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2003
Journal Article
Title
Secretion of functional anti-CD30 angiogenin immunotoxins into the supernatant of transfected 293T cells
Abstract
Immunotoxins consist of a target-cell-specific binding moiety, chemically or recombinantly linked to a cytotoxic component. A number of different immunotoxins (IT) have increasingly been evaluated for immunotherapy. Since these foreign proteins are highly immunogenic in human, we have developed recombinant IT using the human ribonuclease angiogenin. Due to their potential toxic effects an eucaryotic cells, these IT are usually expressed in bacteria. Depending on the structure, size, and sequence of the desired IT, bacterial expression can be limited and the yield after purification be unsatisfactory. Therefore, the expression of IT in eucaryotic cells could provide a promising alternative. For this purpose we genetically fused the anti-CD30 single-chain variable fragment (scFv) Ki4 to the N- and C-termini of recombinant angiogenin. Both IT possess leader sequences, which mediate their secretion into the cell culture supernatant. Using a bicistronic mRNA the IT were simultaneously expressed together with enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP). This allows direct monitoring of transfected cells. An additional plasmid encoded Zeocin resistance enhances the cultivation of transfected cells under selection pressure. Three days after transfection of 293T-cells, unpurified IT were analyzed by flow cytometry and competitive cell proliferation assays. This is the first report on the use of eucaryotic cells for the secretion of functionally active IT with a human effector domain.