Heteropolymeric protein production methods

Abstract
Cultured mammalian cells transfected with new vectors comprising full-length or partial .alpha. and .beta. subunit genomic DNA sequences produce significantly higher levels of dimeric glycoprotein hormone than do cells transfected with .alpha. and .beta. subunit cDNA sequences. In cases where only the cDNA clones are available, the cDNA sequences can be used in new expression vectors comprising introns or other important genomic regions from a homologous or heterologous source.
Description

FIELD OF INVENTION
This invention relates to expression systems for the production of heteropolymeric proteins from transformed mammalian cells and more particularly concerns novel expression systems and vectors for the production of dimeric glycoprotein hormones.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Transfection of the .alpha. and .beta. subunit cDNA clones into cultured mammalian cells has characteristically resulted in low gonadotropin expression levels. This has seriously impeded the production of these hormones on a commercial scale.
It is one aspect of the present invention to provide commercially practical methods for the production of such hormones.
While some genes, such as .beta.-globin (1, 2) and immunoglobulin genes (3-5), require introns for optimal mRNA production, other genes, such as thymidine kinase (6), do not. Intron-dependent increases in gene expression can result from either non-transcriptional (e.g. globin genes) or transcriptional (e.g. immunoglobulin genes) mechanisms.
Isolation of the genes which encode the human and bovine common .alpha., FSH.beta., LH.beta., and human TSH.beta. subunits has been reported (8-14). Ramabhadran et al. (15) first described transfection with and subsequent expression of the human alpha subunit cDNA in mouse cells. Several groups have since reported successful expression of dimeric glycoprotein hormones by transfection of cultured mammalian cells. Some of these groups (16, 17) employed cDNA clones while others (14, 18, 19) have used intron-containing cDNA or genomic sequences. U.S. Pat. NoS. 4,840,896 and 4,923,805 describe the use of cDNA clones (without introns) to produce gonadotropins in cultured mammalian cells. While those expression systems yield biologically active molecules, the yield of the transformed mammalian cells are generally too low for production on a commercial scale.
It is another aspect of the present invention to provide improved expression systems, useful with gonadotropins, which result in higher yield.
Matzuk and Boime (18a) mention that an intron inserted into the coding region of the human .alpha. subunit cDNA improved expression results compared with the use of cDNA clones but provided no data to support that contention or specific description of their methods. In a recent publication, Kaetzel and Nilson (7) reported relatively high levels of bovine LH expression in CHO cells. Their system employed genomic sequences for expression of both the .alpha. and LH.beta. subunits. However, the effect of genomic sequences versus cDNA sequences upon LH expression was not addressed in their paper.
It is yet another aspect of the present invention to obviate the confusion represented by the present state of the art and to provide the critical teaching necessary to derive improved vectors encoding dimeric glycoproteins and production methods utilizing such vectors.
Introns have been linked to increased mRNA accumulation in tissue culture cells for rabbit .beta.-globin (1,2,20), E. coli gpt (20), and mouse DHFR (20, 21). Examples of genes containing introns with enhancer elements which increase transcription are the immunoglobulin genes (3-5), the rat cytochrome c gene (22), and the human pro-.alpha.1(I) collagen gene (23). Introns have also been shown to result in increased transcriptional efficiency in transgenic mice for the following genes: rat growth hormone, mouse metallothionein-I, and human .beta.-globin (24). However, introns have no effect on the expression of these last three genes when they are transfected into cultured mammalian cells.
It has been shown that expression levels can be influenced by different 3' untranslated and polyadenylation regions (24, 25). For example, higher expression levels of a galK marker gene result if the bovine growth hormone polyadenylation region is used for transcription termination rather than the SV40 early or human collagen polyadenylation regions (24).
SUMMARY
In accordance with the various principles and aspects of the present invention there are provided novel expression systems employing the use of .alpha. subunit genomic sequences, or .alpha. subunit cDNA constructions with an added intron, which significantly and surprisingly enhance dimeric glycoprotein hormone production in mammalian cells. This discovery will facilitate the development of processes for high-yield production of dimeric glycoprotein hormones which share the common .alpha. subunit. These include chorionic gonadotropin (CG), follicle stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH), and thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH).
It has also been unexpectedly discovered that TSH.beta. subunit gene expression is intron-dependent. Characterization of the genomic regions necessary for optimal expression of the TSH.beta. subunit now made possible by the instant invention provide critical and specific information regarding the development of a process for efficient production of dimeric TSH.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Further understanding of the various aspects and principles of the present invention may be had by study of the accompanying figures wherein:
FIGS. 1A and 1B show the strategy used to engineer the human .alpha. gene for expression in tissue culture cells. Important restriction endonuclease sites are indicated. Filled-in boxes represent .alpha. gene exons; heavy solid lines, .alpha. gene introns; and thin solid lines, pBR322 or pUC18 vector.
FIG. 2: shows the basic expression vector, CLH3AXSV2�DHFR, ODC, or TPA!, used for stable or transient transfections. The position of the XhoI site used for insertion of .alpha. or .beta. subunit sequences is shown. Double solid lines represent sequences needed for mammalian cell expression. The relative positions of the promoter, polyadenylation, and marker gene regions are indicated. The single solid line represents the pBR322-derived pML-1 region necessary for propagation and selection (by ampicillin resistance) in E. coli.
