WO2002046754A2 - Functional proteomics using double phage display screening - Google Patents

Functional proteomics using double phage display screening Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO2002046754A2
WO2002046754A2 PCT/US2001/047836 US0147836W WO0246754A2 WO 2002046754 A2 WO2002046754 A2 WO 2002046754A2 US 0147836 W US0147836 W US 0147836W WO 0246754 A2 WO0246754 A2 WO 0246754A2
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
protein
antibody
phage
phagemid
proteins
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US2001/047836
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
WO2002046754A3 (en
Inventor
Robert S. Gilmour
Keith Wright Marvin
Original Assignee
Neuronz Limited
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Neuronz Limited filed Critical Neuronz Limited
Priority to US10/433,738 priority Critical patent/US20040053218A1/en
Priority to AU2002230749A priority patent/AU2002230749A1/en
Publication of WO2002046754A2 publication Critical patent/WO2002046754A2/en
Publication of WO2002046754A3 publication Critical patent/WO2002046754A3/en

Links

Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C40COMBINATORIAL TECHNOLOGY
    • C40BCOMBINATORIAL CHEMISTRY; LIBRARIES, e.g. CHEMICAL LIBRARIES
    • C40B40/00Libraries per se, e.g. arrays, mixtures
    • C40B40/02Libraries contained in or displayed by microorganisms, e.g. bacteria or animal cells; Libraries contained in or displayed by vectors, e.g. plasmids; Libraries containing only microorganisms or vectors
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12NMICROORGANISMS OR ENZYMES; COMPOSITIONS THEREOF; PROPAGATING, PRESERVING, OR MAINTAINING MICROORGANISMS; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING; CULTURE MEDIA
    • C12N15/00Mutation or genetic engineering; DNA or RNA concerning genetic engineering, vectors, e.g. plasmids, or their isolation, preparation or purification; Use of hosts therefor
    • C12N15/09Recombinant DNA-technology
    • C12N15/10Processes for the isolation, preparation or purification of DNA or RNA
    • C12N15/1034Isolating an individual clone by screening libraries
    • C12N15/1037Screening libraries presented on the surface of microorganisms, e.g. phage display, E. coli display
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N33/00Investigating or analysing materials by specific methods not covered by groups G01N1/00 - G01N31/00
    • G01N33/48Biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Haemocytometers
    • G01N33/50Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing
    • G01N33/68Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing involving proteins, peptides or amino acids
    • G01N33/6803General methods of protein analysis not limited to specific proteins or families of proteins

Definitions

  • the present invention relates generally to the field of proteomics and, more
  • the present invention exploits phagemid
  • IGF-I insulin-like growth factor-I
  • IGF-I also has important effects on glucose uptake and
  • IGF-I The biological actions of IGF-I are mediated through activation of the IGF-
  • phosphorylated receptor and IRS-I interact with numerous SH 2 domain containing proteins which in turn activate both the Raf-MAPKK-MAPK cascade and the
  • PI3K/PKB phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase/protein kinase B
  • DAG diacylglycerol
  • DAG results from the hydrolysis of nuclear PI lipids by a nuclear phospholipase C which is stimulated by the translocation of active MAP kinase
  • PLC kinase C
  • nucleus retains a good deal of signaling
  • Elkl/TCF which regulate gene expression
  • structural proteins such as histone
  • HI and H2A, and lamin B involved in nuclear architecture or enzymes (such as
  • topoisomerase I and II which catalyze a variety of nuclear reactions.
  • proteome refers to the spectrum of proteins that make up the
  • proteome a few proteins change in amount or sub-cellular location, for example.
  • the proteome of the cell can be separated out and displayed as a two-
  • the present invention provides a
  • the present invention is directed to a mehtod of identifying a protein by
  • tissue of interest by ribosome-phage screening comprising:
  • the antibody phage yield is low
  • phage DNA is amplified prior to re-infecting bacteria.
  • the figure is a representation of the inventive method. The method first
  • the phage selected by the antibody displays either the first
  • proteins especially small peptides, that are biologically active from a tissue of
  • precursor proteins may also be identified and
  • the tissue is processed such that a mixture of cellular proteins is
  • the protein mixture may be fractionated or proteins separated by size
  • Such techniques include, but are not limited to,
  • phagemid is then used to screen a cDNA phage display library displaying the
  • the high-affinity antibody recognizes a
  • the protein of interest from the protein mixture, i.e., a protein-specific phagemid.
  • the cDNA insert associated with the peptide-specific phagemid can then be used
  • the present invention provides a method of identifying proteins isolated on
  • the key step is to isolate from a phagemid display
  • proteome gel The phagemid is then used for two complementary protocols.
  • the expressed antibody is used to screen a separate phagemid display library
  • encoding the antibody is subcloned into a mammalian expression vector and
  • IGF insulin-like growth factor's
  • Antibody means an immunoglobulin that specifically binds to and is
  • Antibodies may include a complete immunoglobulin or fragment thereof, which immunoglobulins include the various classes and
  • isotypes such as IgA, IgD, IgE, IgGI, IgG2a, IgG2b and IgG3, IgM, etc.
  • Fragments thereof may include Fab, Fv and F(ab') 2 , Fab', and the like. In one
  • the antibody is displayed in a phagemid library.
  • biopanning refers to by an in vitro selection
  • biopanning is carried out by incubating a pool of
  • the eluted phage may then be amplified in vivo and the process repeated,
  • Idiotype or "idiotypic” is a unique motif within a protein that gives rise
  • the motif may be present on more than one protein.
  • tissue includes whole tissue, single cells and sub-cellular fractions
  • tissue fluid such as
  • brain microdialysate is included within the definition of tissue.
  • phage display describes an in vitro selection technique in
  • phage display among others, are contemplated.
  • An antibody phage display would be contemplated.
  • An antibody phage display would be contemplated.
  • a protein phage display comprises the DNA for a protein
  • a "phage display library” is a collection of phage displays exhibiting a
  • an antibody phage display library would include a
  • a cDNA phage display library would include the proteome of a tissue
  • PCR or “polymerase chain reaction” means a technique, well-known in
  • A The DNA to be reproduced is heated to separate the two template
  • a heat-stable DNA polymerase enzyme is also added. The enzyme
  • proteome is a portmanteau word, blending the words protein
  • proteome is simply the protein complement expressed by a
  • proteome genome or tissue.
  • the concept of the proteome is fundamentally different to that
  • proteome continually changes in response to external and internal
  • E. coli will express different proteins when cultivated with
  • proteomes and ultimately differentiate into various tissues.
  • the inventive method is based on
  • the 2D array thus generated may contain up to 10,000 protein "spots" on
  • inventive method disclosed herein describes a superior alternative based on phage
  • Immobilized pH gradients (IPG) (see Bjellqvist et al., J. Biochem.
  • IPG gels do not suffer from cathodic drift and
  • IPG gels are commercially available (Amersham Pharmacia).
  • the pH range of IPG gels can be narrowed, for example,
  • one pH unit spans 16 cm, allowing us to "zoom in” on a pH range of interest.
  • IPG gels in the first-dimension are important feature for using IPG gels in the first-dimension.
  • a basic component in this technology is a phage antibody display library.
  • variable regions of human immunoglobulin heavy and light chains to the gene
  • variable regions subsequently introduced in vitro into the variable regions to generate a repertoire
  • Each phage particle contains a single antibody gene in its genome and displays on its surface a unique monoclonal antibody that can be
  • This library has sufficient antibody diversity to
  • proteins can be selected, if the folding of the protein on the ribosome is secured
  • protein and ribosomes can then be bound to immobilized ligand (or alternatively,
  • the mRNA is synthesized by an antibody.
  • insert may be readily synthesized by conventional means such as solid phase
  • the protein of interest may be any protein of interest against the antibody-phagemid display library.
  • the protein of interest may be any protein of interest against the antibody-phagemid display library.
  • the protein of interest may be any protein of interest against the antibody-phagemid display library.
  • a matrix e.g. a protein electroblotted from a 2DE gel onto a nylon membrane
  • a protein electroblotted from a 2DE gel onto a nylon membrane e.g. a protein electroblotted from a 2DE gel onto a nylon membrane
  • Phage that bind to the protein with high specificity are
  • antibody phages of maximum specificity for the protein Desirably less than 10 high-affinity antibody phages are isolated.
  • amplifying bound phage particles in the event that additional amplification is
  • a second phage library is prepare containing the cDNAs from the
  • proteome of the tissue of interest using technique similar to those discussed
  • the protein(s) found by this technique may well be the same as
  • the original protein of interest in the case where the original protein is of lower
  • the protein(s) found by this technique may well include proteins that
  • IGF-I insulin-like growth factor
  • the bound phage particles are
  • the cells After 24 hours, the cells are challenged with IGF-I and the mitogenic
  • Cellular protein profiles i.e., the proteome, are altered in disease such as
  • IGF insulin-like growth factor
  • other growth factors hormones, neurotransmitters and the like
  • the proteome can be monitored it is not always known which proteins are altered.
  • NRPPs nuclear IGF-I-responsive phosphoproteins
  • IPG strips by direct rehydration (in an aqueous solution containing all necessary
  • additives 8 M urea, 0.5 % non- or zwitterionic detergent, 2 % thiol reagent, and
  • the resolved nuclear proteins are visualised by staining with Coomassie Brilliant
  • CBB Blue
  • HPLC HPLC
  • well-resolved peptides are chosen for amino acid sequencing.
  • sequence information is used to determine the identity of the protein by
  • IPG gel strips These recently-developed gel strips, which are 18-cm long
  • electrokinetic membrane apparatus was designed to fractionate proteins according
  • low-abundance NIRPPs are visualised by modified silver staining. This new method is about 100-fold more sensitive than CBB staining.
  • proteins are identified either by direct amino acid
  • IGF-I signals mainly through two separate kinase
  • IGF-I induces activation of nuclear PLC- ⁇ l and production of
  • PI-3-kinase inhibitor wortmannin such as PI-3-kinase inhibitor wortmannin, MAPKK inhibitor PD98059 and PKC
  • the P-labeled 3T3 cells are pre-incubated with one of these inhibitors before
  • proteases such as trypsin
  • proteases such as trypsin
  • the expressed antibody is used to screen a
  • a phagemid display library which expresses murine immunoglobulin V H
  • V L variable genes as a single F v fragment fused to the N-terminus of gene III
  • V gene regions have been hypermutated in the
  • Option 1 If the phagemid number is high enough, they are used to re-
  • helper phagemid i.e., one not containing a gene III fusion
  • a cDNA library is made from Swiss 3T3 total cell mRNA and screened by
  • the library is constructed in the phage display vector
  • pJuFo utilizes modified leucine zipper domains of Jun and Fos which
  • the cells were subsequently incubated with 0.2 mCi/ml Pi for 4 hours,
  • IPG immobilised pH-gradient strips
  • Fv coding region in the phagemid DNA by restriction enzyme digestion and subcloning it into a mammalian expression vector (e.g. pcDNA3). It may also be
  • Cells on coverslips are first transfected with the NLS-GFP-Fv vector and
  • Fluorescent analysis is carried out at wavelengths specific for GFP and Cy5.
  • Proteome analysis is used to uncover a complete display of protein
  • proteome analysis is two dimensional gel electrophoresis, in which the proteins
  • the generated two-dimensional array of proteins may be
  • mRNA is extracted from about 1-5 x 10 6 cells and transcribed to cDNA.
  • PCR products are purified by agarose gel
  • reaction buffer digested with Sfil and separated by using agarose gel electrophoresis.
  • the cut DNA is extracted from agarose gels by Amicon spin
  • cAMP 0.5 mg/ml E. coli tRNA, 20 ⁇ g/ml folinic acid, 100 mM KOAc, 30 mM
  • acetylphosphate 1.5% polyethylene glycol 8000, 3.5 ⁇ g/ml rifampicin, 1 mg/ml
  • vanadyl ribonucleoside complexes 3.5 ⁇ M anti--?,sr-4 oligonucleotide, 0.3 ⁇ M
  • protein disulfide isomerase 51.4 ⁇ l of E. coli MRE600 extract and 90 ⁇ g/ml of mRNA.
  • the an ⁇ -ssrA oligonucleotide is necessary to prevent the nascent protein
  • the phagemid vector, pJuFo is constructed to fuse the modified Jun Leu
  • the cloning system allows the expression and enrichment of functionally folded
  • the periplasmic space allows functional assembly of Jun/Fos
  • PCR amplifications are performed in a thermocycler using
  • modified Jun zipper is digested with Sacl + Xbal, gel-purified, extracted with
  • the ligation mixture is used to transform 50 ⁇ l of E.
  • cDNA is subcloned into pJuFo, expressed, and the Fos-proteome fusion proteins
  • phage particles captured on the surface of phages. Recombinant phage particles are used to infect
  • the ligation mixture is used to transform E. coli XL 1 -Blue cells by

