In Planta protein sialylation through overexpression of the respective mammalian pathway

Journal Article (2010)
Author(s)

Alexandra Castilho (BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences)

Richard Strasser (BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences)

Johannes Stadlmann (BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences)

Josephine Grass (BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences)

Jakub Jez (BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences)

Pia Gattinger (BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences)

Renate Kunert (Institute of Applied Microbiology, Vienna)

Heribert Quendler (Polymun Scientific Immunbiologische Forschung GmbH)

Martin Pabst (BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences)

Renaud Leonard (BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences)

Friedrich Altmann (BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences)

Herta Steinkellner (BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences)

Affiliation
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DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M109.088401 Final published version
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Publication Year
2010
Language
English
Affiliation
External organisation
Journal title
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Issue number
21
Volume number
285
Pages (from-to)
15923-15930
Downloads counter
217

Abstract

Many therapeutic proteins are glycosylated and require terminal sialylation to attain full biological activity. Current manufacturing methods based on mammalian cell culture allow only limited control of this important posttranslational modification, which may lead to the generation of products with low efficacy. Here we report in vivo protein sialylation in plants, which have been shown to be well suited for the efficient generation of complex mammalian glycoproteins. This was achieved by the introduction of an entire mammalian biosynthetic pathway in Nicotiana benthamiana, comprising the coordinated expression of the genes for (i) biosynthesis, (ii) activation, (iii) transport, and (iv) transfer of Neu5Ac to terminal galactose.We show the transient overexpression and functional integrity of six mammalian proteins that act at various stages of the biosynthetic pathway and demonstrate their correct subcellular localization. Co-expression of these genes with a therapeutic glycoprotein, a human monoclonal antibody, resulted in quantitative sialylation of the Fc domain. Sialylation was at great uniformity when glycosylation mutants that lack plant-specific N-glycan residues were used as expression hosts. Finally, we demonstrate efficient neutralization activity of the sialylated monoclonal antibody, indicating full functional integrity of the reporter protein. We report for the first time the incorporation of the entire biosynthetic pathway for protein sialylation in a multicellular organism naturally lacking sialylated glycoconjugates. Besides the biotechnological impact of the achievement, this work may serve as a general model for the manipulation of complex traits into plants.