posted on 2015-07-28, 00:00authored byHongling Yuan, Quan Du, Matthew B. Sturm, Vern L. Schramm
Saporin L3 from Saponaria
officinalis (soapwort)
leaves is a type 1 ribosome-inactivating protein. It catalyzes the
hydrolysis of oligonucleotide adenylate N-ribosidic bonds to release
adenine from rRNA. Depurination sites include both adenines in the
GAGA tetraloop of short sarcin-ricin stem-loops and multiple adenines
within eukaryotic rRNA, tRNAs, and mRNAs. Multiple Escherichia
coli vector designs for saporin L3 expression were attempted
but demonstrated high toxicity even during plasmid maintenance and
selection in E. coli nonexpression strains. Saporin
L3 is >103 times more efficient at RNA deadenylation
on
short GAGA stem-loops than saporin S6, the saporin isoform currently
used in immunotoxin clinical trials. We engineered a construct for
the His-tagged saporin L3 to test for expression in Pichia
pastoris when it is linked to the protein export system for
the yeast α-mating factor. DNA encoding saporin L3 was cloned
into a pPICZαB expression vector and expressed in P.
pastoris under the alcohol dehydrogenase AOX1 promoter. A
fusion protein of saporin L3 containing the pre-pro-sequence of the
α-mating factor, the c-myc epitope, and the His tag was excreted
from the P. pastoris cells and isolated from the
culture medium. Autoprocessing of the α-mating factor yielded
truncated saporin L3 (amino acids 22–280), the c-myc epitope,
and the His tag expressed optimally as a 32 kDa construct following
methanol induction. Saporin L3 was also expressed with specific alanines
and/or serines mutated to cysteine. Native and Cys mutant saporins
are kinetically similar. The recombinant expression of saporin L3
and its mutants permits the production and investigation of this high-activity
ribosome-inactivating protein.