Advances in the production of human therapeutic proteins in yeasts and filamentous fungi
Top Cited Papers
- 1 November 2004
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Biotechnology
- Vol. 22 (11) , 1409-1414
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nbt1028
Abstract
Yeast and fungal protein expression systems are used for the production of many industrially relevant enzymes, and are widely used by the research community to produce proteins that cannot be actively expressed in Escherichia coli or require glycosylation for proper folding and biological activity. However, for the production of therapeutic glycoproteins intended for use in humans, yeasts have been less useful because of their inability to modify proteins with human glycosylation structures. Yeast glycosylation is of the high-mannose type, which confers a short in vivo half-life to the protein and may render it less efficacious or even immunogenic. Several ways of humanizing yeast-derived glycoproteins have been tried, including enzymatically modifying proteins in vitro and modulating host glycosylation pathways in vivo. Recent advances in the glycoengineering of yeasts and the expression of therapeutic glycoproteins in humanized yeasts have shown significant promise, and are challenging the current dominance of therapeutic protein production based on mammalian cell culture.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Biopharmaceutical benchmarks—2003Nature Biotechnology, 2003
- Relationships between the N‐glycan structures and biological activities of recombinant human erythropoietins produced using different culture conditions and purification proceduresBritish Journal of Haematology, 2003
- Filamentous fungi as cell factories for heterologous protein productionTrends in Biotechnology, 2002
- The role of carbohydrate in the assembly and function of polymeric IgGMolecular Immunology, 2000
- High-yield secretion of recombinant gelatins byPichia pastorisYeast, 1999
- Genetic engineering of recombinant glycoproteins and glycosylation pathway in mammalian host cellsGlycoconjugate Journal, 1999
- Therapeutic delivery of proteins to macrophages: implications for treatment of Gaucher's diseaseThe Lancet, 1996
- N-Glycosylation/deglycosylation as a mechanism for the post-translational modification/remodification of proteinsGlycoconjugate Journal, 1995
- Enzyme Therapy in Type 1 Gaucher Disease: Comparative Efficacy of Mannose-Terminated Glucocerebrosidase from Natural and Recombinant SourcesAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1995
- Relationship between sugar chain structure and biological activity of recombinant human erythropoietin produced in Chinese hamster ovary cells.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1989