Method for the preparation of a protein by yeasts using an inducible system, vectors and correspondence transformed strains

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6444438
  • Patent Number
    6,444,438
  • Date Filed
    Tuesday, May 30, 1995
    29 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, September 3, 2002
    22 years ago
Abstract
The present invention relates to a method for the preparation of a protein by yeasts. In particular, the method of the invention concerns transforming a yeast cell with a first DNA fragment encoding the protein and a second DNA fragment that encodes the receptor. The method further entails culturing the transformed yeast cell, and isolating the protein. The first DNA fragment is under control of elements providing for expression of the DNA fragment in yeast, which elements include a higher eukaryotic positive transcription control sequence consisting of a natural ligand responsive element activating sequence or a variant. The receptor is a natural nuclear receptor selected from the group consisting of receptors for steroids or for retinoids or for thyroid hormones or for vitamin D3. The receptor includes a first fragment that recognizes said ligand and a second fragment that binds to said transcriptional control sequence.
Description




The invention relates to inducible expression systems, to the corresponding transformed strains and to methods for obtaining them for producing proteins, in particular heterologous proteins, in yeasts.




The recombinant DNA technique enables genes for heterologous proteins to be expressed in yeasts. Thus, the construction of vectors containing yeast promoter sequences corresponding to the genes for glycolytic enzymes of


Saccharomyces cerevisiae,


such as 3-phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK), an alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH1) or glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GPD), has enabled important proteins to be produced by fusion of their coding sequence to the yeast promoter, for example leukocyte interferon according to Hitzeman R. A. et al., Nature 293, 717-722 (1981) or hepatitis B surface antigen according to Bitter G. A. et al., Gene 263-274 (1984).




In many cases, it has been observed that the heterologous protein produced is toxic for the host cell, and leads to instability of the plasmids and the selection of cells which no longer express the protein in question. Methods enabling the expression of the gene for the protein to be repressed during the cellular growth phase, and then a high production of the protein to be induced during the final stage of culture, have been found using a promoter regulated by a change in carbon sources, for example the promoter of the galactokinase gene (GAL1) or the promoter of the uridinediphosphoglucose 4-epimerase gene (GAL10) which correspond to two of the four genes responsible for the utilization of galactose in yeast and whose expression is repressed by glucose and induced by galactose. Vectors comprising the GAL1 promoter linked to a heterologous gene have been described, enabling yeast to be grown in a medium containing glucose, and the protein then to be expressed when galactose is present in the medium. Yeast strains transformed with such vectors are described, for example, in British Patent Application 2,137,208, and these vectors, under the control of the GAL1 promoter, express in the presence of galactose proteins such as bovine growth hormone or prorenin. Most yeast promoters contain, upstream from TATA elements which mediate transcription initiation, elements which regulate transcription, “upstream activator sequences” (designated UAS), which represent the binding site of proteins which regulate transcription, such as GAL4 for the activation of the genes of galactose metabolism, these proteins themselves being under the control of their own promoters.




Different means have already been proposed for improving the efficiency of transcription of heterologous genes in yeasts. In particular, it has been proposed to use hybrid promoters which contain, upstream from the TATA element of a constitutive yeast promoter, an extrinsic UAS regulatory sequence, such as UASg which corresponds to the GAL1-GAL10 intergenic sequence and which is inserted, for example, upstream from the TATA element of a constitutive yeast promoter, such as GPD as described in Patent Application WO 86/00,680, or such as PGK as described in European Patent Application 258,067. The inserted UASg sequences enable the constitutive promoter to be successively repressed and then expressed by the carbon source used, such as glucose as a repressor and galactose as an inducer.




However, the use of promoters in general or of any hybrid promoter involves a control over totally repressed or induced levels, which is difficult to achieve because these levels involve a group of proteins which regulate transcription. Thus, the GAL4 gene activates transcription by the presence of galactose, which is directly or indirectly responsible for the dissociation of a complex between GAL4 and an antagonistic protein GAL80, while other proteins appear to be involved in the repression by glucose, such as GAL82 and GAL83 according to Yocum R.R. et al., MBC 4 1985-1998 (1984).




In addition to the drawbacks mentioned above, this type of system based on induction with galactose and/or repression with glucose is not very versatile; in effect, it cannot be used for yeasts which do not assimilate glucose and/or galactose and cannot be used in the case where one of these components constitute all or part of the carbon substrate of the culture medium.




It is hence advantageous to have available in yeasts inducing systems capable of being induced by products which are not in themselves necessary for the culturing of these cells, which is the case, for example, with hormones, in particular steroid hormones.




Thus, the present invention relates to a method for the preparation of a protein by yeasts, according to which:




yeast cells which contain the following are cultured:




a DNA sequence coding for the said protein under the control of elements providing for its expression in yeasts, the said elements comprising a transcription control sequence which is inducible by a complex formed by a receptor and a ligand,




a DNA sequence which is functional in yeast, coding for the said receptor, the receptor comprising two essential portions, one of which recognizes the ligand so as to form a complex with the said ligand and the other binds to the said transcription control sequence; the portion of the receptor which recognizes the ligand is preferably of higher eukaryotic origin, and the ligand is not necessary for the culturing of the cells but is capable of entering the said cells when added to the culture medium,




the said ligand is added to the culture medium at an appropriate time point for induction,




the synthesized protein is recovered.




The expression of proteins by yeasts using recombinant DNA techniques is considered to be well known to those versed in the art. A considerable number of publications have already described the preparation of proteins, in particular heterologous proteins, by means of yeasts, using expression vectors. These expression vectors contain, more often than not, apart from the sequence coding for the said protein, the elements controlling its expression in yeasts, that is to say, in general, a promoter and a terminator.




In most cases, these vectors are nonintegrative vectors, that is to say plasmids; they then contain an origin of replication which is efficacious in yeasts, in particular the origin of the 2μ plasmid or an ars sequence peculiar to the said yeast.




These nonintegrative expression vectors contain, in addition, elements enabling provision to be made for their maintenance in the cells, either using as a selection marker a gene for resistance or alternatively an element complementing an auxotrophy of the host strain, URA3 or LEU2 for example.




In some cases, and in order to overcome the drawbacks linked to the use of self-replicating vectors, it has been possible to develop vectors providing for the integration of the sequences in question at chromosomal level. This type of vector enables a more stable strain to be obtained, but the amplification in respect of expression is sometimes smaller than with a nonintegrative plasmid.




Integration vectors contain, more often than not, at least one sequence homologous with a chromosomal sequence which will provide for exchange and integration.




It must be understood that, since the present invention relates essentially to the induction of transcription, the expression vectors which will be used can be of either the integrative or the nonintegrative type.




Although the method in question is more especially intended for the preparation of heterologous protein, it is possible to use it for expressing yeast proteins, in particular in the case of systems providing for the hyperexpression of a gene which can lead, in some cases to cell death before the optimum biomass is obtained.




“Heterologous protein” is understood to mean a protein foreign to the host cell which expresses it, that is to say different in origin from that of the host cell which, according to the invention, is a yeast. The protein can be of bacterial origin, for example


Escherichia coli


beta-galactosidase, or of higher éukaryotic origin, for example of human origin, such as, for example, lymphokines, blood coagulation factors, hormones, vaccinal antigens and, generally speaking, any protein of therapeutic or industrial interest.




As has been stated, the essential feature of the invention is the combination of a transcription control sequence and a receptor complexed to a ligand. The choice of the first is conditioned by the choice of the second.




Among usable transcription control sequences, there may be mentioned, in particular, the sequences which are usually functional in higher éukaryotic cells, that is to say natural sequences activating the transcription of higher éukaryotic cells, such as, for example, an HRE (for “hormone responsive element”) or a variant or synthetic derivative of such a sequence, and which also fulfils in yeast this function of activation of transcription. These sequences are, in general, natural or synthetic, perfect or imperfect palindromic sequences.




Thus, for example, in the case where the transcription control sequence used is an HRE sequence, the receptor is the corresponding hormone.




As stated above, the transcription control sequence represents one of the elements providing for the expression of the desired protein in yeast. Provision for the expression in yeast may hence be made by hybrid sequences which comprise, apart from the transcription control sequence defined in the context of the invention, sequences corresponding to yeast promoter sequences. Among usable promoters, there may be mentioned the inducible promoter GAL1 referred to above, and also constitutive yeast promoters such as the PGK promoter.




In general, the TATA element of the promoter is retained and the transcription control sequence may be placed at variable distances upstream from the TATA element. It is especially advantageous to be able to have available a minimal structure for the hybrid promoter, that is to say a structure in which the distance between the TATA element and the transcription control sequence is small while remaining sufficient to provide for satisfactory inducibility.




“Receptor” in the sense of the invention is hence understood to mean a protein which is functional in higher éukaryotic cells, or variants or corresponding synthetic derivatives which display in yeast the functional properties of the native receptor.




The term “receptor” also comprises chimeric proteins, that is to say a structure in which the two essential portions are of different origins. For example, a preferred combination consists in preparing a hybrid receptor in which the portion which recognizes the ligand is of higher éukaryotic origin and the portion which binds to the transcription control sequence is of yeast origin, but it is possible to use sequences originating from any other microorganism, for example bacteria. The transcription control sequence then comprises a sequence which is functional in yeasts, that is to say a natural sequence activating transcription in yeasts. There may be mentioned, for example, the UAS of the GAL1 promoter, which is a yeast promoter.




The subject of the invention is hence the different functional combinations between a transcription control sequence, whether natural or derived, in particular, by chemical synthesis, and the receptor which can be a natural, derived or chimeric receptor. The nature of the ligand is, in turn, determined by the choice of receptor.




Among usable receptors, there should be mentioned nuclear receptors, in particular for a steroid, and other nuclear receptors, for example for retinoids or for thyroid hormones, as well as vitamin D3. The receptor for a steroid can be a natural receptor for steroid hormones, for example the estrogen receptor, the progesterone receptor or the testosterone receptor, or a variant receptor or chimeric derivative, which is functional with respect to the transcription control sequence. The steroid can be a natural steroid such as estradiol, progesterone or testosterone, or an analog or derivative, which is functional in the complex to which the transcription control sequence contained in the vector of the invention is sensitive.




The estrogen receptor can be the natural receptor (hereinafter designated hER) or a variant or chimeric derivative which is functional in the presence of estradiol with respect to the transcription control sequence contained in the vector of the invention.




More especially, the subject of the invention is the case where the essential portion of the receptor recognizing the ligand originates from the human estrogen receptor designated hERG which, compared with the receptor designated hER, has a glycine instead of a valine at position 400, the ligand then being estradiol. According to a feature of the invention, the whole of the hERG receptor may be used as the receptor.