Landscapes

  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Molecular Biology (AREA)
  • Biomedical Technology (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Biochemistry (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Microbiology (AREA)
  • Biotechnology (AREA)
  • Genetics & Genomics (AREA)
  • Bioinformatics & Cheminformatics (AREA)
  • Zoology (AREA)
  • Immunology (AREA)
  • Urology & Nephrology (AREA)
  • Hematology (AREA)
  • Wood Science & Technology (AREA)
  • Medicinal Chemistry (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Biophysics (AREA)
  • General Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Proteomics, Peptides & Aminoacids (AREA)
  • Pathology (AREA)
  • Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
  • General Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Virology (AREA)
  • Crystallography & Structural Chemistry (AREA)
  • Analytical Chemistry (AREA)
  • Food Science & Technology (AREA)
  • Plant Pathology (AREA)
  • Cell Biology (AREA)
  • Bioinformatics & Computational Biology (AREA)
  • Measuring Or Testing Involving Enzymes Or Micro-Organisms (AREA)

Abstract

The present invention relates to protein identification. In one aspect, the invention provides a method for the identification of a first protein or of a second protein containing an idiotypic region of the first protein comprising (a) contacting said first protein with an antibody phagemid library to form a complex between said first protein and at least one member of said library, (b) screening a cDNA phagemid library of the proteome of a tissue of interest with the complex forming antibody to identify a protein-specific phagemid that displays a protein that binds the antibody phagemidi, (c) identifying the second protein from the cDNA of the protein-specific phagemid. In a second aspect, the method involves as step (b) screening a ribosome display library of the proteome of the tissue of interest with the complex forming antibody obtained from step (a) to identify a protein-specific ribosome that dis plays a protein that binds the antibody phagemid. If the antibody phage yield is low, the phage DNA may be amplified prior to reinfecting bacteria.

