be expressed in this vector may conveniently be inserted between promoter and transcription termination sequences.
Example 14:Insertion of lymphoblastoid interferon-5 DNA into plasmid p31 (see Figure 22) a) Isolation of HaelII-Hpal fragments of plasmid CG-pBR322/HLycIFN-5,
E. coli strain HB101 CG-pBR322/HLycIFN-5, (see Example loE) is grown in 100 ml LB medium supplemented with 10 ug/ml tetracyclin and the plasmid DNA is isolated as described in Example 2. Ten ug of
CG-pBR322/HLycIFN-5, DNA are completely digested with restriction endonucleases Pstl and Hpal. The restriction fragments are separated on a preparative 0.8% low melting agarosé gel. The PstI-Hpal fragment of about 860 bp containing the TFN=3, coding sequence is cut qut of the gel and eluted from the agarose gel as described in Example 4a : and purified by DE52 ion exchange chromatography as detailed’ in ; . Example 5a.
The PstI-Hpal fragment contains 3 Haelll sites: at position 41, 65 and 146 (from the ATG) in the IFN-5, coding sequence. Partial HaeIll digestion leads to three HaeIII-Hpal fragments of 699 bp, 780 bp and 804 bp, respectively. Haelll digestion is carefully adjusted to obtain about equal amounts of all three fragments. The mixture of fragments is phenol extracted, ‘ethanol precipitated and resuspended in 10 mM Tris pH8 at a concentration of 0.1 mg/ml.
b) Preparation of Ball cleaved, dephonsphoryiated plasmid p31
Six pg of p31 DNA (cE. Example 13d) are completely digested with re- striction endonuclease Ball (BRL). Aftor phenol extraction and ethanol precipitation the DNA is redissolved in 100,ul of 50 mM Tris pH 8.0 and passed through a 50 ul bed of equilibrated Chelex 100 (BioRAD) in a siliconized Pasteur pipet. The flow through and 450 ul of subsequent wash are combined. 0.4 units of calf intestine alkaline phosphatase (Boehringer) are added, After 1 h of incubation at 37°C the enzyme is inactivated at 65°C for 1.5 hrs. The NaCl concentration in the incubation mixture is adjusted to 150 mM. The linearized dephosphory- lated p31 DNA is purified by DES52 ion exchange chromatography (see
Example 5a). After ethanol precipitation the DNA is resuspended in 10 mM Tris pH 8 at a concentration of 0.3 mg/ml. c) Ligation of linearized, dephosphorylated p31 DNA to the
HaeIII-Hpal fragments of IFN-5, DNA 0.6 mg of dephosphorylated p31 vector DNA cleaved with Ball is ligated to 0.5 mg of partial HaellI-Hpal fragments of IFN-5, DNA (see .
Example 14a). Ligation is carried out in 10 ml of 60 mM Tris pH 7.5, 10 mM MgCl,, 10 mM DTT, 4 mM ATP and 300 units of T4 DNA ligase (Biolabs) overnight at room temperature. A 1 ul aliquot of the ligation mixture is added to 50 ul of calcium treated transformation N competent E. coli HBIOl cells. The cransformatidn protocoll is as described in Example 4a. Co
Transformed, — colonies are grown individually in LB medium con- taining 100 pg/ml ampicillin. Plasmid DNA is prepared according to the method of Holmes et al., (50) and analysed by digestion with re- striction endonuclease BstEII (one unique site in the PHOS promoter). 20 clones containing the LFN-5, insert are further analysed by
BstEII-EcoRI double digests to determine the orientation and size of the insert. Among 8 clones with the insert in the right orient- ation all 3 expected insert sizes are found. The size corresponds
B40 Oficivn. _) } iy ar 8 EE AAI EE 01 A ITP T 40 TS ee A to the three HaelIl, j-Hpal fragments created by partial HaeIll digest of the LFN-5, gene (cf. Example lda). The clones are referred to as p31/IFL(5,), p31/1F2(5,)) and p31/1£3(5,) with IFN-5, inserts of 804 bp (HaeIIT, -Hpal insert), 780 bp (HaellIl,*lipal) and 699 bp (Hae III, -Hpal), respectively.
Example 15: Insertion of lymphoblastoid interferon-1'b DNA into plasmid p31 (see Fig. 22) a) Isolation of HaeIII-Rsal fragments of plasmid CG-pBR322/HLycIFN-1'b:
Ten pg of CG-pBR322 MLycIFN-1'b DNA (see Example 10E) are digested with restriction endonucleases PstI and Rsal. The restriction frag- ments are separated on a 0.8% low melting agarose gel. A PstI-Rsal fragment of about 870 bp is isolated from the gel and purified as ’ described above (Example 14a).
The PstI-Rsal fragment contains three HaeIIl sites: at positions 13, 37 and 118 from the ATG of the IFN-1'b coding sequence. Partial
Haelll digestion leads to three HaeIII-Rsal fragments of 735 bp, 816 bp and 840 bp, respectively. The mixture of fragments is phenol extracted, ethanol precipitated and resuspended in 10 mM Tris pH 8.0 at a concentration of 0.1 mg/ml.
Co Loh b) Ligation of linearized, dephosphorylated p31 DNA to HaeIII-Rsal fragments of IFN-1'b DNA ry ’ 0.6 mg of dephosphorylated p31 vector DNA cleaved with Ball (see
Example 14b) is ligated to 0.5 ug of partial HaelII-Rsal fragments of IFN-1'b DNA. The ligation procedure, the transformation of compe- tent E. coli HB 101 cells with the ligation mixture and the . R . . . selection of the transformed amp colonies is carried out as described in Example lé4c. Plasmid DNA is prepared according to the method of Holmes et al. (50) and analysed by digestion with restric- tion endonulcease BstEIIL. er eae mie Be BN TRIE a LA MAMET AS PRECIP RY ROS se TY,
i
Cn - 26197 7 clones containing the IFN-1'b insert are analysed by BstEIT-Pvull double digests. Two clones are shown to contain the HaeIIl,-Rsal fragment (816 bp) in the right orientation. This construction is referred to as p31l/IF2(1'b).
Example 16: Insertion of lymphoblastoid interferon-8; DNA into plasmid p3l (see figure 23) a) Isolation of a 1.46 kb Sall-EcoRIl fragment of plasmid p30TEN1(8,)
Five pg of p3OLFN1(8)) DNA (see Example 5d) is digested with re- striction endonucleases Sall and EcoRI. A 1.46 kb Sall-EcoRIl fragment, containing the PHOS promoter linked to the protein coding region of IFN-81 is separated on a 0.8% low melting agarose gel.
The DNA band is localized by ethidium bromide staining and cut out of the gel. b) Isolation of a 3.5 kb SalI-EcoRI fragment of plasmid p31
Five ug of p31 DNA (see Example 13d) are completely digested . with restriction endonucleases Sall and EcoRI. The 3.5 kb vector fragment containing the PHOS transcription termination sequence is separated on a 0.87 low melting agarose gel and the DNA band is cut out. 50 c¢) Ligation of a 1.46 kb Sall-EcoRI fragment of IF 83). toa 3.5 kb
Sall-EcoRI fragment of p31
Gel blocks with 0.67 ug of the 3.5 kb SalI-EcoRI fragment of p31 and 0.5 pg of the 1.46 kb SalIl-EcoRL fragment of p30IFN1(8}) are ligated in 240 ul as described in Example 4a at 15°C overnight. 10 ul of the ligation mixture are used to transform competent
E. coli HB10l cells.
R . PR .
Transformed, amp colonies are gown individually in LB medium con- taining 100 ug/ml ampicillin. Plasmid DNA is prepared according to the method of Holmes et al. (50) and analysed by digestion with restric-— tion endonuclease BstEII (one unique site in the PHOS promoter). a eRe ESEAES
A number of clones containing the IFN-8] inscrt. are analysed by BstEII-
Pvull double digests. They all contain the 1.46 kb SalI-EcoRI fragment.
The identical clones are referred to as P3L/IF(8)).
Example 17: Subdloning of gene constructions in the high copy number yeast vector pJDB207
The constructions described in Examples 14-16 contain the PHOS promoter, different interferon coding regions and the PHOS trans- cription termination signals in a tandem array, all inserted in a pPBR322 derived vector. For expression in yeast the whole insert is subcloned as such in yeast vector pJDB207 (28) allowing selection for leucine prototrophic colonies (cf. Example 9 and fig. 6). 2 pug each of p31/TF(8)) DNA, p31/IF1(5,) DNA, p31/1F2(5,) DNA, p3L/IF3(5,) DNA and p31/IF2(1'b) DNA are digested with restriction endonucleases Sall and HindIII. The restriction fragments are - separated on a preparative 0.87% low melting agarose gel. The small fragment (~2 kb in size) of each digest is cut out of the gel. ° 10 jg of pJDB207 DNA are digested with restriction endonucleases
Sall and HindIII. The large 6.2 kb fragment is isolated from . a preparative 0.87 low melting agarose gel. Gel blocks containing, the DNA fragments are liquified at 65°C and diluted with Hote : lower the agarose concentration to about 0.3%. Co
Each of the 2 kb Sall-HindIII fragments of the plasmids p3L/IF(8)), : p3L/TFL(5,), p31/1F2(5,), P31/IF3(5,) and p31/IF2(1'b) is mixed with [ an equimolar amount of the 6.2 kb HindIII-Sall fragment of pJDB207. !
Ligations are carried out in 100 ml for 4 hrs at 15°C. 10 jl of _~ each ligation mixture are used to transform competent E. coli HB10l cells as described in Example 4a. Several amp colonies from each experiment are grown individually in LB medium containing 100 ug/ml of ampicillin. The plasmid DNA is analysed for the size of the insert
Se 26197 .. by cleavage with resiriction endonucleases Hind [11 and Sail. The resulting clones with the correct inserts are named pJPB207 /IF (81), pJDB207/LFL(5)), pJDB207/1F2(5)) (cf. fig. 27), pJDB207/IF3(5)) aud pJDB207/1F2(1'b) (cf. fig. 27).
Example 18: Transformation of Saccharomyces cerevisiae AH220 and induction of interferon production:
Plasmids pJDB207/IF(8)), pJDB207/1F1(5,), pJDB207/1F2(5,), : pJDB207/1F3(5,) and pJDB207/1F2(1'b) are each introduced into
Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain AH220 (a, trpl, leu2-3, leu2-112, his3, phoS5, pho3) using the transformation protocoll described by
Hinnen et al. (1). Transformed yeast cells are selected on yeast minimal medium plates deficient in leucine. Single transformed yeast colonies are picked and grown as described in Example 7. The different yeast colonies are referred to as
Saccharomyces cerevisiae AH220/pIDB207/1F (81),
Saccharomyces cerevisiae AN220/pJDB207/1F1(5,),
Saccharomyces cerevisiae AH220/pJDB207/1F2(5,), ]
Saccharomyces cerevisiae AH220/pJDB207/1F3(5,) and
Saccharomyces cerevisiae AH220/pJDB207/1F2(1'b)
Example 19: Preparation of yeast cell extracts and determination of the interferon titer: . ad ER Co
Cell extracts are prepared and interferon activity is determined as a : described in Example 8.
The results are summarized in Table 3. a EDT «ee LW [5 5 SLT ere ae
Table 3:
Interferon activity in Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain AH220 after transformation with the following recombinant plasmids:
Plasmids Interferon activity units/ml yeast cell extract , , pJDB207/IF (8) 1+ 10 pJIDB207/TF1(5)) 7.10 pJDB207/1F2(5,) 5 « 10° pJDB207/1F3(5,) 3. 103 pJDB207,TF2(1'b) 4 + 10°
Example 20: Expression of hepatitis B virus surface (HBVs) antigen under the control of the yeast PHO5 promoter a) Construction of a fusion between the PHOS promoter and the HBVs protein coding region : ’ t Ct eT Choa TE } 5 pg DNA of plasmid pHBV130 (51) is digested with restriction -: endonuclease Aval as recommended by the supplier (New England Biolabs).
