Summary

Tasarım ve Yapay Ekstrasellüler Matrix İnşaatı (aECM) Proteinler gelen<em> Escherichia coli</em> Cilt Doku Mühendisliği

Published: June 11, 2015
doi:

Summary

Recombinant technologies have enabled material designers to create novel artificial proteins with customized functionalities for tissue engineering applications. For example, artificial extracellular matrix proteins can be designed to incorporate structural and biological domains derived from native ECMs. Here, we describe the construction and purification of aECM proteins containing elastin-like repeats.

Abstract

Recombinant technology is a versatile platform to create novel artificial proteins with tunable properties. For the last decade, many artificial proteins that have incorporated functional domains derived from nature (or created de novo) have been reported. In particular, artificial extracellular matrix (aECM) proteins have been developed; these aECM proteins consist of biological domains taken from fibronectin, laminins and collagens and are combined with structural domains including elastin-like repeats, silk and collagen repeats. To date, aECM proteins have been widely investigated for applications in tissue engineering and wound repair. Recently, Tjin and coworkers developed integrin-specific aECM proteins designed for promoting human skin keratinocyte attachment and propagation. In their work, the aECM proteins incorporate cell binding domains taken from fibronectin, laminin-5 and collagen IV, as well as flanking elastin-like repeats. They demonstrated that the aECM proteins developed in their work were promising candidates for use as substrates in artificial skin. Here, we outline the design and construction of such aECM proteins as well as their purification process using the thermo-responsive characteristics of elastin.

Introduction

For several decades, both synthetic and natural materials have been explored for use as scaffolds in tissue engineering1,2. While synthetic materials such as polymers offer excellent structural integrity and tunable mechanical properties, they often have insufficient bioactivity to promote growth and infiltration of tissues. On the other hand, natural materials such as extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins have excellent biological activity, but have limitations such as batch-to-batch variability, rapid degradation and immunogenicity issues. As such, recombinant proteins are desired, since they can be designed to mimic only the desirable properties of native proteins3,4.

Recombinant protein engineering has garnered widespread interests as a versatile platform for the design and production of novel artificial protein biopolymers. By controlling the genetic sequence, the functionalities of the artificial proteins can be tailored for a wide variety of applications5,6. In particular, artificial extracellular matrix (aECM) proteins can be tailored to have multiple functionalities for applications in tissue engineering, regeneration and wound repair2,7. More importantly, advances in cloning and purification technologies have increased scalability and reduced the cost of manufacturing recombinant proteins tremendously. It is possible to produce large quantities of recombinant proteins at low production costs which are economic for use in the clinic5.

Artificial extracellular matrix proteins have been developed for tissue engineering applications8-11. For instance, Tirrell et al. designed a small diameter vascular graft using artificial proteins containing fibronectin CS5 sequence and elastin-like repeats (ELP-CS5). They showed that human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) were able to adhere and grow on these materials12. Others have also incorporated short bioactive sequences taken from fibronectin, collagen, laminin, fibrinogen and vitronectin as well as structural domains that mimic elastin, spider silk and collagens to create a variety of fusion proteins10. Bulk cross-linked films made out of elastin-based aECM proteins also exhibited mechanical properties similar to that of native elastin (elastic moduli ranges between 0.3-0.6 MPa)13. Subsequently, aECM proteins containing longer fibronectin fragments were also reported to accelerate wound healing in vitro due to increased integrin binding affinities8.

Recently, integrin-specific artificial ECM proteins have been developed by Tjin and coworkers14. Each aECM protein contains a bioactive cell-binding domain taken from ECM components of native human skin2,7,15, such as laminin-5, collagen-IV and fibronectin. For example, the integrin α3Β1 has been shown to bind the PPFLMLLKGSTR sequence found in the laminin-5 alpha-3 chain globular domain 3 (LG3)16,17. In their report, they showed that primary human skin epidermal keratinocytes preferentially engage different integrins for binding to each of the aECM proteins, depending on the type of cell binding domain present.