FIGS. 3A and 3B. Part A shows the full-length TSH.beta. gene. The positions of the three exons (I, II, and III), two introns (a, b), start ATG, and stop codon (TAA) are indicated. The PvuII sites used to isolate the fragment from which the partial constructions were derived are also indicated. Hatched boxes denote noncoding exon sequences. Part B shows the partial genomic constructions used to compare TSH.beta. mRNA accumulation in transiently transfected COS-7 cells. TSH.beta. 0.9 consists of the two coding exons separated by the endogenous IVS with all sequences upstream of the start ATG and downstream of the TAA removed (sequence shown in Table 9). TSH.beta. 1.2 and TSH.beta. 2.0 contain, in addition, about 300 base pairs of intron 2 and were constructed by adding a synthetic splice donor (.increment.) to allow splicing of the truncated intron. TSH.beta. 2.0 retained the endogenous polyadenylation signal (.increment.) and about 0.8 kb of additional 3' flanking sequence.
FIG. 4: describes CLH3AXSV2DHFR. This vector was constructed from the following components: (i) the dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) transcriptional unit (nucleotide numbers 1 to 1925 of FIG. 4) which consists of the SV40 early region promoter, the mouse DHFR gene and the SV40 small T intron and early region polyadenylation signal sequences (33, 34); (ii) the bacterial plasmid vector sequences of pML (nucleotide numbers 2201 to 4542 of FIG. 4) derived from the pBR322 vector (29) from which a 1370 base pair sequence has been deleted (32); and (iii) the metallothionein promoter (nucleotide numbers 4542 to 7514 of FIG. 4) derived from the mouse metallothionein-1 gene (30, 31) from which the introns and polyadenylation signal sequences have been removed; and (iv) the SV40 early region polyadenylation signal sequences (nucleotide numbers 7514 to 7751 of FIG. 4) (33, 34).





DETAILED DESCRIPTION AND BEST MODE
EXAMPLE 1
Plasmid constructions for the expression of the common .alpha. and FSH.beta. subunits.
A. The complete human .alpha. subunit genomic clone can be conveniently obtained from a number of sources as a 17 kilobase pair (kb) EcoRI insert in pBR322. Because the .alpha. promoter has been shown to be tissue specific and would be unlikely to function efficiently in the tissue culture cells commonly used for heterologous gene expression, steps were taken to remove all 5' flanking sequences. The presence of internal EcoRI sites necessitated several subcloning steps prior to assembly of the trimmed genomic sequence. The engineering strategy advantageously used is diagrammed in FIG. 1. Two pUC18 subclones were constructed, the first with the 8.0 kb BamHI-SacI 5' piece (pUCbs8.0), and the second with the 3' 2.7 kb SacI-EcoRI piece (pUCse2.7). To generate a terminus compatible with the XhoI cloning sites in our expression vectors, pUCse2.7 was digested with EcoRI, the ends were blunted by treatment with the Klenow fragment of E. coli DNA polymerase I, and then SalI linkers were attached in a ligation reaction. Subsequent SalI restriction endonuclease digestion of the reaction mixture yielded a 2.7 kb human .alpha. SalI piece in addition to the 2.6 kb vector fragment. The 2.7 kb human .alpha. SalI piece was gel purified and re-inserted into into the SalI site of pUC18 (pUCss2.7). A clone was chosen which contained the SalI insert in the orientation which permitted isolation of the 2.7 kb .alpha. fragment as a SacI piece. This was gel purified and then inserted into the SacI site of pUCbs8.0 to assemble the complete coding sequence of the human .alpha. gene as an 11 kb insert in pUC18. The insert could be excised as a SalI fragment by virtue of a pre-existing SalI site in the pUC18 polylinker at the 5' end of the gene and the converted SalI site (from EcoRI) at the 3' end of the gene. The completed genomic .alpha. expression construction, henceforth referred to as the "full-length genomic .alpha." sequence, included part of exon I (less the first 35 nucleotides which comprise the 5' untranslated region of the mRNA), all of exons II, III, and IV as well as the intervening sequences, and approximately two kilobase pairs (kb) of 3' flanking sequence. This was inserted into the XhoI site of the CLH3AXSV2DHFR expression vector (FIGS. 2 and 4) so that transcription was directed by the mouse metallothionein-I (MT-I) promoter. The expression vector also contained the mouse dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) gene for a selectable and amplifiable marker.
B. The human .alpha. subunit cDNA was engineered for expression by digesting the full-length clone with NcoI, which spans the start ATG, and HindIII, which cleaves in the 3' untranslated region 215 base pairs (bp) downstream of the TAA stop codon. A 5' SalI site and Kozak consensus sequence (27) were provided by synthetic oligonucleotides, and a 3' SalI site by attaching linkers as described above. The DNA sequence of the engineered .alpha. subunit cDNA clone, which is approximately 600 bp in length, is shown in Table 7. This was inserted into the XhoI site of the CLH3AXSV2DHFR expression vector (FIGS. 2 and 4). The endogenous 5' untranslated region and 3' polyadenylation signal were removed from the cDNA clone in the process of engineering and therefore were supplied by vector sequences: the MT-I promoter and the simian virus 40 (SV40) early polyadenylation signal, respectively.
