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      Towards rational engineering of cells: Recombinant gene expression in defined chromosomal loci

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      BMC Proceedings
      BioMed Central
      22nd European Society for Animal Cell Technology (ESACT) Meeting on Cell Based Technologies
      15-18 May 2011

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          Abstract

          The strength of recombinant gene expression is a key property of cell lines for biopharmaceutical protein production. In most stable cell lines the expression vector is stably introduced into the host chromosomal DNA. Apart from the copy number and the used expression control elements the performance of recombinant expression vectors is modulated by genetic and epigenetic features provided by flanking host elements. Since targeted integration is very difficult cell clones with high expression of a recombinant vector are created by random integration and large scale screening for gene expression. This allows the isolation of those rare recombinant cells in which gene expression is optimal. This is usually due to locus-specific influences of the chromosomal surroundings. We have developed an efficient methodology for targeting expression cassettes to specific chromosomal sites [1,2]]. The method (Flp recombinase mediated cassette exchange - RMCE) allows the repeated use of defined loci by targeting constructs for expression of proteins and viruses, thereby allowing to exploit the positive features of a given integration site [3,4]]. Thereby, a systematic evaluation of the performance of a set of expression vectors in various chromosomal sites becomes feasible. In this study we screened for high performance integration sites in HEK293 and CHO-K1 cells supporting expression cassettes driven by a potent promoter. As a read out, production of antibodies and recombinant retroviral vectors were used. Thereby, we could show that high level expression of a given promoter is restricted to defined integration sites, while other sites show only moderate expression (data not shown). An important new finding was that a given chromosomal site is not flexible with respect to the integrated cassette but requires the integration of specific promoters. As illustrated in figure 1, an integration site, identified for supporting high level expression of an SV40 promoter driven cassette fails to adequately support expression of MPSV and adenoviral major late promoter (AdmlP). Vice versa, another site, initially screened for supporting MSCV promoter expression, could restore expression of the highly homologous MPSV promoter while the SV40 promoter and the AdmlP promoter give only moderate expression. Figure 1 Mode of tagging defines the optimal targeting cassette. Two highly potent chromosomal integration sites were screened upon random integration of an expression cassette driven by the SV40 promoter and the MSCV promoter, respectively. By means of Flp recombinase mediated cassette exchange, the screening cassette was exchanged for various expression cassettes, thereby integrating expression cassettes driven by the SV40 promoter, the adenoviral major late promoter (AdmLP) or the MPSV promoter into the same chromosomal site. The expression level upon targeting the various cassettes was determined and related to the expression level of the tagged cell. Finally, we tested the impact of the orientation of the cassette in a specific chromosomal site. We found that some integration sites are flexible with respect to the orientation of the expression cassettes while others support expression only in one direction (data not shown). While classical enhancer elements are known to activate promoters largely independent from the relative position this finding suggests that other cis acting elements affect the incoming cassettes in an orientation dependent manner. Together, this shows that not the nature of integration site and the design of the vector as such define the performance of a producer cell clone. Rather, the interplay between these components defines the level and stability of expression. Since these interactions cannot be predicted, the performance of a vector in a given site has to be evaluated empirically. In order to exploit favourable sets of chromosomal sites and vectors we made use of bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) vectors. By recombineering, expression cassettes were integrated into pre-selected chromosomal sites as encoded by BAC vectors. These vectors were randomly integrated into cells by standard transfection protocols. Clones were isolated and evaluated for expression. As expected, highly reproducible expression characteristics were found in individual clones (data not shown). In conclusion, the definition of favorable combinations of specific integration sites and vector design allow the rational exploitation of given chromosomal sites. For this purpose, technologies for site specific genetic manipulation of mammalian cells are essential. This concerns both targeted integration of expression cassettes into defined loci (such as RMCE or site specific nuclease induced homologous recombination) or by transduction of large chromosomal domains (as provided by BAC vectors). These technologies pave the way for predictable and high expression of biotechnologically relevant products such as antibodies and recombinant viral vectors.

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          Road to precision: recombinase-based targeting technologies for genome engineering.

