We established a novel cell-free protein synthesis system derived from Trichoplusia ni (HighFive) insect cells by a simple extraction method. Luciferase and beta-galactosidase were synthesized in this system with active forms. We analyzed and optimized (1) the preparation method of the insect cell extract, (2) the concentration of the reaction components, and (3) the 5'-untranslated region (5'-UTR) of mRNA. The extract was prepared by freeze-thawing insect cells suspended in the extraction buffer. This preparation method was a simple and superior method compared with the conventional method using a Dounce homogenizer. Furthermore, protein synthesis efficiency was improved by the addition of 20% (v/v) glycerol to the extraction buffer. Concentrations of the reaction components were optimized to increase protein synthesis efficiency. Moreover, mRNAs containing 5'-UTRs derived from baculovirus polyhedrin genes showed high protein synthesis activity. Especially, the leader composition of the Ectropis obliqua nucleopolyhedrovirus polyhedrin gene showed the highest enhancement activity among the six 5'-UTRs tested. As a result, in a batch reaction approximately 71 microg of luciferase was synthesized per milliliter of reaction volume at 25 degrees C for 6 h. Moreover, this method for the establishment of a cell-free system was applied also to Spodoptera frugiperda 21 (Sf21) insect cells. After optimizing the concentrations of the reaction components and the 5'-UTR of mRNA, approximately 45 microg/mL of luciferase was synthesized in an Sf21 cell-free system at 25 degrees C for 3 h. These productivities were sufficient to perform gene expression analyses. Thus, these cell-free systems may be a useful tool for simple synthesis in post-genomic studies as a novel protein production method.
To establish a strategy for the comprehensive identification of human N-myristoylated proteins, the susceptibility of human cDNA clones to protein N-myristoylation was evaluated by metabolic labeling and MS analyses of proteins expressed in an insect cell-free protein synthesis system. One-hundred-and-forty-one cDNA clones with N-terminal Met-Gly motifs were selected as potential candidates from approximately 2000 Kazusa ORFeome project human cDNA clones, and their susceptibility to protein N-myristoylation was evaluated using fusion proteins, in which the N-terminal ten amino acid residues were fused to an epitope-tagged model protein. As a result, the products of 29 out of 141 cDNA clones were found to be effectively N-myristoylated. The metabolic labeling experiments both in an insect cell-free protein synthesis system and in the transfected COS-1 cells using full-length cDNA revealed that 27 out of 29 proteins were in fact N-myristoylated. Database searches with these 27 cDNA clones revealed that 18 out of 27 proteins are novel N-myristoylated proteins that have not been reported previously to be N-myristoylated, indicating that this strategy is useful for the comprehensive identification of human N-myristoylated proteins from human cDNA resources.
To evaluate the ability of an insect cell-free protein synthesis system to generate proper N-terminal cotranslational protein modifications such as removal of the initiating Met, N-acetylation, and N-myristoylation, several mutants were constructed using truncated human gelsolin (tGelsolin) as a model protein. Tryptic digests of these mutants were analyzed by MALDI-TOF MS and MALDI-quadrupole-IT-TOF MS. The wild-type tGelsolin, which is an N-myristoylated protein, was found to be N-myristoylated when myristoyl-CoA was added to the in vitro translation reaction mixture. N-myristoylation did not occur on the Gly-2 to Ala mutant, in which the N-myristoylation motif was disrupted, whereas this mutant was found to be N-acetylated after removal of the initiating Met. Analyses of Gly-2 to His and Leu-3 to Asp mutants revealed that the amino acids at positions 2 and 3 strongly affect the susceptibility of the nascent peptide chain to removal of the initiating Met and to N-acetylation, respectively. These results suggest that N-terminal modifications occurring in the insect cell-free protein synthesis system are quite similar to those observed in the mammalian protein synthesis system. Thus, a combination of the cell-free protein synthesis system with MS is an effective strategy to analyze protein modifications.
Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase (AP) and human lysozyme (h-LYZ), which contain two and four disulfide bonds, respectively, were expressed in a cell-free protein synthesis system constructed from Spodoptera frugiperda 21 (Sf21) cells. AP was expressed in a soluble and active form using the insect cell-free system under non-reducing conditions, and h-LYZ was expressed in a soluble and active form under non-reducing conditions after addition of reduced glutathione (GSH), oxidized glutathione (GSSG), and protein disulfide isomerase (PDI). The in vitro synthesized proteins were purified by means of a Strep-tag attached to their C termini. Approximately 41 microg AP and 30 microg h-LYZ were obtained from 1 mL each of the reaction mixture. The efficiency of protein synthesis approached that measured under reducing conditions. Analysis of the disulfide bond arrangements by MALDI-TOF MS showed that disulfide linkages identical to those observed in the wild-type proteins were formed.
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