Biotechnol Prog 2001 Jan-Feb;17(1):126-33 Expression and purification of functional human alpha-1-Antitrypsin
from cultured plant cells.
Huang J, Sutliff TD, Wu L, Nandi S, Benge K, Terashima M, Ralston
AH, Drohan W, Huang N, Rodriguez RL.
Human alpha-1-antitrypsin (AAT), the most abundant
protease inhibitor found in the blood, was expressed in rice embryonic
tissue suspension cell culture. This was accomplished by cloning
the codon-optimized AAT gene into a vector containing the rice RAmy3D
promoter and its signal sequence. The synthetic gene incorporates
codons synonymous with those found in highly expressed rice genes.
Approximately 1000 stable transformed calli were produced by particle
bombardment mediated transformation and were screened for high AAT
expression using a porcine elastase inhibitory activity assay. The
band shift assay also confirmed that rice-derived AAT is functional
regarding its binding capability to the elastase substrate. Time
course studies were conducted to determine the optimum, postinduction
expression levels from cell culture. AAT expression equivalent to
20% of the total secreted proteins was achieved, and a purification
scheme was developed that yielded active AAT with purity greater
than 95%. The potential applications of purified plant-derived AAT
for treatments of various AAT-deficient diseases are discussed.