C. The human FSH.beta. partial genomic clone used in this study was a 2.0 kb DdeI-Sau3A segment which contained the protein coding region of exon II in addition to 40 bp of sequence upstream of the start ATG, the protein coding region of exon III, and the 1.6 kb intron which separates the two exons (Table 8). The 5' DdeI and the 3' Sau3A sites had formerly been converted to EcoRI and BamHI sites, respectively, and therefore were not compatible with the current expression vectors. The partial FSH.beta. genomic clone was therefore supplied with SalI termini by blunting as described above and attaching commercially prepared SalI linkers. The SalI piece was then inserted into the XhoI site of CLH3AXSV20DC (FIG. 2), an expression vector structurally similar to CLH3AXSV2DHFR except that the DHFR coding region was replaced with that for murine ornithine decarboxylase (ODC).
EXAMPLE 2
Comparison of the full-length genomic .alpha. and cDNA .alpha. CLH3AXSV2DHFR transcription units in stable transfections.
The genomic .alpha. and cDNA .alpha. CLH3AXSV2DHFR constructions were compared by cotransfection of each .alpha. expression plasmid with the human FSH.beta. CLH3AXSV20DC expression plasmid and measurement of FSH dimer production.
A. Twenty-four hours before the transfections were to be done, 100 millimeter dishes were seeded with 7.times.10.sup.5 DUKX CHO cells (DHFR-minus). Calcium phosphate precipitations were obtained by adding 31 microliters (.mu.l) of 2 molar (M) CaCl.sub.2 to the plasmid DNA suspended in 500 .mu.l of transfection buffer �14 millimolar (mM) NaCl, 5 mM KCl, 0.7 mM Na.sub.2 HPO.sub.4, 5.5 mM dextrose, and 20 mM HEPES (pH 7.5)!. Plasmid DNA amounts used were .alpha. (cDNA or genomic): 10 .mu.g, and FSH.beta.: 30 .mu.g. The precipitates were allowed to form for 45 minutes at room temperature. The culture medium was removed from the cells and replaced with the DNA precipitate. After allowing the cells to sit at room temperature for 20 minutes, 5 ml of culture medium was added to each dish and incubation was continued at 37.degree. C. for 4 hours. The cells were then shocked for 3.5 minutes in 15% glycerol at 37.degree. C. After incubation for 48 hours at 37.degree. C. in culture medium the cells were split 1:10 and selection medium containing 0.02 methotrexate (MTX) was added. The selection medium used was .alpha.-minus modified Eagle's medium supplemented with 10% dialyzed fetal bovine serum and 1% L-glutamine. Ten to fourteen days later, loci were visible and were transferred to 24-well plates. Culture media from these were assayed for FSH dimer expression by using a specific monoclonal-based radioimmunoassay (Serono Diagnostics, Randolph, Mass.). Positive clones were transferred to T-25 flasks in selection medium which contained an increased MTX concentration of 0.1 .mu.M. When the cultures reached confluence the media were again assayed for FSH dimer and the cells were counted to calculate the picogram per cell per 24 hour expression levels.
B. Human FSH dimer secretion levels measured in seven randomly selected clones from each of the human .alpha. genomic/FSH.beta. and human .alpha. cDNA/FSH.beta. cotransfections are presented in Table 1.
TABLE 1______________________________________.alpha. GENOMIC-DHFR/FSH.beta.-ODC .alpha. CDNA-DHFR/FSH.beta.-ODCGFSH pg/cell/24 h in CFSH pg/cell/24 h inCell Line 0.1 .mu.M MTX Cell Line 0.1 .mu.M MTX______________________________________1 0.43 18 0.0033 1.95 37 0.034 0.50 51 0.085 0.70 57 0.027 1.44 60 0.0568 1.18 66 0.0519 2.56 70 0.013Avg. 1.25 Avg. 0.04______________________________________
The results show that FSH dimer expression is greatly enhanced in cells transfected with the full-length genomic .alpha. subunit sequence. The averaged expression levels indicate that the surprisingly large magnitude of the enhancement seen in this particular experiment was approximately thirty-fold.
C. To further demonstrate the superiority of the full-genomic .alpha. sequence, cell lines were stably transfected with the CLH3AXSV2DHFR expression vector that contained either the human .alpha. cDNA or the human .alpha. genomic clone. Expression rates of the free .alpha. subunit were compared. In all cases, the expression of human .alpha. subunit, as determined by a sensitive and specific radioimmunoassay, was never greater than 0.05 pg/cell/24 h for the cDNA-containing cell lines. As detailed in Table 2, cells that were transfected with the genomic .alpha. clone expressed 5-20 times greater levels of the protein:
TABLE 2______________________________________Alpha Expression LevelCell Line pg/cell/24 h______________________________________2 0.3210 0.3612 0.5717 0.3718 0.3936 1.2847 0.6351 0.26______________________________________
EXAMPLE 3
Thyroid Stimulating Hormone Constructions
To demonstrate the effectiveness and broad application of this invention, stably transfected CHO cell lines were prepared by cotransfection of the full-length human genomic .alpha. sequence in CLH3AXSV2DHFR with a partial genomic TSH.beta. sequence in CLH3AXSV20DC. The partial genomic TSH.beta. fragment used in this experiment consisted of the protein coding regions of exon II and III, and the 0.5 kb intron which separated the two exons (Table 9). All 5' and 3' regions flanking the protein coding sequence of TSH.beta. were removed in this particular construction. Following cotransfection with the two expression vectors, stable cell lines were cultured and analyzed for their ability to express TSH. Expression levels of the dimer, as determined by a sensitive and specific radioimmunoassay, are listed in Table 3. Previous studies with the transfection of the cDNA for the .alpha. subunit with the genomic TSH.beta. clone had demonstrated that expression levels were usually below the sensitivity of the radioimmunoassay, usually less than 0.02 pg/cell/24 h.
