Secretion of the extracellular domain of the human insulin receptor from insect cells by use of a baculovirus vector
- 30 June 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Portland Press Ltd. in Biochemical Journal
- Vol. 261 (1) , 119-126
- https://doi.org/10.1042/bj2610119
Abstract
To explore the utility of the baculovirus/insect-cell system for the expression of a soluble secreted human insulin-receptor (hIR) extracellular ligand-binding domain, we have engineered a recombinant virus encoding an hIR deletion mutant which is truncated eight residues from the beginning of the predicted transmembrane domain (i.e. 921 residues). Within 24 h after infection of Sf9 cells with virus, insulin-binding activity begins to accumulate in the culture medium, and reaches a maximum between 48 and 72 h. The intracellular transit and processing of this secreted receptor, designated ''AchIR01'', is quite slow. After 24 h in pulse-chase experiments .apprx. 50% of the metabollically labelled proteins is still inside the cell. This protein accumulates as a non-cleaved hIR precursor which is glycoslated, but the carbohydrate is entirely endoglycosidase H (endoH)-sensitive (i.e. high mannose). Approximately one-half of the receptor in the culture medium (i.e. .apprx. 25% of the total) is in the form of non-cleaved precursor, and about one half of its carbohydrate chains are now endoH-resistant. The remainder of the protein is proteolytically processsed hIR (.alpha.-plus truncated .beta.-subunits). None of these hIR species exhibit O-linked carbohydrate. Only the processed form of the receptor in the medium binds insulin. This insulin-binding protein is secreted as a dimer (.alpha..beta.)2, and binds insulin with an affinity which is comparable with that of both the wild-type hIR as well as the secreted form of the hIR expressed in mammalian cells. Despite the rather inefficient processing and altered glycosylation of the AchIR01 protein in insect cells, this high-affinity insulin-binding protein accumulates in the medium at levels (mg/litre) of about 100 times that achieved in a mammalian-cell system.This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
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