Abstract

We compared insect cell production levels of secreted HIV-1 gp120 glycoprotein encoded by five different baculovirus expression constructs. Combinations consisting of one of two baculovirus promoters (very late or hybrid late/very late) and one of three different signal sequences [human tissue plasminogen activator (tpa), human placental alkaline phosphatase (pap), or baculovirus envelope glycoprotein (gp67)] were constructed. Production of secreted gp120 from these constructs was analyzed in two enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay formats, one detecting the total amount of secreted gp120 protein and the other measuring the level of “active” gp120 (as defined by the ability to bind to CD4). We found that for all of the constructs, approximately 50 to 90% of the secreted gp120 protein was active. Furthermore, our results indicated that expression from either promoter yielded comparable production of secreted protein, despite the fact that transcription from the hybrid promoter begins at an earlier time. By contrast, the signal sequence had a much greater effect on the levels of secreted gp120: the tpa leader yielded the highest level of secreted protein, followed by the gp67 and pap sequences. This result suggests that transcription is not a limiting factor in the production of secreted gp120, but rather that downstream processing of the protein is more critical. Furthermore, these results confirm the notion that the “optimal” signal sequence is protein dependent and that an insect-derived signal sequence is not optimal in all cases.

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