Engineering mammalian protein secretion: Toward the convergence of high-throughput biology and computational methods.
Engineering mammalian protein secretion: Toward the convergence of high-throughput biology and computational methods.
- Research Article
18
- 10.1093/nar/gkac916
- Oct 21, 2022
- Nucleic Acids Research
The development of novel strategies to program cellular behaviors is a central goal in synthetic biology, and post-translational control mediated by engineered protein circuits is a particularly attractive approach to achieve rapid protein secretion on demand. We have developed a programmable protease-mediated post-translational switch (POSH) control platform composed of a chimeric protein unit that consists of a protein of interest fused via a transmembrane domain to a cleavable ER-retention signal, together with two cytosolic inducer-sensitive split protease components. The protease components combine in the presence of the specific inducer to generate active protease, which cleaves the ER-retention signal, releasing the transmembrane-domain-linked protein for trafficking to the trans-Golgi region. A furin site placed downstream of the protein ensures cleavage and subsequent secretion of the desired protein. We show that stimuli ranging from plant-derived, clinically compatible chemicals to remotely controllable inducers such as light and electrostimulation can program protein secretion in various POSH-engineered designer mammalian cells. As proof-of-concept, an all-in-one POSH control plasmid encoding insulin and abscisic acid-activatable split protease units was hydrodynamically transfected into the liver of type-1 diabetic mice. Induction with abscisic acid attenuated glycemic excursions in glucose-tolerance tests. Increased blood levels of insulin were maintained for 12 days.
- Research Article
21
- 10.1002/(sici)1522-7243(200001/02)15:1<45::aid-bio553>3.0.co;2-e
- Jan 1, 2000
- Luminescence
We have shown previously that an engineered form of Renilla luciferase (SRUC) can be secreted as a functional enzyme by mammalian cells, and that fusing wild-type Renilla luciferase with the green fluorescent protein from Aequorea victoria (GFP) yields a chimeric protein retaining light-emission properties similar to that of unfused Renilla luciferase and GFP. In the work presented here, SRUC was fused with GFP to determine whether it could be used to both visualize and quantify protein secretion in mammalian cells. Simian COS-7 and Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells were transiently transfected with gene constructs encoding a secreted or an intracellular version of a Renilla luciferase-GFP fusion protein. Renilla luciferase activity was measured from COS-7 cell lysates and culture media, and GFP activity was detected in CHO cells using fluorescence microscopy. Data indicated that the SRUC-GFP fusion protein was secreted as a chimeric protein that had both Renilla luciferase and GFP activity. This fusion protein could be a useful marker for the study of protein secretion in mammalian cells.
- Research Article
3
- 10.1101/2023.10.04.560774
- Oct 4, 2023
- bioRxiv
Synthetic biology currently holds immense potential to engineer the spatiotemporal control of intercellular signals for biomedicine. Programming behaviors using protein-based circuits has advantages over traditional gene circuits such as compact delivery and direct interactions with signaling proteins. Previously, we described a generalizable platform called RELEASE to enable the control of intercellular signaling through the proteolytic removal of ER-retention motifs compatible with pre-existing protease-based circuits. However, these tools lacked the ability to reliably program complex expression profiles and required numerous proteases, limiting delivery options. Here, we harness the recruitment and antagonistic behavior of endogenous 14-3-3 proteins to create RELEASE-NOT to turn off protein secretion in response to protease activity. By combining RELEASE and RELEASE-NOT, we establish a suite of protein-level processing and output modules called Compact RELEASE (compRELEASE). This innovation enables functions such as logic processing and analog signal filtering using a single input protease. Furthermore, we demonstrate the compactness of the post-translational design by using polycistronic single transcripts to engineer cells to control protein secretion via lentiviral integration and leverage mRNA delivery to selectively express cell surface proteins only in engineered cells harboring inducible proteases. CompRELEASE enables complex control of protein secretion and enhances the potential of synthetic protein circuits for therapeutic applications, while minimizing the overall genetic payload.