          In the past years, recombinase-based approaches for integrating transgenes into defined chromosomal loci of mammalian cells have gained increasing attention. This method is attractive since it enables to precisely integrate transgenes of interest into pre-defined integration sites, thereby allowing to predict the expression properties of a genetically manipulated cell. This review focuses on the current state of targeting strategies including RMCE employing site-specific recombinases such as Cre, Flp and PhiC31. In particular, applications for protein expression, virus production, transgenic animals and chromosome engineering are described.
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            Recombinant protein expression by targeting pre-selected chromosomal loci

            Background Recombinant protein expression in mammalian cells is mostly achieved by stable integration of transgenes into the chromosomal DNA of established cell lines. The chromosomal surroundings have strong influences on the expression of transgenes. The exploitation of defined loci by targeting expression constructs with different regulatory elements is an approach to design high level expression systems. Further, this allows to evaluate the impact of chromosomal surroundings on distinct vector constructs. Results We explored antibody expression upon targeting diverse expression constructs into previously tagged loci in CHO-K1 and HEK293 cells that exhibit high reporter gene expression. These loci were selected by random transfer of reporter cassettes and subsequent screening. Both, retroviral infection and plasmid transfection with eGFP or antibody expression cassettes were employed for tagging. The tagged cell clones were screened for expression and single copy integration. Cell clones producing > 20 pg/cell in 24 hours could be identified. Selected integration sites that had been flanked with heterologous recombinase target sites (FRTs) were targeted by Flp recombinase mediated cassette exchange (RMCE). The results give proof of principle for consistent protein expression upon RMCE. Upon targeting antibody expression cassettes 90-100% of all resulting cell clones showed correct integration. Antibody production was found to be highly consistent within the individual cell clones as expected from their isogenic nature. However, the nature and orientation of expression control elements revealed to be critical. The impact of different promoters was examined with the tag-and-targeting approach. For each of the chosen promoters high expression sites were identified. However, each site supported the chosen promoters to a different extent, indicating that the strength of a particular promoter is dominantly defined by its chromosomal context. Conclusion RMCE provides a powerful method to specifically design vectors for optimized gene expression with high accuracy. Upon considering the specific requirements of chromosomal sites this method provides a unique tool to exploit such sites for predictable expression of biotechnologically relevant proteins such as antibodies.
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              A new generation of retroviral producer cells: predictable and stable virus production by Flp-mediated site-specific integration of retroviral vectors.

              We developed a new strategy that provides well-defined high-titer producer cells for recombinant retroviruses in a minimum amount of time. The strategy involves the targeted integration of the retroviral vector into a chromosomal locus with favorable properties. For proof of concept we established a novel HEK293-based retroviral producer cell line, called Flp293A, with a single-copy retroviral vector integrated at a selected chromosomal locus. The vector was flanked by noninteracting Flp-recombinase recognition sites and was exchanged for different retroviral vectors via Flp-mediated cassette exchange. All analyzed cell clones showed correct integration and identical titers for each of the vectors, confirming that the expression characteristics from the parental cell were preserved. Titers up to 2.5 x 10(7) infectious particles/10(6) cells were obtained. Also, high-titer producer cells for a therapeutic vector that encodes the 8.9-kb collagen VII cDNA in a marker-free cassette were obtained within 3 weeks without screening. Thus, we provide evidence that the precise integration of viral vectors into a favorable chromosomal locus leads to high and predictable virus production. This method is compatible with other retroviral vectors, including self-inactivating vectors and marker-free vectors. Further, it provides a tool for evaluation of different retroviral vector designs.
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                Author and article information

                Conference
                BMC Proc
                BMC Proceedings
                BioMed Central
                1753-6561
                2011
                22 November 2011
                : 5
                : Suppl 8
                : O6
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research, 38124 Braunschweig, Germany
                [2 ]Instituto de Tecnologia Química e Biológica-Universidade Nova de Lisboa/Instituto de Biológica Experimental e Tecnológica (ITQB-UNL/IBET), P-2781-901 Oeiras, Portugal
                [3 ]InSCREENeX GmbH, 38124 Braunschweig, Germany
                Article
                1753-6561-5-S8-O6
                10.1186/1753-6561-5-S8-O6
                3284949
                22373348
                a0b68ed5-2dab-4614-8ce4-3e07d2375813
                Copyright ©2011 Nehlsen et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

                This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                22nd European Society for Animal Cell Technology (ESACT) Meeting on Cell Based Technologies
                Vienna, Austria
                15-18 May 2011
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                Medicine
                Medicine

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