Compared with the human estrogen receptor hER, the complementary DNA sequence of which had been published in Green S. et al. (1986) (Nature, 320, 134-139), the hERG receptor hence comprises a glycine in place of a valine at position 400. The DNA sequence and deduced amino acid sequence published in Green et al. are as follows:















−128


























                                                                   S


maI(


b)







−8




{overscore (GGG)}AGCCCAGGAGCTGGCGGAGGGCGTTCGTCCTGGGAGCTGCACTTGCTCCGTGGGGTCGCCGGCTTCACCGGACCGCAGGCTCCCGGGGCAGGGCCGGGGCCAGAGCTCGCGTGTCGG







                                                                                                       S


acII(


a)






113




CGGGAC


ATG


CGCTGCGTCGCCTCTAACCTCGGGCTGTGCTCTTTTTCCAGGTGGCCCGCCGGTTTC


TGA


GCCTTCTGCCCTGCGGGGGACACGGTCTGACCCTGCCCGCGGCCACGGACC































30




















323




CTC AAG ATC CCC CTG GAG CGG CCC CTG GGC GAG GTG TAC CTG GAC AGC AGC AAG CCC GCC GTG TAC AAC TAC CCC GAG GGC GCC GCC TAC










Leu Lys


Ile Pro Leu Gly Arg Pro Leu Gly Glu Val Tyr Leu Asp Ser Ser Lys Pro Ala Val Tyr Asn Tyr Pro Glu Gly Ala Ala Tyr




60







              


SacII(b


)                                                                 S


maI(c


)













413




GAG TTC AAC GCC GCG GCC GCC GCC AAC GCG CAG GTC TAC GGT CAG ACC GGC CTC CCC TAC GGC CCC GGG TCT GAG GCT GCG GCG TTC GGC







Glu Phe Asn Ala Ala Ala Ala Ala Asn Ala Gln Val Tyr Gly Gln Thr Gly Leu Pro Tyr Gly Pro Gly Ser Glu Ala Ala Ala Phe Gly




90







                                                                                                    P


vuII(


b)













503




TCC AAC GGC CTG GGG GGT TTC CCC CCA CTC AAC AGC GTG TCT CCG AGC CCG CTG ATG CTA CTG CAC CCG CCG CCG CAG CTG TCG CCT TTC







Ser Asn Gly Leu Gly Gly Pne Pro Pro Leu Asn Ser Val Ser Pro Ser Pro Leu Met Leu Leu His Pro Pro Pro Gln Leu Ser Pro Phe




120













593




CTG CAG CCC CAC GGC CAG CAG GTG CCC TAC TAC CTG GAG AAC GAG CCC AGC GGC TAC ACG GTG CGC GAG GCC GGC CCG CCG GCA TTC TAC







Leu Gln Pro His Gly Gln Gln Val Pro Tyr Tyr Leu Glu Asn Glu Pro Ser Gly Tyr Thr Val Arg Glu Ala Gly Pro Pro Ala Phe Tyr




150













683




AGG CCA AAT TCA GAT AAT CGA CGC CAG GGT GGC AGA GAA AGA TTG GCC AGT ACC AAT GAC AAG GGA AGT ATG GCT ATG GAA TCT GCC AAG







Arg Pro Asn Ser Asp Asn Arg Arg Gln Gly Gly Arg Glu Arg Leu Ala Ser Thr Asn Asp Lys Gly Ser Met Ala Met Glu Ser Ala Lys




180













773




GAG ACT CGC TAC TGT GCA GTG TGC AAT GAC TAT GCT TCA GGC TAC CAT TAT GGA GTC TGG TCC TGT GAG GGC TGC AAG GCC TTC TTC AAG







Glu Thr Arg Tyr Cys Ala Val Cys Asn Asp Tyr Ala Ser Gly Tyr His Tyr Gly Val Trp Ser Cys Glu Gly Cys Lys Ala Phe Pne Lys




210













863




AGA AGT ATT CAA GGA CAT AAC GAC TAT ATG TGT CCA GCC ACC AAC CAG TGC ACC ATT GAT AAA AAC AGG AGG AAG AGC TGC CAG GCC TGC







Arg Ser Ile Gln Gly His Asn Asp Tyr Met Cys Pro Ala Thr Asn Gln Cys Thr Ile Asp Lys Asn


Arg Arg Lys Ser


Cys Gln Ala Cys




240













953




CGG CTC CGC AAA TGC TAC GAA GTG GGA ATG ATG AAA GGT GGG ATA CGA AAA GAC CGA AGA GGA GGG AGA ATG TTG AAA CAC AAG CGC CAG







Arg Leu Arg Lys Cys Tyr Glu Val Gly Met Met Lys Gly Gly Ile Arg Lys Asp Arg Arg Gly Gly Arg Met Leu Lys His Lys Arg Gln




270













1043




AGA GAT GAT GGG GAG GGC AGG GGT GAA GTG GGG TCT GCT GGA GAC ATG AGA GCT GCC AAC CTT TGG CCA AGC CCG CTC ATG ATC AAA CGC







Arg Asp Asp Gly Glu Gly Arg Gly Glu Val Gly Ser Ala Gly Asp Met Arg Ala Ala Asn Leu Trp Pro Ser Pro Leu Met Ile Lys Arg




300













1133




TCT AAG AAG AAC AGC CTG GCC TTG TCC CTG ACG GCC GAC CAG ATG GTC AGT GCC TTG TTG GAT GCT GAG CCC CCC ATA CTC TAT TCC GAG







Ser


Lys Lys Asn Ser


Leu Ala Leu Ser Leu Thr Ala Asp Gln Met Val Ser Ala Leu Leu Asp Ala Glu Pro Pro Ile Leu Tyr Ser Glu




330













1223




TAT GAT CCT ACC AGA CCC TTC AGT GAA GCT TCG ATG ATG GGC TTA CTG ACC AAC CTG GCA GAC AGG GAG CTG GTT CAC ATG ATC AAC TGG







Tyr Asp Pro Thr Arg Pro Phe Ser Glu Ala Ser Met Met Gly Leu Leu Thr Asn Leu Ala Asp Arg Glu Leu Val His Met Ile Asn Trp




360













1313




GCG AAG AGG GTG CCA GGC TTT GTG GAT TTG ACC CTC CAT GAT CAG GTC CAC CTT CTA GAA TGT GCC TGG CTA GAG ATC CTG ATG ATT GGT







Ala Lys Arg Val Pro Gly Phe Val Asp Leu Thr Leu His Asp Gln Val His Leu Leu Glu Cys Ala Trp Leu Glu Ile Leu Met Ile Gly




390













1403




CTC GTC TGG CGC TCC ATG GAG CAC CCA GTG AAG CTA CTG TTT GCT CCT AAC TTG CTC TTG GAC AGG AAC CAG GGA AAA TGT GTA GAG GGC







Leu Val Trp Arg Ser Met Glu His Pro Val Lys Leu Leu Phe Ala Pro Asn Leu Leu Leu Asp Arg Asn Gln Gly Lys Cys Val Glu Gly




420













1493




ATG GTG GAG ATC TTC GAC ATG CTG CTG GCT ACA TCA TCT CGG TTC CGC ATG ATG AAT CTG CAG GGA GAG GAG TTT GTG TGC CTC AAA TCT







Met Val Glu Ile Phe Asp Met Leu Leu Ala Thr Ser Ser Arg Phe Arg Met Met Asn Leu Gln Gly Glu Glu Phe Val Cys Leu Lys Ser




450













1583




ATT ATT TTG CTT AAT TCT GGA GTG TAC ACA TTT CTG TCC AGC ACC CTG AAG TCT CTG GAA GAG AAG GAC CAT ATC CAC CGA GTC CTG GAC







Ile Ile Leu Leu Asn Ser Gly Val Tyr Thr Phe Leu Ser Ser Thr Leu Lys Ser Leu Glu Glu Lys Asp His Ile His Arg Val Leu Asp




480













1673




AAG ATC ACA GAC ACT TTG ATC CAC CTG ATG GCC AAG GCA GGC CTG ACC CTG CAG CAG CAG CAC CAG CGG CTG GCC CAG CTC CTC CTC ATC







Lys Ile Thr Asp Thr Leu Ile Val Leu Met Ala Lys Ala Gly Leu Thr Leu Gln Gln Gln His Gln Arg Leu Ala Gln Leu Leu Leu Ile




510













1763




CTC TCC CAC ATC AGG CAC ATG AGT AAC AAA GGC ATG GAG CAT CTG TAC AGC ATG AAG TGC AAG AAC GTG GTG CCC CTC TAT GAC CTG CTG







Leu Ser His Ile Arg His Met Ser Asn Lys Gly Met Glu His Leu Tyr Ser Met Lys Cys Lys Asn Val Val Pro Leu Tyr Asp Leu Leu




540













1853




CTG GAG ATG CTG GAC GCC CAC CGC CTA CAT GCG CCC ACT AGC CGT GGA GGG GGA TCC GTG GAG GAG ACG GAC CAA AGC CAC TTG GCG ACT







Leu Glu Met Leu Asp Ala Val Arg Leu His Ala Pro Thr Ser Arg Gly Gly Ala Ser Val Glu Glu Thr Asp Gln Ser Val Leu Ala Thr




570













1943




GCG GGC TCT ACT TCA TCG CAT TCC TTG CAA AAG TAT TAC ATC ACG GGG GAG GCA GAG GGT TTC CCT GCC ACA GTC TGA GAG CTC CCT GGC







ALA Gly Ser Thr Ser Ser His Ser Leu Gln Lys Tyr Tyr Ile Tyr Gly Glu Ala Glu Gly Phe Pro Ala Thr Val ***