Description

Functional Proteomics Using Double Phage Display Screening
Field of The Invention
The present invention relates generally to the field of proteomics and, more
specifically, to protein identification. The present invention exploits phagemid
display to give a high-sensitivity, high through-put screen for structure/functional
relationships of proteins identified by proteome analysis.
Background Of The Invention
It has been known for a long time that the growth of tumors depends not
only on the rate of cell proliferation, but also on the rate of cell death. An increase
in cell proliferation and a decrease in apoptosis cumulatively results in an increase
in cell numbers, which is the most relevant characteristic of tumors. From this
perspective insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) plays a very important role in
tumor growth, because it stimulates cell proliferation, confers anchorage-
independence and protects cells from cell death in general, and apoptosis in
particular. Additionally, IGF-I also has important effects on glucose uptake and
protein synthesis.
The biological actions of IGF-I are mediated through activation of the IGF-
I receptor which triggers autophosphorylation of the receptor and also
phosphorylation of the insulin receptor substrate-I (IRS-I). Tyrosyl-
phosphorylated receptor and IRS-I interact with numerous SH2 domain containing proteins which in turn activate both the Raf-MAPKK-MAPK cascade and the
phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase/protein kinase B (PI3K/PKB) pathway. The
detailed mechanisms by which these two pathways transmit the IGF-I dependent
signals from cytosol to the nucleus and eventually control the cell cycle are still
poorly understood. The traditional concept has been that the cytoplasmic pool of
activated protein kinases phosphorylate transcription factors in the cytoplasm,
which are consequently translocated to the nucleus. However, this explanation is
in apparent contradiction with the fact that MAP kinase itself translocates to the
nucleus immediately following the stimulation of IGF-I and other growth factors.
Moreover, a recent study has shown that the nuclear translocation of MAPK and
the subsequent phosphorylation of nuclear targets are crucial for the growth
factor-induced gene expression and cell proliferation.
Previous work suggested that the generation of cytoplasmic signals is only
part of the picture and that their entry into the nucleus and their subsequent action
therein are a critical determinant of the phenotypic response. Thus, in the case of
IGF-I it was demonstrated that cell cycle progression is dependent on the
activation of an entirely new cycle. The biochemical mechanisms involved in this
pathway are wholly analogous to those known to occur for plasma membrane
receptor signal transduction except that in the case of the IGF-I response, the
second messenger, diacylglycerol (DAG), is produced downstream of the
cytoplasmic signaling cascade and is only found in the nucleus. Our research has
shown that DAG results from the hydrolysis of nuclear PI lipids by a nuclear phospholipase C which is stimulated by the translocation of active MAP kinase
into the nucleus. The accumulation of nuclear DAG in turn activates protein
kinase C (PKC) which simultaneously translocates to the nucleus by an unknown
mechanism and phosphorylates a number of proteins involved in cell cycle
progression through the Gl/S and G2/M checkpoints.
Thus the notion that the cytoplasm generates a tapering hierarchy of signals
that terminate at the nucleus as a refined, unambiguous output no longer appears
to be the case. On the contrary, the nucleus retains a good deal of signaling
complexity and, in the case of the IGF-I, further expands it through additional
intranuclear mechanisms. The cell response must ultimately depend on a
resolution of these signals through phosphorylati on-dependent changes in the
properties of downstream, effector protein targets within the nucleus. In
considering the role of the nuclear PI cycle in this process it is important to put its
known effects into temporal context. Activation of nuclear PLC occurs within 1
minute of IGF-I stimulation, reaching a maximum at 15 minutes and returning to
baseline after 30 minutes. DAG production and PKC activation lag behind these
events by 10-15 minutes. However, the first effect on the cell cycle per se is not
seen until 1-2 hours after IGF-I stimulation. Clearly, there is a crucial gap in our
knowledge of what occurs in the period immediately following the activation of
the nuclear PI cycle. We hypothesize the existence of a number of key post-cycle
events 15-60 minutes after IGF-I stimulation which prepare the nucleus for cell
division. To date there is no clear idea of these mechanisms or the nuclear effector proteins involved. Possible candidates include transcription factors (such
as Elkl/TCF) which regulate gene expression, structural proteins (such as histone
HI and H2A, and lamin B) involved in nuclear architecture or enzymes (such as
topoisomerase I and II) which catalyze a variety of nuclear reactions. However,
many of these results are based on in vitro studies and their physiological
relevance is uncertain.
Therefore, we systematically sought to identify the nuclear protein targets
of IGF-I action using the latest developments of comparative proteome analysis,
to determine the signaling pathways that lead to their phosphorylation and to
assess their relevance to the initiation of the cell cycle. The ultimate goal being to
provide an understanding of the mechanisms by which these nuclear proteins
direct the processes of cell proliferation and survival and to provide a basis for
rational drug design for novel anti-tumor therapies.
The term "proteome" refers to the spectrum of proteins that make up the
skeleton and working parts of the cell. In disease subtle changes occur in the
proteome; a few proteins change in amount or sub-cellular location, for example.
Knowing what these proteins are and do provides a basic understanding of the
disease as well as information for designing new therapeutic drugs.
To obtain further information about a protein including sub-cellular
location, turnover rate, post-translational modification, covalent and noncovalent
associations, and how all this is affected by different external and internal
conditions it is necessary to study the proteins themselves. Only then can subtle changes be appreciated, like tissue-dependent variable post-translational
modification of the same protein (e.g., human serotransferrin in plasma and
cerebrospinal fluid) or the processing of a single polypeptide to produce many
different products (e.g., the post-translational cleavage of protachykinin beta
precursor into three peptide hormone products).
The proteome of the cell can be separated out and displayed as a two-
dimensional matrix of hundreds to thousands of individual protein spots that form
a reproducible pattern. Disease or changes in cell function produce recognizable
changes in this pattern. A problem has been to identify the protein because the
amounts present in the average spot are often outside the range of conventional
biochemical analysis. For proteomics to be biologically meaningful requires a
prior knowledge of an identified protein's function or a means of readily
determining its functional relevance in vivo.
A decade ago a group in Cambridge, now Cambridge Antibody
Technology (CAT), isolated the repertoire of genes that code for all the antibodies
in a human. They then isolated just those parts of the antibody genes that code for
the recognition and binding of foreign proteins. They transferred these gene
fragments into a bacterial virus in such a way that the antibody recognition protein
fragments were displayed on the surface of the virus and could function much as
they do in the parent antibody. Each virus displays a different member of the
original antibody repertoire. Since then CAT have artificially introduced even
more diversity into this repertoire to display the equivalent of a billion different antibodies. This out-performs the body's capacity to diversity its own antibody
repertoire by a long shot and means that there now exists a specific phage
antibody that recognizes virtually every organic molecule known to nature.
However, these antibody phagemid displays were virtually useless in identifying
unknown proteins as they contained a myriad of recognition binding sites. In
other words, an unknown protein was being bound by an unknown antibody.
Thus, a link was needed in order to use the antibody phage displays to
identify the proteins isolated on proteomic gels. The present invention provides
such a link.
Summary of The Invention
The present invention is directed to a mehtod of identifying a protein by
double phage screening.
In one aspect of the invention there is a method of identifying a first
protein, or a second protein containing an idiotypic region of the first protein,
from a tissue of interest by double phage screening, said method comprising:
(a) contacting said first protein with an antibody phagemid display library to form a complex between said first protein and at least one member of said library;
(b) screening a cDNA phagemid display library of the proteome of the tissue of interest with the complex- forming antibody phage to identify a protein-specific phagemid that displays a second protein that binds the antibody phagemid; and
(c) identifying the second protein from the cDNA of the protein- specific phagemid. In a second aspect there is provided a method of identifying a first protein,
or a second protein containing an idiotypic region of the first protein, from a
tissue of interest by ribosome-phage screening, said method comprising:
(a) contacting said first protein with an antibody phagemid display library to form a complex between said protein and at least one member of said library;
(b) screening a ribosome display library of the proteome of the tissue of interest with the complex-forming antibody phage to identify a protein-specific ribosome that displays a second protein that binds the antibody phagemid; and
(c) identifying the second protein from the cDNA of the protein- specific ribosome.
In an embodiment when the antibody phage yield is low, the antibody
phage DNA is amplified prior to re-infecting bacteria.
Description of the Figure
The figure is a representation of the inventive method. The method first
selects from the antibody phage display the specific antibody that binds to a first
protein of interest in the proteome matrix. This phage antibody is then exposed to
another phage population that has been engineered to display on its surface the
proteome of the cell. The phage selected by the antibody displays either the first
protein or a second protein containing an idiotypic region of the first protein in the
proteome matrix but now in sufficient amounts to permit positive identification. Detailed Description of The Invention
The invention will now be described in detail by way of reference only
using the following definitions and examples. All patents and publications
referred to herein are expressly incorporated by reference.
The inventive method is useful for the identification and characterization of
proteins, especially small peptides, that are biologically active from a tissue of
