Protein Expression and Purification, Vol.102, 27-37, 2014
Improved soluble expression of a single-chain antibody fragment in E. coli for targeting CA125 in epithelial ovarian cancer
Production of antibody fragments in heterologous hosts such as Escherichia coli provides a unique and cost-effective method to develop engineered vectors for tumor targeting. A single-chain Fragment variable (scFv) of the murine monoclonal antibody MAb-B43.13 targeting CA125 in epithelial ovarian cancer was previously developed, expressed, purified and proposed as a functional targeting entity for biomedical applications. However, the yields from its soluble expression in heterologous systems were very low for any practical use in preclinical translational research; leave alone the defeated objective of convenient and cost-effective production. In the present work, the anti-CA125 scFv gene was re-organized and subcloned into pET-22b(+) vector to be in frame with the pelB leader peptide for periplasmic localization and C-terminal hexa-histidine tag to facilitate downstream purification. Six variants of the scFv were constructed to investigate the impact of variable domain orientations, inter-domain peptide linker sequences and codon optimization on the soluble expression of the scFv using Rosetta 2(DE3) as the E. coli host supplemented with tRNAs for rare codons. Expression in shake flask cultures under the control of an inducible T7 promoter and subsequent purification by cobalt based immobilized metal affinity chromatography yielded differential amounts of high purity scFv for all constructs. Here, we report up to 14-fold increase in the soluble expression of the scFv primarily as a result of codon optimization with minor effects from inter-domain peptide linkers and variable domain orientation in the anti-CA125 scFv molecule. All the scFv constructs expressed and purified were found to be immunoreactive for in vitro targeting of CA125 antigen. (C) 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Keywords:Single-chain Fragment variable (scFv);Codon optimization;Soluble expression;Inter-domain peptide linker;CA125;Epithelial ovarian cancer