Asparagine linked (N-linked) glycosylation is an important modification of recombinant proteins, because the attached oligosaccharide chains can significantly alter protein properties. Potential glycosylation sites are not always occupied with oligosaccharide, and site occupancy can change with the
Constraints on the transport and glycosylation of recombinant IFN-γ in Chinese hamster ovary and insect cells
✍ Scribed by Andrew D. Hooker; Nicola H. Green; Anthony J. Baines; Alan T. Bull; Nigel Jenkins; Philip G. Strange; David C. James
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 298 KB
- Volume
- 63
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0006-3592
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✦ Synopsis
In this study we compare intracellular transport and processing of a recombinant glycoprotein in mammalian and insect cells. Detailed analysis of the Nglycosylation of recombinant human IFN-␥ by matrixassisted laser-desorption mass spectrometry showed that the protein secreted by Chinese hamster ovary and baculovirus-infected insect Sf 9 cells was associated with complex sialylated or truncated tri-mannosyl core glycans, respectively. However, the intracellular proteins were predominantly associated with high-mannose type oligosaccharides (Man-6 to Man-9) in both cases, indicating that endoplasmic reticulum to cis-Golgi transport is a predominant rate-limiting step in both expression systems. In CHO cells, although there was a minor intracellular subpopulation of sialylated IFN-␥ glycoforms identical to the secreted product (therefore associated with late-Golgi compartments or secretory vesicles), no other intermediates were evident. Therefore, anterograde transport processes in the Golgi stack do not limit secretion. In Sf 9 insect cells, there was no direct evidence of post-ER glycan-processing events other than core fucosylation and de-mannosylation, both of which were glycosylation site-specific. To investigate the influence of nucleotide-sugar availability on cell-specific glycosylation, the cellular content of nucleotide-sugar substrates in both mammalian and insect cells was quantitatively determined by anion-exchange HPLC. In both host cell types, UDP-hexose and UDP-N-acetylhexosamine were in greater abundance relative to other substrates. However, unlike CHO cells, sialyltransferase activity and CMP-NeuAc substrate were not present in uninfected or baculovirus-infected Sf 9 cells. Similar data were obtained for other insect cell hosts, Sf 21 and Ea4. We conclude that although the limitations on intracellular transport and secretion of recombinant proteins in mammalian and insect cells are similar, N-glycan processing in Sf insect cells is limited, and that genetic modification of N-glycan processing in these insect cell lines will be con-strained by substrate availability to terminal galactosylation.
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