A fragment of 1336 base pairs is obtained which contains the entire protein coding region of HBVs, including 27 base pairs of a potential pre-HBVs sequence (see Fig. 2 in ref. 51: the Aval fragment spans the
DNA segment from the Xho site until an Aval site 62 base pairs beyond the BamHI site located between the surface coding region and the core coding region). The 1336 base pair fragment is purified by soft agarose electrophoresis (0.8% agarose gel) as described in Example 4a.
= - 2 6 1 9 7 mp of plasmid pBR322,/PHU5 Bam-Sal (see fig. 1) is cut with restric- tion endonucleases Sall and Aval (position 1424 of pBR322) and the resulting 3.9 kb vector fragment coniaining pBK122 sequences together with the PHO5 Bam-Sal segment is purified by soft 5 agarose electrophoresis as described above. 1 pg of the 1336 base pair fragment is ligated to 3 ug of the 3.9 kb vector fragment in 50 ul of 60 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.5, 10 mM MgCl, , mM DIT, 1 mM ATP and 600 units of T4 DNA ligase (Biolabs) at 15°C for 4 hours. Transformation of E. coli HBIOl to ampicillin resistance 10 and plasmid isolation is carried out as described in Example 4a,
The correct structure of the plasmid is verified by restriction analysis. The new plasmid thus constructed is called pBR322/PHO5/HBVs (see Fig. 24). b) Adjustment of the PHOS promoter to the exact HBVs protein coding region ,
The fusion described creates a DNA sequence arrangement as depicted in fig. 25. The sequence data are taken from fig. 3 (PHO5) and from
Pasek et al. (52; HBVs). The mRNA initiation site is determined by conventional S1 mapping (48) using the BamHI-Sall fragment of pBR322/PHO5 Bam-Sal (fig. 1). In order to eliminate the PHOS protein coding region present in pBR322/PHO5/HBVs 5, ug of the plasmid is digested with restriction endonuclease KpnI (conditions specified by . supplier, New England Biolabs) which produces a linearized plasmid. 4 mg of linearized plasmid is dipssted with 1 unit of exonuclease Bal3l (Bethesda Reasearch Laboratory) at 30°C for 45 sec in 12 mM CaCl,, 12 uM
MgCl, , 300 mM NaCl, 20 mM Tris, 1 mM EDTA pH 8.1 in a total volume of 100 ml. The reaction is stopped by phenol extraction as described above. After ethanol precipitation the DNA is resuspended in 50 ul TE. in an esse srr ma yf EOIN, LE STEREO NEE DY
- 7 26197 1 ug of DNA is recircularized by ligation with T4 DNA ligase in a volume of 20 ml (conditionc see Example 4a). After transformation of
E. coli HBLOl to ampicillin resistance (see Example 4a) plasmid
DNA is isolated as described and individual plasmid preparations are analysed by restriction analysis with the following enzymes: Haelll,
PstI, BstEII and Hhal. This analysis allows the determination of the presence of the Hhal site (6 base pairs before the start of the HBVs protein coding region) and gives a measure for the size of the deletion. The DNA sequence in the junction area is determined using the method of Maxam and Gilbert (15) (radioactive labelling at the BstEII site at position -374, see fig. 3). The endpoints of the deletion generated in one of the plasmids are indicated in fig. 24.
This plasmid is called pBR322,THO5/HBVsAl4, ¢) Transfer of the PHOS-HBVs fusion to the yeast plasmid pJDB207 (see fig. 26) 5 mg DNA of plasmid pBR322/PHO5/HBVsAl4 is digested with restriction endonuclease BamHI (New England Biolabs, conditions as described by supplier). A 1.8 kb BamHI fragment is prepared by soft agarose gel electrophoresis (0.8% agarose) as described in Example 4a. 2 pg of the yeast vector pJDB207 is digested with the same enzyme. 1 ug of digested pJDB207 and 1 ug of the 1.8 kb BamHI restriction fragment is ligated in a total volume of 20 ul using the conditions described in Example 20a. Transformation of E. coli HB101 to ampicillin Lo oo resistance and isolation of plasmid DNA is carried out as described: . 25 above (Example 4a). Individual plasmids are analyzed by BamHI restriction analysis and the orientation of the inserted BamHI fragment is determined by HindII1/BstEII double digestion. Fig. 26 outlines the construction. The plasmid obtained as indicated in fig. 26 is called pJDB207/PHO5/1BVsAl4.
The plasmid is transformed into yeast strain AH220 as described in
Example 7. Transformed yeast cells are selected, incubated in liquid medium and grown under derepressing conditions as described in
Example 7. A single transformed yeast colony is referred to as
Saccharomyces cerevisiae AH220/pJDB207/HBVsAl4.
me 26197 , .
Preparation of cell extract 1s done as described in .Example & and the amount of HBVs protein produced is determined using the Abbott radioimmun assay (51). Under the assumption that the HBVs antigen : produced by yeast reacts similarly to the antigen in human seruii, about 2 jg HBVs antigen per ml yeast extract are found under derepres- sing conditions. Under repressing conditions the titer is below 0.001 mg/ml. d) Transfer of the PHO5-1BVs fusion to a yeast plasmid containing a PHOS transcription termination sequence ’ 5 ug of DNA of plasmid pJDB207/1F (8) (Example 17) is digested with
BamHI as described above and the 6.9 kb vector part is isolated by soft agarose electrophoresis (0.87 agarose) as described in Example 4a, 5g of pBR322 /PHO5/HBVsAl4 is digested with BamHI as described above and the 1.8 kb BamHI fragment is isolated by soft agarose gel electrophoresis. 1 ug of the 6.9 kb vector fragment is ligated with 1 mg of the 1.8 kb BamHI fragment in a total volume of 20 pl using the conditions described in Example 20a. Transformation of E. coli
HB10l to ampicillin resistance and plasmid isolation is dome as * described in Example 4a. Plasmid analysis is performed by restriction endonuclease digestions. The plasmid obtained as indicated in fig. 26 is called pJDB207/PHO5/HBVsAl4t. Transformation of yeast strain
AH220 and selection of the transformed cells is done as described. . : : in Example 7. A single transformed yeast colony if referred to as
Saccharomyces cerevisiae AH220/pJDB207/HBVsAl4t. Co
Example 21:
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA sequences excised from plasmids pBR322-Pst] dG:HBV-Kpnl dC; pBR322-PstI dG: HBV-BamHI dC; pBR322-PstI dG:HBV-Bgl1II dC; pBR322-Pstl (G:HBV-EcoRI dC; pBR322-BamHI:: HBV-BamhlI; pBR322-EcoRI: HBV-EcoRI; pBR322-Pstl dG:HEV-Kpnl dC,
BR HEE te te tb PCRS ABE Wt RORY CP IRY AEP ye ER EE 6 Er SE I SE SAIN a EER DD RJIIRIT of yp A Se FA Oe ry
“a - 26197
PBR322-PstI' dG:pHBV114-Pstl dC; ((pBR322-EceRI HindIIL: Lac promoter sequence) -HindIII:HBV114-Hhal
HindIII linkers)-BamilI,
PURZ-EcoRI: HBV11l4-Hhal EcoRI linkers,
PpUR2-EcoRI: HBV1l4-Hhal EcoRI linkers; pPBR322-PstT dG:pHBV1l4-Aval dC, and pPBR322-PstI dG:pHBV114-Taq dC. as described in European Patent Application 13828 can be inserted (preferably after appropriately adapting the termini) into plasmids p30 or p31 according to Examples 5, 14 or 15 and subsequently into plasmid pJDB207 according to Example 17. Transformation of
S. cerevisiae is performed according to Example 18. Expression of polypeptides displaying HBV antigenicity is determined according to
Example 20c.
Example 22: Deletion of 3' nontranslated DNA sequences in plasmids pJDB207./TF2(5,) and pJDB207/1F2(1'b) (see figures 27 and 28)
The construction of the plasmids pJDB207/1F2(5,) and pJDB207/IF2(1'b) (cf. Example 17) resulted in a relative long 3' nontranslated region of about 440 bp and 480 bp, respectively. To shorten this region of the constructs the DNA is digested with exonuclease Bal3l.from an unique - C
Smal site in the middle of this region. Xho linkers are introduced and the DNA is circularized by ligation. - : a) Bal3l digestion of Smal cleaved plasmids pJDB207/1F2(5,) and pJDB207/1F2(1'b) 20 pg each of the plasmid DNAs are ’ligested with restriction endo- nuclease Smal. After extraction with phenol/chloroform, the DNA is pre- cipitated with ethanol. The DNA is resuspended in 10 mM Tris pH ~ 8.0 at a concentration of 0.5 mg/ml. 10 he of the Smal cleaved DNAs are each digested with 2 U of endonuclease Bal3l (BRL) in 100 pl of 20 mM Tris pH 8.0, 100 mM NaCl, 12 mM MgCl, , 12 mM CaCl, and 1 aM
EDTA. Aliquots of 3 Hg of DNA are withdrawn after 90, 120 and 150 te 26197 seconds of incubation at 30°C and are immediately mixed with 50 pl of phenol and 60 pl TNE. After extraction with phenol/chloroform and ethanol precipitation, the DNA is resuspended in 10 mM Tris pH 8.0 at a concentration of 100 pg/ml. Te analyse the exonucleolytic digestion of Bal3l, aliquots of 0.7 ng of DNA from each time point are digested with HindIII EcoRl for pJDB207/1F2(5,)-derived samples or with
Pvull HindIII for pJDB207/IF2(1'b)-derived samples. For further experiments the DNAs from the 90 second time points are used. b) Addition of Xhol linkers to the Bal3l treated DNAs 2.2 pg each of plasmid DNA pJDB207/1F2(5,) and pJDB207/1IF2(1'b), after 90 sec. of Bal3l digestion (see Example 22a) are incubated for 1 hour at 37°C with 2.8 U of Klenow DNA polymerase (large fragment of polymerase I, BRL) in 35 pl of 60 mM Tris pH 7.5, 10 mM MgCl, and 0.1 mM dNTP's.
Three pg of XhoI linkers (5'-CCTCGAGG-3', Collaborative Research) are kinased in 50 pl of 6 mM Tris pH 7.5, 10 mM MgCl, 4 mM DTT, 0.5 mM
ATP and 35 U of T4 polynucleotide kinase (Boehringer) for 30 min at 37°C. 0.67 ye of kinased Xhol linkers and 0.4 pg of Bal3l treated blunt end
DNA of plasmid pJDB207/1F2(5)) or pJDB207.1F2(13b) are ligated over night at room temperature in 25 pl of 60 mM Tris pH 7.5, 10 mM MgCl, Nn } 5 mM DTT, 3.5 mM ATP and 450 U of T4 DNA ligase. The ligated DNA is separated from excess linkers by isopropanol precipitation in the presence of 10 mM EDTA, 0.3 M sodiumacetate pH 6.0 and 0.54 volumes of isopropanol. After 35 min. of incubation at room temperature the DNA is sedimented by centrifugation. The pellets are dried at the air and resuspended in 17 pl of 6 mM Tris pH 7.9, 150 mM NaCl, 6 mM MgCl, and 6 mM mercaptoethanol. The Xhol linkers ligated to the DNA are cleaved with XhoI, the DNA is precipitated with isopropanol as described before and circularized by ligation. After 6 hours of ligation at 15°C in 50 yl of 60 mM Tris pH 7,5, 10 mM MgCl,, 10 mM DIT, 1 mM ATP and ee pe IY ARR NG ET PALA IR pp TENT GR OMIM LA UI RIL LY
600 U of T4 DNA ligase 10 pl of each ligation mixture are added to 100 pl of calcium-treated, transformation competent E. ccli HB1O1 cells (see Example 4a). 72 transformed, amp™ colonies containing plasmids with an 1FN-5, insert are grown individually in LB medium containing 100 mg/l ampicillin.
