Uptake of recombinant myeloperoxidase, free or fused to Fc gamma, by macrophages enhances killing activity toward micro-organisms
Autor: | Lida Garcia-Quintana, N. Moguilevsky, Pierre J. Courtoy, Alain Jacquet, John Werenne, Alex Bollen, Philippe Totté, Christophe Tournay, László Maródi |
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Rok vydání: | 1996 |
Předmět: |
Glycosylation
Macrophage Fc receptor Receptors Fc Monocytes law.invention F30 - Génétique et amélioration des plantes Mice law Cricetinae Candida albicans Receptor Chimère biology Chinese hamster ovary cell General Medicine Biochemistry Recombinant DNA Heartwater Disease Péroxydase F60 - Physiologie et biochimie végétale Immunoglobulin gamma-Chains Recombinant Fusion Proteins Molecular Sequence Data CHO Cells Cell Line Genetics Animals Humans Binding site Molecular Biology Peroxidase Base Sequence Biologie moléculaire Cell Biology Macrophage Activation Fusion protein Molecular biology In vitro Immunoglobulin Fc Fragments Molecular Weight Cell culture Immunoglobulin G biology.protein Immunoglobuline Antimicrobien |
Zdroj: | DNA and Cell Biology |
ISSN: | 1044-5498 |
Popis: | A chimeric antibody-like molecule consisting of the human myeloperoxidase (rMPO) fused to the second and third constant-sequence (CH2 and CH3) Fc domains of human immunoglobulin G-1 has been constructed and expressed in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells. This fusion molecule was designed to combine the binding specificity of Fc with the antimicrobial properties of rMPO. The rMPO-Fc fusion dimerized through the Fc fragment, while retaining the enzymatic activity of rMPO. The chimeric molecule was glycosylated and most of the propeptide was eliminated, indicating a better processing of the polypeptide than for rMPO alone. Both rMPO and rMPO-Fc bound to and were internalized by macrophage-like U937 promonocytic cells. Unexpectedly, the chimera failed to bind to the Fc receptor but interacted with a higher affinity than rMPO with the same binding sites. The presence of the Fc fragment in the chimera, in addition, did not extend the plasma half-life of the fusion protein. In vitro, rMPO-Fc exhibited a stronger killing effect than rMPO toward Candida albicans in the presence of either H202 alone or human macrophages. In vivo, rMPO-Fc similarly conferred a better protection than rMPO in a lethal model of murine cowdriosis. These properties could be related to the Fc-induced dimerization of the fusion protein in CHO cells. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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