595













2033




TCCCACACGGTTCAGATAATCCCTGCTGCATTTTACCCTCATCATGCACCACTTTAGCCAAATTCTGTCTCCTGCATACACTCCGGCATGCATCCAACACCAATGGCTTTCTAGATGAGT













2153




GGCCATTCATTTGCTTGCTCAGTTCTTAGTGGCACATCTTCTGTCTTCTGTTGGGAACAGCCAAAGGGATTCCAAGGCTAAATCTTTGTAACAGCTCTCTTTCCCCCTTGCTATGTTACT













2273




AAGCGTGAGGATTCCCGTAGCTCTTCACAGCTGAACTCAGTCTATGGGTTGGGGCTCAGATAACTCTGTGCATTTAAGCTACTTGTAGAGACCCAGGCCTGGAGAGTAGACATTTTGCCT













2393




CTGATAAGCACTTTTTAAATGGCTCTAAGAATAAGCCACAGCAAAGAATTTAAAGTGGCTCCTTTAATTGGTGACTTGGAGAAAGCTAGGTGAAGGGTTTATTATAGCACCCTCTTGTAT













2513




TCCTATGGCAATGCATCCTTTTATGAAAGTGGTACACCTTAAAGCTTTTATATGACTGTAGCAGAGTATCTGGTGATTGTCAATTCACTTCCCCCTATAGGAATACAAGGGGCCACACAG













2633




GGAAGGCAGATCCCCTAGTTGGCCAAGACTTATTTTAACTTGATACACTGCAGATTCAGAGTGTCCTGAAGCTCTGCCTCTGGCTTTCCGGTCATGGGTTCCAGTTAATTCATGCCTCCC













2753




ATGGACCTATGGAGAACAAGAAGTTGATCTTAGTTAAGTCTCCCTATATGAGGGATAAGTTCCTGATTTTTGTTTTTATTTTTGTGTTACAAAAGAAAGCCCTCCCTCCCTGAACTTGCA













2873




GTAAGGTCAGCTTCAGGACCTGTTCCAGTGGGCACTGTACTTGGATCTTCCCGGCGTGTGTGTGCCTTACACAGGGGTGAACTGTTCACTGTGGTGATGCATGATGAGGGTAAATGGTAG













2993




TTGAAAGGAGCAGGGGCCCTGGTGTTGCATTTAGCCCTGGGGATGGAGCTTGAACAGTACTTGTGCAGGATTGTTGTGGCTACTACAGAACAAGAGGGAAAGTAGGGCAGAAACTGGATA













3113




CAGTTCTGAGCACAGCCAGACTTGCTCAGGTGGGCCTGCACAGGCTGCAGCTACCTAGGAACATTCCTTGCAGACCCCGCATTGCCTTTGGGGGTGCCCTGGGATCCCTGGGGTAGTCCA













3233




GCTCTTATTCATTTCCCAGCGTGGCCCTGGTTGGAAGAAGCAGCTGTCAAGTTGTAGACAGCTGTGTTCCTACAATTGGCCCAGCACCCTGGGGCACGGGAGAAGGGTGGGGACCGTTGC













3353




TGTCACTACTCAGGCTGACTGGGGCCTGGTCAGATTACGTATGCCCTTGGTGGTTTAGAGATAATCCAAAATCAGGGTTTGGTTTGGGGAAGAAAATCCTCCCCCTTCCTCCCCCGCCCC













3473




GTTCCCTACGGCCTCCACTCCTGCCAGCTCATTTCCTTCAATTTCCTTTGACCTATAGGCTAAAAAAGAAAGGCTCATTCCAGCCACAGGGCAGCCTTCCCTGGGCCTTTGCTTCTCTAG













3693




CACAATTATGGGTTACTTCCTTTTTCTTAACAAAAAAGAATGTTTGATTTCCTCTGGGTGACCTTATTGTCTGTAATTGAAACCCTATTGAGAGGTGATGTCTGTGTTAGCCAATGACCC













3713




AGGTAGCTGCTCGGGCTTCTCTTGGTATGTCTTGTTTGGAAAAGTGGATTTCATTCATTTCTGATTGTCCAGTTAAGTGATCACCAAAGGACTGAGAATCTGGGAGGGCAAAAAAAAAAA













3833




AAAAAGTTTTTATGTGCACTTAAATTTGCGGACAATTTTATGTATCTGTGTTAAGGATATGCTTAAGAACATAATTCTTTTGTTGCTGTTTGTTTAAGAAGCACCTTAGTTTGTTTAAGA













3953




AGCACCTTATATAGTATAATATATATTTTTTTGAAATTACATTGCTTGTTTATCAGACAATTGAATGTAGTAATTCTGTTCTGGATTTAATTTGACTGGGTTAACATGCAAAAACCAAGG













4073




AAAAATATTTAGTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTGTATACTTTTCAAGCTACCTTGTCATGTATACAGTCATTTATGCCTAAAGCCTGGTGATTATTCATTTAAATGAAGATCACATTTCATCTC













4193




AACTTTTGTATCCACAGTAGACAAAATAGCACTAATCCAGATGCCTATTGTTGGATATTGAATGACAGACAATCTTATGTAGCAAAGATTATGCCTGAAAAGGAAAATTATTCAGGGCAG













4313




CTAATTTTGCTTTTACCAAAATATCAGTAGTAATATTTTTGGACAGTAGCTAATGGGTCAGTGGGTTCTTTTTAATGTTTATACTTAGATTTTCTTTTAAAAAAATTAA


AATAAA


ACAAA













4433




AAAAATTTCTAGGACTAGACGATGTAATACCAGCTAAAGCCAAACAATTATACAGTGGAAGGTTTTACATTATTCATCCAATGTGTTTCTATTCATGTTAAGATACTACTACATTTGAAG













4553




TGGGCAGAGAACATCAGATGATTGAAATGTTCGCCCAGGGGTCTCCAGGAACTTTGGAAATCTCTTTGTATTTTTACTTGAAGTGCCACTAATGGACAGCAGATATTTTCTGGCTGATGT













4673




TGGTATTGGGTGTAGGAACATGATTTAAAAAAAAAACTCTTGCCTCTGCTTTCCCCCACTCTGAGGGAAGTTAAAATGTAAAAGATGTGATTTATCTGGGGGGCTCAGGTATGGTGGGGA













4793




AGTGGATTCAGGAATCTGGGGAATGGCAAATATATTAAGAAGAGTATTGAAAGTATTTGGAGGAAAATGGTTAATTCTGGGTGTGCACCAAGGTTCAGTAGAGTCCACTTCTGCCCTGGA













4913




GACCACAAATCAACTAGCTCCATTTACAGCCATTTCTAAAATGGCAGCTTCAGTTCTAGAGAACAAAGAACAACATCAGCAGTAAAGTCCATGGAATAGCTAGTGGTCTGTGTTTCTTTT













5033




CGCCATTGCCTAGCTTGCCGTAATGATTCTATAATGCCATCATGCAGCAATTATGAGAGGCTAGGTCATCCAAAGAGAAGACCCTATCAATGTAGGTTGCAAAATCTAACCCCTAAGGAA













5153




GTGCAGTCTTTGATTTGATTTCCCTAGTAACCTTGCAGATATGTTTAACCAAGCCATAGGCCATGCCTTTTGAGGGCTGAACAAATAAGGGACTTACTGATAATTTACTTTTGATCACAT













5273




TAAGGTGTTCTCACCTTGAAATCTTATACACTGAAATGGCCATTGATTTAGGCCACTGGCTTACACTACTCCTTCCCCTGCATGACACTGATTAGAAATACTTTCCTATTCATACTTTCC













5393




AATTATGAGATGGACTGTGGGTACTGGGAGTGATCACTAACACCATAGTAATGTCTAATATTCACAGGCAGATCTGCTTGGGGAAGCTAGTTATGTGAAAGGCA


AATAAA


GTCATACAGT













5513




AGCTCAAAAGGCAACCATAATTCTCTTTGGTGCAAGTCTTGGGAGCGTGATCTAGATTACACTGCACCATTCCCAAGTTAATCCCCTGAAAACTTACTCTCAACTGGAGCAAATGAACTT













5633




TGGTCCCAAATATCCATCTTTTCAGTAGCGTTAATTATGCTCTGTTTCCAACTGCATTTCCTTTCCAATTGAATTAAAGTGTGGCCTCGTTTTTAGTCATTTAAAATTGTTTTCTAAGTA













5753




ATTGCTGCCTCTATTATGGCACTTCAATTTTGCAGTGTCTTTTGAGATTCAAGAAAAATTTCTATTGATTTTTTTGCATCCAATTGTGCCTGAACTTTTAAAATATGTAAATGCTGCCAT













5873




GTTCCAAACCCATCGTCAGTGTGTGTGTTTAGAGCTGTGCACCCTAGAAACAACATACTTGTCCCATCAGCAGGTGCCTGAGACACAGACCCCTTTGCATTCACAGAGAGGTCATTGGTT













5993




ATAGAGACTTGAATTAATAAGTGACATTATGCCAGTTTCTGTTCTCTCACAGGTGATAAACAATGCTTTTTGTGCACTACATACTCTTCAGTGTAGAGCTCTTGTTTTATGGGAAAAGGC













6113




TCAAATGGCAAATTGTGTTTGATGGATTAATATGCCCTTTTGCCGATGCATACTATTACTGATGTGACTCGGTTTTGTCGCAGCTTTGCTTTGTTTAATGAAACACACTTGTAAACCTCT













6233




TTTGCACTTTGAAAAAGAATCCAGCGGGATGCTCGAGCACCTGTAAACAATTTTCTCAACCTATTTGATGTTCA


AATAAA


GAATTAAACTAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA











It has been possible to observe that, by using this receptor instead of the hER receptor, a greater stability of the receptor was obtained, hence eliminating all risk of denaturation capable of leading to less binding of the specific ligand, in this instance estradiol. This phenomenon is expressly true in the region of 25° C., that is to say at the temperatures at which the method for the preparation of recombinant proteins comprising an induction stage according to the invention is carried out. It is hence preferable to use this receptor, which enables a smaller quantity of estradiol to be introduced into the culture medium in order to initiate the induction.




According to an additional feature of the invention, estradiol is added at a concentration of between 2 and 50 nM, and preferably of the order of 10 nM.




The invention relates especially to the case in which the control sequence is the sequence -605 to -634 of the chicken vitellogenin gene, which is the transcription control sequence of this gene, sensitive to estradiol (designated hereinafter ERE for “estrogen responsive element”). The synthesis of oligonucleotides containing this sequence or repetitions of the latter makes it possible to obtain, according to the invention, an expression vector comprising this sequence or repetitions of the latter (designated hereinafter ERE1 or ERE3).




One of the advantages of the invention is that the induction of the expression may be initiated very simply by adding to the culture medium a ligand matched to the receptor. The implementation of the induction hence becomes completely independent of the nature of the culture medium.




The appropriate time point for the introduction of the ligand can be determined easily; in practice, it will be the point at which a high level of biomass has been attained in the fermentation vat.




The invention relates most especially to the vectors, the structure and method for production of which will be given later by way of example in the experimental part.




It is appropriate to note that the elements for the expression of the protein and the elements providing for the expression of the receptor can occur on a single plasmid or on two different plasmids each containing an origin of replication which is functional in yeasts. However, it is also possible to arrange for the use of vectors providing for the integration of some of these elements, for example the production of the receptor can originate from sequences integrated on a chromosome of the cell.




Thus, the present invention also relates to the vectors carrying the sequences which are usable for the transformation of yeast cells.




The invention also encompasses the yeast strains which are usable in the method according to the invention.




As yeast strains, all strains customarily used for the production of recombinant proteins may be used. Saccharomyces strains such as


S. cerevisiae


may be mentioned, in particular. Special mention may be made of strains displaying one or more deficiencies in proteolytic activity, for example having the pep4 mutation. There may also be mentioned strains displaying a suppresion of the proteolytic function encoded by the PRC1 gene. The use of these strains enables the quality of the proteins obtained to be improved.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

shows the structure of pTG848,





FIG. 2

shows schematically the strategy enabling pYERE to be prepared,





FIG. 3

shows schematically the strategy enabling pYERE/hER to be prepared,





FIG. 4



a


shows schematically the structures of pYERE1/hER, pYEREm/hER, pYERE3/hER and pYGAL/hER and shows the sequences of the ERE and EREm elements,





FIG. 4



b


shows, for the RNAs extracted from induced or noninduced cells containing the plasmids indicated, the RNA fragments protected from digestion by ribonucleases A and T1 after hybridization with an antisense Gal1 RNA probe,





FIG. 5



a


shows diagrammatically the result of insertion in tandem of a portion of the coding sequence of PRC1 into pUC8 (BamHI site) to give pTG2893,





FIG. 5



b


shows schematically the deletion introduced into the fragment of PRC1 by excision of the EcoRV fragment of pTG2893 to give pTG2894, the arrows showing the direction of transcription,





FIG. 6

shows the diagrammatic structure of plasmid pTG3809, the arrows showing the direction of transcription,





FIG. 7

shows the diagrammatic structure of phage M13TG2890,





FIG. 8

shows diagrammatically the construction of plasmid pTG3851,





FIG. 9

demonstrates the effect on the activation of transcription in yeast cells of adding increasing quantities of estradiol with, as receptor, either the human estrogen receptor hER (circles) or the human estrogen receptor hERG (triangles).