Plasmid DNA is analysed by HaeIll digestion. The restriction pattern allows to judge the approximate size of the deletion introduced by
Bal3l. Two clones are further analysed and assayed for interferon activity. They are referred to as pJDB207/1F2(5,)A72 and pJDB207/1F2 (5.7082.
The nucleotide sequence on either side of the new junction (XhoI linker) between the 3' nontranslated region of the IFN-5, gene and the PHOS transcription termination region is given in fig. 28.
In an analogous manner 60 amp? colonies containing plasmids with an
IFN-1'b insert are grown individually in LB medium containing 100 mg/l ampicillin. Plasmid DNA is analysed as described above. One clone is selected and assayed for IFN activity. It is referred to as pJDB207./1F2(1'b)A.
Example 23: Construction of recombinant plasmids, gontaining portable
IFN-5., 8, and -1'b cDNA inserts which can be used for direct ,. - expression of mature lymphoblastoid IFN (cf. figures 29 and 30) a) Preparation of the cDNA inserts . The cDNA inserts are excised from the recombinant plasmids
CG-pBR322/HLycIFN-8,, CG-pBR322/HLycIFN-1'b, CG-pBR322/HLycIFN-5, by digestion of each of 150 pg of plasmid DNA with PstI (Biolabs) using the procedure as suggested by the supplier. Following phenol extraction and ethanol precipitation, the excised inserts are isolated by means of sucrose density gradient centrifugation (5-237) in 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0) and 1 mM EDTA. The centrifugation is performed at 35 000 rpm in a TST 41 rotor (Kontron AG) at 15°C for 16 h. 0.3 ml fractions are collected with an ISCO gradient collector at 1 ml/min. The fractions containing the small fragment (i.e. the insert) are pooled. The DNA is precipitated with ethanol as usual, and the precipitate is collected by centrifugation in a
HB-4 rotor (Sorvall) at 10 000 rpm at 0°C for 10 min. The precipitate is redissolved in 60 pl 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5) and 0.05 mM EDTA.
About 30 ug DNA are recovered as determined by measuring the optical density. ‘ 2 pg of each of the cDNA inserts are digested with 2.5 units of Sau3A (Biolabs) in 10 pg/ml EtBr and incubated at 37°C for 60 min. The digests are phenol extracted and the DNA is precipitated in ethanol as above. The DNA fragments are fractionated on a 1.2 7% agarose gel in a solution containing 50 mM Tris, 50 mM boric acid, 1 mM EDTA and . 0.5 pg/ml ethidium bromide.
The second largest DNA fragment (Sau 3A-PstI) from each of the 3 digests is excised from the gel, squirted ‘through a thin needle with a syringe into 5 ml of 0.15 M NaCl, 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0J, 1 mM EDTA, and eluted overnight by shaking. The eluate is passed . through a 100 pl DE-52 (Whatman) Pasteur-pipette column to adsorb the DNA. The column is washed with 2 ml of the same buffer and the DNA is eluted with 400 pl of a solution containing 1.5 M NaCl, 50 mM Tris oe (pH 8.0) and 1 mM EDTA. The DNA is precipitated with 2 volumes . of ethanol at -20°C overnight. The precipitates are collected by centrifugation in an Eppendorf centrifuge and redissolved in 10 pl 10 mM Tris<HC1 (pH 7.8), 0,05 mM EDTA. ’ b) Preparation of the acceptor plasmid DNA-fragment 1. Digestion of the plasmid pBR322 by EcoRI and S 10 pg of plasmid DNA pBR322 are digested with 15 units of EcoRI (Biolabs) for 60 min. at 37°C under conditions described by the supplier. Following phenol extraction and ethanol precipitation, the DNA is redissolved in 25 pl H,0 and the staggered ends are a ropa od A oA a Sy ge AN 1 1 VIDOR pA RET fe enn 3 ee 26197 ! removed by treatment of the DNA with 20 units of endonuclease Sy (P-L Biochemicals) in 350 pl of a solution containing 250 mM NaCl, - 30 mM sodium acetate (pH 4.5), 1 mM ZnSO, at 30°C for 30 min. The reaction is stopped by adding EDTA (pH 7.5) at 10 mM. The DNA is extracted with phenol, concentrated by ethanol precipitation and redissolved in 50 pl of 10 mM TriseHC1 (pH 7.8), 0.05 mM EDTA. 2, Ligation of a chemically synthesized DNA linker to pBR322 digested with EcoRI and S$ © Two oligodeoxynucleotides of the formulae 5'~AATTCTATCTGT-3' and 5' ~GATCACACATAGAATT-3' are synthesized using the procedure described in Example 10 Ea.
The synthetic oligodeoxynucleotides are phosphorylated at their 5'-ends by incubating 80 pmoles of both oligodeoxynucleotides with pCi [y-32p}-ATP (6700 Ciemmol !, Amersham) in a 80 ul reaction volume, containing 0.1 mM rATP (Sigma), 50 mM Tris+HCl (pH 9.5), 10 mM MgCl,, 5 mM DTT and 20 units of T, polynucleotide Kinase . (P-L Biochemicals) for 30 min. at 37°C. The reaction is stopped by " freezing the mixture at -80°C. : 20 The resulting radioactively phosphorylated linker of the formula (*%p)-AaTTCTATGICT | 3 Ce
TTAAGATACACACTAG-[""P) CL I ' . is subsequently incubated with 6 pe of pBR322 cleaved with EcoRI and $1 (see above) in a 200 pl reaction volume containing 0.5 mM rATP (Sigma) 0.1 mM DTT (Calbiochem), 20 mM TriseHC1l (pH 7.8), 10 mM MgCl, and 4e10° units of T, DNA ligase (Biolabs) by incubating the mixture for 2 h at 15°C.
The solution is deproteivized by phenol extraction and the DNA is concentrated by ethanol precipitation. The DNA is redissolved in 100p1 10 mM Tris*HCL (pH 7.5), 0.05 mM EDTA and centrifuged through a sucrose gradient (5 - 23 7) in 50 mM Tris<HCl (pH 8.0),
Bioinshniiishi Asin - 1
L
- 85 -— ! ) 26197 mM EDTA. The centrifugation is performed at 60 000 rpm in a TST 60 rotor (Kontron AG) at 15°C for 2.5 h. 0.2 ml fractions are collected with an 1SCO gradient collector at 1 ml/min. The fractions containing the (3%p]-1abeled plasmid DNA (fractions 11 - 14 out of 22 fractions) are pooled, the DNA is precipitated with ethanol and digested with 12 units of Bell, (Biolabs) as recommended bY the supplier. After phenol extraction and ethanol precipitation, the digested DNA is treated with 10 units of Pstl (Biolabs) as recommended by the supplier. The phenol extracted digest is then centrifuged through a (5 ~ 23 %) sucrose density gradient for 15 h at 35 000 rpm at 15°C in a TST 41 rotor (Kontron AG). 0.3 ml fractions are collected (see above) and the fractions containing the large (>2p]-1labeled Bell - Pstl DNA fragment (fractions 27 - 31 out of 42 fractions) are pooled and concentrated by ethanol precipitation.
The DNA is redissolved in 20 pl TriseHCl pH 7.8, 0.05 mM EDTA. c. Ligation of the acceptor plasmid fragment tO the cDNA inserts 2 pl of the acceptor plasmid DNA fragment (~100 ng) (see above) are incubated with each of 3 pl of cDNA inserts (~~20 ng) (see above) in a reaction volume containing 20 mM TriseHCl (pH 7.8), 10 mM MgCl,s 0.1 mM rATP, 0.1 mM DTT and 400 units of T, DNA ligase in 10 pl for 3 h at 15°C. Lo rE 5 pl of the reaction mixtures are then added to a ixture containing 150 Pr calcium-treated gE. coli HB 101 in 10 mM MgCl,» 10 mi CaCl, and 10 mM TriseHCl (pt 7.5) in a total volume of 200 pl.
The mixture is cooled in ice for 20 min. heated to 42°C for 1 min. and incubated at 20°C for 10 min. 1 ml of tryptone medium (tryptone medium contains 10 8 Bacto-Trypton (Difco); 1 8 yeast extract (Difco); 1 8 glucose; g g NaCl and 294 mg caCl,*2 H,0 in 1 1 of distilled water) is added and the mixture is incubated for 30 min. { 30 at 37°C by shaking at 300 rpm. The mixture is plated onto 2 agar plates (Mc Conkey agar, Difco; 0,6 ml/plate) supplemented with
10 pg ml of tetracycline (Sigma).The Plates are incubated at 37°C for 12-17 n, Approximately 1000 colonies are obtained per transfor- mation mixture. 4 colonies are picked from each transformation mixture for further analysis. d) Restriction analysis of the hybrid plasmids
In order to further analyse the potential hybrid plasmids, the
Plasmid DNA is isolated from 12 colonies (4 from each of the 3 ligation mixtures, see above), : :
The hybrid plasmid DNA is isolated as follows: 1 colony is used to inoculate 10 ml of tryptone medium, supplemented with 10 pg ml of tetracycline as above in a 25 ml Erlenmeyer flask. The culture ig shaken for 15 - 18 h at 37°C at 300 rpm. The cells are harvested by centrifugation (Sorvall, HS-4 rotor, 10 min. at 4000 rpm, 4°C).
About 0.1 g of cells are obtained and are resuspended in 1 ml 50 mM
TriseHCl (pH 8.0). 0.25 ml of lysozyme solution (10 mg/ml in 50 mM
Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), lysozyme is puchased from Sigma) are added and after incubation at 0°C for 10 min., 0.15 ml of 0.5 M EDTA (pH 7.5) is added. After another 10 min. at 0°Cc, 60 Pl of 2 7 Triton X-100 . (Merck) is added. After 30 min. at 0°C, the sample is centrifuged for 30 min. at 15000 rpm and 4°C in a Sorvall SA-600 rotor. The super- : natant is deproteinized with 1 volume of Phenol (saturated. in. TNE).
The phases are separated by ccetrifugation (Sorvall HB-4 rotor) for so 10 min. at 5000 rpm at 4°C. The upper phase is extracted twice with 1 volume of chloroform. Pancreatic RNAse A (Sigma; 10 mg/ml in TNE, © 25 preheated 10 min. at 85°C) is added to a final concentration of pg/ml and the mixture is incubated for 40 min. at 37°C. The solution is then adjusted to 1 M NaCl and 10 7% polyethylene glycol 6000 (Fluka, autoclaved for 20 min. at 120°C) and incubated at =10°C for 2 h. The Precipitate is collected in a Sorvall HB-4 rotor (20 min. at 10 000 rpm, 0°C) and redissolved in 100 ul of TNE. The
DNA solution ig extracted with 1 volume of Phenol and the DNA is precipitated with 2 volumes of ethanol at -80°C for 10 min.