TABLE 3______________________________________TSH Expression RateCell Line pg/cell/24 h______________________________________7 0.198 0.2210 0.2412 0.2437 0.1348 2.97______________________________________
TSH production, then, like FSH production, can be greatly enhanced by use of the full genomic .alpha. sequence, rather than the .alpha. cDNA sequence, in mammalian cell transfections. In this experiment the range of TSH production enhancement was 6 to 100 fold.
EXAMPLE 4
Introns and Expression Enhancement
The human .alpha. genomic construction differed from the human .alpha. cDNA construction not only in that it contained introns, but also in that it contained endogenous 5' untranslated sequence, the endogenous polyadenylation signal, and additional 3' flanking sequences. Therefore, one could not infer from the results of the previous set experiments which genomic regions contributed to the enhanced expression.
A. To determine if the introns within the genomic .alpha. sequence were responsible for the elevated .alpha. subunit levels, we inserted a 2 kb XbaI-PstI portion of the human .alpha. intron A between the mouse MT-I 5' untranslated region and the .alpha. cDNA sequence in the CLH3AXSV2TPA vector (FIG. 2). The truncated intron retained the endogenous splice acceptor, but the splice donor was supplied by a synthetic oligonucleotide.
B. Another plasmid was constructed to test the effect of a heterologous intron on .alpha. subunit expression. In this construction, a 130 bp intron from the MOPC41 immunoglobulin K gene (5) was inserted between the mouse MT-I 5' untranslated region and the .alpha. cDNA sequence. No transcriptional enhancer elements were included in this particular intervening sequence.
C. The intron-containing .alpha. cDNA constructs were compared to the original .alpha. cDNA construct and the full length genomic .alpha. sequence by transient transfection of COS-7 cells with the plasmid DNA and analysis of mRNA levels by northern blotting. In this experiment, the tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) cDNA served as an internal standard and was used to correct for the variations in the transfection efficiency of different plasmid constructions and thus normalize measured .alpha. subunit mRNA levels. Transfections were done in duplicate using the DEAE-dextran protocol of Seed and Aruffo (28). Two days after transfection, total cellular RNA was isolated from the cells. The RNA (5 micrograms) was fractionated on formaldehyde gels and then transferred to nylon membranes using standard northern blotting techniques. The membranes were then hybridized to either a .sup.32 P-labeled human .alpha. or a .sup.32 P-labeled tPA probe and the resulting signals were quantitated on a Betascope Model 603 blot analyzer (Betagen Corp., Waltham, Mass.). Normalized .alpha. mRNA values for relative comparisons were calculated by dividing the number of .alpha. counts by the number of tPA counts and then averaging the numbers obtained for duplicate samples. Results of the experiment are shown in Table 4.
TABLE 4__________________________________________________________________________Plasmid Betascope counts Normalized Values Average ofConstruction .alpha. probe tPA probe (.alpha./tPA) Duplicates__________________________________________________________________________1. .alpha. genomic A 6315 958 6.6 7 B 7836 1177 6.72. .alpha. cDNA + .alpha. IVS A 25353 1294 19.6 21 B 34616 1559 22.23. .alpha. cDNA + Ig IVS A 31743 1690 18.8 17 B 37495 2327 16.14. .alpha. cDNA A 3891 2608 1.5 1 B 3671 3341 1.1__________________________________________________________________________
The results indicated that the cDNA constructions which contained either the human .alpha. intron (No. 2) or the immunoglobulin intron (No. 3) were more efficient than the full length genomic sequence (No. 1) in the accumulation of .alpha. subunit mRNA. Specifically, the normalized .alpha. subunit mRNA levels were 7- to 21-fold higher than those produced by the cDNA construct (No. 4) without an intron. We have therefore unexpectedly discovered that introns, and not the 5' or 3' regions which flank the .alpha. subunit protein coding sequence, are primarily responsible for the increased expression levels and that the effect is due, at least in part, to an increased accumulation of .alpha. subunit mRNA.
EXAMPLE 5
Expression Enhancement Not Due to Increased Transcription Rates.
Nuclear runoff transcription assays were used to determine if the high level of genomic .alpha.-induced mRNA accumulation was due to an increased transcription rate. Transient transfection of COS-7 cells with the .alpha. genomic and .alpha. cDNA-containing CLH3AXSV2TPA plasmids was done as described in Example 4. Standard methods were used in the preparation of nuclei and for the runoff transcription assay (Current Protocols in Molecular Biology; Ausubel, F. M. et al., ed.; John Wiley & Sons, NY, N.Y.). The DNA probes for .alpha., DHFR, and tPA were gel purified insert sequences and approximately 0.25 .mu.g of each were slot blotted in duplicate onto nitrocellulose membranes. The membranes were hybridized to �.sup.32 P-UTP! labeled nuclear runoff RNA prepared from COS-7 cells that had been transfected with no DNA (mock), the full-length human .alpha. genomic clone in CLH3AXSV2TPA, or the human .alpha. cDNA clone in CLH3AXSV2TPA. The hybridization signal was quantitated on a Betascope Model 603 blot analyzer (Betagen, Corp., Waltham, Mass.). Normalized values for the transcription rate were obtained by dividing the averaged .alpha. counts by the averaged tPA counts. The monkey DHFR nuclear runoff RNA should not hybridize to the mouse DHFR DNA probe sequence in the conditions used for this experiment, and therefore serves as a negative control. The relative transcription rate results are summarized in Table 5, below.
