Production of active human glucocerebrosidase in seeds of Arabidopsis thaliana complex-glycan deficient (cgl) plants

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He, Xu
Galpin, Jason D
Tropak, Michael B
Mahuran, Don
Haselhorst, Thomas
von Itzstein, Mark
Kolarich, Daniel
Packer, Nicolle H
Miao, Yansong
Jiang, Liwen
Grabowski, Gregory A
Clarke, Lorne A
Kermode, Allison R
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2012
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Abstract

There is a clear need for efficient methods to produce protein therapeutics requiring mannose-termination for therapeutic efficacy. Here we report on a unique system for production of active human lysosomal acid ߭glucosidase (glucocerebrosidase, GCase, EC 3.2.1.45) using seeds of the Arabidopsis thaliana cgl mutant, which are deficient in the activity of N-acetylglucosaminyl transferase I (EC 2.4.1.101). Gaucher disease is a prevalent lysosomal storage disease in which affected individuals inherit mutations in the gene (GBA1) encoding GCase. A gene cassette optimized for seed expression was used to generate the human enzyme in seeds of the cgl (C5) mutant, and the recombinant GCase was mainly accumulated in the apoplast. Importantly, the enzymatic properties including kinetic parameters, IC50 of isofagomine (IFG), and thermal stability of the cgl-derived GCase were comparable to those of imiglucerase, a commercially-available recombinant human GCase used for enzyme replacement therapy in Gaucher patients. N-glycan structural analyses of recombinant cgl-GCase showed that the majority of the N-glycans (97%) were mannose-terminated. Additional purification was required to remove the ~15% of the plant-derived recombinant GCase that possessed potentially immunogenic (xylose- and/or fucose-containing) N-glycans. Uptake of cgl-derived GCase by mouse macrophages was similar to that of imiglucerase. The cgl seed system requires no addition of foreign (non-native) amino acids to the mature recombinant GCase protein, and the dry transgenic seeds represent a stable repository of the therapeutic protein. Other strategies that may completely prevent plant-like complex N-glycans are discussed, including use of a null cgl mutant.

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Glycobiology

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22

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4

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Biological sciences

Enzymes

Receptors and membrane biology

Structural biology (incl. macromolecular modelling)

Biomedical and clinical sciences

Biochemistry and cell biology

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