interest. Additionally, precursor proteins may also be identified and
characterized. The tissue is processed such that a mixture of cellular proteins is
obtained. The protein mixture may be fractionated or proteins separated by size
by conventional techniques. Such techniques include, but are not limited to,
column filtration, chromatography and the like. The protein mixture is then run
on two dimensional gel electrophoresis. The protein of interest is isolated from
the gel and contacted with an antibody-phage display library to yield at least one
high-affinity antibody phagemid to the protein of interest. The antibody-
phagemid is then used to screen a cDNA phage display library displaying the
proteome of the tissue of interest. Thus, the high-affinity antibody recognizes a
protein displayed in the cDNA phage library that possesses an epitope found on
the protein of interest from the protein mixture, i.e., a protein-specific phagemid.
The cDNA insert associated with the peptide-specific phagemid can then be used
to identify the protein of interest using techniques well-known in the art, such as
PCR, DNA sequencing, and the like. The present invention provides a method of identifying proteins isolated on
a proteomic gel or matrix. The key step is to isolate from a phagemid display
antibody library, specific antibodies that recognize single protein spots on a
proteome gel. The phagemid is then used for two complementary protocols.
First, the expressed antibody is used to screen a separate phagemid display library
expressing total cellular proteins and the protein antigen identified from the
sequence of the cDNA spliced into the phagemid genome. Second, the DNA
encoding the antibody is subcloned into a mammalian expression vector and
expressed in a fibroblast where it accumulates and neutralizes the target antigen in
vivo. The effect of the "protein knockout" is assessed by the ability of the cell to
respond to insulin-like growth factor's (IGF) mitogenic and anti-apoptotic signals.
This strategy however is generally applicable to the analysis of signaling
pathways for many other growth factors in addition to IGF.
Definitions
As used herein, the following terms or abbreviations, whether used in the
singular or plural, will have the meanings indicated:
"Antibody" means an immunoglobulin that specifically binds to and is
thereby defined as complementary with a particular spatial and polar organization
of another molecule such as the unknown protein to be identified by the inventive
method described herein. Antibodies may include a complete immunoglobulin or fragment thereof, which immunoglobulins include the various classes and
isotypes, such as IgA, IgD, IgE, IgGI, IgG2a, IgG2b and IgG3, IgM, etc.
Fragments thereof may include Fab, Fv and F(ab')2, Fab', and the like. In one
aspect, the antibody is displayed in a phagemid library.
The term "biopanning" as used herein refers to by an in vitro selection
procedure. In its simplest form, biopanning is carried out by incubating a pool of
phage-displayed variants with a target of interest that has been immobilized on a
plate or bead, washing away unbound phage, and eluting specifically bound phage
by disrupting the binding interactions between the phage and target.
The eluted phage may then be amplified in vivo and the process repeated,
resulting in stepwise enrichment of the phage pool in favor of the tightest binding
sequences. Repetition of the biopanning and amplification process will generally
result in a small (e.g. less than 10) high affinity phagemids for a given protein.
"Idiotype" or "idiotypic" is a unique motif within a protein that gives rise
to an antigenic determinate. The motif may be present on more than one protein.
The term may be used interchangeably with epitope herein.
"Tissue" includes whole tissue, single cells and sub-cellular fractions
thereof, including extracts and isolates thereof. For example, a tissue fluid, such
as brain microdialysate, is included within the definition of tissue.
As used herein, "phage display" describes an in vitro selection technique in
which a peptide or protein is genetically fused to a coat protein of a
bacteriophage, resulting in display of the fused protein on the exterior of the phage virion, while the DNA encoding the fusion resides within the virion. This
physical linkage between the displayed protein and the DNA encoding it allows
screening of vast numbers of variants of the protein, each linked to its
corresponding DNA sequence, by a simple in vitro selection procedure called
"biopanning" (see definition above).
Therefore, in the inventive method an antibody phage display and a protein
phage display, among others, are contemplated. An antibody phage display would
comprise the DNA for an antibody and would display the antibody on the exterior
of the phage. Similarly, a protein phage display comprises the DNA for a protein
and displays the protein on the exterior of the phage.
A "phage display library" is a collection of phage displays exhibiting a
certain characteristic. Thus, an antibody phage display library would include a
collection of unique antibodies each displayed on the exterior of a phage.
Similarly, a cDNA phage display library would include the proteome of a tissue
with each protein displayed on the exterior of a phage.
"PCR" or "polymerase chain reaction" means a technique, well-known in
the art, for reproducing specific DNA sequences in vitro. The sequence of PCR
involves the following steps:
A: The DNA to be reproduced is heated to separate the two template
strands.
B: Two primers which are complimentary to the region to be amplified are
added. A heat-stable DNA polymerase enzyme is also added. The enzyme
catalyses the extension of the primers, using the DNA strand as template. The
solution is heated to break the bonds between the strands of the DNA. When the
solution cools, the primers bind to the separated strands, and DNA polymerase
quickly builds a new strand by joining the free nucleotide bases to the primers.
When this process is repeated, a strand that was formed with one primer binds to
the other primer, resulting in a new strand that is restricted solely to the desired
segment. Thus, the region of DNA between the primers is selectively replicated.
Further repetitions of the process can produce billions of copies of a small piece
of DNA in several hours.
The cycle is repeated, with the newly synthesized double stranded DNA
being heat-denatured and the enzymes extending the primers attached to the
liberated single DNA strands. The chain reaction, once set up, results in the
exponential amplification of the original DNA, where the number of cycles (n)
determines how many copies of the DNA (2n) are produced.
The term "proteome" is a portmanteau word, blending the words protein
and genome. The "proteome" is simply the protein complement expressed by a
genome or tissue. The concept of the proteome is fundamentally different to that
of the genome: while the genome is virtually static and can be well-defined for an
organism, the proteome continually changes in response to external and internal
events. For example, E. coli will express different proteins when cultivated with
minimal media instead of complete media. Therefore, its proteome will be different and so have a different proteome. Similarly, during mammalian
development cells express different proteins, develop dissimilar but characteristic
proteomes, and ultimately differentiate into various tissues.
Methods
In proteome projects, one of the primary goals is to separate and visualize
as many proteins from a sample as possible, thus allowing them to be catalogued
by computer and studied by analytical techniques. The inventive method is based
on two well-established methodologies that have been combined in an innovative
way to create a technology platform with unparalleled potential for research and
biotechnology.
Two Dimensional gel electrophoresis
The complete spectrum of proteins expressed by a cell or tissue can be
visualized by two dimensional gel electrophoresis (2DE) in which they are
separated by isoelectric focussing in a first dimension and then in a second
dimension according to apparent molecular weight by SDS-PAGE. See Klose
(Human Genetik 26: 231-24, 1975) and O'Farrell (J. Biol. Chem. 250: 4007-4021,
1975). The 2D array thus generated may contain up to 10,000 protein "spots" on
a single gel. Therefore, in principle it is possible to resolve the entire proteome on a single two-dimensional gel. 2-D PAGE is one of the most efficient and
powerful methods for purifying proteins in small quantities.
Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis has been used successfully to identify
differences in proteins in a wide variety of normal and pathological states. To
exploit the significance of these differences however requires a knowledge of the
identity and function of the proteins identification by conventional means (e.g., N-
terminal sequencing and mass spectroscopy) is limited by the small amounts of
material in each spot and invariably this relies on matching the partial sequence to
an existing protein data base. An ambiguous or novel sequence requires the
laborious process of back-reference to a cDNA library for complete
characterization. Thereafter, the functional significance is usually assessed by
protracted and often unpredictable gene knock out or antisense methods. The
inventive method disclosed herein describes a superior alternative based on phage
display libraries which is capable of ultra-sensitive, high through-put screening of
proteins of interest.
Immobilized pH gradients (IPG) (see Bjellqvist et al., J. Biochem.
Biophys. Meth. 6: 317-339, 1982 and Gδrg et al., Electrophoresis 9: 531-546,
1988) can now be used for the pH range 3 to 12 and have become the method of
choice for the isoelectric focusing. IPG gels do not suffer from cathodic drift and
focus proteins to equilibrium, thus providing very high reproducibility.
Furthermore, IPG gels are commercially available (Amersham Pharmacia
Biotech), so the reproducibility among different laboratories needed to establish and standardize two-dimensional gel databases is now possible. When very high
resolution is required, the pH range of IPG gels can be narrowed, for example,
one pH unit spans 16 cm, allowing us to "zoom in" on a pH range of interest. An
important feature for using IPG gels in the first-dimension is their ability to
accommodate the high sample loads needed for micropreparative 2-D PAGE.
Current methods for sample loading produce hundreds to thousands of protein
spots on a single gel, with the quantities of each protein ranging from high
nanogram to low microgram amounts. The study of very low-abundance proteins
by 2-D PAGE is still challenging, even after loading milligram quantities of
samples. Prefractionation either by sub-cellular compartmentalization or by
narrow-range micropreparative 2-D PAGE often helps. However, a method of
identifying very low-abundance proteins remains desirable.
Phage Display
A basic component in this technology is a phage antibody display library.
Such libraries are commercially available from vendors/licensors such as
Cambridge Antibody Technology (CAT). In engineering their library CAT fused
the variable regions of human immunoglobulin heavy and light chains to the gene
for a minor coat protein of the Ml 3 bacteriophage. Further mutations were