The examples which follow illustrate the invention without, however, limiting the latter.




EXAMPLE 1




Construction of the PYERE/hER Vectors




Methods




The techniques of molecular biology used for the construction of the different plasmids are described in the manuals “Molecular cloning, a laboratory manual”, T. Maniatis, E. F. Fritsch and J. Sambrook, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y.: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (1982) and “Current Protocols in Molecular Biology”, F. M. Ausubel, R. Brent, R. E. Kingston, D. D. Moore, J. A. Smith, J. G. Seidman and K. Sruhl, Greene Publishing Associates and Wiley Intersciences (1987). They comprise, in particular, digestion of the DNA with restriction enzymes, separation of the DNA fragments by agarose or polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, ligation of DNA fragments with the enzyme T4 DNA ligase, transformation of


E. coli


with the recombinant plasmids and determination of the nucleotide sequence by Sanger's technique.




The plasmids used carry the gene for resistance to ampicillin, thereby permitting selection of the bacteria transformed by a plasmid on agar dishes containing ampicillin (50 μg/ml).




The


E. coli


strain used is strain DH5, genotype: F-, enda1, HsdR17(rk-md+), supE44, thi-1, lambda-, reca&, gyrA96, reIAI (Hanahan: DNA cloning: a practical approach (Vol. 1=p. 109-135, ed. D. M. Glover, IRL Press, Oxford (1985)).




The techniques of transformation and growth of yeast strains are described in “Laboratory Course Manual for Methods in Yeast Genetics”, F. Sherman, G. R. Find and J. B. Hicks, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y.: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (1986).




The yeast strain used is TGY14-1a, pep4.3, genotype Mat a, ura3-251-373-328, leu2, pep4.3.




The parent plasmid pTG848, described in European Patent No. 200,655, is an


E. coli


/yeast shuttle plasmid which permits the expression in yeast of an exogenous gene under the control of the phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK) gene promoter. This plasmid contains a pBR 322 origin of replication and the gene for resistance to ampicillin for selection in


E. coli,


and a 2 μm origin of replication and the ura3 and leu2 genes for selection in yeast, as well as the PGK gene promoter and its 3′ end containing the polyadenylation signal. This gene was modified so as to introduce a BglII site at the initiation ATG, thereby enabling the coding region for another protein to be inserted between this site and the BglII site situated upstream from the polyadenylation signal (FIG.


1


).




Construction of Plasmids pUC18, ERE1, DUC18 EREm, pUC18 ERE3




Plasmid pUC18 (C. Yanisch-Perron, J. Vieira and J. Messing, Gene 33, 103-1190 (1986)) contains a pBR322 origin of replication, the gene for resistance to ampicillin and a polylinker comprising, in particular, XbaI and HindIII sites. This plasmid was digested with the restriction enzymes XmaI and HindIII; to the plasmid thus digested, the following are then added by complementary oligonucleotide techniques:




5′-CCGGGTCTAGAAGATCTA3′ (SEQ ID NO: 3)




3′-CAGATCTTCTAGATTCGA5′ (SEQ ID NO: 4)




The derived plasmid pUC18 BglII then has a polylinker which contains, in order, XmaI, XbaI, BglII and HindIII sites.




Into this plasmid, digested with BglII, the fragments consisting of the following complementary oligonucleotides are introduced respectively:




ERE1:




5′GATCCAATATTCCTGGTCAGGCGTGACCGGAGCTGA3′ (SEQ ID NO: 5)




3′GTTATAAGGACCAGTCGCACTGGCCTCGACTCTAG5′ (SEQ ID NO: 6)




EREm:




5′GATCCAATATTCCCCGTCAGCGTGACCGGAGCTGA3′ (SEQ ID NO: 7)




3′GTTATAAGGGGCAGTCGCACTGGCCTCGACTCTAG5′ (SEQ ID NO: 8)




ERE3 which consists of a direct repetition of three ERE1 fragments.




ERE1 contains the ERE (for “estrogen responsive element”) sequence -605 to -634 of the vitellogenin promoter.




EREm is a mutant in which a GC transversion in the ERE sequence considerably reduces its activity in MCF-7 cells.




Construction of Plasmids pLRERE1, PLREREm, pLRERE3




Plasmid pLR1Δ20 is described in the paper by R. W. West, R. R. Yocum and M. Ptashne, Molecular and Cellular Biology 4, 2467-2478 (1984). This plasmid contains an active and chimeric gene for beta-galactosidase under the control of the GAL1 promoter (FIG.


2


).




The object of the construction is to replace the UASs (upstream activator sequences) of the Gal1 gene, situated between the XmaI and XhoI sites of the Gal1 promoter region, by the fragments ERE1, EREm and ERE3, respectively.




pLRERE1




Plasmid pUC18ERE1 is digested with the restriction enzyme BglII. The site is filled in with DNA polymerase I (Klenow fragment) in the presence of the 4 deoxynucleotide triphosphates. An XhoI linker (Biolabs ref. 1030) is then added to the ends: the plasmid is then digested with XmaI and XhoI and the XmaI-XhoI fragment containing the ERE1 sequence is isolated.




This fragment is then cloned into plasmid pLR1Δ20 between XmaI and XhoI sites to give plasmid pLRERE1.




pLREREm, pLRERE3




Plasmids pLREREm and pLRERE3 are constructed in the same manner by replacing pUC18ERE1 by pUC18EREm and pUC18ERE3, respectively, in the above protocol.




Construction of Plasmids pYERE1, pYEREm, pYERE3




Plasmids pLRERE1, pLREREm and pLRERE3 possess a Tth111I site at the 3′ end of the lacZ (beta-galactosidase) chimeric gene (FIG.


2


).




pYERE1




Plasmid pLRERE1 is digested with the enzyme Tth111I; the site is then filled in with DNA polymerase I (Klenow fragment). An XmaI linker (Biolabs ref. 1048) is then added to the ends. The DNA is digested with XmaI, and the XmaI-XmaI fragment containing the lacZ chimeric gene under the control of the hybrid promoter (EREA-Gal1) is inserted at the single XmaI site of plasmid pTG848, to give plasmid pYERE1.




pYEREm, pYERE3




Plasmids pYEREm and pYERE3 are constructed in the same manner by replacing pLRERE1 by pLREREm and pLRERE3, respectively, in the above protocol.




Construction of Plasmid pYGAL




Plasmid pLR1Δ20 is digested with the restriction enzyme Tth111I, and the site is then filled in with DNA polymerase I (Klenow fragment). An XmaI linker (Biolabs ref.1048) is added to the ends and the DNA is then digested with the enzyme XmaI. The XmaI fragment containing the lacZ chimeric gene under the control of the Gal1 promoter is inserted at the XmaI site of plasmid pTG848, giving plasmid pYGAL.




Construction of Plasmids pYERE1/hER, pYERE1/hERR, pYEREm/hER, pYGAL/hER




The object of these constructions is to place the cDNA coding for the human estrogen receptor (hER) under the control of the PGK promoter, at the BglII site of plasmids pYERE1, pYEREm, pYERE3 and pYGAL (FIG.


3


).




Plasmid pKCR2-ER containing the cDNA of the human estrogen receptor (S. Green et al., Nature 320, 134-139 (1986)) is digested with the restriction enzyme EcoRI and the site is then filled in with DNA polymerase I (Klenow fragment). A BamHI linker (Biolabs ref. 102) is then added to the ends. After digestion with BamHI, the fragment coding for the human estrogen receptor is isolated.




It is inserted into the vector pYERE1 digested with BglII to create plasmids pYERE1/hER and pYERE1/hERR, which differ by the orientation of the hER cDNA relative to the PGK promoter.




In pYERE1/hER, the PGK promoter is situated on the 5′ side of the hER cDNA, and hence induces transcription of the mRNA coding for the hER protein.




In pYERE1/hERR, the orientation is reversed, and hence induces the transcription of an antisense RNA of the hER messenger RNA.




pYEREm/hER, pYERE3/hER and pYGAL/hER are constructed on the same model as pYERE1/hER, by replacing pYERE1 by pYEREm, pYERE3 and pYGAL, respectively, in the above construction.




These plasmids (

FIG. 4



a


) constructed in


E. coli


DH5 are transferred into yeast strain TGY14.1a which carries the ura3 mutation. The presence of the ura3 gene on these plasmids permits complementation for the yeasts transformed by a plasmid, which are hence selected on agar dishes containing a medium without uracil (preparation: 0.67 g of Difco medium No. 0919-15, 0.5 g casamino acids, 1 g glucose, and 2 g agar per 100 ml).




EXAMPLE 2




Induction by Estradiol of Transcription for the ERE Gal1 Hybrid Promoters Carried by the pYERE/hER Vectors




The different yeasts containing plasmids pYERE1/hER, pYEREm/hER, pYERE3/hER, pYERE1/hERR and pYGAL/hER, respectively, are cultured in base medium for yeast (Difco No. 0919-15) on the basis of 0.67 g/100 ml and 0.5% casamino acids containing 1% glucose or 2% galactose or 100 nM estradiol (added to the culture 2 hours before the cells are recovered) as shown in

FIG. 4



b.






The RNA is prepared from 10


9


cells according to the protocol described in Methods in Yeast Genetics, p. 143-144.




To measure the transcriptional activity of the Gal1 or ERE-Gal1 promoters, these RNAs are hybridized with a radiolabeled RNA probe derived from the 5′ end of the Gal1 gene (strand complementary to the messenger RNA). The hybridized fragments will be protected from digestion by RNases A and T1. The probe is prepared from the EcoRI fragment (containing the Gal1 promoter) of plasmid pLR1Δ20 (R. W. West, R. R. Yocum and M. Ptashne, Molecular and Cellular Biology 4, 2467-2478 (1984)) cloned into plasmid Bluescribe M13+ (Stratagene ref. 211201). The resulting plasmid is then linearized with HindIII and the radiolabeled probe is then synthesized from the phage T7 promoter with Stratagene Kit No. 211604. The probe size is of the order of 1000 nucleotides.




There are several transcription initiation sites in the Gal1 promoter; the probe is complementary to the Gal1 RNA over a length of 154 to 165 nucleotides.




The probe is incubated with 20 μg of RNA, and the mixture containing possible hybrids is digested with ribonucleases A and T1 according to the protocol described in Current Protocols in Molecular Biology.




The undigested fragments are then identified by urea/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and autoradiography (

FIG. 4



b


).




For the constructions expressing the hER receptor, the induction of a messenger RNA specific to the ERE-Gal1 hybrid promoter is observed in the presence of estradiol; the transcription initiation sites are identical to those of the Gal1 (pYGAL) promoter induced by galactose: protected fragments of the same size.




