Several protein toxins, such as the potent plant toxin ricin, enter mammalian cells by endocytosis and undergo retrograde transport via the Golgi complex to reach the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). In this compartment the catalytic moieties exploit the ER‐associated degradation (ERAD) pathway to reach their cytosolic targets. Bacterial toxins such as cholera toxin or Pseudomonas exotoxin A carry KDEL or KDEL‐like C‐terminal tetrapeptides for efficient delivery to the ER. Chimeric toxins containing monomeric plant ribosome‐inactivating proteins linked to various targeting moieties are highly cytotoxic, but it remains unclear how these molecules travel within the target cell to reach cytosolic ribosomes. We investigated the intracellular pathways of saporin, a monomeric plant ribosome‐inactivating protein that can enter cells by receptor‐mediated endocytosis. Saporin toxicity was not affected by treatment with Brefeldin A or chloroquine, indicating that this toxin follows a Golgi‐independent pathway to the cytosol and does not require a low pH for membrane translocation. In intoxicated Vero or HeLa cells, ricin but not saporin could be clearly visualized in the Golgi complex using immunofluorescence. The saporin signal was not evident in the Golgi, but was found to partially overlap with that of a late endosome/lysosome marker. Consistently, the toxicities of saporin or saporin‐based targeted chimeric polypeptides were not enhanced by the addition of ER retrieval sequences. Thus, the intracellular movement of saporin differs from that followed by ricin and other protein toxins that rely on Golgi‐mediated retrograde transport to reach their retrotranslocation site.
Most of the targeting moieties, such as antibody fragments or growth factor domains, used to construct targeted toxins for anticancer therapy derive from secretory proteins. These normally fold in the oxidative environment of the endoplasmic reticulum, and hence their folding in bacterial cells can be quite inefficient. For instance, only low amounts of properly folded antimetastatic chimera constituted by the amino-terminal fragment of human urokinase (ATF) fused to the plant ribosome-inactivating protein saporin could be recovered. ATF-saporin was instead secreted efficiently when expressed in eukaryotic cells protected from autointoxication with neutralizing anti-saporin antibodies. Pichia pastoris is a microbial eukaryotic host where these domains can fold into a transport-competent conformation and reach the extracellular medium. We show here that despite some host toxicity codon-usage optimization greatly increased the expression levels of active saporin but not those of an active-site mutant SAP-KQ in GS115 (his4) strain. The lack of any toxicity associated with expression of the latter confirmed that toxicity is due to saporin catalytic activity. Nevertheless, GS115 (his4) cells in flask culture secreted 3.5 mg/L of a histidine-tagged ATF-saporin chimera showing an IC(50) of 6 x 10(-11) M against U937 cells, thus demonstrating the suitability of this expression platform for secretion of toxic saporin-based chimeras.
BackgroundAntibodies raised against selected antigens over-expressed at the cell surface of malignant cells have been chemically conjugated to protein toxin domains to obtain immunotoxins (ITs) able to selectively kill cancer cells. Since latest generation immunotoxins are composed of a toxic domain genetically fused to antibody fragment(s) which confer on the IT target selective specificity, we rescued from the hydridoma 4KB128, a recombinant single-chain variable fragment (scFv) targeting CD22, a marker antigen expressed by B-lineage leukaemias and lymphomas. We constructed several ITs using two enzymatic toxins both able to block protein translation, one of bacterial origin (a truncated version of Pseudomonas exotoxin A, PE40) endowed with EF-2 ADP-ribosylation activity, the other being the plant ribosome-inactivating protein saporin, able to specifically depurinate 23/26/28S ribosomal RNA. PE40 was selected because it has been widely used for the construction of recombinant ITs that have already undergone evaluation in clinical trials. Saporin has also been evaluated clinically and has recently been expressed successfully at high levels in a Pichia pastoris expression system. The aim of the present study was to evaluate optimal microbial expression of various IT formats.ResultsAn anti-CD22 scFv termed 4KB was obtained which showed the expected binding activity which was also internalized by CD22+ target cells and was also competed for by the parental monoclonal CD22 antibody. Several fusion constructs were designed and expressed either in E. coli or in Pichia pastoris and the resulting fusion proteins affinity-purified. Protein synthesis inhibition assays were performed on CD22+ human Daudi cells and showed that the selected ITs were active, having IC50 values (concentration inhibiting protein synthesis by 50% relative to controls) in the nanomolar range.ConclusionsWe undertook a systematic comparison between the performance of the different fusion constructs, with respect to yields in E. coli or P. pastoris expression systems and also with regard to each constructs specific killing efficacy. Our results confirm that E. coli is the system of choice for the expression of recombinant fusion toxins of bacterial origin whereas we further demonstrate that saporin-based ITs are best expressed and recovered from P. pastoris cultures after yeast codon-usage optimization.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12934-015-0202-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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