The aECM proteins discussed in the work by Tjin et al. contain flanking elastin-like domains {(VPGIG)2VPGKG(VPGIG)2}8 that confer elasticity which mimics the mechanical properties of human skin. In addition, the incorporation of lysine residues within the elastin-like repeats also increases the overall protein solubility in aqueous solvents. In addition, the lysine residues also serve as crosslinking sites to facilitate the formation of crosslinked aECM films12. Inclusion of elastin-like repeats within the aECM protein sequence allow the proteins to be readily purified via Inverse Transition Cycling (ITC)14. Elastins undergo a sharp and reversible phase transition at a specific temperature known as the lower critical solution temperature (LCST) or the inverse transition temperature (Tt)18-20. Elastins and elastin-like repeats adopt hydrophilic random coil conformations below their LCST and become soluble in water, whereas above their LCST, elastins aggregate rapidly into micron-size particles. Such phase transitions are reversible and hence, can be exploited to allow elastin-based aECM proteins to be readily purified via the ITC technique21.

In this work, we report a generalized procedure to design, construct and purify artificial ECM proteins containing bioactive cell-binding domains, fused to elastin-like repeats. The process to design and clone the plasmids that encode for the amino acid sequences for the aECM proteins is described. The steps involved to purify the aECM proteins using ITC are outlined. Finally, the methods to determine the purity of the aECM proteins obtained using SDS-PAGE electrophoresis and Western Blotting are discussed.

Protocol

AECM Proteinler için rekombinant kodlayan plazmidlerin yapılması Vektör 1. Klonlama Fonksyonel (örneğin, hücre bağlama alanı ve elastin-benzeri tekrarlar) amino asit dizisini tasarımı. Fonksiyonel etki uçlarını yan Tasarım kısıtlama siteleri alt klonlama yazılımı talimatlarına göre özgür yazılım kullanarak (örn http://biologylabs.utah.edu/jorgensen/wayned/ape/) kolaylaştırmak için. Burada, planlanan bölgelere sindirimi sınırlandırmak için işlevsel bir etki…

Representative Results

Elastin benzeri tekrarları içeren füzyon proteinleri tasarımında, genel bir elastin içeriğini, füzyon proteininin 18 arasında yeterince büyük bir kısmını muhafaza etmek önemlidir. Bu füzyon proteini yapısı saflaştırılması için ITC kullanmak için, onun elastin gibi özelliklerini muhafaza sağlamaktır. aECM proteinleri tasarımı ve bu bölümde tarif edilen sekanslar, özel olarak Tjin ve ark., 14 tarafından gerçekleştirilen çalışmadan alınmıştır.</em…

Discussion

Rekombinant protein mühendisliği aşağıdan yukarıya yaklaşımı kullanarak yeni protein malzemeleri oluşturmak için çok yönlü bir tekniktir. Protein bazlı malzemeler ilgi uygulamasına göre birden fazla işlevleri sahip olacak şekilde dizayn uygun olabilir. Nedeniyle klonlanması ve protein ifadesi teknolojileri artan ilerleme için, bir tekrar üretilebilir ve ölçeklenebilir şekilde yapay proteinler çeşitli oluşturmak için göreceli olarak basit (ve uygun maliyetli) olmuştur. elastin-benzeri domen…

Divulgazioni

The authors have nothing to disclose.

Acknowledgements

Yazarlar Milli Eğitim Bakanlığı AcRF Tier 1 (RG41) fon kabul ve Nanyang Teknoloji Üniversitesi tarafından hibe başlatmak istiyorum. Alçak ve Tjin Nanyang Teknoloji Üniversitesi, Singapur Araştırma Öğrenci Bursu (RSS) tarafından finanse edilmektedir.

Materials

pET22b (+) Novagen 69744 T7 expression vectors with resistance to ampicillin 
BL21(DE3)pLysS  Invitrogen C6060-03 additional antibiotics – chloramphenicol
Isopropyl-beta-D-thiogalactoside (IPTG) Gold Biotechnology I2481C 1M stock solution with autoclaved water, make fresh prior to induction.
QIAprep Spin Miniprep Kit Qiagen 27106 plasmid isolation kit
T4 ligase New England Biolabs M0202S
Ampicillin Affymetrix 11259
Chloramphenicol Affymetrix 23660
Zymoclean™ gel DNA recovery kit Zymo Research D4001
XL10-gold strain Agilent Technologies 200315