The induction of transcription using the ERE-Gal1 hybrid promoter is strictly dependent on the presence of estradiol. The induction by estradiol requires the presence of the hER receptor (the construction pYERE/hERR is inactive). It also requires the presence of an ERE element (for the construction pYGAL/hER, there is no induction by estradiol).




The quantity of Gal1 RNA detected for cells containing pYERE3/hER is approximately 10 times as high as for cells containing pYERE1/hER: the repetition in tandem of the ERE elements (pYERE3 contains an ERE trimer, pYERE1 a monomer) hence appears to have a synergistic effect on the activation of transcription.




EXAMPLE 3




Expression, Inducible by Estradiol, of Beta-galactosidase in Yeasts Containing the pYERE/hER Vectors




Beta-galactosidase activity is measured according to the protocol of West et al. (1984). Table 1 below shows the beta-galactosidase activity of yeast strains carrying plasmids pYERE1/hER, pYERE3/hER, pYEREm/hER, pYERE1/hERR and pYGAL/hER, respectively, in the presence or absence of glucose, galactose or estradiol, as seen in the table.




The level of constitutive activity of the promoters is very low and is not affected by the presence of the hER protein (pYGAL and pYGAL/hER or pYERE1/hER and pYERE1/hERR give the same degree of activity). In contrast, the addition of estradiol leads to a strong induction of the hybrid promoters of pYERE1/hER and pYERE3/hER.




The fact that the promoters of pYEREm/hER and pYGAL/hER are not sensitive to induction by estradiol shows the necessity of a functional ERE element in the promoter controlling the expression of lacZ, while the absence of induction for pYERE1/hERR shows that the presence of the hER receptor is also necessary for observing induction by estradiol.




The level of expression attained in comparable to that obtained using the Gal1 promoter (the case of pYGAL/hER) in the presence of galactose.




The presence of three ERE elements in tandem (the case of pYERE3/hER) gives an activity twice as high as the case where the promoter contains a single ERE element (pYERE1/hER).












TABLE 1











Induction of beta-galactosidase activity






by YhER in the presence of hormone















BETA-








GALACTO-








SIDASE







MEDIUM




ACTIVITY















PLASMID




Glucose




Galactose




Estradiol




(units)


















pYERE1/hER




+














60






pYERE1/hER




+









+




1,060






pYERE1/hERR




+














60






pYERE1/hERR




+









+




60






pYERE3/hER




+














60






pYERE3/hER




+









+




2,060






pYEREM/hER




+














60






pYEREM/hER




+









+




260






pYGAL/hER




+














180






pYGAL/hER




+









+




180






pYGAL




+














180






pYGAL









+









2,300














The yeasts transformed by the plasmids indicated are cultured in the presence of 1% of glucose or 2% of galactose as stated in the table; for induction by estradiol, 100 nM hormone is added 2 hours before the cells are harvested.




The tests of beta-galactosidase activity are performed in a traditional manner (West R. W. jr., Yocum R. R. and Ptashne M., Mol. Cell. Biol., 4, 2467-2478 (1984)).




EXAMPLE 4




Integration of a Complementary DNA Coding for hER in the Genome of a Yeast Strain




Preparation of the Expression Vector Carrying a Cassette for the Expression of hER Inserted into the PRC1 Gene (pTG3809)




The cassette for the expression of hER is inserted into a fragment of the PRC1 gene in order to obtain, after transformation of a yeast strain with pTG3809, a yeast strain displaying elimination of the proteolytic function encoded by the PRC1 gene.




In the first place, a cassette for the expression of hER (M13TG2896) is prepared in the following manner:




the yeast PGK promoter (HindIII-BglII fragment) and its terminator (HindIII-BglII fragment) are introduced into phage M13TG130 (Kieny, M. P. et al. (1983), Gene 26, p. 91-99) linearized by HindIII digestion, to give phage M13 TG2890,




the BamHI fragment derived from pKCR2-hER carrying the human estrogen receptor is introduced into M13TG2890 linearized by BglII digestion, to give a cassette for the expression of hER referred to as M13TG2896.




This cassette for the expression of hER is then inserted into the PRC1 gene to give plasmid pTG3809 permitting its integration in the yeast genome.




The sequence of the PRC1 gene has been published by Valls, L. A. et al. (1987) (Cell 48, p. 887-897). Two oligonucleotides are constructed from this sequence. The first is complementary to the 5′ region of the gene, and its sequence is as follows:




5′ AAG AAA GAC TGG GAC TTT GTG 3′ (SEQ ID NO: 9)




The second is complementary to the 3′ region of the gene, and its sequence is as follows:




5′ GAT TGG ATG AAG CCT TAC CAC 3′ (SEQ ID NO: 10)




From a yeast genomic library (chromosomal DNA fragments partially digested with Sau3A, inserted into the BamHI site of pFL1 (Parent, S. A. et al. (1985), Yeast 1, p. 83-138)), and by hybridization with these two oligonucleotides, an


E. coli


clone containing the PRC1 gene inserted into pFL1, and referred to as pTG2863, is selected.




The 1.1-kb BamHI fragment of pTG2863 carrying a portion of the coding sequence of the PRC1 gene is introduced into the BamHI site of plasmid pUC8. This insertion takes place in tandem and plasmid pTG2893 (

FIG. 5



a


) is obtained.




The coordinates of the first base of the restriction sites, relative to the adenine of the ATG of the PRC1 coding sequence, are as follows: BamHI-1: 482; EcoRV-1: 1102; EcoRV-2: 1153; EcoRV-3: 1234 and BamHI-2: 1574.




A deletion in the PRC1 coding sequence is accomplished by EcoRV digestion of pTG2893 to give pTG2894 (

FIG. 5



b


).




The cassette for the expression of hER is introduced into the deleted inner fragment of the PRC1 gene of pTG2894 in the following manner: the expression cassette (M13TG2896) is digested with BamHI, the ends are filled in with Klenow polymerase and, after cleavage with EcoRV, fragment is isolated. This fragment carries the complete cassette; it is introduced into the EcoRV site of pTG2894 to give plasmid pTG3809 (FIG.


6


), which carries, between two fragments of PRC1:




several recognition sites for the restriction enzymes SphI, XbaI and KpnI originating from M13TG130,




the PGK terminator yeast,




the complementary DNA of hER,




the PGK promoter of the yeast.




Transformation of the Yeast Strain with the Plasmid Carrying the hER Expression Cassette Inserted into a Fragment of the Deleted PRC1 Gene (pTG3809)




The yeast strain transformed is


S. cerevisiae


TGY2sp13b (MATa; ura3-251, -373, -328; leu2-3, -112).




Plasmid pTG3809 is cleaved with BamHI. The DNA sequences of the ends of the fragment thereby isolated are homologous with those of the PRC1 gene sequence. These sequences will enable the fragment to be integrated in the genomic portion of the PRC1 gene of the yeast strain. This insertion leads to destruction of the genomic PRC1 gene by deletion.




Since the fragment does not carry a selection marker, plasmid pLRERE3 is used as a cotransformation vector. It permits the selection of Ura


+


prototrophs. Among Ura


+


prototrophs, the clones which have integrated the hER expression cassette carry a mutation in the PRC1 gene which leads to a loss of activity of carboxypeptidase yscY. These mutants are detected by a colorimetric test (Jones, E. W. (1977), Genetics 85, p. 23-33). The structure of the modified PRC1 locus is verified by Southern's method.




This


S. cerevisiae


strain which has integrated the cassette for the expression of hER in the deleted PRC1 gene is referred to as TGY2sp13b prc1-d :: hER.




Construction of a Plasmid Carrying the ERE3 Sequence and a Fragment of the PGK Gene Promoter (pGT3851)




An XhoI site is introduced into the vector M13TG2890 at the 5′, 3′ junction of the ends of the deletion accomplished by direct mutagenesis using the following oligonucleotide:




-506 . . . -401




5′ AATTACCGTCGCTCG AGCGACGGCTCACAG 3′ (SEQ ID NO:11)




XhoI




to give the vector M13TG3829 (FIG.


7


). The positions indicated are specified relative to the ATG of the PGK gene. The deleted form of the PGK promoter will be designed hereinafter PGK-dp401. The conformity of the sequence is then verified by sequencing.




This vector carries the TATA sequence and the transcription initiation site, the second activator sequence downstream designated HSE from -256 to -377 (Piper, P. W. et al. (1988), Nucleic Acids Res. 16, p. 1333), but no longer carries the UAS from -402 to -479. The XhoI site permits ligation with the ERE3 sequence, and the BglII site the introduction of a gene which enables an activity to be detected by an enzymatic test.




The host strain for the M13 phages is


E. coli


strain JM103 (delta(lac, pro), thi, strA, supE, endA, sbcB, hsdR, F′traD36, proAB, lacIQ, lacZdeltaM15).




Plasmid pLRERE3 is digested with XmaI and EcoRI. The DNA fragment containing the ERE3 sequences is purified on agarose gel and then inserted into the XmaI-EcoRI sites of plasmid pTZ18R (Pharmacia, LKB Biotechnology) to give plasmid pTG3833. The host strain for the plasmids is


E. coli


strain 1106 (supE, hsdR, hsdM, met, supF).




Phase M13TG3829 (

FIG. 7

) is treated with XhoI and EcoRI and is then inserted at the XhoI-EcoRI site of plasmid pTG3833 to give pTG3834.




The lacZ gene is excised from pCH110 (Hall, C. V. et al. (1983), J. Mol. Appl. Gen. 2, p. 101-109) by HindIII-BamHI digestion and cloned into pPolyII (Lathe, R. et al. (1987), Gene 57 p. 193-201) to give pTG1174. Plasmid pTG2145 corresponds to plasmid pTG1174 in which the HindIII, PstI and SalI sites have been eliminated. It contains, in a BglII-BamHI fragment, the following


E. coli


gene fusion: gpt :: trDS :: lacZ.




The sequences in the vicinity of the ATG are modified so as to permit the correct translation in yeast in the following manner:




pTG2145 is digested with BglII and KpnI and the 200-base pair fragment containing the ATG is purified on acrylamide gel;




this fragment is inserted at the BamHI-KpnI sites of phage M13TG131 (Kieny, M. P. et al. (1983), Gene 26, p. 91-99) to give M13TG3838;




the “AGC” sequence corresponding to the second codon for a serine of M13TG3838 is exchanged for the sequence “TCT”, the cytosines at positions -3 and -1 relative to the ATG are replaced by adenines and a BglII site is generated on the 5′ side of the ATG to permit a fusion with genes to be inserted downstream from the hybrid promoter, by performing a directed mutagenesis using the following oligonucleotide:




5′ CGATGTATTTTTCAGACATTTTAAGATCTCCAGCCTGTTT 3′ (SEQ ID NO: 12) to give phage M13TG3842. The bases modified during this mutagenesis are underlined below:




GACACTTCACATGAGC- (M13TG3838) (SEQ ID NO: 14)




AGATCTTAAAATGTCT- (M13TG3842) (SEQ ID NO: 15)




The 130-base pair BglII-KpnI fragment of M13TG3842 is introduced into pTG2145 to replace the 200-base pair BglII-KpnI fragment therein. Plasmid pTG3843 is thereby obtained.