subsequently introduced in vitro into the variable regions to generate a repertoire
of antibodies capable of recognizing a very large number (for example, more than
10 ) of epitopes. Each phage particle contains a single antibody gene in its genome and displays on its surface a unique monoclonal antibody that can be
selected from the vast number of other phage in the library by its ability to bind to
a specific protein epitope. This library has sufficient antibody diversity to
recognize the 10,000 or so proteins on a 2DE gel many times over and therefore
has immense potential for adaptation and application to the problems of multiple
protein analysis. Moreover, the phage infect and multiply in E. coli and are
readily handled by standard microbiological procedures under PCI containment
facilities. The generation of such a library is described, e.g., in McCafferty et al.,
Nature, v. 348, pp. 552-554 (December 6, 1990); and a person of ordinary skill in
the art will be able, having regard to that skill and the literature available, to
generate a similar library.
Ribosome Display
"Ribosome display" is a novel method which has been developed in which
whole functional proteins are enriched in a cell-free system for their binding
function, without the use of any cells, vectors, phages or transformation (Proc.
Natl. Acad. Sci. 94, 4937, 1997; Curr. Opin. Biotechnol. 9, 534, 1998; Curr. Top.
Microbiol. Immunol., 243, 107, 1999; J. Immunol. Meth. 231, 119, 1999; FEBS
Lett., 450, 105, 1999). This technology is based on in vitro translation, in which
both the mRNA and the protein product do not leave the ribosome. This results in
two fundamental advantages: (i) the diversity of a protein library is no longer
restricted by the transformation efficiency of the bacteria, and (ii), because of the large number of PCR cycles, errors can be introduced, and by the repeated
selection for ligand binding, improved molecules are selected. Correctly folded
proteins can be selected, if the folding of the protein on the ribosome is secured
(Nat. Biotechnol. 15, 79, 1997).
In this method the whole cell cDNA is subjected to a transcription and
translation process using established methods. The mRNA read off the cDNA is
such that it lacks a termination codon and so is translated into protein on the
ribosome surface and also remains attached to it. See Hanes et al., Proc. Natl.
Acad. Sci. 94:4937 (1997).
Briefly, a library of DNA is transcribed in vitro. It is then translated under
conditions where the protein and the mRNA stay on the ribosome, and such that
the protein folds correctly. This whole complex, consisting of mRNA, folded
protein and ribosomes can then be bound to immobilized ligand (or alternatively,
be recognized by an antibody). From these immobilized complexes, the mRNA is
isolated.
Screening techniques other than PCR, RT-PCR or hybridization are well
known to those of skill in the art and the selection of the techniques does not limit
the present invention. The procedures for isolating and identifying gene
fragments are well known to those of skill in the art; see, e.g. T. Maniatis et al,
Molecular Cloning (A Laboratory Manual), Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press. Once identified and sequenced, the nucleotide fragments of the cDNA
insert may be readily synthesized by conventional means such as solid phase
oligo-DNA synthesis (Letsinger et al., (1965) Oligonucleotide synthesis on a
polymer support. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 87:3526-3227). Alternatively, the DNA may
be produced by recombinant methods, then sequenced. Cloning procedures are
conventional and are described by T. Maniatis et al, Molecular Cloning (A
Laboratory Manual), Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (1982).
General Strategy
The novel application of the antibody-phagemid display library is outlined
in the Figure with respect to proteins isolated from a 2DE gel. There are three
basic steps:
1. Isolation of a phage antibody or a candidate protein. An isolated protein of interest from a tissue of interest is "biopanned"
against the antibody-phagemid display library. The protein of interest may be any
protein, known or unknown, that has been purified and transferred to a support
matrix (e.g. a protein electroblotted from a 2DE gel onto a nylon membrane) or
immobilized by any technique that does not effect its conformation or function
(e.g. a protein separated by HPLC and immobilized on beads or in the wells of
microtiter plates). Phage that bind to the protein with high specificity are
recovered and the procedure repeated as many times as necessary (typically 2-3
times) to isolate antibody phages of maximum specificity for the protein. Desirably less than 10 high-affinity antibody phages are isolated. These are then
replicated in bacteria to give a much reduced subset of phage antibodies against
the candidate protein. (The Figure also shows an intermediate PCR step for
amplifying bound phage particles in the event that additional amplification is
necessary.)
2. Identification of the structure of the candidate protein. A second phage library is prepare containing the cDNAs from the
proteome of the tissue of interest using technique similar to those discussed
above. In this case the phage library displays on their surface all the different
proteins expressed in the cell, one protein per phage. The selected phage antibody
subset is then screened against this library and the bound phage purified. The
proteins displayed on these phage(s) should be the same as or contain an idiotypic
region of the original protein. Individual phages are isolated and the sequence of
the displayed protein deduced from the sequence of the cDNA in the phagemid
genome. Thus a combination of phage antibody specificity and an ability to
amplify individual phage isolates in bacterial allows for complete characterization
of virtually any protein. In the case where the original protein is of higher
molecular weight, the protein(s) found by this technique may well be the same as
the original protein of interest; in the case where the original protein is of lower
molecular weight, such that it can be isolated and sequenced by conventional
techniques, the protein(s) found by this technique may well include proteins that
are idiotypic to the original protein and may be precursors to the original protein. 3. Identification of the function of the candidate protein. Among the 10-20 phage antibodies isolated against a protein in step 1 there
is a high probability that at least one will not only recognize the protein but also
neutralize its biological action in vivo. A strategy that reveals this function and
which circumvents the disadvantages of conventional knock out experiments is to
transiently express the neutralizing antibody gene in vivo by transfection into cells
and to screen for effects on general cellular responses (e.g., viability,
hormone/growth factor responses, cell cycle characteristics, differentiation) using
standard procedures. For example, in the case where the original spot was seen to
increase in response to a given hormone, this strategy would both identify the
protein and also reveal whether it is essential for hormone action and perhaps also
suggest a particular mechanism of action.
Experimental Outline
While all the basic techniques outlines above are individually well-
established, their integration into a discovery platform is innovative and has never
before been attempted. This can be achieved in a straightforward manner by
analyzing a spot whose identity is already established or by "spiking" a 2DE gel
with an appropriate amount of a known protein. An example of the latter is
phospholipase Cβ(PLCβ) which we have shown to be essential for the mitogenic
action of insulin-like growth factor (IGF-I). An experimental plan would be as
follows: 1) Recombinant PLCβ is made by the baculovirus expression system -
a standard procedure.
2) Total cellular proteins from Swiss 3T3 fibroblasts are spiked with
program amounts of recombinant PLC and its position identified on a 2DE gel.
(Achieved by labeling with H-methionine.)
3) The PLC spot is electro-transferred to a nylon membrane and
biopanned with the CAT phage antibody library. The bound phage particles are
purified by several rounds of biopanning. The result is a PLC-specific phage.
4) A second phage library displaying total 3T3 cell proteins is screened
with the PLC-specific phage and cross-reacting phage purified.
5) Individual phage are isolated, their cDNA inserts sequenced and
compared with the known DNA sequence of PLCβ.
6) Antibody expressing DNA from phage isolated in step 3 are cloned
into a mammalian expression vector and transiently transfected into Swiss 3T3
cells. After 24 hours, the cells are challenged with IGF-I and the mitogenic
response measured by BrUdr incorporation into DNA. Some of the
phosphoproteins have similar MWs but different pis, suggesting that there are
multiple phosphorylated isoforms of a single protein.
Experimental Background
Cellular protein profiles, i.e., the proteome, are altered in disease such as
cancer and with changes in the external milieu. For example, it is known that
insulin-like growth factor (IGF), as well as other growth factors, hormones, neurotransmitters and the like, effect the cell in unique ways. While changes in
the proteome can be monitored it is not always known which proteins are altered.
The dynamics of nuclear protein phosphorylation events following IGF-I
stimulation is investigated. Quiescent Swiss 3T3 cells are radiolabelled with P;
and treated with IGI-I for different periods (5 min, 10 min, 15 min, 20 min, 30
min, and 60 min). The nuclei from these cells are then purified in the presence of
protease and phosphatase inhibitors, and nuclear proteins are resolved by
analytical 2-DE as described for Figure 1. The phosphoproteins are detected by
autoradiography or phosphorimaging, and systematically analyzed using
Imagemaster™ 2D software to detect proteins whose
phosphorylation/dephosphorylation is induced by IGI-I.
Once these nuclear IGF-I-responsive phosphoproteins (NIRPPs) are
detected, preparative 2-DE is performed to isolate sufficient amount of them for
further characterization. To this end, up to 5 mg of nuclear proteins is applied to
IPG strips by direct rehydration (in an aqueous solution containing all necessary
additives: 8 M urea, 0.5 % non- or zwitterionic detergent, 2 % thiol reagent, and
0.5 % carrier ampholytes) using a methacrylate rehydration chamber (Rabilloud et
al., Electrophoresis 15: 1552-1558, 1994), and then resolved by 2-DE as above.
The resolved nuclear proteins are visualised by staining with Coomassie Brilliant
Blue (CBB). The NIRPPs in the gels are located by matching the CBB-stained
gels with their corresponding autoradiograms. These proteins are subsequently
excised from the gels and in-gel digested by trypsin. The tryptic digests are separated by reversed phase high performance liquid chromatography (RP-
HPLC), and the well-resolved peptides are chosen for amino acid sequencing.
The sequence information is used to determine the identity of the protein by
reference to a database. If the sequence cannot be found in the database, the
information is used to design degenerate PCR primers to clone the gene for the
protein.
The approach described above allows the identification of at least those
