TY - JOUR
T1 - STEP® vectors for rapid generation of stable transfected CHO cell pools and clones with high expression levels and product quality homogeneity of difficult-to-express proteins
AU - Luthra, Abhinav
AU - Spanjaard, Remco A
AU - Cheema, Sarwat
AU - Veith, Nathalie
AU - Kober, Lars
AU - Wang, Yiding
AU - Jing, Tao
AU - Zhao, Yi
AU - Hoeksema, Femke
AU - Yallop, Chris
AU - Havenga, Menzo
AU - Bakker, Wilfried A M
N1 - Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021/10
Y1 - 2021/10
N2 - Many proteins produced in CHO cells need evaluation for their clinical and commercial potential. Traditional methods based on stable clone generation are slow and unsuitable for screening larger numbers of proteins, while transient expression technologies are fast but unpredictable regarding product quality and lacking an optional path to subcloning. The STEP® vector technology introduced here combines the best properties of both methods. STEP® vectors contain a strong transcriptional cassette driving expression of a bicistronic mRNA. The gene-of-interest (GOI) is cloned upstream of a functionally impaired zeocin resistance gene (FI-Zeo) whose translation is coupled to that of the GOI through an IRES. Stable transfected cells surviving zeocin selection produce high levels of FI-Zeo and thus, high levels of the GOI-encoded protein. By using different spacers, the translational coupling efficiency and selection strength can be controlled allowing maximization of expression of any GOI. Production of laronidase and factor VII (FVII) is presented as examples of unrelated, difficult-to-express (DTE) proteins. First step is rapid generation of transfected pools with the STEP® vectors. All high expressing surviving pools showed high product quality homogeneity as did monoclonal cell lines obtained from the top pools. Up to 500 μg/mL laronidase was obtained with virtually identical glycosylation profile as reference product. For FVII, cell specific productivity of 0.45 pg/cell/day with 50 IU/μg protein matched highest reported levels of reference product even before process development. Taken together, STEP® vector technology is ideally suited for rapid, small to large-scale production of DTE proteins compared to traditional methods.
AB - Many proteins produced in CHO cells need evaluation for their clinical and commercial potential. Traditional methods based on stable clone generation are slow and unsuitable for screening larger numbers of proteins, while transient expression technologies are fast but unpredictable regarding product quality and lacking an optional path to subcloning. The STEP® vector technology introduced here combines the best properties of both methods. STEP® vectors contain a strong transcriptional cassette driving expression of a bicistronic mRNA. The gene-of-interest (GOI) is cloned upstream of a functionally impaired zeocin resistance gene (FI-Zeo) whose translation is coupled to that of the GOI through an IRES. Stable transfected cells surviving zeocin selection produce high levels of FI-Zeo and thus, high levels of the GOI-encoded protein. By using different spacers, the translational coupling efficiency and selection strength can be controlled allowing maximization of expression of any GOI. Production of laronidase and factor VII (FVII) is presented as examples of unrelated, difficult-to-express (DTE) proteins. First step is rapid generation of transfected pools with the STEP® vectors. All high expressing surviving pools showed high product quality homogeneity as did monoclonal cell lines obtained from the top pools. Up to 500 μg/mL laronidase was obtained with virtually identical glycosylation profile as reference product. For FVII, cell specific productivity of 0.45 pg/cell/day with 50 IU/μg protein matched highest reported levels of reference product even before process development. Taken together, STEP® vector technology is ideally suited for rapid, small to large-scale production of DTE proteins compared to traditional methods.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85108111679&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.pep.2021.105920
DO - 10.1016/j.pep.2021.105920
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 34044134
SN - 1046-5928
VL - 186
SP - 105920
JO - Protein Expression and Purification
JF - Protein Expression and Purification
M1 - 105920
ER -