TABLE 5______________________________________Nuclear runoff RNAMock COS-7 .alpha. cDNASV2TPA .alpha.genomic/SV2TPADNA Probes 1 2 1 2 1 2______________________________________.alpha. cDNA 119 160 2093 2155 492 620tPA 387 413 18022 17667 8486 7388DHFR 230 307 54 0 32 765*Rate Ratios:.alpha./tPA -- 0.12 0.07______________________________________ *Non-specific background rendered this value artifically high
In this particular experiment the runoff transcription rate of the .alpha. cDNA (0.12) was surprisingly higher than that of the genomic .alpha. sequence (0.07). An increased transcription rate is therefore not the mechanism by which the genomic .alpha. sequence generates higher .alpha. subunit expression levels.
EXAMPLE 6
TSH.beta. Subunit Expression is Intron-dependent.
A. The full-length genomic TSH.beta. gene (14a) is diagrammed in FIG. 3, Part A. The positions of the three exons (I, II, and III), two introns (a, b), start ATG, and stop codon (TAA) are indicated. The PvuII sites were separated by approximately 2 kb of DNA sequence which included exons II and III and contained the complete protein coding sequence for TSH.beta.. The TSH.beta. partial genomic constructions used in this study were derived from the 2 kb PvuII fragment and are diagrammed in FIG. 3B. TSH.beta. 0.9 (0.9 kb) was the same construct used in stable transfections in Example 3 and consisted of the two coding exons separated by the endogenous intervening sequence with all sequences upstream of the start ATG and downstream of the TAA removed. TSH.beta. 1.2 (1.2 kb) and TSH.beta. 2.0 (2.0 kb) contained, in addition, about 300 base pairs of intron a and were constructed by adding a synthetic splice donor to allow splicing of the truncated intron. TSH.beta. 2.0 retained the endongenous polyadenylation signal and about 0.8 kb of additional 3' flanking sequence.
B. Duplicate cultures (A, B) of COS-7 cells were transfected, using the protocol described in Example 4, with CLH3AXSV2DHFR plasmids which contained one of the following partial genomic fragments: (1) TSH.beta. 0.9, (2) TSH.beta. 1.2, or (3) TSH.beta. 2.0. The genes were inserted into the Xhoi cloning site so that transcription would be initiated by the MT-I promoter and, in the case of TSH.beta. 0.9 and TSH.beta. 1.2, terminated by the SV40 early polyadenylation signal. After 48 hours of incubation, total cellular RNA was isolated from the cells. The RNA (9 micrograms) was fractionated on formaldehyde gels and then transferred to nylon membranes using standard northern blotting techniques. The membranes were hybridized to either a .sup.32 P-labeled mouse MT-I probe (to detect the TSH.beta. mRNA which also contains about 50 base pairs MT-I 5' untranslated sequence) or a .sup.32 P-labeled DHFR probe (to compare transfection efficiencies). The resulting signals were quantitated on a Betascope Model 603 blot analyzer (Betagen Corp., Waltham, Mass.). Normalized TSH.beta. mRNA values for relative comparisons were calculated by dividing MT-I counts by DHFR counts. Normalized values obtained for duplicate transfections were then averaged and divided by the number obtained for TSH.beta. 0.9. The comparative results obtained for accumulation of mRNA are summarized in Table. 6.
TABLE 6__________________________________________________________________________Plasmid Betascope counts Normalized Values Relative ValuesConstruction MT Probe DHFR Probe (MT/DHFR) (averaged)__________________________________________________________________________1. TSH.beta. 0.9 A 983 3985 0.25 1 B 834 4118 0.202. TSH.beta. 1.2 A 4480 254 17.6 60 B 2748 285 9.63. TSH.beta. 2.0 A 1381 1209 1.2 5 B 1632 1254 1.3__________________________________________________________________________
C. The results indicated that the two constructs which retained a portion of the first intron (TSH.beta. 1.2 and TSH.beta. 2.0) yielded 5-60 fold higher mRNA accumulation than did the construct which contained no sequences from the first intron. Therefore TSH.beta. gene expression, like .alpha. subunit gene expression, is intron-dependent. Of interest was the unexpected observation that intron b, which was present in all the constructs and was in the protein coding region, did not confer optimal enhancement. This suggested either that there are specific sequences in the first intron of the TSH.beta. gene which increased mRNA accumulation or, more likely, that the position of the intron (close to the 5' end of the mRNA) was the crucial factor. That intron-dependent gene expression may be affected by the placement of the intron in the transcription unit is supported by preliminary experiments with the human .alpha. cDNA. Insertion of the .kappa. immunoglobulin gene intron in the 3' untranslated region of the mRNA, between the .alpha. cDNA and the SV40 polyadenylation region, resulted in no increased mRNA accumulation when compared to the unaltered .alpha. cDNA.
