Publications by authors named "Vanessa E Wall"

Tobacco-etch-virus (TEV) protease is the workhorse of many laboratories in which protein expression is the linchpin of downstream experiments. TEV protease is remarkable in its sequence specificity as the cleavage sequence rarely appears in higher organisms and its ability to cleave fusion tag proteins from proteins of interest. Herein we report work done on large-scale production of TEV protease using different promotors, media, fusion tags, and expression platforms.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate 3-kinases (PI3K) are a family of kinases whose activity affects pathways needed for basic cell functions. As a result, PI3K is one of the most mutated genes in all human cancers and serves as an ideal therapeutic target for cancer treatment. Expanding on work done by other groups we improved protein yield to produce stable and pure protein using a variety of modifications including improved solubility tag, novel expression modalities, and optimized purification protocol and buffer.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The diversity of chemical and structural attributes of proteins makes it inherently difficult to produce a wide range of proteins in a single recombinant protein production system. The nature of the target proteins themselves, along with cost, ease of use, and speed, are typically cited as major factors to consider in production. Despite a wide variety of alternative expression systems, most recombinant proteins for research and therapeutics are produced in a limited number of systems: Escherichia coli, yeast, insect cells, and the mammalian cell lines HEK293 and CHO.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The tobacco etch virus (TEV) protease is a commonly used reagent for removal of solubility and purification tags from recombinant proteins and is cited as being highly specific for its canonical cleavage site. Flexibility in some amino acids within this recognition sequence has been described in the literature but researchers generally assume few native human proteins will carry off-target sequences for TEV cleavage. We report here the aberrant cleavage of three human proteins with non-canonical TEV protease cleavage sites and identify broader sequence specificity rules that can be used to predict unwanted cleavage of recombinant proteins.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The small GTPase Rat sarcoma virus proteins (RAS) are key regulators of cell growth and involved in 20-30% of cancers. RAS switches between its active state and inactive state via exchange of GTP (active) and GDP (inactive). Therefore, to study active protein, it needs to undergo nucleotide exchange to a non-hydrolysable GTP analog.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

RAF inhibitors unexpectedly induce ERK signaling in normal and tumor cells with elevated RAS activity. Paradoxical activation is believed to be RAS dependent. In this study, we showed that LY3009120, a pan-RAF inhibitor, can unexpectedly cause paradoxical ERK activation in KRAS-dependent lung cancer cell lines, when KRAS is inhibited by ARS1620, a KRAS inhibitor.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The efflux transporter P-glycoprotein (P-gp) is an important mediator of various pharmacokinetic parameters, being expressed at numerous physiological barriers and also in multidrug-resistant cancer cells. Molecular cloning of homologous cDNAs is an important tool for the characterization of functional differences in P-gp between species. However, plasmids containing mouse mdr1a cDNA display significant genetic instability during cloning in bacteria, indicating that mdr1a cDNA may be somehow toxic to bacteria, allowing only clones containing mutations that abrogate this toxicity to survive transformation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Generation of DNA clones for use in proteomic and genomic research often requires a significant level of parallel production, as the number of downstream options for these experiments increases. Where a single fluorescently tagged construct may have sufficed before, there is now the need for multiple types of labels for different readouts and different assays. Protein expression, which once utilized a very small set of vectors because of low throughput expression and purification, has now rapidly matured into a high throughput system in which dozens of conditions can be tested in parallel to identify the best candidate clones.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Transient gene expression (TGE) in mammalian cells has become a routine process for expressing recombinant proteins in cell lines such as human embryonic kidney 293 and Chinese hamster ovary cells. The rapidly increasing need for recombinant proteins requires further improvements in TGE technology. While a great deal of focus has been directed toward optimizing the secretion of antibodies and other naturally secreted targets, much less work has been done on ways to improve cytoplasmic expression in mammalian cells.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Since its start, the Mammalian Gene Collection (MGC) has sought to provide at least one full-protein-coding sequence cDNA clone for every human and mouse gene with a RefSeq transcript, and at least 6200 rat genes. The MGC cloning effort initially relied on random expressed sequence tag screening of cDNA libraries. Here, we summarize our recent progress using directed RT-PCR cloning and DNA synthesis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The aim of this study was to examine the expression of the RBM5 tumor suppressor, in relation to RBM6 and RBM10, to obtain a better understanding of the potential role played by these RBM5-related factors in the regulation of RBM5 tumor-suppressor activity. Paired non-tumor and tumor samples were obtained from 73 breast cancer patients. RNA and protein expression were examined by semi-quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction and immunoblot, respectively.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

RBM5/LUCA-15/H37 is a nuclear SR-related RNA binding protein with the ability to modulate both apoptosis and the cell cycle, and retard tumour formation. How RBM5 functions to carry out these, potentially interrelated, biological activities is unknown. Since reversible phosphorylation has been shown to play an important role in the regulation of SR protein function, apoptosis and cell cycle control, in an attempt to elucidate the underlying mechanisms regulating RBM5 function, the phosphorylation status of RBM5 was investigated.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF