Bioscience Technology
Reed Business Information Rockaway, NJ,
07866

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Gene
Expression: It’s The Protein
By Angelo DePalma
Interest in characterizing
novel proteins has led to an explosion in gene
expression techniques. Whether used for therapy,
experimentation, or biomanufacturing, gene expression is
about producing proteins.
Andrew Breile and Jay
Wong prepare an in vitro coupled
transcription-translation reaction for protein
expression
| Stable expression of
protein-coding genes is the gold standard for
bioproduction systems. However, stable transfection
takes time. The alternative, transient gene expression,
offers a rapid, convenient route to any protein whose
precursor gene can be synthesized. Transient
gene/protein expression delivers protein anywhere from
three to ten days after the gene becomes available,
compared with six months for stable transfection. The
down-side is that since transient transfection vectors
operate independently of genomic chromosomes, the
induced trait extinguishes as cells reproduce. Protein
production from transient transfection therefore only
lasts for a few days to perhaps two
weeks.
Med-chem on proteins? Biotech
firms may prepare hundreds of variants of a target
protein during drug development, in much the same way as
small-molecule drug developers create analog libraries.
Since each of these discovery-stage proteins must be
produced and tested quickly, developers use transient
gene/protein expression techniques.
"Transient
expression systems are the best way to get through the
large number of proteins we need for a typical
development project," says Tina Etcheverry, Ph.D.,
Senior Scientist at Genentech (South San Francisco,
CA).
Culturing mammalian
cells in a 65 liters bioreactor. Photo copyright
2005, Biotechnology Research Council National
Research Council Canada (NRC-BRC)
| Protein expression
doesn't end after researchers settle on a clinical
candidate. Investigators may wish to create variants for
different animal models, or to produce what Dr.
Etcheverry calls protein "reagents," primarily
receptors, used to assay the protein product. After
settling on the target, researchers will then
affinity-mature it for higher efficacy, which means more
proteins need to be made.
Moreover, targeted
therapies require a separate diagnostic molecule,
usually a monoclonal antibody, which must be developed
in much the same way as therapeutic
molecules.
More than perhaps any other biotech
company, Genentech has demonstrated that transient
expression systems are scalable, from Petri dish-sized
cultures up to 100-liter bioreactors that churn out
grams of material for primate and other
studies.
Large-scale transient expression was
rare until recently, not because of a lack of technology
but due to the cost of reagents and for generating
genes. The cost hurdle still exists for stable gene
transfection. For example, adenoviruses used in gene
therapy and for transfecting mammalian cells require
separate manufacturing and validation
efforts.
"Viral vectors need to be produced,
amplified, and purified," says Yves Durocher, Ph.D.,
Group Leader at the National Research Council Canada
(NRCC; Montreal, Quebec). "Plus afterward you have to
assure those viruses were removed from whatever you
make."
By using simple vehicles like calcium
phosphate and cationic lipids, transient expression
eliminates the cost hurdle and add-on manufacturing
associated with adenoviruses.
The path to
scale-up As one of the world's leading cell
culture experts, Florian Wurm, Ph.D. of the Swiss
Federal Institute of Technology (Lausanne) has a keen
interest in transient gene expression, particularly for
mammalian cell systems. Wurm was part of a group at
Genentech (which included Tina Etcheverry) charged with
creating an improved version of tissue plasminogen
activator (TPA). The molecule eventually approved,
TNKase-TPA, was the result of hundreds of codon
substitutions on the gene, each performed separately and
expressed as single amino acid changes in the
protein.
Harvesting a 20 liters bioreactor
culture using a continous-flow centrifuge. Photo
copyright 2005, Biotechnology Research Council
National Research Council Canada (NRC-BRC)
| During this project Dr.
Wurm's group needed more variants of TPA than they could
hope to create through stable transfection. So they
became experts at transient gene/protein expression —
not just for producing experimental quantities of
protein, but for preclinical production as well.
"Transient expression gives you protein almost as
quickly as you can make DNA," says Dr. Wurm. "So I
thought, why not scale this up?"
During Wurm's
tenure at the company, his group used calcium phosphate
as the gene delivery vehicle. By the time he left for
academe the company was routinely using transient gene
expression at the 2-3 liter scale. At Lausanne, Wurm's
group has run transient transfections at the 100-liter
scale in bioreactors. Genentech went on to perfect
several methods based on cationic lipid gene delivery,
and is now also capable of running hundred-liter
cultures on transiently-transfected
cells.
Although yields are low compared with
stable transfection, transient methods could one day be
employed for manufacturing. The key will be discovery of
proteins whose efficacy is significantly higher than
that of the native material. For example, TNKase-TPA is
more than three times as effective per milligram as TPA,
with approximately the same safety profile. Dr. Wurm
believes that with additional improvements through
mutagenesis, a protein with 100 times the efficacy of
TPA might have been discovered. "But the realities of
corporate drug discovery dictated that the research
project had to end at some point," he notes.
Culturing
mammalian cells in a 180 liters bioreactor. Photo
copyright 2005, Biotechnology Research Council
National Research Council Canada (NRC-BRC)
| A biologic that is 100
times more powerful than the native protein need only be
administered at 1% the dose of the original. Protein
expression can be carried out in small bioreactors
rather than in mega-facilities, and downstream
purification is significantly compressed.
"The
key to biotech economics is potency," notes Wurm. "MAb
manufacturers struggle to produce hundreds of kilograms
of product, but the overwhelming majority of the dose
never makes it to the tumor. If we can improve
monoclonal antibody potency, to the point where a
patient only needs a few milligrams per day instead of
grams per day, we will need to manufacture considerably
less of these drugs to meet market demand."
Yves
Durocher at NRCC agrees. "The biggest issue in moving
beyond the 100-liter scale is producing enough plasmid
DNA," he says, noting that the one milligram per liter
of DNA required should not be too difficult to
manufacture since the technology is established and the
material is already made, under GMP conditions, for gene
therapy.
The mechanisms of transient gene
expression are not well-characterized. What is known is
that if genes can get into cells there is a good chance
they will be utilized by ribosomes. How the gene enters
cells is not that critical. When mixed with DNA, calcium
phosphate, by far the least expensive vehicle, forms
particles which the cell ingests. Cationic lipids, by
contrast, break through the cell membrane and allow
genes to enter that way.
Transient expression
will grow in importance as new protein drugs transform
medicine. "The most serious bottleneck in biotechnology
today is protein production," says Dr. Wurm. "Not the
kilograms or hundreds of kilograms for any individual
protein, but the number of different proteins we need to
express to develop these drugs. Transient gene
expression helps overcome that hurdle."
Look
Ma, no cells! Cell-free methods, which have been
used since the early days of molecular biology, provide
the most straightforward route to proteins. Cell-free
extracts containing ribosomes and other crucial
protein-generating ingredients from wheat germ, rabbit
reticulocyte, or E. coli produce modest quantities of
protein when spiked with DNA or messenger RNA.
Density,
sensitivity and resolution of microarrays are just
some of the factors that affect queality of
results. How current the content is can speed up
or slow down the journey to discover the novel
targets or biological process of desease. (Photo
courtesy of Agilent Technologies.)
| Benefits of cell-free
techniques include speed and latitude for incorporating
labels at desired locations in the target protein.
Cell-free expression is also the way to go for proteins
that inhibit cell growth or are toxic to
stably-transfected cultures. Such products may often be
produced in cell-free systems. The bad news is that
extracts only operate for a few minutes or hours,
compared with live cells which can be kept alive and
productive for days or weeks.
Cell-free methods
allow expression of proteins that may be toxic to living
cells. Plus extracts may contain protease inhibitors to
limit protein degradation, another strategy that would
not work with living cells.
Several companies
provide kits for cell-free protein expression. Roche
Applied Science (Indianapolis, IN) introduced its RTS
(Rapid Translation System) cell-free expression
technology about five years ago. Roche claims that RTS
generates a hundred milligrams or more of protein per
run.
Cell-free protein expression has a
reputation for being a research tool, but commercial
possibilities are intriguing. For example Ambergen
(Boston, MA) has turned its cell-free method into a
medical diagnostic tool.
AmerGen's diagnostic
technology, which it calls the ELISA Protein Truncation
Test (PTT), is also based on cell-free protein
synthesis. Ninety-five percent of diseases caused by
genetic mutations involve chain truncation. Examples
include polycystic kidney disease, neurofibromytosis, an
inherited form of muscular dystrophy, and
bcr1/bcr2-active breast cancers. Thirty such diseases
have been identified.
Truncation assays compare
normal proteins, which contain an intact C- and
N-terminus, with abnormal proteins that lack the
C-terminus. Traditionally these assays employ
radioactive tags and gel electrophoresis, which are
difficult to use in a clinical setting. AmberGen's
variation on this theme is a routine ELISA test.
Researchers supply separate tags for each terminus, but
mutant proteins lacking the C-terminus are also missing
that specific signal.
Ambergen has also developed
proprietary niche technologies for generating proteins
from genes in vitro. The first method is non-radioactive
labeling through transfer RNA (tRNA), which delivers
amino acids to proteins as they grow. TRAMPE
(tRNA-mediated protein engineering), as the technique is
called, uses fluorescently-labeled amino acids affixed
to tRNA and added to the cell-free expression medium.
The other innovation is a photocleavable form of biotin,
PC Biotin, which assists in isolating proteins with
biotin affinity.
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