Plasmid pTG848 (

FIG. 1

) is digested with BglII and then religated to give pTG2886. The large HindIII-EcoRI fragment of pTG2886 is ligated in the presence of T4 ligaseth BwlII and thHindIII-EcoRI fragment of plasmid pFL1 (Parent S. A. et al. (1985), Yeast 1, p. 83-138) which carries a sequence of the


S. cerevisiae


plasmid, to give plasmid pTG2886 LEU2-d, URA3-d. The 0.9-kb HindIII fragment of plasmid pTG2800 described in the European publication of Patent EP-A-0,258,501 carrying the URA3-d gene is then inserted into the HindIII site of this plasmid to give pTG2886 URA3-d, delta LEU2-d. The SmaI-BglII fragment of M13TG131 (Kieny, M. P. et al. (1983), Gene 26, p. 91-99) which possesses several restriction sites is then introduced into this plasmid to give pTG3828.




Plasmid pTG3843 is digested with BglII and BamHI, and the fragment carrying the lacZ fusion gene is purified on agarose gel. This fragment is then inserted at the BglII site of pTG3846 (FIG.


8


).




The plasmid pTG3834 is digested with XmaI and BglII, and the fragment is introduced into the XmaI and BglII site of pTG3846 to give plasmid pTG3851 (FIG.


8


).




Inducible Expression of lacZ






S. cerevisiae


strain TGY2sp13b prc1-d :: hER is relieved of its cotransformation plasmid pLRERE3 and then transformed with plasmid pTG3851 by the lithium acetate method (Ito, H. et al. (1983), J. Bacteriol. 153, p. 163-168), and the Ura


+


prototrophs are selected. They are then cultured in an Erlenmeyer at 30° C. on a selective medium (0.7% of nitrogenous bases for yeasts without amino acids (Yeast Nitrogen Bases), 0.5% of casamino acids, 2% of glucose and, if necessary, 2% of agar). These cultures are set up with or without estradiol. For induction with estradiol, 100 nM hormone is added 2 hours before the cells are harvested. The cells are harvested, washed and ground in the presence of protease inhibitors, and the cell debris is then precipitated by centrifugation (10,000 rpm). The protein concentration is determined in the supernatant by the method described by Bradford (1976) (Anal. Biochem. 72, p. 248), and then the beta-galactosidase activity by the same assay method as that described in Example 3. The beta-galactosidase activity is also determined by the method used in Example 3; the assay is performed on permeabilized cells.




Table 2 shows the basal activity (in the absence of estradiol, [−(Est)]) and induced activity (in the presence of estradiol, [+(Est)]) of beta-galactosidase under the control of the ERE3 :: PGK-dp hybrid promoters. This activity is expressed as nmol of ONPG (O-nitro-phenyl-beta-D-glucopyranoside) hydrolyzed per minute and per mg of protein at 30° C.; the values in brackets are directly comparable with those shown in Table 1, expressed in “units”. The inducibility corresponds to the ratio specific activity without estradiol/specific activity with estradiol.

















TABLE 2











Vector: PGK





Specific activity




Inducibility





























promoter




− (Est)




+ (Est)








pTG3851:PGK-dp401




20 (30)




460 (770)




23















EXAMPLE 5




Preparation of a Vector for the Expression of Beta-galactosidase in Yeast which Also Carries a Sequence Coding for the hERG Receptor (pYERE1/hERG)




The starting material is plasmid pYERE1/hER. Using the following oligonucleotide:




5′GGAGCACCCAGGGAAGCTACTGT-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 13)




A mutation in the GTG codon coding for valine in the complementary DNA coding for the human estrogen receptor (hER) is produced by localized mutagenesis in the following manner: the complementary DNA coding for the hER receptor described by Green et al. (1986) (Nature 320, p. 134-139) is subcloned into the EcoRI site of the eukaryotic expression vector pSG


1


described by Green et al. (1988) (Nucl. Acids Res. 16, p. 369). The single-stranded DNA is then prepared and a point mutation is produced by localized mutagenesis in the GTG codon coding for valine at position 400 so as to obtain a GGG codon coding for glycine, using the oligonucleotide defined above (the change in nucleotide is underlined). The DNA sequences are verified. The vector pYERE1/hERG is then constructed by inserting the hERG complementary DNA into the vector pYERE1/hER.




EXAMPLE 6




Expression, Inducible by Estradiol, of Beta-galactosidase in Yeasts Containing the Vector pYER1/hERG




The conditions of transformation and culturing of the cells are identical to those described above. When the optical density reaches 600, 10 nM estradiol is added.

FIG. 9

shows that 50% of the maximal beta-galactosidase activity is obtained for an estradiol concentration of 5 nM with pYERE1/hERG (triangles), whereas with pYERE1/hER (circles) a concentration of approximately 50 nM is required.




Moreover, it was possible to observe that the mutation which replaces val-400 by gly-400 in the estradiol-binding domain stabilizes the structure of the receptor and increases its affinity for estradiol to 25° C.




Saccharomyces strain TGY 14-1a pYERE3/hER was deposited with the Collection Nationale de Cultures de Microorganismes (CNCM) (National Collection of Micro-organism Cultures) of the Institut Pasteur—25 rue du Docteur-Roux, 75724 Paris Cédex 15 (France) on Jun. 17, 1988 under No. I-770.







15





6450 base pairs


nucleic acid


single


linear




DNA (genomic)