CE ag I SB i opm iene ae
- B7 ~ 26197
The precipitate Ls collected by centrifugation in an Eppendorf centrifuge and the DNA is redissolved in 20 pl of 10 mM Tris+HCl (pH 7.5) and 0.5 mM EDTA. 8 - 10 pg of hybrid plasmid DNA are recovered from 10 ml culture. ’
All of the plasmid DNAs are analysed by the following double digests: 0.5 pg of each DNA is digested with MindIII (Biolabs) and Pvull (Biolabs), HindIII and Pstl (Biolabs), HindIII and BamH (Biolabs),
EcoRI (Biolabs) and PstI using standard protocols, and fractionated on a 1.5 7 agarose gel according to size in 40 mM Triseacetate (pH 7.8), 1 mM EDTA containing 0.5 ug/ml EtBr.
The hybrid plasmids having the desired restriction enzyme pattern are selected. The result is summarized in figures 29 and 30.
Plasmid DNA, containing the insert derived from pBR322/HLycIFN-8, or pBR322/liLycIFN-5, or pBR322/HLycIFN-1'b are denoted
CG-pBR322/HLyclFN(a-3)-252 and CG-pBR322/HLycIFN(a-2)-261 and
CG-pBR322/HLycIFN(a-1)-258, respectively. ]
In order to further confirm the structure at the junction point between the linker and the start of the coding sequence of the IFN cDNAs, the nucleotide sequence is determined at this area. In particular, 2 pg of the isolated plasmid DNA CG-pBR322/HLy cIFN(a~1)-258 is digested with EcoRI, 5'-terminally labeled and cleaved with PstI; ~ . The DNA fragments are fractionated on a 6 7 polyacrylamid gel and the
EcoRl*-PstI (9.4 bp) DNA fragment is extracted as described above.
The DNA fragment is subjected to sequence analysis according to Maxam and Gilbert (15).
The structure at the junction point between the linker and the start of the coding sequence of the IFN cDNAs in plasmids
CG-pBR3221ILycIFN(a-2)-261 and CG-pBR322/HLycIFN(a-3)-252 is confirmed analogously. ’ ya STR Sg SAA HAIR WEES Te LL
In the plasmids CG-pBR322/HLycIFN(a-1)-258, (a-2)-261 and (a-3)-252 the IFN coding sequences are preceded by the following nulceotide segment containing an EcoRI restriction site.
EcoRI Sau3A -NGAATTCTATGTGTGATC. .... ~NCTTAAGATACACACTAG. .... —_—
IFN gene
Example 24: Deletion of the PHOS signal sequence in the expression plasmid p31 (see figure 31)
Expression plasmid p31 contains the PHOS promoter sequence including the mRNA start sites, the translation start codon ATG of acid phos- phatase and additional 40 nucleotides coding for part of the acid phosphatase signal sequence. In this construction, the nucleotides for the signal sequence and the ATG are eliminated by Bal3l digestion,
EcoRI linkers are introduced to allow joining of the PHOS promoter to appropriate mature coding sequences (e.g. interferon genes). a) Balll digestion of Ball cleaved plasmid p30 pg of p30 DNA (see Example 4b) are digested with restriction endo- nuclease Ball, resulting in 2 frjcments of 3.7 and 5.1 kb, After . 20 extraction with phenol/thloroform, the DNA is precipitated with : . ethanol. The DNA is resuspended in 10 mM Tris pH 8.0 at a concentration of 0.5 ug/ml. 9 ng of Ball cleaved p30 DNA are digested with 2 U of exonuclease Bal31l (BRL ) in 100 pl of 20 mM Tris pH 8.0, 100 mM
NaCl, 12 mM MgCl,, 12 mM CaCl, and 1 mM EDTA. Aliquots of 2 ug DNA each are withdrawn after 15 sec., 30 sec., 45 sec. and 60 sec. of incubation at 30°C and are immediately mixed with 50 pl phenol and 60 pl TNE. After extraction with phenol chloroform and ethanol preci- pitation, the DNA is resuspended in 10 mM Tris pH 8.0 at a concentra- oe if eat MTL Ce 3 at rel ME NCA aI BETES RIT BN Bp hr 1h An Ot aaa BS ty BA a CS ale BW XE, 5s ht Boe te a? ye el e- 26197 tion of 100 ng/ml. To analyse the extent of exonucleolytic cleavage by B8al3l 0.5 ug of DNA from each time point are digested with endo-. nuclease BamlI and analysed on a 1.5 7 agarose gel in Tris-borate buffer pH 8.3. On the average 70 bp are removed from each end of the fragment after 45 sec. of Bal3l digestion. For further experiments
DNA from the 45 second time point is used. b) Addition of EcoRI linkers to the Bal3l treated DNA
Two A, co units of EcoRI linkers (5'~-GGAATTCC-3', BRL) are resuspended in 250 pl of 10 mM Tris pH 8, 1 mM EDTA. Two pg of EcoRI linkers are kinased in 75 pl of 60 mM Tris pH 7.5, 10 mM MgCl, , 15 mM DDT, 10 pH
ATP and 33 U of T4 polynucleotide kinase (Boehringer). After 1 h at 37°C the mixture is allowed to cool to room temperature and is then stored at -20°C.
The annealed, double stranded EcoRI linkers are ligated with their blunt ends to the Bal3l treated DNA fragments. Half a microgram of
Bal3l treated DNA (see Example 24a) is incubated for 16 hours at room temperature with a 50fold excess of kinased EcoRI linkers in 20 pl of 60 mM Tris pH 7.5, 10 mM MgCl,, 10 mM DTT, 4 mM ATP and 600 U of Té4
DNA ligase (Biolabs). After inactivation of the T4 DNA ligase (10 min at 65°C) the excess of EcoRI linkers is cleaved by 50 U of EcoRI (Boehringer) in a volume of 50 jl. The DNA is extracted with: phenol” chloroform, precipitated by ethanol and resuspended in 10 m4 Tris, oo 1 mM EDTA. -
Restriction endonuclease EcoRI not only cleaves the terminally added
EcoRI linkers of both Ball fragments (3.7 kb and 5.1 kb) but also at an internal EcoRI site in the 5.1 kb fragment giving rise to a 3.9 kb and a 1.2 kb fragment. The 3.7 kb and 3.9 kb fragments are separated from the 1.2 kb fragment on a 0.8 Z low melting agarose gel (Sigma) in 90 mM Tris-HCl pH 8.3, 90 mM boric acid and 2.5 mM EDTA. The DNA bands are stained with ethidium bromide and visualized under long wave
UV light at 366 nm. The two large DNA fragments of 3.7 kb and 3.9 kb a te pb eit ANTE ANN REA Tr Fe 2 are not separated. They are cut out of the gel in a single gel block and are extracted as described in Example 4a.
The linear fragments terminating in EcoRI sticky ends are circularized by ligation. About 0.25 yg of fragments are ligated in 100 pl of 60 mM
Tris pH 7.5, 10 mM MgCl,, 10 mM DIT, 1 wM ATP and 600 U T4 DNA ligase for 4 hours at 15°C.
Ten pl aliquots of the ligation mixture are added to 100 ul of calcium treated, transformation competent E.coli HB1OL cells (see Example 4a). 35 transformed, amp colonies are grown individually in LB medium containing 100 pg/ml of ampicillin. Plasmid DNA is prepared according to the method of Holmes et.al. (50) and is analysed by EcoRI/BamHI double digestion. c) Nucleotide sequence analysis to determine the position of the
EcoRI linker addition
I5 Most of the 35 clones will differ from each other in the position of
EcoRI linker addition in the PHOS promoter region depending on the degree of Bal3ll digestion of the individual DNA molecules. For the nucleotide sequence analysis plasmid DNA is digested with EcoRI. After extraction with phenol’chloroform the restricted DNA is precipitated with ethanol. The DNA is dephosphorylated and 5'-terminally labeled as described in Example 10Ed. The labeled DNA fragments are cleaved ®ich a _ second restriction endonuclease, BamHI. The products are separated on a } : 0.8 Z low melting agarose gel. The 0.5-0.6 kb 5'~labeled EcoRI-BamHI fragment is isolated from low melting agarose as described in Example . 4a. For the determination of the nucleotide sequence adjacent to the
EcoRI linker the different DNA fragments are chemically degraded and the products are separated by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis as described by Maxam and Gilbert (15). ni USE NS RAE REE
The different clones and the position of the corresponding last nucleo tide of the PHOS sequence (then followed by an EcoRL linker) is listed in
Tab. 4 (see also figure32 ).
Table 4 . clone position of last nucleotide of the PHOS sequence pE +25 pG +16 pe +15 pd +12 pY -4 pR -10 pP -16 : pV -18 pL -21 pN ~22 pC -24 ’ pH -27 pS -28 pk -29 o pl Co 738 Ea pM -50 pO ‘ -53 pF -59 pm -617 pk -73 pi -81 ph -137 d) Isolation of a 0.53 kb BamHI-EcoRI fragment containing the
PHOS5/R promoter:
Plasmid pR contains the PHO5/R promoter on a 534 bp BamHI-EcoRI fragment, According to the numbering in fig. 3a, the fragment covers
PHO5 promoter sequences from nucleotide - 541 (Bamlll site) to nucleotide —~ 10. An EcoRI linker, ligated to nucleotide ~ 10 (see
Example 24b) contributes two G-residues upon EcoRI cleavage.
Plasmid pR is digested with restriction endonucleases BamHI and
EcoRI. The 0.53 kb BamHI-EcoRI fragment is separated on a 0.8% low melting agarose gel and isolated as described in Example 4a. The nucleotide sequence is given in fig. 33.
In an analogous manner plasmid pY is digested and a 0.53 kb
BamHI-EcoRI fragment is isolated containing the PHO53/Y promoter. .
The nucleotide sequence is given in fig. 34. ’ e) Replacement of the SalI-EcoRl fragment in plasmid p31 by a
Sall-EcoRI fragment of the .new constructions oo ————— eT, a
Five mg of plasmid p31 (cf. Example 13d) are digested with restriction endonuclease Sall. The restricted DNA is precipitated with ethanol and resuspended in 50 ml of 100 mM Tris pH 7.5, 50 mM NaCl, 5 mM MgCl,
The DNA is digested with EcoRI to completion. The restriction fragments are separated on a 0.8% low melting agarose gel in Tris-borate-EDTA buffer pH 8.3. A 3.5 kb DNA fragment is isolated in a small gel block containing the DNA band.
~ 23 —
Five pg each of clones pR and pY (cf. Table 4 and fig. 32) are digested with Sall and EcoRI in the same way AS described above. The 0.8 kb DNA fragments are isolated in small blocks of low melting agarose gel. 0.67 pg of the 3.5 kb SalI-EcoRI fragment of vector p31 is ligated to 0.34 pg of the 0.8 kb Sall-EcoRI fragment of plasmid pR or pY, respectively. Appropriate gel blocks, containing the DNA fragments are mixed and melted at 65°C. The liquified gel is diluted three times.
Ligation is performed in a total volume of 240 pl of 60 mM Tris pH 7.5, mM MgCl, 10 mM DTT, 1 mM ATP with 750 U of T4 DNA ligase (Biolabs) 10 overnight at 15°C. A 2 pl aliquot of each of the ligations is added to 100 pl of calcium treated, transformation competent E. coli HB1Ol cells (sce Example 4a).
R . sos . . 8 transformed, amp colonies each are grown individually 1n LB medium containing 100 pg/ml ampicillin. Plasmid DNA is analysed by restriction analysis. The clones of each group are identical. One clone each is further used and referred to as p3L/R or p3l/7Y, respectively (figs 31).