NIRPPs with high or moderate abundance. For those low abundance NIRPPs
which cannot be directly visualised by CBB staining, the following strategies are
employed to enrich and identify these proteins: (I) To use extreme narrow pH
range IPG gel strips. These recently-developed gel strips, which are 18-cm long
with pH interval of as small as 0.5, allow up to 50 mg proteins to be loaded on a
single gel, and thus greatly increase the chance to detect low-abundance NIRPPs
(http://www.apbiotech.com). (II) Prior to 2-DE, pre-fractionation of nuclear
protein samples using Gradiflow (Gradipore, Ltd., French's Forest NSW 2086,
Australia; see also http://www.gradiflow.com). This new preparative
electrokinetic membrane apparatus was designed to fractionate proteins according
to their relative mobility under controlled electrophoretic conditions (Gradiflow
Technical Overview, May 1999). (Ill) Post 2-DE enrichment. Following 2-DE
separation, low-abundance NIRPPs are collected from their 'spots' from multiple
gels, pooled and refractionated, thus allowing "in-gel" concentration. (IV)
Alternatively, low-abundance NIRPPs are visualised by modified silver staining. This new method is about 100-fold more sensitive than CBB staining. Following
modified silver staining, proteins are identified either by direct amino acid
sequencing or by peptide mass fingerprinting using matrix-assisted laser
desorption ionisation time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOFMS). (V) It
is intended to use the inventive phagemid display strategy described herein in
tandem with that outlined above to extend the range of sensitivity of detection to
the low abundance proteins.
To elucidate the signaling pathways underlying the phosphorγlation and/or dephosphorylation of those NIRPPs identified above.
(a) Studies with specific signaling inhibitors.
As discussed above, IGF-I signals mainly through two separate kinase
cascades namely the Ras-Raf-MAPK and PI-3-kinase-PDK-PKB cascades.
Recent Studies revealed that these two signaling cascades cross talk with each
other. In addition, IGF-I induces activation of nuclear PLC-βl and production of
nuclear DAG which in turn stimulates the translocation of PKC-α to the nucleus.
These signaling events can be specifically blocked by different kinase inhibitors,
such as PI-3-kinase inhibitor wortmannin, MAPKK inhibitor PD98059 and PKC
inhibitor calphostin C. These specific inhibitors are used to investigate which
signaling pathway is involved in the phosphorylation events of NIRPPs. To this
end, the P-labeled 3T3 cells are pre-incubated with one of these inhibitors before
IGF-I stimulation, and phosphorylation of nuclear proteins is subsequently
analyzed as above, to see whether the action of IGF-I on NIRPPs is blocked under
these circumstances. These studies also distinguish protein targets which are phosphorylated directly by MAPK from those phosphorylated indirectly via
MAPK-dependent activation of PKC.
(b) Mapping the precise phosphorylation sites of NIRPPs.
It is well established that the substrate specificity of protein kinases is
determined by the consensus sequence motif surrounding the phosphorylation site.
Therefore, identification of phosphorylation sites could provide important clues
for determining the nature of the protein kinases that are directly responsible for
79 ~^ the phosphorylation of a particular protein. Nuclei from P labeled 3T3 cells
treated with IGF-I are separated by 2-DE, and the proteins visualised by
autoradiography as above. The 'spots' corresponding to NIRPPs are excised and
pooled from multiple gels. Aliquots of these proteins are subjected to
phosphoamino acid analysis to determine which type of amino acid residues
(serine, theronine or tyrosine) is phosphorylated. The remaining samples are
digested by proteases such as trypsin, and the protease digests are separated by
79
RP-HPLC. Each fraction is collected, and the fractions that contain P-labeled
phosphopeptides are detected by liquid scintillation counting. The precise
phosphorylation sites of these purified phosphopeptides is consequently analyzed
by a phosphoamino acid releasing assay using solid phase Edman degradation
sequencing. Alternatively, for those low abundance NIRPPs, the protease digests
are directly analyzed by MALDI-TOF MS. The number of phosphate residues
and their phosphorylation sites are determined by comparing the experimentally observed mass with the theoretically generated mass profiles for all the known
protein sequences present in a database (http://www.expasy.hcugh.ch).
To establish the role of the IGF-1 responsive phosphoproteins in cell growth and proliferation using a double phagemid display strategy.
For proteomics to be biologically meaningful requires a prior knowledge of
an identified protein's function or a means of readily determining its functional
relevance in vivo. Most of the functional strategies are DNA based (e.g., gene
knock out, antisense RNA), are technically complex and are unpredictable in
outcome. Here we use a protein based approach which exploits phagemid display
to give a high-sensitivity, high through-put screen for structure/functional
relationships of proteins identified by proteome analysis. The key step is to
isolate from a phagemid display antibody library, specific antibodies which
recognize single protein spots on a proteome gel. The phagemid is then used for
two complementary protocols. Firstly, the expressed antibody is used to screen a
separate phagemid display library expressing total cellular proteins and the protein
antigen identified from the sequence of the cDNA spliced into the phagemid
genome. Secondly, the DNA encoding the antibody is subcloned into a
mammalian expression vector and expressed in a fibroblast where it accumulates
and neutralizes the target antigen in vivo. The effect of the "protein knockout" is
assessed by the ability of the cell to respond to IGF's mitogenic and anti-apoptotic
signals. The strategy is summarized in the Figure. Examples
The following preparations and examples are given to enable those skilled
in the art to more clearly understand and to practice the present invention. They
should not be considered as limiting the scope of the invention, but merely as
being illustrative and representative thereof.
Example 1
Screening The Proteome With A Phage Display Antibody Library
A phagemid display library which expresses murine immunoglobulin VH
and VL variable genes as a single Fv fragment fused to the N-terminus of gene III
of an fd phage vector is used. The V gene regions have been hypermutated in the
antigen binding loops to generate a repertoire of antibody specificities capable of
recognizing an infinite variety of epitopes. These are displayed on the phage
surface (4 x V regions/virion) as monoclonal antibodies and can be selected from
the library by screening with an appropriate antigen. This technology was first
described for human V genes in 1990 (McCafferty et al. Nature 348:552, 1990).
An equivalent murine library, produced by Pharmacia, is now in the public
domain and therefore offers a unique opportunity to couple the enormous
potential of proteomics with the unparalleled discrimination of phagemid display.
Spots of interest from 2DE gels are electroblotted onto nylon membranes
and "biopanned" with 1010 - 1012 phagemid particles. The membrane is washed
free from unbound phagemid and the bound virions eluted with glycine buffer at pH 2. Two options can then be deployed depending on the number of phagemids
recovered.
Option 1 : If the phagemid number is high enough, they are used to re-
infect E. coli directly and the biopanning procedure repeated with the same
protein until a small number of phage with high binding efficiency are obtained.
The original paper of McCafferty et al. reported that two rounds of biopanning
enrichment were sufficient to select a single copy of a test phagemid antibody in
the presence of 4x106 wild type phagemids thus demonstrating the exquisite
sensitivity and specificity of the method. Given adequate recovery of bound
phagemids from membranes this strategy is successful for most 2DE spots;
however, where phagemid numbers are too low for direct re-infection an
alternative option is proposed.
Option 2: The pooled single stranded DNA of the phagemid virions are
amplified by PCR using forward and reverse primers corresponding to the 5' and
3' termini of the phagemid DNA. If the primers are phosphorylated at their 5'
ends it is then possible to ligate the PCR product to form double stranded
phagemid DNA with which to transduce E. coli by electroporation. Subsequent
infection with a helper phagemid (i.e., one not containing a gene III fusion)
promotes virion packaging and results in an amplified population of the original
bound phagemid with which to carry out the enrichment procedure as descried in
Option 1. Example 2
Use Of A Phagemid Monoclonal Antibody To Identify The Original 2DE Protein
Spot
A cDNA library is made from Swiss 3T3 total cell mRNA and screened by
the phage display method. The library is constructed in the phage display vector
pJuFo following an already established method (Crameri and Suter, Gene 137: 69-
73, 1993). pJuFo utilizes modified leucine zipper domains of Jun and Fos which
couple covalently in the periplasm of the host to permit library proteins to be
fused both C-terminally to a vector encoded peptide and N-terminally to the
filamentous phagemid cIII coat protein. Helper phage infection releases phage
particles each displaying on their surface the protein encoded by the particular
cDNA within. These are screened by biopanning with phagemid display
antibodies conjugated to biotin and strepavidin coated microtitre wells by the
phage ELISA method and the effectiveness of the biopanning is monitored by the
titre of the phagemids recovered at successive rounds. After isolation, phage
clones are sequenced and sequences compared with those in the GenBank and
EMBL databases to identify the cDNA. Confirmation that the sequence
corresponds to the original 2DE spot comes initially from molecular weight
estimation, the partial protein sequence derived from MALDI-TOF analysis of
tryptic peptides and N-terminal Edman sequencing.
Changes in phosphorylation patterns of nuclear proteins in Swiss 3T3 cells
following IGF-I stimulation. Confluent Swiss 3T3 cells in 100 mm dishes were
starved in serum- free DMEM for 24 hours and were then incubated in DMEM without sodium phosphate for another one hour to deplete the ATP metabolic
79 pool. The cells were subsequently incubated with 0.2 mCi/ml Pi for 4 hours,
and treated without or with 40 ng/ml IGF-I for 5 minutes. Nuclei were then
purified and solubilised in lysis buffer [50 mM Tris, pH 8.0/10 mM EDTA/1%
(wt/vol) SDS plus protease inhibitors leupeptin, pepstatin, and PMSF all added at
0.2 mM]. Nuclear lysates with equivalent amount of radioactivity were applied to
immobilised pH-gradient strips (IPG) with pH range of 4-7 for isoelectric
focusing, and then separated by 12-14% gradient SDS-PAGE. The nuclear
phosphoproteins were then visualised by autoradiography and analyzed by image
software.
Example 3
Use Of Phagemid Monoclonal Antibody To Assess Functional Relevance Of
Proteins
Over-expression of normal or mutated cDNA in a cell line is often used to
assess protein function. A criticism of this approach is that abnormally high