1
GAGTTGTGCC TGGAGTGATG TTTAAGCCAA TGTCAGGGCA AGGCAACAGT CCCTGGCCGT 60
CCTCCAGCAC CTTTGTAATG CATATGAGCT CGGGAGACCA GTACTTAAAG TTGGAGGCCC 120
GGGAGCCCAG GAGCTGGCGG AGGGCGTTCG TCCTGGGAGC TGCACTTGCT CCGTCGGGTC 180
GCCGGCTTCA CCGGACCGCA GGCTCCCGGG GCAGGGCCGG GGCCAGAGCT CGCGTGTCGG 240
CGGGACATGC GCTGCGTCGC CTCTAACCTC GGGCTGTGCT CTTTTTCCAG GTGGCCCGCC 300
GGTTTCTGAG CCTTCTGCCC TGCGGGGACA CGGTCTGCAC CCTGCCCGCG GCCACGGACC 360
ATGACCATGA CCCTCCACAC CAAAGCATCT GGGATGGCCC TACTGCATCA GATCCAAGGG 420
AACGAGCTGG AGCCCCTGAA CCGTCCGCAG CTCAAGATCC CCCTGGAGCG GCCCCTGGGC 480
GAGGTGTACC TGGACAGCAG CAAGCCCGCC GTGTACAACT ACCCCGAGGG CGCCGCCTAC 540
GAGTTCAACG CCGCGGCCGC CGCCAACGCG CAGGTCTACG GTCAGACCGG CCTCCCCTAC 600
GGCCCCGGGT CTGAGGCTGC GGCGTTCGGC TCCAACGGCC TGGGGGGTTT CCCCCCACTC 660
AACAGCGTGT CTCCGAGCCC GCTGATGCTA CTGCACCCGC CGCCGCAGCT GTCGCCTTTC 720
CTGCAGCCCC ACGGCCAGCA GGTGCCCTAC TACCTGGAGA ACGAGCCCAG CGGCTACACG 780
GTGCGCGAGG CCGGCCCGCC GGCATTCTAC AGGCCAAATT CAGATAATCG ACGCCAGGGT 840
GGCAGAGAAA GATTGGCCAG TACCAATGAC AAGGGAAGTA TGGCTATGGA ATCTGCCAAG 900
GAGACTCGCT ACTGTGCAGT GTGCAATGAC TATGCTTCAG GCTACCATTA TGGAGTCTGG 960
TCCTGTGAGG GCTGCAAGGC CTTCTTCAAG AGAAGTATTC AAGGACATAA CGACTATATG 1020
TGTCCAGCCA CCAACCAGTG CACCATTGAT AAAAACAGGA GGAAGAGCTG CCAGGCCTGC 1080
CGGCTCCGCA AATGCTACGA AGTGGGAATG ATGAAAGGTG GGATACGAAA AGACCGAAGA 1140
GGAGGGAGAA TGTTGAAACA CAAGCGCCAG AGAGATGATG GGGAGGGCAG GGGTGAAGTG 1200
GGGTCTGCTG GAGACATGAG AGCTGCCAAC CTTTGGCCAA GCCCGCTCAT GATCAAACGC 1260
TCTAAGAAGA ACAGCCTGGC CTTGTCCCTG ACGGCCGACC AGATGGTCAG TGCCTTGTTG 1320
GATGCTGAGC CCCCCATACT CTATTCCGAG TATGATCCTA CCAGACCCTT CAGTGAAGCT 1380
TCGATGATGG GCTTACTGAC CAACCTGGCA GACAGGGAGC TGGTTCACAT GATCAACTGG 1440
GCGAAGAGGG TGCCAGGCTT TGTGGATTTG ACCCTCCATG ATCAGGTCCA CCTTCTAGAA 1500
TGTGCCTGGC TAGAGATCCT GATGATTGGT CTCGTCTGGC GCTCCATGGA GCACCCAGTG 1560
AAGCTACTGT TTGCTCCTAA CTTGCTCTTG GACAGGAACC AGGGAAAATG TGTAGAGGGC 1620
ATGGTGGAGA TCTTCGACAT GCTGCTGGCT ACATCATCTC GGTTCCGCAT GATGAATCTG 1680
CAGGGAGAGG AGTTTGTGTG CCTCAAATCT ATTATTTTGC TTAATTCTGG AGTGTACACA 1740
TTTCTGTCCA GCACCCTGAA GTCTCTGGAA GAGAAGGACC ATATCCACCG AGTCCTGGAC 1800
AAGATCACAG ACACTTTGAT CCACCTGATG GCCAAGGCAG GCCTGACCCT GCAGCAGCAG 1860
CACCAGCGGC TGGCCCAGCT CCTCCTCATC CTCTCCCACA TCAGGCACAT GAGTAACAAA 1920
GGCATGGAGC ATCTGTACAG CATGAAGTGC AAGAACGTGG TGCCCCTCTA TGACCTGCTG 1980
CTGGAGATGC TGGACGCCCA CCGCCTACAT GCGCCCACTA GCCGTGGAGG GGCATCCGTG 2040
GAGGAGACGG ACCAAAGCCA CTTGGCCACT GCGGGCTCTA CTTCATCGCA TTCCTTGCAA 2100
AAGTATTACA TCACGGGGGA GGCAGAGGGT TTCCCTGCCA CAGTCTGAGA GCTCCCTGGC 2160
TCCCACACGG TTCAGATAAT CCCTGCTGCA TTTTACCCTC ATCATGCACC ACTTTAGCCA 2220
AATTCTGTCT CCTGCATACA CTCCGGCATG CATCCAACAC CAATGGCTTT CTAGATGAGT 2280
GGCCATTCAT TTGCTTGCTC AGTTCTTAGT GGCACATCTT CTGTCTTCTG TTGGGAACAG 2340
CCAAAGGGAT TCCAAGGCTA AATCTTTGTA ACAGCTCTCT TTCCCCCTTG CTATGTTACT 2400
AAGCGTGAGG ATTCCCGTAG CTCTTCACAG CTGAACTCAG TCTATGGGTT GGGGCTCAGA 2460
TAACTCTGTG CATTTAAGCT ACTTGTAGAG ACCCAGGCCT GGAGAGTAGA CATTTTGCCT 2520
CTGATAAGCA CTTTTTAAAT GGCTCTAAGA ATAAGCCACA GCAAAGAATT TAAAGTGGCT 2580
CCTTTAATTG GTGACTTGGA GAAAGCTAGG TCAAGGGTTT ATTATAGCAC CCTCTTGTAT 2640
TCCTATGGCA ATGCATCCTT TTATGAAAGT GGTACACCTT AAAGCTTTTA TATGACTGTA 2700
GCAGAGTATC TGGTGATTGT CAATTCACTT CCCCCTATAG GAATACAAGG GGCCACACAG 2760
GGAAGGCAGA TCCCCTAGTT GGCCAAGACT TATTTTAACT TGATACACTG CAGATTCAGA 2820
GTGTCCTGAA GCTCTGCCTC TGGCTTTCCG GTCATGGGTT CCAGTTAATT CATGCCTCCC 2880
ATGGACCTAT GGAGAGCAAC AAGTTGATCT TAGTTAAGTC TCCCTATATG AGGGATAAGT 2940
TCCTGATTTT TGTTTTTATT TTTGTGTTAC AAAAGAAAGC CCTCCCTCCC TGAACTTGCA 3000
GTAAGGTCAG CTTCAGGACC TGTTCCAGTG GGCACTGTAC TTGGATCTTC CCGGCGTGTG 3060
TGTGCCTTAC ACAGGGGTGA ACTGTTCACT GTGGTGATGC ATGATGAGGG TAAATGGTAG 3120
TTGAAAGGAG CAGGGGCCCT GGTGTTGCAT TTAGCCCTGG GGCATGGAGC TGAACAGTAC 3180
TTGTGCAGGA TTGTTGTGGC TACTAGAGAA CAAGAGGGAA AGTAGGGCAG AAACTGGATA 3240
CAGTTCTGAG CACAGCCAGA CTTGCTCAGG TGGCCCTGCA CAGGCTGCAG CTACCTAGGA 3300
ACATTCCTTG CAGACCCCGC ATTGCCTTTG GGGGTGCCCT GGGATCCCTG GGGTAGTCCA 3360
GCTCTTATTC ATTTCCCAGC GTGGCCCTGG TTGGAAGAAG CAGCTGTCAA GTTGTAGACA 3420
GCTGTGTTCC TACAATTGGC CCAGCACCCT GGGGCACGGG AGAAGGGTGG GGACCGTTGC 3480
TGTCACTACT CAGGCTGACT GGGGCCTGGT CAGATTACGT ATGCCCTTGG TGGTTTAGAG 3540
ATAATCCAAA ATCAGGGTTT GGTTTGGGGA AGAAAATCCT CCCCCTTCCT CCCCCGCCCC 3600
GTTCCCTACC GCCTCCACTC CTGCCAGCTC ATTTCCTTCA ATTTCCTTTG ACCTATAGGC 3660
TAAAAAAGAA AGGCTCATTC CAGCCACAGG GCAGCCTTCC CTGGGCCTTT GCTTCTCTAG 3720
CACAATTATG GGTTACTTCC TTTTTCTTAA CAAAAAAGAA TGTTTGATTT CCTCTGGGTG 3780
ACCTTATTGT CTGTAATTGA AACCCTATTG AGAGGTGATG TCTGTGTTAG CCAATGACCC 3840
AGGTAGCTGC TCGGGCTTCT CTTGGTATGT CTTGTTTGGA AAAGTGGATT TCATTCATTT 3900
CTGATTGTCC AGTTAAGTGA TCACCAAAGG ACTGAGAATC TGGGAGGGCA AAAAAAAAAA 3960
AAAAAGTTTT TATGTGCACT TAAATTTGGG GACAATTTTA TGTATCTGTG TTAAGGATAT 4020
GCTTAAGAAC ATAATTCTTT TGTTGCTGTT TGTTTAAGAA GCACCTTAGT TTGTTTAAGA 4080
AGCACCTTAT ATAGTATAAT ATATATTTTT TTGAAATTAC ATTGCTTGTT TATCAGACAA 4140
TTGAATGTAG TAATTCTGTT CTGGATTTAA TTTGACTGGG TTAACATGCA AAAACCAAGG 4200
AAAAATATTT AGTTTTTTTT TTTTTTTTTG TATACTTTTC AAGCTACCTT GTCATGTATA 4260
CAGTCATTTA TGCCTAAAGC CTGGTGATTA TTCATTTAAA TGAAGATCAC ATTTCATATC 4320
AACTTTTGTA TCCACAGTAG ACAAAATAGC ACTAATCCAG ATGCCTATTG TTGGATATTG 4380
AATGACAGAC AATCTTATGT AGCAAAGATT ATGCCTGAAA AGGAAAATTA TTCAGGGCAG 4440
CTAATTTTGC TTTTACCAAA ATATCAGTAG TAATATTTTT GGACAGTAGC TAATGGGTCA 4500
GTGGGTTCTT TTTAATGTTT ATACTTAGAT TTTCTTTTAA AAAAATTAAA ATAAAACAAA 4560
AAAAATTTCT AGGACTAGAC GATGTAATAC CAGCTAAAGC CAAACAATTA TACAGTGGAA 4620
GGTTTTACAT TATTCATCCA ATGTGTTTCT ATTCATGTTA AGATACTACT ACATTTGAAG 4680
TGGGCAGAGA ACATCAGATG ATTGAAATGT TCGCCCAGGG GTCTCCAGCA ACTTTGGAAA 4740
TCTCTTTGTA TTTTTACTTG AAGTGCCACT AATGGACAGC AGATATTTTC TGGCTGATGT 4800
TGGTATTGGG TGTAGGAACA TGATTTAAAA AAAAAACTCT TGCCTCTGCT TTCCCCCACT 4860
CTGAGGCAAG TTAAAATGTA AAAGATGTGA TTTATCTGGG GGGCTCAGGT ATGGTGGGGA 4920
AGTGGATTCA GGAATCTGGG GAATGGCAAA TATATTAAGA AGAGTATTGA AAGTATTTGG 4980
AGGAAAATGG TTAATTCTGG GTGTGCACCA AGGTTCAGTA GAGTCCACTT CTGCCCTGGA 5040
GACCACAAAT CAACTAGCTC CATTTACAGC CATTTCTAAA ATGGCAGCTT CAGTTCTAGA 5100
GAAGAAAGAA CAACATCAGC AGTAAAGTCC ATGGAATAGC TAGTGGTCTG TGTTTCTTTT 5160
CGCCATTGCC TAGCTTGCCG TAATGATTCT ATAATGCCAT CATGCAGCAA TTATGAGAGG 5220
CTAGGTCATC CAAAGAGAAG ACCCTATCAA TGTAGGTTGC AAAATCTAAC CCCTAAGGAA 5280
GTGCAGTCTT TGATTTGATT TCCCTAGTAA CCTTGCAGAT ATGTTTAACC AAGCCATAGC 5340
CCATGCCTTT TGAGGGCTGA ACAAATAAGG GACTTACTGA TAATTTACTT TTGATCACAT 5400
TAAGGTGTTC TCACCTTGAA ATCTTATACA CTGAAATGGC CATTGATTTA GGCCACTGGC 5460
TTAGAGTACT CCTTCCCCTG CATGACACTG ATTACAAATA CTTTCCTATT CATACTTTCC 5520
AATTATGAGA TGGACTGTGG GTACTGGGAG TGATCACTAA CACCATAGTA ATGTCTAATA 5580
TTCACAGGCA GATCTGCTTG GGGAAGCTAG TTATGTGAAA GGCAAATAAA GTCATACAGT 5640
AGCTCAAAAG GCAACCATAA TTCTCTTTGG TGCAAGTCTT GGGAGCGTGA TCTAGATTAC 5700
ACTGCACCAT TCCCAAGTTA ATCCCCTGAA AACTTACTCT CAACTGGAGC AAATGAACTT 5760
TGGTCCCAAA TATCCATCTT TTCAGTAGCG TTAATTATGC TCTGTTTCCA ACTGCATTTC 5820
CTTTCCAATT GAATTAAAGT GTGGCCTCGT TTTTAGTCAT TTAAAATTGT TTTCTAAGTA 5880
ATTGCTGCCT CTATTATGGC ACTTCAATTT TGCACTGTCT TTTGAGATTC AAGAAAAATT 5940
TCTATTCATT TTTTTGCATC CAATTGTGCC TGAACTTTTA AAATATGTAA ATGCTGCCAT 6000
GTTCCAAACC CATCGTCAGT GTGTGTGTTT AGAGCTGTGC ACCCTAGAAA CAACATACTT 6060
GTCCCATGAG CAGGTGCCTG AGACACAGAC CCCTTTGCAT TCACAGAGAG GTCATTGGTT 6120
ATAGAGACTT GAATTAATAA GTGACATTAT GCCAGTTTCT GTTCTCTCAC AGGTGATAAA 6180
CAATGCTTTT TGTGCACTAC ATACTCTTCA GTGTAGAGCT CTTGTTTTAT GGGAAAAGGC 6240
TCAAATGCCA AATTGTGTTT GATGGATTAA TATGCCCTTT TGCCGATGCA TACTATTACT 6300
GATGTGACTC GGTTTTGTCG CAGCTTTGCT TTGTTTAATG AAACACACTT GTAAACCTCT 6360
TTTGCACTTT GAAAAAGAAT CCAGCGGGAT GCTCGAGCAC CTGTAAACAA TTTTCTCAAC 6420
CTATTTGATG TTCAAATAAA GAATTAAACT 6450