Example 25: Insertion of lymphoblastoid interferon-u-3 DNA into plasmid p3L/R or p3LY (cf. figure 35)
This construction joins the PHOS promoter region to the gene coding . for mature interferon-a-3. Neither of the signal sequences of PHOS : or interferon is present but there is an EcoRI linker introduced at the site of the junction. : pede mie ELV eld AL TFS a SE LaF RRP RAM AT San 1
. J : * ~ -94 - 9 6197
Plasmid p31/R (sce Example 24e) contains the PHOS promoter sequence which is terminated 9 nucleotides before the ATG of the acid phosphatase gene by an EcoKl linker 5° -tGuaAlICG-3°. The lymphoblastoid interferona-3 gene in plasmid CG-pBR322/1LycIFN(a-3)-252 (see
Example 23) is specifically adapted for the junction to the EcoRI linker in the PHO5 promoter. The additional nucleotides at the 5' end of the coding sequence of mature interferon-a-3 provide an EcoRI restriction site and an ATG, necessary for the translation of the inter- feron gene (cf. figure 29). Essentially the same construction is also done with plasmid p3LY (see Example 24e). a) Preparation of EcoRI cleaved, dephosphorylated plasmid p3L/R
Five pg of plasmid p31/R are digested with restriction endonuclease
EcoRI (Boehringer) to completion. After extraction with phenol/chloro- form, the DNA is precipitated with ethanol and resuspended in 100 pl of 50 mM Tris pH 8.0. Passage of the DNA through Chelex 100 (BioRAD), dephosphorylation by calf intestine alkaline phosphatase (Boehringer) and purification of the dephosphorylated DNA by DE52 ion exchange chromatography is as described in Example 14b. The DNA is resuspended in 10 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.5, 1 mM EDTA at a concentration of 0.2 mg/ml. b) Isolation of a 0.6 kb EcoRI fragment of plasmid
CG-pBR322/HLycIFN(a-3)-252 containing the IFN-a-3 coding sequence
Co Ten pg of plasmid CG-pBR322/HLycIFN(a-3)-252 are digested with restric- tion endonuclease EcoRI. The digest results in 2 fragments of 3.8 kb i !
I
!
; os - 26197 and 0.6 kb. The 0.6 kb fragment contains the interferon-a—3 coding region. The fragment is isolated on a 0.6 7 low melting agarose gel in
Tris-borate-EDTA buffer. The gel piece containing the 0.6 kb DNA fragment is cut out of the gel and used for ligation. ¢) Ligation of linearized, dephosphorylated p31/R DNA and the 0.6 kb
EcoRI fragment of I1FN-a—-3 DNA 1.5 pe of dephosphorylated p3L/R vector DNA cleaved with EcoRI is ligated to 0.19 pg of the 0.6 kb EcoRI fragment of IFN-a-3. The latter fragment is contained in a small block of low melting agarose gel which is melted at 65°C. The liquidified gel is diluted two times.
Ligation is performed in a total volume of 220 pl 60 mM Tris pH 7.5, ; 10 mM MgCl,, 10 mM DTT, 1 mM ATP with 800 U of T4 DNA ligase (Biolabs) overnight at 15°C. A 10 pl aliquot of the ligation mixture is added to 100 pl of calcium treated, transformation competent E. coli HBlOl cells (see Example 4a). 6 transformed, amp" colonies are grown individually in LB medium, ; containing 100 pg/ml ampicillin. Plasmid DNA is prepared according to the method of Holmes et al. (50) and is analysed by BglII/BstEII double digests to determine the orientation and the size of the insert.
One of these clones is referred to as p3lR/IF(a-3).
The same construction is done with p3L’Y (See Example 24e). Plasmids _ from 6 transformed, _— colonies are analysed. 2 clones have the right ’ orientation of the insert. One of them is referred to as p31Y/IF(a-3).
Example 26: Insertion of lymphoblastoid interferon-a-2 DMA into plasmid
P3LR (see figure 36) :
This construction joins the PHOS promoter to the mature interferon-a-2 ; coding region. : a) Isolation of a 3.9 kb HindIII-EcoRI fragment of vector p3LR
Ten pg of vector p3l/R are digested with HindIII to completion. The ] buffer is adjusted with 0.1 volume of 1 M Tris pH 7.5. The HindIII- i ee 26197 cleaved p3L/R DNA is then digested with EcoRI. The 3-9 kb HindlI[~
EcoRI fragment jis isolated from a 0.8 7 low melting agarose gel in a ; gel block cut out of the gel. b) Isolation of a 0.9 kb Xbal ~HindIII fragment of pJDB207/1F2(5, )
Five ug of plasmid PJDB207/1F2(5,) (cf. Example 17) are digested with
HindIII to completion. The buffer is adjusted with 0.1 volume of 1 M Tris pH 7.9. The HindIII-cleaved plasmid is then digested with
XbaI. The 0.9 kb XbaI-HindIII fragment contains part of the interferon- a-2 coding sequence and the downstream PHOS transcription termination signals. The 0.9 kb fragment is separated on a 0.8% low melting agarose gel and cut out of the gel, c) Isolation of a 252 bp EcoRI-Xbal fragment of plasmid
CG-pBR322/HLycIFN(a-2)~-261 containing part of the IFN-q-2 coding sequence
Ten pg of plasmid CG-pBR322/HLycIFN (a-2)~-261 (see Example 23) are digested with Xbal in 100 PL of 6 mM Tris pH 7.9, 150 mM NaCl, 6 aM
MgCl, and 6 mM mercaptoethanol. After complete digestion with XbaI the linearized plasmid DNA is partially digested with 3 U of EcoRI (Boehringer). After 20 min at 37°C the digestion is stopped by freezing at -70°C. The DNA fragments are analysed on a 1.5 7 agarose gel in : Tris-borate-EDTA buffer PH 8.3. The 252 bp EcoRI-Xbal fragment contains the 5' part of the mature interferon-q~2 coding sequence (up to the
Xbal site) with the specific linker for the junction with the PHOS promoter. The 252 bp fragment is isolated in a small gel block from a 0.8 % low melting agarose gel. d) Ligation of DNA fragments :
Three DNA fragments described in Examples 26 a-c, having appropriate 1 sticky ends are ligated in one reaction: 0.67 pg of the 3.9 kb HindIII-EcoRI fragment of vector p3L/R, 0.16 pil of the 0.9 kb Xbal-HindIII fragment of pIDB207/1F2(5,) and about 70 ng { {
H oh i. 1 : L rt 26197 k of the 250 bp EcoRI-Xbal fragment of CG~pBR322HLycIFN(a-2)-261 are ligated. All three DNA fragments are contained in small gel blocks of low melting agarose. The three pieces oi agarose pel are pooled, melted at 65°C and diluted three times. The ligation is done in a total volume of 450 pl of 60 mM Tris pH 7.5, 10 mM MgCl,, 10 mM DTT, 1 mM ATP with 1200 U of T4 DNA ligase at 15°C for 16 hours. A 10 pl aliquot of the ligation mixture is added to 100 ul of calcium treated, transformation competent E. coli HB1Ol cells (see Example 4a). 3 § 12 transformed, amp’ colonies are grown individually in LB medium containing 100 pg/ml of ampicillin. Plasmid DNA is prepared according F to the method of Holmes et al. (50) and is analysed by BamHI HindIII b . double digestion. All clones show an identical digestion pattern,
One of them is referred to as p31R/IF(a-2).
Instead of the 0.9 kb XbaI-HindIII fragment of pJDB207/1F2(5,) also a ! 0.5 kb Xbal-HindIIl fragment of plasmid pJDB207/1F2(5,)472 or E pJDB207/TF2(5,)A82 (see example 22) can be used for ligation. Alsp, : instead of the 3.9 kb HindIII-EcoRI fragment of vector p3l/R the ; ligation is carried out with the 3.9 kb HindIII-EcoRI fragment of vector p3L-Y.
Conditions for ligation of the DNA fragments and the transformation : of E.coli HBIO1l are the same as described above. 12 transformed, amp colonies of each ligation are grown individually in LB medium containing 100 pg/ml ampicillin. Plasmid DNA is analysed ] by BamHI HindIII double digestion. The resulting clones are referred to as p31R/IF(a=2)A72, p31R/IF(a-2)482, p31¥/IF(a-2), p3LY/IF (a-2)A72 and p31Y/IF (a-2)082. ’ vee ry EE GE ANTE TSE IRPI By TA
~ 98 - 26197
Example 27: Insertion of lymphoblastoid interferon-a-l into plasmid pP3L/R (see figure 37) TT a) Isolation of a 3.9 kb HindIII-EcoRI fragment of vector p3L/R:
Ten pg of vector p3L/R are digested with HindIII and EcoRI as de- scribed in Example 26a. The resulting 0.4 kb and 3.9 kb fragments ; are separated on a preparative 0.8% low melting agarose gel. The 3.9 kb
HindIII-EcoRI fragment is eluted from the gel as described in Example 4a. The DNA is purified by DE52 (Whatman) ion exchange chromatography (see Example 5a), precipitated with ethanol and resuspended in 10 mM
Tris pH 8.0, 1 mM EDTA at a concentration of 0.1 mg/ml. b) Isolation of 0.9 kb PvuII-HindIII fragment of pJDB207/IF2(1'b):
Five mug of plasmid pJDB207/IF2(1'b) (cf. Example 17) are digested with
Pvull and HindIII. The resulting fragments of 0.9 kb and 7.3 kb are separated on a preparative 0.87 low melting agarose gel. The 0.9 kb fragment is eluted from the gel and purified as described in Example 27a. The DNA is resuspended in 10 mM Tris pH 8.0, 1 mM EDTA at a concentration of 0.05 mg/ml. * c) Isolation of a 286 bp EcoRI-Pvull fragment of plasmid
CG-pBR322/HLycIFN(a-1)-258 containing part of the IFN-a-1 coding sequence
Ten pg of plasmid CG-pBR322/HLycIFN(a—-1)-258 (see Example 23) are digested with PvuIl and EcoRI. A 286 bp restriction fragment is . separated from a 4.2 kb fragment on a preparative 0.87 low melting agarose gel, The 286 bp EcoRI-Pvull fragment is eluted from the gel and purified as described in Example 27a. The DNA is resuspended in 10 mM Tris pH 8.0, 1 mM EDTA at a concentration of 0.03 mg/ml. d) Ligation of DNA fragments : 0.5 pg of the 3.9 kb HindIII-EcoRI fragment of vector p3l/R, 0.25 pg of the 0.9 kb PvulI-HindIII fragment of pJDB207/IF2(1'b) and 0.1 Je of the 286 bp EcoRI-Pvull fragment of plasmid .
CG-pBR322/HLycIFN(a—1)-258 are ligated for 16 hrs at 15°C in 20 pl i Re a URI A I RINE ERLE SII HP SPI EUARSITITINO 5 WRAL Sah Ty LE, eA
: “9 26197 i of 60 mM Tris pH 7.5, 10 mi MgCl, , 10 mM DTT, 4 mM ATP and 600 U of
DNA ligase. A 3 pl aliquot of the ligation mixture is added to 100 pl of calcium treated, transformation competent E. coli HB101 cells (see Example 4a). : 12 transformed, amp® colonies are grown individually in LB medium with 100 pg/ml of ampicillin. Plasmid DNA is analysed by BamHI HindIII double digestion. One clone giving rise to a 1.4 kb BamHI fragment and a 390 bp BamHI-HindIII fragment, is further analysed and referred : to as p31R/IF(a-1).
The 3.9 kb HindIII-EcoRI fragment of vector p3l/R can be replaced by the HindIII-EcoRI fragment of vector p3l/Y. Also, instead of the \ 0.9 kb PvuII-HindIII fragment of pJDB207/1F2(1'b), a 0.45 kb Pvull-
HindIII fragment of pJDB207/IF2(1'b)A can be used for the ligation. :
The resulting clones are analysed as described above. The clones are referred to as p31R/IF(a-1)4, p31Y/IF (a1) and p31Y/IF(a-1)A.