levels of an endogenous protein, especially if it has a regulatory function, may
distort any conclusion about its action. Introduction of antisense sequence to the
protein of interest into cells is also unpredictable and complete ablation of
synthesis is often difficult to achieve.
An alternative strategy is to exploit cloned phagemid antibodies to known
proteins to neutralize their function in vivo. This can be done by recovering the
Fv coding region in the phagemid DNA by restriction enzyme digestion and subcloning it into a mammalian expression vector (e.g. pcDNA3). It may also be
efficacious to fuse a nuclear localization sequence (NLS) to the Fv gene to target
the antibody to the nucleus and a green fluorescent protein (GFP) gene under
control of a separate promoter to allow visualization of transfected cells. The
vector is introduced into 3T3 fibroblasts and its IGF responsiveness determined.
Two strategies are used:
A. High Through-Put Screening Of Transiently Transfected Cells.
In transient transfection not all cells in a culture take up and express the
introduced gene therefore the functional needs to be applicable at the single cell
level. Cells on coverslips are first transfected with the NLS-GFP-Fv vector and
two days later transferred to serum free medium for 16 hrs. Cultures are
stimulated with IGF-I for a further 16 hrs and then pulsed with 5'BrdUrd for 10
mins. Cells are then permeabilized with detergent to permit the entry of a
monoclonal antibody against 5'BrdUrd and a Cy5-conjugated anti-mouse IgG.
Fluorescent analysis is carried out at wavelengths specific for GFP and Cy5.
Functional impairment of IGF's mitogenic response is scored for cells which
fluoresce for GFP (and therefore express the Fv antibody) but not for Cy5. Cells
which do not take up the vector will fluoresce for Cy5 only and act as a positive
control for IGF stimulation. In this way phagemid antibodies to multiple 2DE
protein spots can be screened relatively rapidly for their functional relevance to
the IGF-dependent mitogenic response. B. Analysis Of Mechanism In Stably Transfected Cells.
To further determine the mode of action of proteins of interest highlighted
by the above screen it is necessary first to derive clonal cell lines expressing the
antibody in a stable manner. This is achieved by selecting cells in the presence of
the drug G418, resistance for which is built into the pcDNA3 expression vector.
If the assumption that signals are propagated by sequential protein
phosphorylations is correct, neutralization of an individual signaling molecule will
have a marked effect on the phosphorylation of subsequent molecules in the
cascade. Thus, a broad understanding of these intermolecular relationships can be
obtained by comparing the iterative proteome profile of nuclear phosphoproteins
from normal and antibody expressing cell lines and identifying the differences.
From this information it is possible to piece together the sequence of very early
signaling events which some hours later lead to the initiation of the cell cycle.
Example 4
To characterize the dynamic changes in phosphorylation/dephosphorylation of nuclear proteins following IGF-I stimulation.
As discussed above, several important protein kinases which play a central
role in IGF's biological action, are translocated to the nucleus following IGF-I
stimulation. However, the details about how these kinases exert their actions in
the nucleus and eventually control cell cycle and proliferations are still poorly
characterized. Surprisingly, little is known about their physiological nuclear
targets. Proteome analysis is used to uncover a complete display of protein
phosphorylation events that occur at the nuclei following IGF-I stimulation, and to
search for novel nuclear targets of this growth factor. The central technique of
proteome analysis is two dimensional gel electrophoresis, in which the proteins
are separated firstly by isoelectric focusing according to their isoelectric points
(pi) and then by SDS-PAGE according to their molecular weight in a second
perpendicular dimension. The generated two-dimensional array of proteins may
contain up to 10,000 protein 'spots' in a single gel. This technique is unique in its
ability to separate protein isoforms with subtle pi value differences (as small as
0.01), and thus serve as an exceptional tool to display proteins with multiple
phosphorylated isoforms.
Proteome analysis has been employed successfully to identify differentially
expressed proteins under pathological conditions and to investigate the protein.
Example 5
Construction of Ribosome Display Library
mRNA is extracted from about 1-5 x 106 cells and transcribed to cDNA.
After PCR amplification, PCR products are purified by agarose gel
electrophoresis and extracted from the gel with the QIAEX gel extraction kit
(Qiagen). An assembly PCR is carried out (see Krebber et al., J. Immunol.
Methods 201 :35-55, 1997) and the PCR products are directly diluted 3-fold in Sfil
reaction buffer, digested with Sfil and separated by using agarose gel electrophoresis. The cut DNA is extracted from agarose gels by Amicon spin
columns, concentrated by isopropyl alcohol precipitation and dissolved in sterile
water. Purified PCR products are ligated in a 30-μl reaction mixture with Sfil-cut
vector pAK200 overnight at 16°C (molar ratio insert to vector = 1 :2). To
introduce the features necessary for ribosome display, the ligation mixtures are
directly amplified in two steps by PCR, by using in the first step the primers SDA,
which introduced a ribosome binding site, and T3Te, which encodes the translated
early transcription terminator of phage T3, and in the second step primers T3Te
and T7B, which introduced the T7 promoter as well as the 5'-loop (Hanes et al.,
PNAS 91 :4937-4942 (1997)). PCR products are used without purification for in
vitro transcription, and RNA is purified by LiCl precipitation.
Example 6
In vitro Translation of mRNA
In vitro translations in an E. coli S-30 system are performed as described
by Hanes et al (supra) with small modifications. Briefly, the in vitro translation is
carried out for 8 minutes at 37°C in a 220-μl reaction that contained the following
components: 50 mM Tris-HOAc, pH 7.5, 30 mM NH4HOAc, 12.3 mM
Mg(OAc)2, 0.35 mM of each amino acid, 2 mM ATP, 0.5 mM GTP, 1 mM
cAMP, 0.5 mg/ml E. coli tRNA, 20 μg/ml folinic acid, 100 mM KOAc, 30 mM
acetylphosphate, 1.5% polyethylene glycol 8000, 3.5 μg/ml rifampicin, 1 mg/ml
vanadyl ribonucleoside complexes, 3.5 μM anti--?,sr-4 oligonucleotide, 0.3 μM
protein disulfide isomerase, 51.4 μl of E. coli MRE600 extract and 90 μg/ml of mRNA. The anύ-ssrA oligonucleotide is necessary to prevent the nascent protein
from being released from the ribosome.
Example 7
Phagemid Vector Construction for Proteome Display
The phagemid vector, pJuFo, is constructed to fuse the modified Jun Leu
zipper with the C-terminal domain of the pill protein of the filamentous phage.
The cloning system allows the expression and enrichment of functionally folded
cDNA products covalently linked to the filamentous phage, and thus to the
genetic information required for their production. At the N- and C-termini of the
original Jun Leu zipper, Cys residues are added via GlyGly spacers (O'Shea et al.,
Science 245:645-648 (1989)). The Jun::pIII fusion is placed under the control of
a lac promoter/operator element and directed to the periplasmic space by the pelB
signal sequence. Gene products to be captured on the outer phage surface are
linked to the C-terminus of the modified Fos Leu zipper, which is flanked by Cys
residues added via GlyGly spacers at the N- and C-termini. The genes to be
coexpressed with Fos are cloned as BgHI-Xbal, Bglϊl-Kpnl or Xbal-Kpnl
fragments and placed under the control of a separate lac promoter/operator
element and directed to the periplasmic space of the E. coli host by the pelB signal
sequence. The periplasmic space allows functional assembly of Jun/Fos
heterodimers as parallel coiled-coil structures followed by proper disulfide bond
formation mediated by the engineered Cys residues flanking the Leu zippers. During helper phage superinfection the Fos-fusion protein captured by Jun::pIII is
incorporated into the virion. Purified phage displaying gene products on the
surface are used for further investigations.
DNA encoding the Leu zippers from Jun and Fos genes is isolated by PCR
using the original constructs (Roche Research Center, NJ, USA) as templates with
5'- and 3 '-primers. PCR amplifications are performed in a thermocycler using
standard protocols (Sambrook et al., Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual.
2nd Edition. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press. Cold Spring Harbor, NY 1989)
and amplification reagents obtained from Anawa (Wangen, Switzerland). In a
first step the Jun-encoding gene fragment is inserted in- frame 5' to the pill coding
sequence of pComb3 as a Hindlll-BamHI fragment. For cloning of DNA
encoding the modified Fos Leu zipper region, phagemid DNA containing the
modified Jun zipper is digested with Sacl + Xbal, gel-purified, extracted with
glass milk (Bio 101, La Jolla, CA, USA) and ligated with Fos PCR product
digested with Sacl + Xbal. The ligation mixture is used to transform 50 μl of E.
coli XL 1 -Blue (Stratagene, La Jolla CA, USA) electrocompetent cells which are
then plated on LB/Ap plates as described by Barbas et al., Comp. Methods
Enzymol. 2: 119-124 (1991). Single colonies are picked, grown in liquid culture,
DNA is prepared (see Holmes et al., Anal. Biochem. 114: 193-197 (1981)) and the
final construct is verified by restriction analysis. The pJuFo is recovered from the
liquid cultures by PEG/NaCl precipitation and stored at -20°C until use. Construction of the pJuFo:proteome cDNA is briefly as follows: the
cDNA is subcloned into pJuFo, expressed, and the Fos-proteome fusion proteins
captured on the surface of phages. Recombinant phage particles are used to infect
20 ml of E. coli XL 1 -Blue cells together with 1011 pfu of R408 helper phage.
After incubation for 15 minutes at 37°C, 200 ml 2x YT medium (Barbas et al.,
PNAS 88:7978-7982, 1991) containing 100 μg/ml ampicillin are added and
incubation continued for 6 hours. The culture is then heated at 70°C for 20
minutes then centrifuged for 10 minutes at 8,000 x g. The decanted supernatant
containing the in vivo excised cDNA library into the pBluescript phagemid was
stored at 4°C. To prepare DNA excised phagemid (1010 pfu) is used to infect E.
coli XL 1 -Blue (10 ml, A600 = 1). After addition of 250 ml LB-medium containing
100 μg/ml ampicillin and further incubation at 37°C overnight, plasmid DNA was
prepared using a commercial kit (Diagen, Dusseldorf, Germany). For the
construction of a phage cDNA library, 2 μg of this DNA is cleaved with Xbal +
Kpnl, the inserts gel purified and ligated to 4 μg of pJuFo vector digested with
Xbal + Kpnl. The ligation mixture is used to transform E. coli XL 1 -Blue cells by
electroporation and a phage expression vector is prepared by helper phage
infection as described by Barbas and Lerner (1991, Comp. Methods Enzymol. 2:
119-124).
Although the foregoing invention has been described in some detail by way
of illustration and example for purposes of clarity and understanding, it will be obvious that certain changes and modifications may be practiced within the scope
of the appended claims.