TABLE 7__________________________________________________________________________ ##STR1## ##STR2## ##STR3## ##STR4## ##STR5## ##STR6## ##STR7##421AGTTGTTTAGTGTTTATGGCTTTGTGAGATAAAACTCTCCTTTTCCTTACCATACCACTT480481TGACACGCTTCAAGGATATACTGCAGCTTTACTGCCTTCCTCCTTATCCTACAGTACAAT540 ##STR8##The engineered alpha subunit cDNA sequence. Restriction endonucleasesites and Kozak consensus region whichwere supplied by synthetic oligonucleotides are indicated. The alphasubunit amino acid sequence is also shown.__________________________________________________________________________
TABLE 8__________________________________________________________________________ ##STR9## ##STR10## ##STR11## ##STR12## ##STR13## ##STR14## ##STR15## ##STR16## ##STR17##The engineered human FSH beta subunit partial genomic sequence. Positionsof the terminal SalI sites are indicated.Nucleotides in lower case at the 3' terminus results from attachment ofsynthetic linkers. The FSH beta amino acidsequence marks the coding regions of exons II and III. The dotted linerepresents uncharacterized intervening sequence (IVS).__________________________________________________________________________
TABLE 9__________________________________________________________________________ ##STR18## ##STR19## ##STR20##181TGTAGTTCATGTCACTTCTTTTGGCTGTAAATTATATAAGCCCTGAAGAAGTCCATTCCT240241ATATAGAAAGGAAATGAAATAAATCACAACCTCATTTCCCAAATCTAATGGTTATTGGCT300301CCTTAGAAGCAGAGTACACAGGTTACAATATTATGTGAATCTACTCAGCACAATGGATAC360361GCATAATTTTATAACAGTTTTGTGTCCCAGCTTTACTTAAACCTTATCTTGTTCCCATGA420421TCAACGATGAAAGAGAGGAGGGTCTCACTTTTGTCTCTGTAGAATTCAACGTGGTTAAGT480481TGGTATTGGAGAATGGGGCTAAGCAATTCTTTCCCAGTTGTATTTGTGATGAAGGAATAT540541AAGTGAATTTATTTTTATGTTTCTATTATCTATATGTTTCCTAAAGTCCTGTCACATTAT600 ##STR21## ##STR22## ##STR23## ##STR24## ##STR25##The engineered TSH beta subunit partial genomic sequence. SalI sites andKozak consensus sequence supplied bysynthetic oligonucleotides are indicated. The TSH beta amino acidsequence marks the coding regions of exons II and III.__________________________________________________________________________
D. Since TSH.beta. 1.2 yielded 10-fold higher amounts of mRNA than TSH.beta. 2.0, it is probable that the endogenous polyadenylation signal and 3' flanking sequence carried on TSH.beta. 2.0 are not required for efficient mRNA formation, and may actually be detrimental. Alternatively, the disparity in mRNA accumulation between TSH.beta. 1.2 and TSH.beta. 2.0 may be related to the different distances between the MT-I promoter and the SV40 early promoter (driving the DHFR) in the two plasmid constructions. The closer proximity (0.8 kb) of the two promoters in the TSH.beta. 1.2 construction may permit increased interaction between the SV40 enhancer elements and the MT-I promoter, thereby increasing the rate of transcription from the latter.
Because of the similarity of .alpha. and TSH.beta. gene structure among various mammals, we expect that our findings based on the human .alpha. and TSH.beta. subunits apply equally to those of other species, such as the bovine, equine, porcine, baboon and monkey. Likewise, LH.beta. and FSH.beta. subunit genes may show a similar dependence on genomic DNA structure for optimal expression and these requirements should apply across species.
Construction of expression vectors will be advantageously simplified by application of the knowledge that certain genomic regions, such as introns, are important for mRNA accumulation, and that the position of these regions in the transcription unit may be important. For example, these genomic regions may be subcloned or synthesized and included in constructions with the .alpha. and .beta. subunit cDNA sequences. The cDNA clones are often easier to obtain and to engineer than the much larger genomic clones. Thus, this discovery will simplify the development of cell lines which produce high levels of hormone and, ultimately, will permit large scale production of these proteins at a lower cost. These and other aspects and variations of the present invention will now be readily apparent to those skilled in the art and are not deemed to depart from either the spirit or the scope of the present invention.