Example 28: Subcloning of gene constructions in the high copy number yeast vector pJDB207 (see fig. 38) :
The constructions described in Example 25-27 contain the PHO5 promoter, different interferon coding regions and the PHOS transcription termi- nation signals in a tandem array, all inserted in a pBR322 derived vector. Sall-HindIII fragments containing the whole array are ligated into the 6.2 kb SalI-HindIII fragment of pJDB207 as described in . Example 17. 2 pg of plasmid p31R/IF (a-3) are digested with restriction endonucleases Sall and HindIII. The restriction fragments are sepa- rated on a preparative 0.8% low melting agarose gel. The small frag- ment (1.8 kb in size) is cut out of the gel.
Plasmid pJDB207 is digested with restriction endonucleases Sall and
HindIII and the large 6.2 kb fragment is isolated as described in
Example 17.
RE ATE ER TR PA POR J er oo 1 ~ 100 - ’ 26197
Ligation of the DNA fragments and transformation of competent E. coli
HB10l cells is carried out as described in Example 17. 8 amp colonies ure grown individually in LB medium containing 100 pa/ml of ampicillin.
The plasmid DNA is analysed for the size of the insert by cleavages with restriction endonucleases HindIII and SalI. One clone having the correct insert is selected and referred to as pJDB207R/IF(a3).
In an analogous manner, starting from the plasmids p31Y/IF(a-3), p31R/IF(a-2), p31R/IF(a-2)A72, p31R/IF(a-2)A82, p31Y/1F(a~2), p31Y/IF(a-2)A72, p31Y/IF(a-2)082, p31R/IF(a=1), p31R/TF(a-1)4,
P31Y/IF(a-1) and p31Y/IF(a-1)A, the following clones with the correct insert are obtained: B pJDB207Y/1F (a-3), : pJDB207R/1IF (a-2), i pJDB207R/IF(a-2)A72, pJDB207R/IF(a—2)A82, i pJDB207Y/TF(a~2), pJDB207Y/IF(a-2)4A72, . pJDB207Y/1IF (a-2)082, pJDB207R/IF (a~1), pJDB207R/IF(a-1)a, pJDB207Y/1F(a—-1), and pJDR207Y/TF (a=1) 4,
Example 29: Transformation of Saccharomyces cerevisiae AH220 and ] induction of interferon production
Plasmids pJDB207/1F2(5,)A72, pJDB207/1F2(5,)A82, pJDB207/1F2(1'b)A, b pJDB207R/IF (3), pJDB207Y/IF (a-3), pJDB207R/IF (a-2), pJDB207R/IF (a-2)A72, pJDB207R/IF (a-2)A82, pIDB207Y/IF (a-2), pJDB207Y./IF (a=2)A72, pJDB207Y “IF (a—-2)A82, pJDB207R/IF(a-1), pJDB207R/IF(a—1)A, 5 pJDB207[/IF(a-1) and pJDB207(/IF(a-1)A (see Examples 22 and 28, 3 respectively) are each introduced’ into Saccharomyces cerevisiae : strain AH220 (a, trpl, leu2-3, leu2-112, his3, phos, ; pho3) using the transformation protocol described by X eh EEL Ee a Ce aT RIE ASN STS ARES ITE BH ee TI MAREE YA RM 138, i ba nd Tm
: i i - 101 - | 9 6 1 9 7
Hinnen et al. (1). Transformed yeast cells are selected on yeast minimal medium plates deficient in leucine. Single transformed yeast colonies are picked and grown as described in Example 7. The different yeast colonies are referred to as
Saccharomyces cerevisiae AH220/pJDB207/1F2(5,)A72,
Saccharomyces cerevisiae AH220/pJDB207/1F2(5,)A82,
Saccharomyces cerevisiae AH220/pJDB207/1F2(1'b)A,
Saccharomyces cerevisiae Al220/pJDB207R/1F(a-3),
Saccharomyces cerevisiae .AH220/pJDB207Y/IF (a3),
Saccharomyces cerevisiae AH220/pJDB207R/IF(a-2),
Saccharomyces cerevisiae AH220/pJDB207R/1F(a-2)A72,
Saccharomyces cerevisiae AH220/pJDB207R/1F(a-2) £82,
Saccharomyces cerevisiae Ali220/pJDB207Y/IF(a-2),
Saccharomyces cerevisiae AH220/pJDB207Y/IF(a-2}A72,
Saccharomyces cerevisiae AH220/pJDB207Y/1F (a-2) 282,
Saccharomyces cerevisiae AH220/pJDB207R/1F (a1),
Saccharomyces cerevisiae AH220,/pJDB207R/IF(a-1)A,
Saccharomyces cerevisiae AH220/pJDB207Y/1F(a-1) and
Saccharomyces cerevisiae AN220/pIDB207Y/IF(a-1)A. :
Example 30: Transformation of Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain GRF18 and induction of interferon production
Analogous to the process described in Example 29, Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain GRF18 (a, his3-11, his3-15, leu2-3, leu2-112, can’) is transformed with the plasmids listed in Example 29. The different yeast colonies are referred to as
Saccharomyces cerevisiae GRF18/pJDB207/1F2(5 )A72,
Saccharomyces cerevisiae GRF18 /pJDB207/1F2(5,)182,
Saccharomyces cerevisiae GRF18,/pJDB207/1F2(1'b)4,
Saccharomyces cerevisiae GRF18/pJDB207R/IF (3),
Saccharomyces cerevisiae GRF18/pJDB207Y/1F(a-3),
Saccharomyces cerevisiae GRF18/pJDB207R/IF(a-2),
Saccharomyces cerevisiae GRF13,/pJDB207R/1F(a~-2)472, . aes OT HO TRY LT YR EI SS VIER IR TGR ¢ (A TAT
Se 26197
Saccharomyces cerevisiae CRF18 /pJDB207R/TF(a-2) 482,
Saccharomyces cerevisiae GRF18 /pJDB207Y/1F(a~2),
Saccharomyces cerevigiae GRF18.7pJDB207Y/1F (a~2)472,
Saccharomyces cerevisiae GRF18 /pJDB207Y/IF (a-2)A82, .
Saccharomyces cerevisiae GRF18,/pJDB207R/1F(a~1), : Saccharomyces cerevisiae GRF18 /pJDB207R IF (a-1)a,
Saccharomyces cerevisiae GRF18/pJDB207Y/IF(a-1) and
Saccharomyces cerevisiae GRF18/pJDB207Y,/TF(a-1)aA. } A
Example 31: Preparation of yeast cell extracts and determination of the interferon titer Ls
Cells from 50 ml of culture medium »1t a cell density of 1-210" /m1 are : collected by centrifugation in a Sorval GSA rotor for 10 min. at h 3000 rpm. The cells are resuspended in 2 ml of 0.1 M KH, PO, PH 7.4, and F + centrifuged at room temperature for 5 min. at 3000 rpm. The sedimented el cells are resuspended in 1.2 ml ice cold lysis mix [0.1 M potassium pb pliosphate buffer pH 7.4, 1Z (v/v) Triton X-100,0.1 mM PMSF (Merck) 1 and \ transferred to a 30 ml Corex tube. 1.6 g of glass beads (0.4 mm in fi diameter) are added to the cells and the suspension is shaken on a +
Vortex Mixer (Scientific Instruments Inc., USA) at full speed for i sec. and then cooled for 1 min. ‘in an ice bath, This shaking £5 procedure is repeated 5 to 10 times until more than 90% of the cells il are broken (check under light microscope). Py hd : {1
LE
ME
{As = [4 eh id
Hl it
Ee iH
Eq
ER
{
I oT 26197
Cell debris and glass beads are removed from the solution by centri- fugation for 10 min. at 8000 rpm at 4°C in a Sorvall HB-4 rotor.
The supernatant is transferred to Eppendorf tubes, frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at -60°C. Interferon activity is determined 5 according to the procedure of Armstrong (32) using human CCL-23 cells and vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) as the challenge virus. The results are summarized in Table 5.
The interferon activity in S. cerevisiae strains AH220 and GRF18 after transformation with a recombinant plasmid is generally identical.
Table 6 shows a comparison of the interferon activities of both strains after transformation with the plasmids listed as examples. ’
Ce ety YON NPR SSSR Eg ERENAL 4 OA SUPT TSR 1 op Hn BYE
Table 5:
Interteron activity in S. cerevisiae strain AH 220 after transformation with the following recombinant plasmids: : Interferon activity expressed in plasmids Example | units/ml yeast celllunits/l yeast cell extract culture pJDB207/TF(8}) 17 1-107 2.10% pJDB207R/IF(a-3) 28 1-10° 2.10° " pJDB207Y/IF(a-3) 28 1010° 2.10° 5 7 pJDB207/1F1(5,) 17 7¢10 1.410 pJDB207/1F2(5,) 17 510° 1.0+10 pIDB207/1F3(5,) 17 310° 6.3+10" 5 7 pJDB207/1F2(5,)A72 22 5+10 1e10 7 pJDB207/1F2(5,)482 22 5¢10° lelo
C7 8 \15 PJIDB207R/IF(a-2) 28 1-10 2-10 pJDB207R/IF (o-2)A72 28 10107 20108 pJDB207R/IF (a2) A82 28 1.10 2.10% pJDB207Y/IF (a-2) 28 1-10’ 2.108 pJDB207Y/IF(a-2)A72 28 1.10’ 2.10° pJDB207Y/IF(a-2)A82 28 1-10’ 2010° 3 4 pJDB207/1F2(1'b) 17 410 8+10 pJDB207/1F2(1'b)A 22 1.10° 2.10 pJDB207R/IF(a~1) 28 5010 1.10% pJDB207R/IF (a-1)A 28 4010" 8+10° pJDB207Y/IF(a-1) 28 5.10% 1010° pJDB207Y/IF(¢1)A 28 4e10" 8+10° i wo da or hn Sets at ox VAY T fe Len BIRT 0 A . ; 32 h . co tt ene Cd Ma rd SL EDR AE gdp weeny, von hl inde
: ‘ - 105 - Lo 26197 L ¢
Table 6: Comparison of interferon activity in S. cerevisiae strains
AH220 and GRF18 after transformation with the following recombinant plasmids: plasmids Interferon activity (units/l yeast cell culture ig
AH220 GRF18 E % 1 8 8 pJDB207/TF (81) 2010 2¢10 [i pJDB207R/IF (a-3) 2010° 2010 : 4 % 7 6 2 pJDB207/1F2(51) 1e10 9¢10 Bi pJDB207R/IF (0-2) 2010° 2010° i |pJDB207R/IF (a-2)A82 20108 2010° | | ) i
Example 32: Production of interferon-o-2 by a recombinant strain of ] the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae on a 300 1 scale ! the yeast Saccharomyces Corer ~~ ~~
I:
Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain GRF18,/pJDB207R/IF(a-2)A82 carries ’ i! a plasmid which includes a leucine marker allowing selective 2 maintenance of the plasmid in the host organism, a structural gene for ki human interferon-a-2 and the acid phosphatase PHOS promoter which ¢ allows expression of the IFN-a-2 gene in media with limiting amounts 3 h of inorganic phosphate. = . The strain is maintained on agar slant cultures prepared with a de- : fined medium lacking the amino acid leucine to ensure retention of the c plasmid. Freshly inoculated slants are incubated for 24 hours at 30°C. !
