Single-chain antibodies (scFv), which can be produced in Escherichia coli cells, have been shown in numerous cases to be active in antigen binding. In the case of the two anti-lysozyme single-chain antibodies, scFvLH and scFvHL, which have the reversed arrangement of the variable domains of the heavy and light chains of the corresponding monoclonal antibodies, the expression level differs greatly when they are produced in Escherichia coli [Tsumoto et al. (1995) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 201, 546-551]. Although the expression level of scFvLH is high in vivo, the single chain antibody with the reversed orientation (scFvHL) was synthesized in a very low yield and no active product could be obtained. We report here the synthesis of these two anti-lysozyme single-chain antibodies in high yields and with high biological activities in a cell-free E. coli expression system in the presence of reduced and oxidized glutathione, protein disulfide isomerase (PDI), and chaperones. In immunological blotting assays, the synthesized scFvs with both arrangements exhibit specific binding activity to the corresponding antigens, hen egg-white lysozyme, and in an activity assay both inhibited the action of lysozyme. scFvLH is synthesized mainly as a product with the expected molecular weight, whereas scFvHL is produced with additional shorter fragments, suggesting that the low yield isolation through the expression in vivo is due to mistranslation or ribonucleolytic cleavage of the transcript. In the cell-free expression of scFv a certain amount of the product is precipitated but in the presence of chaperones the amount of soluble protein increased from 25 to 90% (PDI and chaperones). The overall expression level and the specific biological activity, however, were hardly influenced. The system reported here can provide significant amounts of various scFv fragments regardless of the order of variable regions, including those which are hardly expressed in vivo.
Intra-RNA cross-links were introduced into E. coli 50S ribosomal subunits by mild ultraviolet irradiation. The subunits were partially digested with cobra venom nuclease, and the cross-linked RNA complexes were isolated by two-dimensional electrophoresis. Many of the complexes were submitted to a second partial digestion procedure. Oligonucleotide analysis of the RNA fragments obtained in this manner enabled cross-links between the following ribonuclease T1 oligonucleotides in the 23S RNA to be established: positions 292-296 and 339-350; 601-604 and 652-656; 1018-1022 and 1140-1149; 1433-1435 and 1556-1560; 1836-1839 and 1898-1903; 2832-2834 (tentative) and 2878-2885; 2849-2852 and 2865-2867 (tentative); 739-748 and 2609-2618; 571-577 and 2030-2032; 1777-1792 (tentative) and 2584-2588. The first seven of these cross-links lie within the secondary structure of the 23S RNA, whereas the last three are tertiary structural cross-links. The degree of precision of the individual determinations was variable, depending on the nucleotide sequence in the vicinity of the cross-link site concerned.
Treatment of E. coli 50S ribosomal subunits with low doses of bis-(2-chloroethyl)-methylamine ("nitrogen mustard") leads to formation of a number of intra-RNA and RNA-protein cross-links. After partial digestion of the cross-linked subunits with cobra venom nuclease, followed by destruction of the protein moiety with proteinase K, complexes containing the intra-RNA cross-links were isolated by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. The individual complexes were subjected to oligonucleotide analysis, either directly or after a second partial digestion procedure using ribonuclease T1, and the cross-link sites determined. In 23S RNA, the cross-links found were between bases 763 and 1567, 1210 and 1236, 1482 and 1501; in 5S RNA, base 69 was cross-linked to base 107. The significance of these cross-links in relation to the three-dimensional organization of the ribosomal RNA is discussed.
Intra-RNA cross-links were introduced into E. coli 30S ribosomal subunits by treatment with bis-(2-chloroethyl)methylamine. The subunits were partially digested with cobra venom nuclease, and the cross-linked complexes were separated by two-dimensional electrophoresis and analysed according to our published procedures. Tertiary structural cross-links in the 16S RNA were identified between nucleotides 31 and 306, and between the tetranucleotide 693-696 and nucleotides 794 or 799. Secondary structural cross-links, lying at the ends of double-helical regions, were found between nucleotides 46 and the trinucleotide 362-364, and between the dinucleotide 148-149 and nucleotide 174. Cross-links within double-helical elements were identified between the tetranucleotide 128-131 and nucleotide 232, between nucleotide 250 and the dinucleotide 274-275, and between nucleotides 1413 and 1486. Adenine as well as guanine residues were involved in the cross-links.
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