Expression systems: Difference between revisions

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=Bacteria=
=Mainstream systems=


  ''Escherichia coli''
==''Escherichia coli''==
  ''Bacillus subtilis''
===Rosetta cells ===
  ''Bacillus megaterium''
  ''Pseudomonas fluorescens''


=Protozoa=
If you are trying to express non-bacterial protein, it is quite likely that your gene of interest contains rare codons and thus E.Coli can't express it well.  Rosetta and Rosetta 2 cells (available from Novagen) are designed to overcome this problem.  For human proteins, expression levels may sometimes change from "I need to enrich the protein batch on affinity column before I can see protein on the gel" to "80% of the protein in the lysed cells is my protein of interest".
   ''Leishmania tarentolae''
 
==Fungi==
 
===''Pichia pastoris''===
 
 
==Insect cells==
    
===Baculovirus-mediated expression in ''Spodoptera frugiperd'' and ''Trichoplusia ni'' cells===
 
==Mammalian cells==


=Fungi=
===Human Embryonic Kidney (HEK) 293 cultured cells ===
  ''Pichia pastoris''
Commonly known as HEK293 cells they are actually an excellent protein source, especially for secreted proteins. Contrary to urban legend, they are significantly cheaper than insect cells to culture. You need standard cell culture equipment that in most cases is available in any biology department. Cloning is easy and a wealth of vectors are available to insert your gene in. contrary to insect cells, the DNA can be used directly for
  ''Saccharomyces cerevisiae''
[http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17001101?ordinalpos=6&itool=EntrezSystem2.PEntrez.Pubmed.Pubmed_ResultsPanel.Pubmed_RVDocSum transient transfections].
  ''Schizosaccharomyces pombe''
In some cases it is worth investing in generating a stable cell line that produces the protein of interest; a good tool to do that is the
  ''Hansenula polymorpha''
[http://www.invitrogen.com/content.cfm?pageid=3375 Flp-In system from Invitrogen ] that can be used to generate highly expressing stable cell lines.
  Filamentous fungi
Quite easy to scale up the volume still using attached cells, in special plastic bottles that present a large surface area: thats most useful especially for secreted proteins. There are two main ways to express your gene in HEK293 cells:
Producing intracellular proteins in HEK293 cells requires to grow the cells in suspension which can be a bit more of an art and requires a CO2 shaking incubator.


=Insect cells=
===Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cultured cells===
  Baculovirus-mediated expression in "Spodoptera frugiperda" and "Trichoplusia ni" cells
 
=Other systems=
 
==Bacteria==
 
===''Bacillus subtilis''===
 
===''Bacillus megaterium''===
 
===''Pseudomonas fluorescens''===
 
==Protozoa==
 
===''Leishmania tarentolae''===
 
==Fungi==
 
===''Saccharomyces cerevisiae''===
 
===''Schizosaccharomyces pombe''===
 
===''Hansenula polymorpha''===
 
===''Filamentous fungi''===


=Mammalian cells=


  Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cultured cells
  Human Embryonic Kidney (HEK) 293 cultured cells [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17001101?ordinalpos=6&itool=EntrezSystem2.PEntrez.Pubmed.Pubmed_ResultsPanel.Pubmed_RVDocSum (Transient transfection)].
  Human Embryonic Kidney (HEK) 293 cultured cells [http://www.invitrogen.com/content.cfm?pageid=3375 (Flp-In System)].


=Plant cells=
=Plant cells=
  Algae
  Chloroplasts
''Nicotiana tabacum''


= Try Rosetta cells =
==Algae==


If you are trying to express non-bacterial protein, it is quite likely that your gene of interest contains rare codons and thus E.Coli can't express it well.  Rosetta and Rosetta 2 cells (available from Novagen) are designed to overcome this problem.  For human proteins, expression levels may sometimes change from "I need to enrich the protein batch on affinity column before I can see protein on the gel" to "80% of the protein in the lysed cells is my protein of interest".
Chloroplasts


 
''Nicotiana tabacum''
--[[User:Zelig ff|Artem]] 02:43, 11 February 2008 (CET)

Latest revision as of 18:34, 12 February 2008

Mainstream systems[edit | edit source]

Escherichia coli[edit | edit source]

Rosetta cells[edit | edit source]

If you are trying to express non-bacterial protein, it is quite likely that your gene of interest contains rare codons and thus E.Coli can't express it well. Rosetta and Rosetta 2 cells (available from Novagen) are designed to overcome this problem. For human proteins, expression levels may sometimes change from "I need to enrich the protein batch on affinity column before I can see protein on the gel" to "80% of the protein in the lysed cells is my protein of interest".

Fungi[edit | edit source]

Pichia pastoris[edit | edit source]

Insect cells[edit | edit source]

Baculovirus-mediated expression in Spodoptera frugiperd and Trichoplusia ni cells[edit | edit source]

Mammalian cells[edit | edit source]

Human Embryonic Kidney (HEK) 293 cultured cells[edit | edit source]

Commonly known as HEK293 cells they are actually an excellent protein source, especially for secreted proteins. Contrary to urban legend, they are significantly cheaper than insect cells to culture. You need standard cell culture equipment that in most cases is available in any biology department. Cloning is easy and a wealth of vectors are available to insert your gene in. contrary to insect cells, the DNA can be used directly for transient transfections. In some cases it is worth investing in generating a stable cell line that produces the protein of interest; a good tool to do that is the Flp-In system from Invitrogen that can be used to generate highly expressing stable cell lines. Quite easy to scale up the volume still using attached cells, in special plastic bottles that present a large surface area: thats most useful especially for secreted proteins. There are two main ways to express your gene in HEK293 cells: Producing intracellular proteins in HEK293 cells requires to grow the cells in suspension which can be a bit more of an art and requires a CO2 shaking incubator.

Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cultured cells[edit | edit source]

Other systems[edit | edit source]

Bacteria[edit | edit source]

Bacillus subtilis[edit | edit source]

Bacillus megaterium[edit | edit source]

Pseudomonas fluorescens[edit | edit source]

Protozoa[edit | edit source]

Leishmania tarentolae[edit | edit source]

Fungi[edit | edit source]

Saccharomyces cerevisiae[edit | edit source]

Schizosaccharomyces pombe[edit | edit source]

Hansenula polymorpha[edit | edit source]

Filamentous fungi[edit | edit source]

Plant cells[edit | edit source]

Algae[edit | edit source]

Chloroplasts

Nicotiana tabacum