REFERENCES
1. Hamer, D. H. and Leder, P. (1979) Cell 17, 737-747
2. Hamer, D. H. and Leder, P. (1979) Cell 18, 1299-1302
3. Banerji, J. et al. (1983) Cell 33, 729-740
4. Gillies, S. D. et al. (1983) Cell 33, 717-728
5. Queen, C. and Baltimore, D. (1983) Cell 33, 741-748
6. Gross, M. K. et al. (1987) Mol. Cell. Biol. 7, 4576-4581
7. Kaetzel, D. M. and Nilson, J. H. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 6344-6351
8. Fiddes, J. C. and Goodman, H. M. (1981) J. Mol. Appl. Genetics 1, 3-18
9. Goodwin, R. G. et al. (1983) Nucl. Acids Res. 11, 6873-6882
10. Virgin, J. et al. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 7072-7077
11. Talmadge, K. et al. (1984) Nature 307, 37-40
12. Kim, K. E. et al. (1988) DNA 7, 227-233
13. Watkins, P. C. et al. (1987) DNA 6, 205-212
14. Wondisford, F. E. et al. (1988) Mol. Endo. 2, 32-39
14a. Wondisford, F. E. et al. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 12538-12542
15. Ramabhadran, T. V. et al. (1984) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 81, 6701-6705
16. Reddy, V. B. et al. (1985) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 82, 3644-3648
17. Watanabe, S. et al. (1987) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Comm. 149, 1149-1155
18. Matzuk, M. M. et al. (1987) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 84, 6354-6358
18a. Matzuk, M. and Boime, I. (1988) J. Cell Biol. 106, 1049-1059
19. Kaetzel, D. M. et al. (1985) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 82, 7280-7283
20. Buchman, A. R. and Berg, P. (1988) Mol. Cell. Biol. 8, 4395-4405
21. Lee, F. et al. (1981) Nature 294, 228-232
22. Evans, M. J. and Scarpulla, R. C. (1988) Mol. Cell. Biol. 8, 35-41
23. Rossouw, C. M. S. et al. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 15151-15157
24. Brinster, R. L. et al. (1987) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 85, 836-840
25. Pfarr, D. S. et al. (1986) DNA 5, 115-122
26. Ross, J. and Kobs, G. (1986) J. Mol. Biol. 188, 579-593
27. Kozak, M. (1984) Nucl. Acids Res. 12, 857-872
28. Seed, B. and Aruffo, A. (1987) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 84, 3365-3365
29. Bolivar, F., Rodriguez, R. L., Green, P. J., Betlach, M. C., Heynecker, H. L., Boyer, H. W., Crosa, G. F. and Falkow, S. (1977) Gene 2:95.
30. Glanville, N., Durnham, D. M. and Palmiter, R. D. (1981) Nature 292:267-269.
31. Hamer, D. H. and Walling, M. (1982) J. Mol. Appl. Gen. 1:273-288.
32. Lusky, M. and Botchan, M. (1981) Nature 293:79-81.
33. Reddy, V. B., Thimmapaya, B., Dhar, R., Subramanian, K. N., Zain, B. S., Pan, J., Ghosh P. K., Celma, M. L. and Weissman, S. M. (1978) Science 200:494.
34. Tooze, J. (ed.), DNA Tumor Viruses; Molecular Biology of Tumor Viruses; 2nd Ed., Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, New York 1981.
35. Chiang T.-R. and McConlogue, L. (1988), Mol. Cell. Biol. 8:764-769.
Except as otherwise stated, procedures and techniques used are generally as reported and conventional in the art such as is described by Maniatis et al, A Cloning Manual, Cold Spring Harbor (1982). All references cited above or in the specification are fully incorporated herein by reference.
Claims
  • 1. A method for the production of a dimeric protein selected from the group consisting of luteinizing hormone, follicle stimulating hormone, chorionic gonadotropin and thyroid stimulating hormone, comprising:
  • a) providing a first vector comprising a promoter, a structural gene encoding the .alpha.-subunit of said dimeric protein, and a terminating sequence, said promoter, structural gene and terminating sequence being operatively linked to permit expression of said gene when a host cell is appropriately transformed by said first vector, wherein said structural gene comprises a coding region and at least one intron, wherein one intron is immediately 5' to the coding region of the .alpha.-subunit, with the proviso that the structural gene encoding the .alpha.-subunit is not the entire genomic sequence of the gene encoding the .alpha.-subunit of bovine luteinizing hormone;
  • b) providing a structural gene encoding the .beta.-subunit of said dimeric protein, said .beta.-subunit structural gene being within said first vector containing said .alpha.-subunit and being operatively linked thereto so as to permit expression of said .beta.-subunit structural gene when a host cell is appropriately transformed by said first vector, or in a second vector comprising a promoter, said .beta.-subunit structural gene and a terminating sequence, said promoter, .beta.-subunit structural gene and terminating sequence being operatively linked to permit expression of said .beta.-subunit structural gene when a host cell is appropriately transformed by said second vector;
  • c) transforming host cells with said first vector or, if said structural gene encoding the .beta.-subunit is in said second vector, transforming host cells with said first and second vectors; and
  • d) culturing said transformed cells under conditions by which the dimeric protein is produced,
  • wherein said intron immediately 5' to the coding region of the .alpha.-subunit is spatially disposed with respect to the ATG of the coding region such that an amount of dimeric protein is produced which is greater than that which can be produced under comparable conditions using a structural gene encoding the .alpha.-subunit which is the cDNA without introns.
  • 2. The method of claim 1 wherein said structural gene encoding said .beta.-subunit is the genomic sequence of the gene encoding said .beta.-subunit.
  • 3. The method of claim 1 wherein said structural gene encoding said .alpha.-subunit comprises a DNA encoding said .alpha.-subunit to which has been added a plurality of introns, 3' and 5' flanking regions, endogenous 5' untranslated sequence and polyadenylation signal.
  • 4. The method of claim 1 wherein said dimeric protein is human follicle stimulating hormone and said first vector comprises the genomic sequence of the gene encoding said .alpha.-subunit.
  • 5. The method of claim 1 wherein said dimeric protein is human luteinizing hormone and said first vector comprises the genomic sequence of the gene encoding said .alpha.-subunit.
  • 6. The method of claim 1 wherein said dimeric protein is human chorionic gonadotropin hormone and said first vector comprises the genomic sequence of the gene encoding said .alpha.-subunit.
  • 7. The method of claim 1 wherein said dimeric protein is non-human chorionic gonadotropin hormone and said first vector comprises the genomic sequence of the gene encoding said .alpha.-subunit.
