Expression and characterization of murine osteoblast-specific factor 2 (OSF-2) in a baculovirus expression system.
Osteoblast-specific factor 2 (OSF-2) is a approximately 90-kDa protein selectively expressed in bone. OSF-2 cDNA was recently isolated from mouse and human cDNA libraries and shows limited sequence homology with fasciclin I, a cell adhesion protein expressed in insect nerve cells. Here we describe the expression of recombinant murine OSF-2 (rmOSF-2) in a baculovirus/insect cell system. Western blotting analysis employing polyclonal antiserum raised against a C-terminal synthetic OSF-2 peptide detected a protein of approximately 90-kDa as early as 2 days after infection of Sf9 cells with the recombinant virus. Tunicamycin treatment of infected cells resulted in a mobility shift of OSF-2 (approximately 90-kDa band) on Western blots. N-Glycanase digestion resulted in the same mobility shift of OSF-2, indicating that rmOSF-2 expressed in insect cells is N-glycosylated. However, OSF-2 was insensitive to endoglycosidase H digestion while a major fraction of this protein had affinity for concanavalin A. Finally, it was demonstrated that rmOSF-2 was able to bind to heparin. This finding suggests that OSF-2 might be associated with the bone extracellular matrix after secretion by osteoblasts and participate in cell adhesion and/or cell communication. The establishment of the baculovirus expression system with a high productivity of recombinant OSF-2 (around 40 micrograms/ml at maximum) and its heparin binding properties should allow us to obtain large amounts of rmOSF-2.[1]References
- Expression and characterization of murine osteoblast-specific factor 2 (OSF-2) in a baculovirus expression system. Sugiura, T., Takamatsu, H., Kudo, A., Amann, E. Protein Expr. Purif. (1995) [Pubmed]
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