Claims

ClaimsWe Claim:
1. A method of identifying a first protein, or a second protein containing an idiotypic region of the first protein, from a tissue of interest by double phage screening, said use comprising:
(a) contacting said first protein with an antibody phagemid display library to form a complex between said first protein and at least one member of said library;
(b) screening a cDNA phagemid display library of the proteome of the tissue of interest with the complex-forming antibody phage to identify a protein-specific phagemid that displays a second protein that binds the antibody phagemid; and
(c) identifying the second protein from the cDNA of the protein-specific phagemid.
2. The method of Claim 1, wherein DNA from the complex-forming antibody phage is amplified and used to increase the titer of the antibody phage(s) prior to the second screening step.
3. A method of identifying a first protein, or a second protein containing an idiotypic region of the first protein, from a tissue of interest by ribosome-phage screening, said use comprising:
(a) contacting said first protein with an antibody phagemid display library to form a complex between said protein and at least one member of said library;
(b) screening a ribosome display library of the proteome of the tissue of interest with the complex-forming antibody phage to identify a protein-specific ribosome that displays a second protein that binds the antibody phagemid; and
(c) identifying the second protein from the cDNA of the protein-specific ribosome.
PCT/US2001/047836 2000-12-08 2001-12-07 Functional proteomics using double phage display screening WO2002046754A2 (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US10/433,738 US20040053218A1 (en) 2001-12-07 2001-12-07 Functional proteomics using double phage display screening
AU2002230749A AU2002230749A1 (en) 2000-12-08 2001-12-07 Functional proteomics using double phage display screening

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US25446600P 2000-12-08 2000-12-08
US60/254,466 2000-12-08

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO2002046754A2 true WO2002046754A2 (en) 2002-06-13
WO2002046754A3 WO2002046754A3 (en) 2003-05-22

Family

ID=22964415

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/US2001/047836 WO2002046754A2 (en) 2000-12-08 2001-12-07 Functional proteomics using double phage display screening

Country Status (2)

Country Link
AU (1) AU2002230749A1 (en)
WO (1) WO2002046754A2 (en)

Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1999039210A1 (en) * 1998-01-29 1999-08-05 Miller, Samuel High density arrays for proteome analysis and methods and compositions therefor

Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1999039210A1 (en) * 1998-01-29 1999-08-05 Miller, Samuel High density arrays for proteome analysis and methods and compositions therefor

Non-Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
LITTLE M ET AL: "Generation of a large complex antibody library from multiple donors" JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGICAL METHODS, ELSEVIER SCIENCE PUBLISHERS B.V.,AMSTERDAM, NL, vol. 231, no. 1-2, 10 December 1999 (1999-12-10), pages 3-9, XP004187630 ISSN: 0022-1759 *
LIU BIN ET AL: "Applying phage antibodies to proteomics: Selecting single chain Fv antibodies to antigens blotted on nitrocellulose" ANALYTICAL BIOCHEMISTRY, ACADEMIC PRESS, SAN DIEGO, CA, US, vol. 286, no. 1, 1 November 2000 (2000-11-01), pages 119-128, XP002187878 ISSN: 0003-2697 *
LUFT B J ET AL: "The 93-kilodalton protein of Borrelia burgdorferi: an immunodominant protoplasmic cylinder antigen" INFECTION AND IMMUNITY, AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR MICROBIOLOGY. WASHINGTON, US, vol. 60, no. 10, October 1992 (1992-10), pages 4309-4321, XP002127125 ISSN: 0019-9567 *
SCHAFFITZEL C ET AL: "Ribosome display: an in vitro method for selection and evolution of antibodies from libraries" JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGICAL METHODS, ELSEVIER SCIENCE PUBLISHERS B.V.,AMSTERDAM, NL, vol. 231, no. 1-2, 10 December 1999 (1999-12-10), pages 119-135, XP004187639 ISSN: 0022-1759 *
SOERENSEN A ET AL: "PURIFICATION AND CHARACTERIZATION OF A LOW-MOLECULAR-MASS T-CELL ANTIGEN SECRETED BY MYCOBACTERIUM TUBERCULOSIS" INFECTION AND IMMUNITY, AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR MICROBIOLOGY. WASHINGTON, US, vol. 63, no. 5, 1 May 1995 (1995-05-01), pages 1710-1717, XP002068818 ISSN: 0019-9567 *

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
AU2002230749A1 (en) 2002-06-18
WO2002046754A3 (en) 2003-05-22

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US5843701A (en) Systematic polypeptide evolution by reverse translation
Schmitz et al. Catalytic specificity of phosphotyrosine kinases Blk, Lyn, c-Src and Syk as assessed by phage display
US6777239B2 (en) Epitope-captured antibody display
Zucconi et al. Selection of ligands by panning of domain libraries displayed on phage lambda reveals new potential partners of synaptojanin 1
US7223547B2 (en) Polypeptides having a functional domain of interest and methods of identifying and using same
WO1993003172A1 (en) Systematic polypeptide evolution by reverse translation
WO1992002536A1 (en) Systematic polypeptide evolution by reverse translation
CZ20013399A3 (en) Protein isolation method and protein analysis, particularly mass spectrometry analysis
US20060275823A1 (en) Selection of peptides with antibody-like properties
EP1169641B1 (en) Proteome mining
EP1328814B1 (en) Method for in vivo identification of intracellular epitopes
US20040053218A1 (en) Functional proteomics using double phage display screening
WO2002046754A2 (en) Functional proteomics using double phage display screening
Arif et al. Experimental approaches for investigation of aminoacyl tRNA synthetase phosphorylation
Pacholczyk et al. Epitope and mimotope for an antibody to the Na, K‐ATPase
EP3702495A1 (en) Antibody like protein
WO2008140538A1 (en) Dna display screen for expression product with desired binding properties
JP2002058479A (en) Method for obtaining comformational recognition amino acid sequence
US20030082514A1 (en) Method for identification of biologically active peptides and nucleic acids
JP2006506058A (en) Process for determining target function and identifying drug leads
Lisowska et al. Next-generation sequencing of a combinatorial peptide phage library screened against ubiquitin identifies peptide aptamers that can inhibit the in vitro ubiquitin transfer cascade
Ladner Phage display and pharmacogenomics
US20050227268A1 (en) Expression cloning using a tagged cDNA library
Mizukoshi et al. Rapid preparation of stable isotope labeled peptides that bind to target proteins by a phage library system
Dente et al. Use of random peptide phage-displayed libraries for studying protein phosphorylation and phosphotyrosine-dependent protein-protein interactions

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AK Designated states

Kind code of ref document: A2

Designated state(s): AE AG AL AM AT AU AZ BA BB BG BR BY BZ CA CH CN CO CR CU CZ CZ DE DE DK DK DM DZ EC EE EE ES FI FI GB GD GE GH GM HR HU ID IL IN IS JP KE KG KP KR KZ LC LK LR LS LT LU LV MA MD MG MK MN MW MX MZ NO NZ OM PH PL PT RO RU SD SE SG SI SK SK SL TJ TM TR TT TZ UA UG US UZ VN YU ZA ZM ZW

AL Designated countries for regional patents

Kind code of ref document: A2

Designated state(s): GH GM KE LS MW MZ SD SL SZ TZ UG ZM ZW AM AZ BY KG KZ MD RU TJ TM AT BE CH CY DE DK ES FI FR GB GR IE IT LU MC NL PT SE TR BF BJ CF CG CI CM GA GN GQ GW ML MR NE SN TD TG

121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application
WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 10433738

Country of ref document: US

REG Reference to national code

Ref country code: DE

Ref legal event code: 8642

122 Ep: pct application non-entry in european phase
DFPE Request for preliminary examination filed prior to expiration of 19th month from priority date (pct application filed before 20040101)
NENP Non-entry into the national phase in:

Ref country code: JP

WWW Wipo information: withdrawn in national office

Country of ref document: JP