2006 AIChE Annual Meeting
(115g) Cell-Free Protein Synthesis of Complex Proteins Containing Unnatural Amino Acids
Authors
The openness of the cell-free system allows precise control of both natural and unAA concentrations, avoiding cellular uptake limitations, as well as the concentrations of the orthogonal suppressor tRNA and aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase. In addition it significantly reduces the period for protein expression and folding (3 to 6 hours) as compared to two weeks for mammalian cell processes. It is also advantageous to use cell-free protein technology because it can be used to produce toxic proteins and offers high product quality, low production cost, and low capital costs.
We have initially chosen to incorporate O-methyl-L-tyrosine, p-acetyl-L-phenylalanine, and p-azido-L-phenylalanine site-specifically using an orthogonal tRNATyr/Tyrosine-synthetase pair from Methanococcus jannaschii. We have incorporated these unnatural amino acids into soluble bacterial proteins; therapeutic, mammalian secreted proteins containing disulfide bonds, and membrane proteins. This cell-free protein synthesis platform was developed by optimizing cell strains, extract preparation protocols, chaperone concentrations, and cell-free reaction conditions. Reactions in which the tRNA and synthetase are either purified and added to the cell-free reaction or produced during cell extract preparation result in significant quantities of disulfide bonded and vesicle incorporated proteins. Activity was verified by colorimetric, cell proliferation, immunoprecipitation, and transport assays. Improved incorporation of unAA's has motivated us to attempt targeted post-translational modification of the azide and ketone moieties inserted into the cell-free products. This may allow us to rapidly produce functionalized membrane proteins and homogeneous therapeutics and vaccines.