Riferimenti

  1. Chen, Q., Liang, S., Thouas, G. A. Elastomeric biomaterials for tissue engineering. Prog Polym Sci. 38 (3-4), 584-671 (2013).
  2. Groeber, F., Holeiter, M., Hampel, M., Hinderer, S., Schenke-Layland, K. Skin tissue engineering – In vivo and in vitro applications. Adv Drug Deliv Rev. 63 (4-5), 352-366 (2011).
  3. Kushner, A. M., Guan, Z. Modular Design in Natural and Biomimetic Soft Materials. Angewandte Chemie International Edition. 50 (39), 9026-9057 (2011).
  4. Gagner, J. E., Kim, W., Chaikof, E. L. Designing protein-based biomaterials for medical applications. Acta Biomater. 10 (4), 1542-1557 (2014).
  5. Gomes, S., Leonor, I. B., Mano, J. F., Reis, R. L., Kaplan, D. L. Natural and genetically engineered proteins for tissue engineering. Prog Polym Sci. 37 (1), 1-17 (2012).
  6. Werkmeister, J. A., Ramshaw, J. A. M. Recombinant protein scaffolds for tissue engineering. Biomedical Materials. 7 (1), 012002 (2012).
  7. MacNeil, S. Biomaterials for tissue engineering of skin. Materials Today. 11 (5), 26-35 (2008).
  8. Fong, E., Tirrell, D. A. Collective Cell Migration on Artificial Extracellular Matrix Proteins Containing Full-Length Fibronectin Domains. Advanced Materials. 22 (46), 5271-5275 (2010).
  9. Ratner, B. D., Bryant, S. J. BIOMATERIALS: Where We Have Been and Where We are Going. Annual Review of Biomedical Engineering. 6 (1), 41-75 (2004).
  10. Cai, L., Heilshorn, S. C. Designing ECM-mimetic materials using protein engineering. Acta Biomater. 10 (4), 1751-1760 (2014).
  11. Annabi, N., et al. Elastomeric recombinant protein-based biomaterials. Biochemical Engineering Journal. 77, 110-118 (2013).
  12. Heilshorn, S. C., DiZio, K. A., Welsh, E. R., Tirrell, D. A. Endothelial cell adhesion to the fibronectin CS5 domain in artificial extracellular matrix proteins. Biomaterials. 24 (23), 4245-4252 (2003).
  13. Simnick, A. J., Lim, D. W., Chow, D., Chilkoti, A. Biomedical and Biotechnological Applications of Elastin-Like Polypeptides. Polymer Reviews. 47 (1), 121-154 (2007).
  14. Tjin, M. S., Chua, A. W. C., Ma, D. R., Lee, S. T., Fong, E. Human Epidermal Keratinocyte Cell Response on Integrin-Specific Artificial Extracellular Matrix Proteins. Macromolecular Bioscience. 14 (8), 1125-1134 (2014).
  15. MacNeil, S. Progress and opportunities for tissue-engineered skin. Nature. 445 (7130), 874-880 (2007).
  16. Kariya, Y., et al. Differential regulation of cellular adhesion and migration by recombinant laminin-5 forms with partial deletion or mutation within the G3 domain of α3 chain. J Cell Biochem. 88 (3), 506-520 (2003).
  17. Shang, M., Koshikawa, N., Schenk, S., Quaranta, V. The LG3 module of laminin-5 harbors a binding site for integrin α3Β1 that promotes cell adhesion, spreading, and migration. J Biol Chem. 276 (35), 33045-33053 (2001).
  18. Hassouneh, W., Christensen, T., Chilkoti, A. Elastin-like polypeptides as a purification tag for recombinant proteins. Current Protocols in Protein Science. , 6.11.1-6.11.16 (2010).
  19. Keeley, F., Mecham, R., Keeley, F. Ch. 4. Evolution of Extracellular Matrix.Biology of Extracellular Matrix. , 73-119 (2013).
  20. Le, D. H. T., et al. Self-Assembly of Elastin-Mimetic Double Hydrophobic Polypeptides. Biomacromolecules. 14 (4), 1028-1034 (2013).
  21. MacEwan, S. R., Hassouneh, W., Chilkoti, A. Non-chromatographic Purification of Recombinant Elastin-like Polypeptides and their Fusions with Peptides and Proteins from Escherichia coli. Journal of visualized experiments: JoVE. (88), e51583 (2014).
  22. Meyer, D. E., Chilkoti, A. Genetically encoded synthesis of protein-based polymers with precisely specified molecular weight and sequence by recursive directional ligation: examples from the elastin-like polypeptide system. Biomacromolecules. 3 (2), 357-367 (2002).

Play Video

Citazione di questo articolo
Low, P. S. J., Tjin, M. S., Fong, E. Design and Construction of Artificial Extracellular Matrix (aECM) Proteins from Escherichia coli for Skin Tissue Engineering. J. Vis. Exp. (100), e52845, doi:10.3791/52845 (2015).

View Video