The surface culture of one slant is resuspended in 3 ml pre-culture 5 ’ 4 E medium which is then transferred to the first shake flask pre—culture. :
The 500 ml flask has a single baffle and contains 100 ml pre-culture medium having the following composition (values in g/1): : yeast extract (Difco), 10.0; L-asparagine, 6.6; KH, PO, , 1.0; ] k
Mg$0, *7H,0, 1.0; L-histidine, 0.02 and D-glucose (monohydrate), 33.0. p 1 ) eee re TEP WEISMAN FR CTR RARE TY Te TT we 926197
The medium which has been prepared using deionised water, has a pH value of approximately 6.0. The glucose is sterilised separately. This first pre-culture is incubated for 24 hours at 30°C on an orbital shaker with 5 cm throw at a speed of 250 rev. min.
The first pre-culture flask provides the inoculum for the second pre—culture flasks. These flasks receive an inoculum level of 17 v/v. The medium and incubation conditions are identical with those for the first pre-culture. The culture broths from 36 such flasks are combined to provide a 12 v/v. inoculum for the main production fermenter.
The production fermenter has a total volume of approximately 500 1, contains 4 baffles and a single six-bladed disc turbine agitator with a diameter of 230 mm. The agitation rate is 450 rev/min, the overpressure 0.3 bar and the aeration rate is 1 vol/vol/min.
The fermenter contains 300 1 of a medium with the following composi- tion (values in g/1): L-asparagine, 2.0; L-histidine, 0.02;
KH, PO, , 0.03; MgSO, ¢7H,0, 0.5; NaCl, 0.1; CaCl,*2H,0, 0.1; KCl, 1.0;
D-glucose (monohydrate), 20,0; vitamin solution, 5 ml/l1 and trace element solution, 5 ml/l. The medium is adjusted to pH7.2 using NaOH before sterilisation. The glucose, vitamins and trace elements ‘are sterilised separately and added to the medium. The stock solutions for vitamins and trace elements have the following compositions (in g71): Vitamins - biotin, 0.0002; calcium-D-pantothenat, 0.04; folic acid, 0.0002; nicotinic acid, 0.04; p-aminobenzoic acid, 0.02; pyridoxine hydrochloride, 0.04; riboflavin, 0.02; thiamine hydrochloride, 0.04; and inositol, 0.2 in 1 1 of deionised water; trace elements - boric acid, 0.05; CuSO, *5H,0, 0.004; KI, 0.01;
FeCl1,6H,0, 0.02; MnSO, *4H,0, 0.04; Na,MoO, «21,0, 0.02 and
Zns0, *7H,0, 0.04 in 1 1 of deionised water. The fermentation
JO temperature is 30°C. The pH value falls to a value of about 4.0-4.2 but can be controlled if desired at an intermediate value using : sodium hydroxide. After fermenting for about 18 hours the maximum :
i iy - 107 - 261 9 “7 k
X yield of interferon is reached [as determined according to
Armstrong (32)]. The optical density, which reaches about 2.0 units, and the acid phosphatase activity are useful indications of the progress of the fermentation. The fermentation broth may be cooled: to 10°C if required prior to harvesting of the yeast cells. !
Example 33: Isolation and purification of HLyIFN-a-2 : a. Preparation of the polypeptide solution for the monoclonal i antibody column ;
A total volume of 600 1 of culture broth having a pH of 4.1 is cooled g to 10°C. The cells are separated using an Alfa-Laval BRPX-207 p de-sludger centrifuge. The clear supernatant contains no IFN-activity. }
Residual supernatant liquor entrained with the cells is displaced 1 by washing with 20 1 Lysis Buffer A [100 mM KH, PO, , 500 mM NaCl, i 0.1% v/v Triton x-100® and 0.1 mM PMSF adjusted with KOH to pH 7.5]. H
The contents of the centrifuge bowl (7 1) are ejected with complete . desludging and the de-sludger washed once with 5 1 Lysis Buffer A. {
The cell mass obtained is diluted with Buffer A to 60 1 and has’a 3 pH value of 7.3. The suspension is cooled to 5-10°C and passed 3 through a pynd®ui1 (type KD5) at a feed rate of 100 L/h. b
The mill is equipped with polyurethane agitator discs and 4200 ml I glass beads of 0.5-0.75 mm diameter and is operated at 1625 rev/min. )
The ruptured cell suspension (pH ~ 7.3) is centrifuged as described Md: previously. The supernatant (75 1) is concentrated to 3 1 by ultra- 5 i filtration. An aliquot (300 ml) of this polypeptide solution is passed G 5, through a H1P100 Hollow filter cartridge using an Amicon DC-2 li
Hollow Fibre System. A further 2 1 of buffer system B [30 mM i’
Tris-HCl, 500 mM NaCl, adjusted to pH 8.5] is applied to the filter. i
The combined filtrate and washings (2 1) are concentrated to 100 ml ] by means of a H1P10 Hollow filter cartridge. The concentrate is i adsorbed onto a column of DEAE-Trisacryl On DEAE (LKB Ltd.). The 3 column is washed and then eluted with Buffer C (200 mM NaCl, 25 mM it
Tris—-HC1 at pH 8.5). The eluate has an interferon activity of i i
Ji 4 th ee YC FT HT ATRESIA rb SYNC) SE TR TTR EA qT Ct cL rey we 26197 1.4 x 10° IU/mg polypeptide when assayed according to the method of
Armstrong (32). The eluate is stored at -20°C prior to further puri- fication on the monoclonal antibody column. b) Purification of human LyIFN-o-2 on a monoclonal antibody column
The monoclonal antibody column NK2 (purchased from CELLTECH U.K.) (bed volume 20 ml), is equilibrated with 20 mM Na-phosphate, 154 mil NaCl, pH 7.4 and portions of the above polypeptide solution are applied onto the column at room temperature with a flow rate of 50 ml/h. The first fractions containing the nonadsorbed polypeptides and 100 ml of PBS washings are discarded. Further non specific bound polypeptides are eluted with 110 ml of PBS containjug additional 0.5 M NaCl and 0.27%
Triton X 100%, The column is washed with 200 ml of 20 mM Na-phosphate, 0.3 M NaCl, pH 7.4, whereupon the specifically adsorbed polypeptides © are eluted with 50 ml of Buffer D (0.1 M citric acid, 0.3 M NaCl, pH 2). This solution is adjusted to pH 6.3 with 2N NaOH and concen- trated at 4°C with the aid of an immersible~CX molecular separator atillipore &). The concentrate is applied onto a Sephadex c-2® fine column (2.6x34 cm, 200 ml bed volume) equilibrated with 0.025 M histidineeHC1l at pH 6.3. The column is eluted with the same } histidineeHCl buffer at 4°C and with a flow rate of 42 ml h. 20 fractions are collected of each 10.5 ml. Polypeptide containing fractions are detected by their optical absorption at 280 nm.
Fractions 7 and 8 contain the polypeptide with IFN activity as localised by the assay according to Armstrong (32). The active "25 fractions containing LyIFN-a-2 are stored at -20°C until further use.
The IFN activity of the fractions is 1.8010° 1U/mg polypeptide (32).
By lyophilizing the above fractions from 1 ml solution 20-40 mug of polypeptide are obtained.
SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (cf. (53)) reveals a molecular weight for the obtained LyIFN-a-2 of about 18 kDaltons.
; n- 26197
Example 34: Secretion of interferon by transformed yeast cells into the culture medium
In order to determine the effect of a N-terminal protein signal sequence on protein secretion, yeast strain S. cerevisiae GRF18,/pJDB207/1F(8.) (containing a hybrid signal sequence, see example 17) and yeast strain
S. cerevisiae GRF18/pJDB207R/IF(a~3) (without signal sequence) are grown as described in Example 28. The amount of the produced interferon ? present in the culture medium as well as the amount of interferon . . . . ) present in cell extracts, (prepared as described in Example 31) is ; determined and the results are given in table 7. } : 2
Table 7: Comparison of interferon secretion of transformed -
S. cerevisiae GRF18 strains into the culture medium: : reer 4
S. cerevisiae strain Interferon activity (units/1 yeast cell 3 culture) \ cell extract culture medium : 9 4
RF18,/pJDB207R/IF (a-3) 1.5 ee 10 3 10 . ; 8 7
SRF18,/pJDB207/1F (8) 2 + 10 2 «10 \ { anaes ae aT EE Te EERE MII SAI 5 TENT { SOT I RA Tr oT TE !
. . ~- 110 -
References 1. A. Hinnen et al., "Transformation of yeast", Proc. Natl. Acad.
Sci. USA 75, 1929 (1978) 2. J.D. Beggs, "Transformation of yeast by a replicating hybrid plasmid”, Nature 275, 104 (1978) 3. J. Hicks et al., "Properties of yeast transformation", Cold Spring
Harbor, Symp. Quant. Biol. 43, 1305 (1979) 4. K.Struhl et al., "High-frequency transformation of yeast; auton- omous replication of hybrid DNA molecules”, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci.
USA 76, 1035 (1979) 5. R.A. Hitzeman et al., "Expression of a human gene for interferon in yeast", Nature 293, 717 (1981) 6. J.D. Beggs et al., "Abnormal expression of chromosomal rabbit
B-globin gene in Saccharomyces cerevisiae', Nature 283, 835 (1980) 7. R. Axel, "The use of eukaryotic promoter sequences in the produc- tion of proteinaceous materials", PCT patent application 8102425. 8. J.A. Carbon et al., "DNA capable of replication and stable mitotic maintenance in a host eukaryote, method of preparation thereof and eukaryotic cell containing same", European patent application 48081. (The regents of the University of California) ’ ) 9. D.T. Stinchcomb et al., "Eukaryotic autonomously replicating segment", European patent application 45573 (The board of trustees of Leland Stanford Junior University) 10. "Plasmidvektoren, Hybridplasmide und ihre Verwendung zur Herstel- lung von Proteinen", German Offenlegungsschrift 2 923297 (Insti- tut Pasteur) : , lr ARI a ue ty aR veh We LE A ales AIS EY Bt Ae th EAT a Bek te rr A AA Le os an Cr mommy ON
. ! h oh 26197 11. '"Procédé de production de protéines par expression des génes correspondants dans des microorganismes et vecteurs susceptibles d'étre mis en oeuvre dans de tels procédés', French Pateut appli- cation 2 458 585 (Institut Pasteur) : 12. M. Aigle et al., "Nouveaux plasmides hybrides et microorganismes les contenant', European patent application 11562 (Agence natio-— nale de valorisation de la recherche) 13. A. Schurr et al., J. Gen. Microbiol. 65, 291 (1971) and A. Toh-e et al., Mol. Gen. Cenet. 162, 139 (1978) 14. P. Mildner et al., Biochim.s Biophys. Acta 429, 274 (1976) : 15. A.M. Maxam et al. in "Methods in Enzymology", vol. 65, p.499; ; oo New York 1980 16. A. Hinnen et al., "Vectors for cloning in yeast', Curr. Top.
