Efficient production of protein complexes in mammalian cells using a poxvirus vector

PLoS One. 2022 Dec 15;17(12):e0279038. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0279038. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

The production of full length, biologically active proteins in mammalian cells is critical for a wide variety of purposes ranging from structural studies to preparation of subunit vaccines. Prior research has shown that Modified vaccinia virus Ankara encoding the bacteriophage T7 RNA polymerase (MVA-T7) is particularly suitable for high level expression of proteins upon infection of mammalian cells. The expression system is safe for users and 10-50 mg of full length, biologically active proteins may be obtained in their native state, from a few litres of infected cell cultures. Here we report further improvements which allow an increase in the ease and speed of recombinant virus isolation, the scale-up of protein production and the simultaneous synthesis of several polypeptides belonging to a protein complex using a single virus vector. Isolation of MVA-T7 viruses encoding foreign proteins was simplified by combining positive selection for virus recombinants and negative selection against parental virus, a process which eliminated the need for tedious plaque purification. Scale-up of protein production was achieved by infecting a BHK 21 suspension cell line and inducing protein expression with previously infected cells instead of virus, thus saving time and effort in handling virus stocks. Protein complexes were produced from infected cells by concatenating the Tobacco Etch Virus (TEV) N1A protease sequence with each of the genes of the complex into a single ORF, each gene being separated from the other by twin TEV protease cleavage sites. We report the application of these methods to the production of a complex formed on the one hand between the HIV-1 integrase and its cell partner LEDGF and on the other between the HIV-1 VIF protein and its cell partners APOBEC3G, CBFβ, Elo B and Elo C. The strategies developed in this study should be valuable for the overexpression and subsequent purification of numerous protein complexes.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Cell Line
  • Genetic Vectors* / genetics
  • Mammals / genetics
  • Vaccinia virus* / genetics

Supplementary concepts

  • Modified Vaccinia Ankara virus

Grants and funding

This work of the Interdisciplinary Thematic Institute IMCBio, as part of the ITI 2021-2028 program of the University of Strasbourg, CNRS and Inserm, was supported by IdEx Unistra (ANR-10-IDEX-0002), and by SFRI-STRAT’US project (ANR 20-SFRI-0012) and EUR IMCBio (ANR-17-EURE-0023) under the framework of the French Investments for the Future Program. We acknowledge grants from ANRS (ECTZ20988), SIDACTION (2016-1-AEQ-10578, 2018-1-AEQ-12026) and the French Infrastructure for Integrated Structural Biology (FRISBI) ANR-10-INSB-0005 and Instruct-ERIC. We are grateful to Lauriane Kuhn, Philippe Wolff and Philippe Hammann on the Proteomics platform at the IBMC and to members of the IGBMC Structural Biology and Genomics platform as well as members of the IGBMC common services.