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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Secretion of active human lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase by insect cells infected with a recombinant baculovirus.

Difficulties in purifying the plasma enzyme lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) have hampered detailed studies of its (patho)physiological role in lipoprotein metabolism and of structure-function relationships. Potentially, baculovirus-driven expression systems offer a powerful means to produce significant amounts of LCAT. Accordingly, full-length LCAT cDNA was cloned into pVL 1392, a high-level expression derivative of Autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus (AcNPV), and the resultant plasmid was co-transfected into Trichoplusia ni insect cells (High 5 line) with a linearized viral DNA using lipofectin. Such viral DNA had a lethal mutation and grew only when recombined with a pVL1392-type rescue plasmid; cells infected with recombinant Autographa californica LCAT virus changed from a fibroblast-like morphology to rounded, but lacked the polyhedrin occlusion bodies characteristic of wild-type AcNPV infections. Enzymically active recombinant LCAT (rLCAT), sensitive to sulphydryl reagents, was secreted in the late phase of infection (36-48 h) but was absent with wild-type infections. The secreted protein had an apparent molecular mass of 53 kDa by SDS/PAGE, lower than that of native plasma LCAT; it was susceptible to endoglycosidase H digestion and was bound by concanavalin A, suggesting that precursor high-mannose N-glycan chains had not undergone full maturation to complex types. Pretreatment of the cells with tunicamycin to inhibit the first step of N-glycosylation led to intracellular accumulation of immature rLCAT (approximately 46-48 kDa) and a marked reduction in enzyme secreted. We conclude that the baculovirus gene-expression system will permit production of biologically active normal and mutant forms of LCAT protein.[1]

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