Abstract
Granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) is a member of the colony-stimulating factor (CSF) family, which functions to enhance the proliferation and differentiation of hematopoietic stem cells and other hematopoietic lineages such as neutrophils, dendritic cells, or macrophages. These proteins have thus generated considerable interest in clinical therapy research. A current obstacle to the prokaryotic production of human GM-CSF (hGM-CSF) is its low solubility when overexpressed and subsequent complex refolding processes. In our present study, the solubility of hGM-CSF was examined when combined with three N-terminal fusion tags in five E. coli strains at three different expression temperatures. In the five E. coli strains BL21 (DE3), ClearColi BL21 (DE3), LOBSTR, SHuffle T7 and Origami2 (DE3), the hexahistidine-tagged hGM-CSF showed the best expression but was insoluble in all cases at each examined temperature. Tagging with the maltose-binding protein (MBP) and the b′a′ domain of protein disulfide isomerase (PDIb′a′) greatly improved the soluble overexpression of hGM-CSF at 30 °C and 18 °C. The solubility was not improved using the Origami2 (DE3) and SHuffle T7 strains that have been engineered for disulfide bond formation. Two conventional chromatographic steps were used to purify hGM-CSF from the overexpressed PDIb′a′-hGM-CSF produced in ClearColi BL21 (DE3). In the experiment, 0.65 mg of hGM-CSF was isolated from a 0.5 L flask culture of these E. coli and showed a 98% purity by SDS-PAGE analysis and silver staining. The bioactivity of this purified hGM-CSF was measured at an EC50 of 16.4 ± 2 pM by a CCK8 assay in TF-1 human erythroleukemia cells.
Highlights
Human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, known as colony-stimulating factor 2 (CSF-2), enhances the growth and differentiation of hematopoietic progenitor cells to various lineages, including granulocytes, macrophages, eosinophils, megakaryocyte, and red blood cells [1], it does not play a major role in steadystate myelopoiesis [2]
In addition to the clinical applications, hGM-colonystimulating factor (CSF) is used in the induction of hematopoietic cells from pluripotent stem cells. Human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (hGM-CSF) promotes the neuronal differentiation of adult neural stem cells [7]
The tobacco etch virus (TEV) protease cleavage site (ENLYFQ/G) was placed upstream of the hGM-CSF sequence and the resulting insert was cloned into the pDONR207 vector via a BP reaction to create the hGM-CSF entry vector
Summary
Human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (hGM-CSF), known as colony-stimulating factor 2 (CSF-2), enhances the growth and differentiation of hematopoietic progenitor cells to various lineages, including granulocytes, macrophages, eosinophils, megakaryocyte, and red blood cells [1], it does not play a major role in steadystate myelopoiesis [2]. This protein has a paracrine role in tissue inflammation, such as rheumatoid arthritis or multiple sclerosis [3]. Because of these clinical and non-clinical demands for hGM-CSF, efficient production of bioactive hGM-CSF has been pursued
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