- Research Article
32
- 10.1016/j.semcdb.2018.03.006
- Mar 22, 2018
- Seminars in Cell & Developmental Biology
Regulation of protein homeostasis by unconventional protein secretion in mammalian cells
- Research Article
166
- 10.1128/jvi.71.12.9054-9064.1997
- Dec 1, 1997
- Journal of Virology
Poliovirus protein 3A, only 87 amino acids in length, is a potent inhibitor of protein secretion in mammalian cells, blocking anterograde protein traffic from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to the Golgi complex. The function of viral protein 3A in blocking protein secretion is extremely sensitive to mutations near the N terminus of the protein. Deletion of the first 10 amino acids or insertion of a single amino acid between amino acids 15 and 16, a mutation that causes a cold-sensitive defect in poliovirus RNA replication, abrogates the inhibition of protein secretion although wild-type amounts of the mutant proteins are expressed. Immunofluorescence light microscopy and immunoelectron microscopy demonstrate that 3A protein, expressed in the absence of other viral proteins, colocalizes with membranes derived from the ER. The precise topology of 3A with respect to ER membranes is not known, but it is likely to be associated with the cytosolic surface of the ER. Although the glycosylation of 3A in translation extracts has been reported, we show that tunicamycin, under conditions in which glycosylation of cellular proteins is inhibited, has no effect on poliovirus growth. Therefore, glycosylation of 3A plays no functional role in the viral replicative cycle. Electron microscopy reveals that the ER dilates dramatically in the presence of 3A protein. The absence of accumulated vesicles and the swelling of the ER-derived membranes argues that ER-to-Golgi traffic is inhibited at the step of vesicle formation or budding from the ER.
- Research Article
96
- 10.1038/mt.2009.302
- Apr 1, 2010
- Molecular Therapy
piggyBac Transposon-mediated Long-term Gene Expression in Mice
- Research Article
17
- 10.1016/s0092-8674(00)80307-4
- Jul 1, 1997
- Cell
Recognition of a Transmembrane Domain: Another Role for the Ribosome?
- Research Article
3
- 10.1016/j.vetmic.2019.04.032
- Apr 28, 2019
- Veterinary Microbiology
The immunogenicity of the secretory GΔTM protein of bovine ephemeral fever virus stably expressed by mammalian cells
- Research Article
39
- 10.1111/j.1600-0854.2010.01081.x
- May 11, 2010
- Traffic
Previous studies have shown that yeast glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored proteins (GPI-APs) and other secretory proteins are preferentially incorporated into distinct coat protein II (COPII) vesicle populations for their transport from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to the Golgi apparatus, and that incorporation of yeast GPI-APs into COPII vesicles requires specific lipid interactions. We compared the ER exit mechanism and segregation of GPI-APs from other secretory proteins in mammalian and yeast cells. We find that, unlike yeast, ER-to-Golgi transport of GPI-APs in mammalian cells does not depend on sphingolipid synthesis. Whereas ER exit of GPI-APs is tightly dependent on Sar1 in mammalian cells, it is much less so in yeast. Furthermore, in mammalian cells, GPI-APs and other secretory proteins are not segregated upon COPII vesicle formation, in contrast to the remarkable segregation seen in yeast. These findings suggest that GPI-APs use different mechanisms to concentrate in COPII vesicles in the two organisms, and the difference might explain their propensity to segregate from other secretory proteins upon ER exit.
- Research Article
4
- 10.1016/j.plantsci.2004.02.003
- Mar 3, 2004
- Plant Science
Cytoskeleton-dependent polarized secretion of arylsulfatase in the unicellular green alga, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii
- Research Article
- 10.1089/hum.2015.29005.abstracts
- Sep 1, 2015
- Human Gene Therapy
British Society for Gene and Cell Therapy Annual Conference Glasgow9–11th June 2015Conference Abstracts
- Research Article
87
- 10.1016/s0140-6736(97)90013-1
- May 1, 1997
- The Lancet
Gene therapy of cancer
- Research Article
43
- 10.1016/j.ymthe.2018.04.004
- Apr 6, 2018
- Molecular Therapy
Gene Therapy Strategies to Restore ER Proteostasis in Disease.
- Research Article
3
- 10.1016/j.molmet.2024.102077
- Jan 1, 2025
- Molecular Metabolism
Mammalian Mitochondrial Inorganic Polyphosphate (polyP) and Cell Signaling: Crosstalk Between PolyP and the Activity of AMPK.
- Research Article
130
- 10.1093/emboj/19.23.6419
- Dec 1, 2000
- The EMBO Journal
Recently it has been recognized that the signal recognition particle (SRP) of Escherichia coli represents a specific targeting device for hydrophobic inner membrane proteins. It has remained unclear, however, whether the bacterial SRP functions in concert with SecA, which is required for the translocation of secretory proteins across the inner membrane. Here, we have analyzed a hybrid protein constructed by fusing the signal anchor sequence of an SRP-dependent inner membrane protein (MtlA) to the mature part of an exclusively SecA-requiring secretory protein (OmpA). We show that the signal anchor sequence of MtlA confers the novel properties onto nascent chains of OmpA of being co-translationally recognized and targeted to SecY by SRP. Once targeted to SecY, ribosome-associated nascent chains of the hybrid protein, however, remain untranslocated unless SecA is present. These results indicate that SRP and SecA cooperate in a sequential, non-overlapping manner in the topogenesis of those membrane proteins which, in addition to a signal anchor sequence, harbor a substantial hydrophilic domain to be translocated into the periplasm.
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