  • 8. The method of claim 2 wherein said dimeric protein is non-human follicle stimulating hormone and said vector comprises the genomic sequence of the gene encoding said .alpha.-subunit.
  • 9. The method of claim 1 wherein said .alpha.-subunit comprises the sequence
  • Met Asp Tyr Tyr Arg Lys Tyr Ala Ala Ile Phe Leu Val Thr Leu Ser Val Phe Leu His Val Leu His Ser Ala Pro Asp Val Gln Asp Cys Pro Glu Cys Thr Leu Gln Glu Asn Pro Phe Phe Ser Gln Pro Gly Ala Pro Ile Leu Gln Cys Met Gly Cys Cys Phe Ser Arg Ala Tyr Pro Thr Pro Leu Arg Ser Lys Lys Thr Met Leu Val Gln Lys Asn Val Thr Ser Glu Ser Thr Cys Cys Val Ala Lys Ser Tyr Asn Arg Val Thr Val Met Gly Gly Phe Lys Val Glu Asn His Thr Ala Cys His Cys Ser Thr Cys Tyr Tyr His Lys Ser.
  • 10. The method of claim 4 wherein said .beta.-subunit comprises the sequence
  • Met Lys Thr Leu Gln Phe Phe Phe Leu Phe Cys Cys Trp Lys Ala Ile Cys Cys Asn Ser Cys Glu Leu Thr Asn Ile Thr Ile Ala Ile Glu Lys Glu Glu Cys Arg Phe Cys Ile Ser Ile Asn Thr Thr Trp Cys Ala Gly Tyr Cys Tyr Thr Arg Asp Leu Val Tyr Lys Asp Pro Ala Arg Pro Lys Ile Gln Lys Thr Cys Thr Phe Lys Glu Leu Val Tyr Glu Thr Val Arg Val Pro Gly Cys Ala His His Ala Asp Ser Leu Tyr Thr Tyr Pro Val Ala Thr Gln Cys His Cys Gly Lys Cys Asp Ser Asp Ser Thr Asp Cys Thr Val Arg Gly Leu Gly Pro Ser Tyr Cys Ser Phe Gly Glu Met Lys Glu.
  • 11. A method in accordance with claim 1 wherein said structural gene encoding the .alpha.-subunit is other the entire genomic sequence of the gene encoding said .alpha.-subunit.
  • 12. A method in accordance with claim 1 wherein said structural gene encoding the .beta.-subunit is in said second vector.
  • 13. A method in accordance with claim 1 wherein said structural gene encoding the .beta.-subunit includes at least one intron.
  • 14. A method in accordance with claim 1 wherein, in the structural gene encoding the .alpha.-subunit, said one intron which is immediately 5' to the coding region of the .alpha.-subunit naturally occurs in the genomic sequence of the gene encoding the .alpha.-subunit of the natural dimeric protein corresponding to the dimeric protein being produced.
  • 15. The method of claim 1 wherein said dimeric protein is human thyroid stimulating hormone and said first vector comprises the genomic sequence of the gene encoding said .alpha.-subunit.
  • 16. A method in accordance with claim 1, wherein said structural gene contains only a single intron.
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation of application Ser. No. 07/780,556, filed Oct. 16, 1991, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,240,832, which is a continuation of Ser. No. 07/368,628, filed Jun. 20, 1989, now abandoned.

US Referenced Citations (5)
Number Name Date Kind
4840896 Reddy Jun 1989
4923805 Reddy et al. May 1990
5108909 Haigwood Apr 1992
5240832 Kelton et al. Aug 1993
5405945 Boime et al. Apr 1995
Non-Patent Literature Citations (22)
Entry
Ramabhadran et al., 1984, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 81: 6701-6705 1984.
Kaetzel et al., 1988, J. Biol. Chem. 263: 6344-6351 1988.
Kozak, M. 1987. J. Molec. Biol. 196, 947-950.
Buchman et al. 1988. Molec. Cell. Biol. 8, 4395-4405.
Crawford et al. 1986. Gene 46, 161-169.
Watanabe et al., Biochem. Biophys. Res. Comm. 149:1149-1155 (1987).
Matzuk et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 84:6354-6358 (1987).
Matzuk et al., J. Cell Biol. 106:1049-1059 (1988).
Maztuk et al., Molec. Endocrinol. 2:95-100 (1988).
Fiddes et al., J. Molec. Appl. Genet. 1:3-18 (1981).
Fiddes et al., Nature 281:351-355 (1979).
Goodwin et al., Nucl. Acids Res. 11:6873-6882 (1983).
Kaetzel et al., J. Biol. Chem. 264:6344-6351 (1986).
Kaetzel et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 82:7280-7283 (1985).
Talmadge et al. Nature 307:37-40.
Beck et al., DNA 4:76 (1985).
Medeiros-Neto et al. (eds) in Fronteirs in Thyroidology, Plenum Medical Book Co., New York, pp. 173-176.
Chin et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 80:4649-4653 (1983).
Kozak et al., Nucleic Acids Res. 12:857-872 (1984).
Wondisford et al., J. Biol. Chem. 263:12538-12542 (1988).
Watkins et al., DNA 6:205-212 (1987).
Tatsumi et al., Gene 73:489-497.
Continuations (2)
Number Date Country
Parent 780556 Oct 1991
Parent 368628 Jun 1989