595 amino acids


amino acid


single


linear




peptide



2
Met Thr Met Thr Leu His Thr Lys Ala Ser Gly Met Ala Leu Leu His
1 5 10 15
Gln Ile Gln Gly Asn Glu Leu Glu Pro Leu Asn Arg Pro Gln Leu Lys
20 25 30
Ile Pro Leu Glu Arg Pro Leu Gly Glu Val Tyr Leu Asp Ser Ser Lys
35 40 45
Pro Ala Val Tyr Asn Tyr Pro Glu Gly Ala Ala Tyr Glu Phe Asn Ala
50 55 60
Ala Ala Ala Ala Asn Ala Gln Val Tyr Gly Gln Thr Gly Leu Pro Tyr
65 70 75 80
Gly Pro Gly Ser Glu Ala Ala Ala Phe Gly Ser Asn Gly Leu Gly Gly
85 90 95
Phe Pro Pro Leu Asn Ser Val Ser Pro Ser Pro Leu Met Leu Leu His
100 105 110
Pro Pro Pro Gln Leu Ser Pro Phe Leu Gln Pro His Gly Gln Gln Val
115 120 125
Pro Tyr Tyr Leu Glu Asn Glu Pro Ser Gly Tyr Thr Val Arg Glu Ala
130 135 140
Gly Pro Pro Ala Phe Tyr Arg Pro Asn Ser Asp Asn Arg Arg Gln Gly
145 150 155 160
Gly Arg Glu Arg Leu Ala Ser Thr Asn Asp Lys Gly Ser Met Ala Met
165 170 175
Glu Ser Ala Lys Glu Thr Arg Tyr Cys Ala Val Cys Asn Asp Tyr Ala
180 185 190
Ser Gly Tyr His Tyr Gly Val Trp Ser Cys Glu Gly Cys Lys Ala Phe
195 200 205
Phe Lys Arg Ser Ile Gln Gly His Asn Asp Tyr Met Cys Pro Ala Thr
210 215 220
Asn Gln Cys Thr Ile Asp Lys Asn Arg Arg Lys Ser Cys Gln Ala Cys
225 230 235 240
Arg Leu Arg Lys Cys Tyr Glu Val Gly Met Met Lys Gly Gly Ile Arg
245 250 255
Lys Asp Arg Arg Gly Gly Arg Met Leu Lys His Lys Arg Gln Arg Asp
260 265 270
Asp Gly Glu Gly Arg Gly Glu Val Gly Ser Ala Gly Asp Met Arg Ala
275 280 285
Ala Asn Leu Trp Pro Ser Pro Leu Met Ile Lys Arg Ser Lys Lys Asn
290 295 300
Ser Leu Ala Leu Ser Leu Thr Ala Asp Gln Met Val Ser Ala Leu Leu
305 310 315 320
Asp Ala Glu Pro Pro Ile Leu Tyr Ser Glu Tyr Asp Pro Thr Arg Pro
325 330 335
Phe Ser Glu Ala Ser Met Met Gly Leu Leu Thr Asn Leu Ala Asp Arg
340 345 350
Glu Leu Val His Met Ile Asn Trp Ala Lys Arg Val Pro Gly Phe Val
355 360 365
Asp Leu Thr Leu His Asp Gln Val His Leu Leu Glu Cys Ala Trp Leu
370 375 380
Glu Ile Leu Met Ile Gly Leu Val Trp Arg Ser Met Glu His Pro Val
385 390 395 400
Lys Leu Leu Phe Ala Pro Asn Leu Leu Leu Asp Arg Asn Gln Gly Lys
405 410 415
Cys Val Glu Gly Met Val Glu Ile Phe Asp Met Leu Leu Ala Thr Ser
420 425 430
Ser Arg Phe Arg Met Met Asn Leu Gln Gly Glu Glu Phe Val Cys Leu
435 440 445
Lys Ser Ile Ile Leu Leu Asn Ser Gly Val Tyr Thr Phe Leu Ser Ser
450 455 460
Thr Leu Lys Ser Leu Glu Glu Lys Asp His Ile His Arg Val Leu Asp
465 470 475 480
Lys Ile Thr Asp Thr Leu Ile His Leu Met Ala Lys Ala Gly Leu Thr
485 490 495
Leu Gln Gln Gln His Gln Arg Leu Ala Gln Leu Leu Leu Ile Leu Ser
500 505 510
His Ile Arg His Met Ser Asn Lys Gly Met Glu His Leu Tyr Ser Met
515 520 525
Lys Cys Lys Asn Val Val Pro Leu Tyr Asp Leu Leu Leu Glu Met Leu
530 535 540
Asp Ala His Arg Leu His Ala Pro Thr Ser Arg Gly Gly Ala Ser Val
545 550 555 560
Glu Glu Thr Asp Gln Ser His Leu Ala Thr Ala Gly Ser Thr Ser Ser
565 570 575
His Ser Leu Gln Lys Tyr Tyr Ile Thr Gly Glu Ala Glu Gly Phe Pro
580 585 590
Ala Thr Val
595






18 base pairs


nucleic acid


single


linear




DNA (genomic)



3
CCGGGTCTAG AAGATCTA 18






18 base pairs


nucleic acid


single


linear




DNA (genomic)



4
CAGATCTTCT AGATTCGA 18






36 base pairs


nucleic acid


single


linear




DNA (genomic)



5
GATCCAATAT TCCTGGTCAG GCGTGACCGG AGCTGA 36






35 base pairs


nucleic acid


single


linear




DNA (genomic)



6
GTTATAAGGA CCAGTCGCAC TGGCCTCGAC TCTAG 35






35 base pairs


nucleic acid


single


linear




DNA (genomic)



7
GATCCAATAT TCCCCGTCAG CGTGACCGGA GCTGA 35






35 base pairs


nucleic acid


single


linear




DNA (genomic)



8
GTTATAAGGG GCAGTCGCAC TGGCCTCGAC TCTAG 35






21 base pairs


nucleic acid


single


linear




DNA (genomic)



9
AAGAAAGACT GGGACTTTGT G 21






21 base pairs


nucleic acid


single


linear




DNA (genomic)



10
GATTGGATGA AGCCTTACCA C 21






30 base pairs


nucleic acid


single


linear




DNA (genomic)



11
AATTACCGTC GCTCGAGCGA CGGCTCACAG 30






40 base pairs


nucleic acid


single


linear




DNA (genomic)



12
CGATGTATTT TTCAGACATT TTAAGATCTC CAGCCTGTTT 40






23 base pairs


nucleic acid


single


linear




DNA (genomic)



13
GGAGCACCCA GGGAAGCTAC TGT 23






16 base pairs


nucleic acid


single


linear




DNA (genomic)



14
GACACTTCAC ATGAGC 16






16 base pairs


nucleic acid


single


linear




DNA (genomic)



15
AGATCTTAAA ATGTCT 16







Claims
  • 1. A method of preparing a heterologous protein that comprises:i) transforming a yeast cell with: a) a first DNA fragment encoding said heterologous protein under control of elements providing for expression of said first DNA fragment in yeast, said elements comprising a higher eucaryotic positive transcription control sequence selected from the group consisting of a natural ligand responsive element activating sequence or a variant of a natural ligand responsive element activating sequence which is a palindromic sequence or a repetition of a palindromic sequence and which retains the function of a natural ligand responsive element activating sequence in a test of inducible expression of β-galactosidase in yeast, that is induced by a higher eucaryotic receptor complexed with a ligand, and b) a second DNA fragment that is functional in yeast and that encodes said receptor under control of elements providing for expression of said receptor in yeast, wherein said receptor is a natural nuclear receptor selected from the group consisting of receptors for steroids or for retinoids or for thyroid hormones or for vitamin D3, and variants of said receptors which retain the function of said receptors in yeast, wherein said receptor comprises a first fragment that recognizes said ligand and a second fragment that binds to said transcriptional control sequence; ii) culturing said transformed yeast cell resulting from step (i) in the presence of said ligand complexed with the said expressed receptor whereby said transcription control sequence is induced and said heterologous protein is thereby produced; and iii) isolating said heterologous protein.
  • 2. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the liqand responsive element activating sequence is an estrogen responsive element.
  • 3. The method as claimed in claim 1 wherein the receptor is an estrogen receptor, said ligand is an estrogen and the portion of the receptor that recognizes the ligand is obtained from the human estrogen receptor (hER).
  • 4. The method as claimed in claim 3, wherein the ligand responsive element activating sequence is an estrogen responsive element directly repeated two times.
  • 5. The method as claimed in claim 1 wherein the fragment of the receptor that recognizes the ligand is obtained from the human estrogen receptor which has glycine instead of a valine in amino acid position 400 (hERG receptor) as shown in Seq:Id No: 2, the ligand being an estrogen.
  • 6. The method as claimed in claim 5, wherein estradiol is added at a concentration of between 2 nM and 50 nM.
  • 7. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein, in the yeast, the first DNA fragment encoding said protein under the control of elements providing for expression of said second DNA fragment in yeasts or the DNA fragment encoding said receptor occurs on a plasmid containing an origin of replication functional in yeast.
  • 8. The method as claimed in claim 7, wherein said first DNA fragment and said second DNA fragment occur on the same plasmid.
  • 9. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the DNA fragment encoding for the said receptor is carried by a chromosome of the yeast.
  • 10. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein said yeast is deficient in proteases.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
88 08978 Jul 1988 FR
Parent Case Info

This is a continuation of application Ser. No. 08/161,064, filed on Dec. 3, 1993, which was abandoned upon the filing hereof which is a cont. of Ser. No. 08/044,079 filed Apr. 6, 1993 now abandoned, which is a cont. of Ser. No. 07/798,993 filed Dec. 2, 1991 now abandoned, which is a cont. of Ser. No. 07/373,524 filed Jun. 30, 1989 now abandoned.

US Referenced Citations (2)
Number Name Date Kind
5071773 Evans et al. Dec 1991 A
5175105 Meyhack et al. Dec 1992 A
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number Date Country
0258067 Feb 1988 EP
Non-Patent Literature Citations (21)
Entry
Martinez et al. 1987. Embo J. 6, 3719-3727.*
Strathern et al. 1981. in: The Molecular Biology of the Yeast Saccharomyces-Life Cycle and Inheritance. Cold Spring Hrbor Laboratory. Cold Spring Harbor, NY. p. 99.*
Green et al. 1986 Nature 320, 134-139.*
West et al. 1984 Molec. Cell. Biol. 4, 2467-2478.*
Jost et al. 1984 Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 81, 429-433.*
Feldman et al. 1984. Proc. Natl. Acad Sci. USA. 81, 4722-4726.*
Feldman et al. 1984 Science. 224, 1109-1111.*
Burshell et al. 1984. J. Biol. Chem. 259, 3430-3456.*
Feldman et al. 1982 Science 218, 297-299.*
Cushing et al. 1986. Trans. Ill. Acad. Sci. 79, 111-116.*
Green et al. 1988 Nuc. Acids. Res. 16, 369.*
Knist et al. 1986, Embo J. 5, 891-897.*
Ma et al; Cell, vol. 51, Oct. 9, 1987; pp. 113-119.
T. Etcheverry et al; Biotechnology, vol. 4, No. 8; (Aug., 1986) pp. 726-730.
Metzger et al; Nature, vol. 334, Jul. 7, 1988, pp. 31-36.
Webster et al; Cell, vol. 52, Jan. 29, 1988, pp. 169-178.
Kakidani et al; Cell, vol. 52, Jan. 29, 1988, pp. 161-167.
French Search Report—FR 8808978 FA 413113.
The Journal Of Biological Chemistry, vol. 267, No. 16, Issue of Jun. 5, pp. 11191-11195, 1992, entitled Glucocorticoid-specific Gene Activation by the Intact Human . . . Yeast, by Wright, et al.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, vol. 90, pp. 4281-4285, May 1993, entitled “Efficient transactivation by retinoic acid receptors in yeast requires retinoid X receptors”, by Heery, et al.
Molecular Biology of the Gene, General Principles, vol. 1, Fourth Edition, Watson et al., 1987, pp. 274-277 and 738-739.
Continuations (4)
Number Date Country
Parent 08/161064 Dec 1993 US
Child 08/453998 US
Parent 08/044079 Apr 1993 US
Child 08/161064 US
Parent 07/798993 Dec 1991 US
Child 08/044079 US
Parent 07/373524 Jun 1989 US
Child 07/798993 US