Microbiol. Immunol. 96, 101 (1982) { 17. A. Hinnen et al. in "Eukaryotic Gene Regulation', vol. 14, p. 43, ,
New York 1979 °c 18. "Genetic Engineering’ (ed. A.M. Chakrabarty), West Palm Beach 1978 19. J. Lodder, 'The Yeasts', Amsterdam 1971 20. M. Grunstein et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci.USA 72, 3961 (1979) 21. A. Jimenez et al., Nature 287, 869 (1980) - 22. T. Staehelin et al., J. Biol. Chem. 256, 9750 (1981) ; 23. M.V. Olson et al., J. Mol. Biol. 132, 387 (1979) 24. WU. Meyer, FEBS Lett. 90, 341 (1978) 25. B. Hohn et al. in "Genetic Engineering", vol. 2, p. 169, :
New York 1980 ! 26. B. liohn in "Methods in Enzymology", vol. 68, p. 299, New York 1979 a ° 27. N. Mantei ct al., Gene 10, 1 (1980) , 28. J.D. Beggs in "Genetic Engineering’, vol. 2, p. 175, New York 1981 ; yt Te oO RES PRA IARI TE NE TRG THN (AY E67 mere
- 112 - 9 6 1 9 7 29. M. Mandel et al., J. Mol. Biol. 53, 159 (1970) : : 30. J.H. Miller, "Experiments in Molecular Genetics", Cold Spring
Harbor 1972 31. A. Toh-e et al., J.Bacteriol. 113, 727 (1973) 32. J.A. Armstrong, Appl. Microbiol. 21, 723 (1971) 33. J.B. Gurdon, J. Embryol. Exp. Morph. 20, 401-414 (1968) 34, Barth, J. Embryol. Exp. Morph. 7, 210-222 (1959) 35. A. Colman, Cell 17, 517 (1979) | : 36. A. Efstratiadis et al., Cell 4, 367-378 (1975) 37. T. Maniatis et al., Cell 8, 163-182 (1976) 38. J.H.J. Hoeijmakers et al., Gene 8, 391-417 (1980) 39. A.C. Peacock et al., Biochemistry 6, 1818 (1967) 40. K. Itakura et al., J. Am. Chem. Soc. 97, 7327 (1975) 41. J.F.M. de Rooij et al., Recl. Trav. Chim. Pays-Bas 98, 537-548 (1979) 42. W. Mueller et al., J. Mol. Biol. 124, 343 (1978) 43. D.V. Goeddel et al., Nature 290, 20 (1981) 44. C. Weissmann, European patent application No.32134 (Biogen N.V.) 45. T.Taniguchi et al., Gene 10, 11 (1980) © 20 46, M. Streuli et al., Science 209, 1343 (1980) 47. Perlman et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 79, 781 (1982) : 48. A.J. Berk et al., Cell 12, 721-732 (1977) 49, J. Messing, In the 3rd Cleveland Symposium on Macromolecules: /
Recombinant DNA (ed. A. Walton), Elsevier, Amsterdam 1981, / pp. 143-153 : 50. D.S. Holmes et al., Anal. Biochem, 114, 193-197 (1981) s i ",
ET TI NL 0 PL LAT Sn ERNE 4 Of RT SET 1 he 3g 5 vse 5 pr aerge i ¢
Cs - 26197 } 51. N.M. Gough et al., J. Mol. Biol. 162, 43-67 (1982) 52. Pasek ei. al., Nature 282, 575-579 (1979). 53. U.K. Laemmli, Nature 227, 680-685 (1970). 4 ; ) mn vr eA TORE NS A CU EIT ARRAN RE TI TTI RT or 26197
Appendix
Symbols used in figures 10-14 of the accompanying drawings have the following meanings: : |] amino acid exchange * and 2 nucleotide exchange ’
Toe sequence not present in prior art vY polyadenylation sites in prior art ¢ deletion of a nucleotide . ' insertion of a nucleotide "10 In the respective figures the indicated symbols are referring to the closest prior art references as mentioned in Example 10. =
In the other figures of the accompanying drawings, the symbol used . have the following meanings: ’ CE EN A A Ry CRT RH ST RL SR EARL, 0 EWE war see egy Ry j - 115 - 3 26197 :
Zero HBVs gene ——X—— deletion of a restriction site human lymphoblastoid . —————— pBR 322 sequences mae interferon gene yeast chromosomal DNA J yeast chromosomal DNA
COCCI jo rjved from PHO3, PHOS region derived from IRP! region —Y deletion in pBR 322 — on i rr rr2Zi yeast Zpqplasmid DNA sletion In p yeast chromosomal DNA : _ 4 restriction site \ derived from LEU 2 region ]
R 4 amp ampicillin resistance gene ——————— direction of transcription
R — : tet tetracycline resistance gene : 4 = linker DNA stretch ’
Le RR ne TE a STI LR STE Ly of . - DRERE: bh SEE eR ER RS Lp fing HRN Se #1 Sh

Claims (3)

  1. CLAIMS: : (4 a DNA fragment comprising the yeast PHO3 or PHOS promoter, and mutants thereof which retain the promoter function.
  2. 2 A DNA fragment according to claim 1 comprising the PHO3 promoter, and mutants thereof which retain the promoter function, (3 A DNA fragment according to claim 1 comprising the PHOS promoter, and mutants thereof which retain the promoter / : : @ A DNA fragment according to + claim’ 1 "7" containing whole or part of the signal Sequence of the PHO3 or PHOS protein coding region linked to the yeast PHO3 or PHOS promoter, and mutants thereof which retain the promoter function. Co & A DNA fragment according to claim 1 having the nucleotide se~ quence c . A TTT ATL CAA CAA GAA TG CG CAAT ATO TCA CG TATTTGCARGTCAT CIT } CTT TAG TT TCT CATO TAA GCGCACOT COTO TAT ARC TT CAAA CAR OT CAT AGC CTT TTC TT TOT TG ACAA CAA TATATAT TART TAGE CATA GAA COCA CTO CACAN TC CAMAAAGTAAAAGTCATTARAGAGTT ' AGA TCC TAA AT GAA TCO ATA CAA CCT TCG ACT CACACG TOO GAC TA .
    i oe 26197 ’ CACAGACTAAATTTATGATTCTGGTCCCTGTTTTCCAAGAGATCGCACATGCCAAATTAT CAAATTGGTCACCTTACTTGGCAAGGCATATACCCATTITCCGATAAGCCTAAACATCTTT CAATTCTCCAAATCAANACCTATATAACCCCTCATCTTTTGCTAAGTCGAGGTTAGTATGG x CTTCATCTCTCATGAGAATAAGAACAACAACAAATACAGCAAGCAAATTCCAGATTACCA %
    = . 1 ATGTTTAAATCTGTTGTTTIATTCAATTTTAGCCGCTTCTTTGGCCAATGCAGGTACCATT La DY » Fil CCCTTAGGCAAACTAGCCGATG and subfragments andmutants thereof ok which retain the promoter function. 5
    4; . ro (60a DNA fragment according to cljim 5 selected from the group 5 . x consisting of the DNA fragment having the nucleotide sequence oe £5 ‘ 5 ATCCGAAAGTTGTATTCAACAAGAATGCGCAAATATGTCAACGTATTTGGAAGTCATCTT bs i ATGCTGCGCTGCTTTAATGTTTTCTCATGTAAGCGGACGTCGTCTATAAACTTCAAACGAA i hE, hn inl GGTAAAAGGTTCATAGCGCTTTTTCTTTGTCTGCACAAAGAAATATATATTAAATTAGCA iy A Sar CGTTTTCGCATAGAACGCAACTGCACAATGCCAAAAAAAGTAAAAGTGATTAAAAGAGTT i : a AATTGAATAGGCAATCTCTAAATGAATCGATACAACCTTGGCACTCACACGTGGGACTAG 3 CACACACTAAATTTATGATTCTGGTCCCTGTTTTCGAAGAGATCGCACATGCCAAATTAT 2 CAAATTGGTCACCTTACTTGGCAAGGCATATACCCATTTGGGATAAGGGTAAACATCTTT is GAATTGTCGAAATGAAACGTATATAAGCGCTGATGTTTTGCTAAGTCGACGTTAGTATGG 1 Hr ba CTTCATCTCTCATGAGAATAAGAACAACAACAAATAGAGCAAGCAAATTCGGG, HH LY and the DNA fragment having the nucleotide sequence rig Pe G =H ATCCGAAAGTTGTATTCAACAACAATGCGCAAATATGTCAACCGTATTTGCAAGTCATCTT a ATGTGCGCTGCTTTAATGTTTTCTCATGTAAGCGGACGTCCTCTATAAACTTCAAACGAA ke aL 2 8 GGTAAAAGGTTCATAGCGCTTTTTCTTTGTCTGCACAAACAAATATATATTAAATTAGCA iy ' J No .
  3. 3 CGTTTTCGCATAGAACGCAACTGCACAATGCCAAAAAAAGTAAAAGTGATTAAAAGAGTT it fl : fe k . ie reeeee a pte nn LM TR BAY RINT IRR qt A fret i CE UE Ae a RE JY, mee lL us - 26197 AATTGAATAGGCAATCTCTAAATGAATCGATACAACCTTCGCACTCACACGTCOGACTAG CAA CAC TAA TT TATGATTCTCGTCCCTCTTTTCGAAGAGAT COCACATGCCAAAT TAT CAAATTCGTCACCTTACTTGGCAAGGCATATACCCATTTGCGATAAGCCTAAACATCTTT CAATTGTCGAAATGAAACGTATATAAGCGCTGATCTTTTGCTAAGTCGAGCTTAGTATGE CTT CATCTCTCATGAGAATAAGAACAACAACAAATACAGCAAGCAAATTCGAGAT TAG, : 2 A DNA fragment according to claim 1 having the nucleotide sequence GA GATATCCGAAACACGTAAATGGATGTTTCAATCCCTGTAGTCAGTCAGGAACCCATATTA ’ TATTACAGTATTAGTCGCCGCTTAGGCACGCCTTTAATTAGCAAAATCAAACCTTAAGTG CATATGCCGTATAAGGGAAACTCAAAGAACTGGCATCGCAAAAATGAAAAAAAGGAAGAG TOAMAAAAAAAAATTCAAAAGAAATTTACTAAATAATACCAGTTTGCCAAATAGT AAAC AGCTTTGAGTACTCCTATGCAACATATAT AAGTGCTTAAATTTGCTCGATCCAAGTCAAT . TATCCCTTGATTATCATAAAAAAAATACTACAGTAAAGAAACGGCCATTCCAAATTACCT ATGTTTAAGTCTGTTGTTTATTCGGTTCTAGCCGCTGCTTTAGTTAATGCAGGT and subfragments and mutants thereof which retain the promoter function.
    A method for producing a DNA fragment according to claim 1 which comprises (A) preparing an acid phosphatase, gene by complementing acid phos- phatase deficient yeast strains by transformation with plasmid f DNA from a yeast gene library containing the wild-type copy of said gene and isolating said gene, (B) Preparing subclones of the obtained gene, and (C) identifying the location of the promoter region of the above subclones and isolating DNA fragments comprising the acid phosphata;e 3 promoter. ;
PH34737D 1982-08-09 1987-01-16 Yeast hybrid vectors and their use in the production of polypeptides PH26197A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB8222883 1982-08-09
GB8237026 1982-12-31
GB838315145A GB8315145D0 (en) 1982-08-09 1983-06-02 Yeast hybrid vectors
PH29374A PH25617A (en) 1982-08-09 1983-08-09 Yeast hybrid vectors, their use for the production of polypeptides

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PH26197A true PH26197A (en) 1992-03-18

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PH3473787L PH26800A (en) 1982-08-09 1987-01-16 Yeast hybrid vectors and their use for the production of polypeptides
PH3473787K PH26266A (en) 1982-08-09 1987-01-16 Yeast hybrid vectors and their use for the production of polypeptides
PH34737D PH26197A (en) 1982-08-09 1987-01-16 Yeast hybrid vectors and their use in the production of polypeptides

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PH3473787L PH26800A (en) 1982-08-09 1987-01-16 Yeast hybrid vectors and their use for the production of polypeptides
PH3473787K PH26266A (en) 1982-08-09 1987-01-16 Yeast hybrid vectors and their use for the production of polypeptides

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PH26266A (en) 1992-04-01
PH26800A (en) 1992-10-13

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