Development of rational bioprocess design strategies for a clinically relevant protein candidate

The Hepatitis B Virus X (HBx) protein has been associated with the initiation and development of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), a killer disease affecting millions of lives worldwide. Being a multifunctional viral regulator, the HBx protein has been found to modulate all major host cellular metabol...

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Main Author: Anindya Basu
Other Authors: Susanna Leong Su Jan
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2012
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/50661
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-506612023-03-03T16:03:26Z Development of rational bioprocess design strategies for a clinically relevant protein candidate Anindya Basu Susanna Leong Su Jan School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering DRNTU::Engineering::Bioengineering The Hepatitis B Virus X (HBx) protein has been associated with the initiation and development of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), a killer disease affecting millions of lives worldwide. Being a multifunctional viral regulator, the HBx protein has been found to modulate all major host cellular metabolic pathways, causing scientists to hypothesize that it can be a potential drug target for the disease. However, the HBx protein is expressed at very low levels within the infected host cells. Increase in HBx yield can be achieved by recombinant production in bacteria host systems but this often results in the insoluble expression of the protein. The lack of pure bioactive HBx continues to hinder research progress to study the protein’s structure-function and hence the development of new anti-HBx drug candidates. Moreover, the absence of native HBx also prevents quantitative bioactivity determination of the protein, making bioprocess design and scale-up studies difficult to perform. To overcome this roadblock, my research project aims to develop a scalable bioprocess for HBx production at amounts that are sufficient for subsequent structural characterisation and drug designing studies. HBx expression and bioprocess development studies commenced with the use of a glutathione S transferase (GST) tagged HBx construct. The use of this construct, however, was challenged by inefficient Factor Xa cleavage and poor economics. Thereafter, a new 6His-HBx protein construct was designed which only comprised a 6-histidine (His)tag to ease recovery of the protein using immobilised metal affinity chromatography (IMAC). As the 6His-HBx protein was expressed as insoluble inclusion bodies (IBs), rational strategies employing second virial coefficient (SVC) measurements in combination with a Statistical design of experiments (DoE) platform were developed to facilitate rapid determination of optimal physicochemical conditions necessary to retain HBx solubility and stability. The SVC studies clearly indicated the importance of a net reducing environment combined with L-arginine (an aggregation inhibitor) for improved solubility of HBx, a highly hydrophobic protein with 9 cysteine residues. The SVC results guided the rational design of a HBx refolding buffer to maintain HBx in a stable soluble state, leading to the development of a dilution refolding based bioprocess for HBx. Further improvement of the process was impeded by the absence of an analytical platform to evaluate HBx refolding yields. To overcome this roadblock, a novel ELISA platform for HBx was subsequently developed to quantitatively determine HBx refolding yields. DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY (SCBE) 2012-08-27T07:07:44Z 2012-08-27T07:07:44Z 2012 2012 Thesis Anindya Basu. (2012). Development of rational bioprocess design strategies for a clinically relevant protein candidate. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/50661 10.32657/10356/50661 en 147 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Bioengineering
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Bioengineering
Anindya Basu
Development of rational bioprocess design strategies for a clinically relevant protein candidate
description The Hepatitis B Virus X (HBx) protein has been associated with the initiation and development of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), a killer disease affecting millions of lives worldwide. Being a multifunctional viral regulator, the HBx protein has been found to modulate all major host cellular metabolic pathways, causing scientists to hypothesize that it can be a potential drug target for the disease. However, the HBx protein is expressed at very low levels within the infected host cells. Increase in HBx yield can be achieved by recombinant production in bacteria host systems but this often results in the insoluble expression of the protein. The lack of pure bioactive HBx continues to hinder research progress to study the protein’s structure-function and hence the development of new anti-HBx drug candidates. Moreover, the absence of native HBx also prevents quantitative bioactivity determination of the protein, making bioprocess design and scale-up studies difficult to perform. To overcome this roadblock, my research project aims to develop a scalable bioprocess for HBx production at amounts that are sufficient for subsequent structural characterisation and drug designing studies. HBx expression and bioprocess development studies commenced with the use of a glutathione S transferase (GST) tagged HBx construct. The use of this construct, however, was challenged by inefficient Factor Xa cleavage and poor economics. Thereafter, a new 6His-HBx protein construct was designed which only comprised a 6-histidine (His)tag to ease recovery of the protein using immobilised metal affinity chromatography (IMAC). As the 6His-HBx protein was expressed as insoluble inclusion bodies (IBs), rational strategies employing second virial coefficient (SVC) measurements in combination with a Statistical design of experiments (DoE) platform were developed to facilitate rapid determination of optimal physicochemical conditions necessary to retain HBx solubility and stability. The SVC studies clearly indicated the importance of a net reducing environment combined with L-arginine (an aggregation inhibitor) for improved solubility of HBx, a highly hydrophobic protein with 9 cysteine residues. The SVC results guided the rational design of a HBx refolding buffer to maintain HBx in a stable soluble state, leading to the development of a dilution refolding based bioprocess for HBx. Further improvement of the process was impeded by the absence of an analytical platform to evaluate HBx refolding yields. To overcome this roadblock, a novel ELISA platform for HBx was subsequently developed to quantitatively determine HBx refolding yields.
author2 Susanna Leong Su Jan
author_facet Susanna Leong Su Jan
Anindya Basu
format Theses and Dissertations
author Anindya Basu
author_sort Anindya Basu
title Development of rational bioprocess design strategies for a clinically relevant protein candidate
title_short Development of rational bioprocess design strategies for a clinically relevant protein candidate
title_full Development of rational bioprocess design strategies for a clinically relevant protein candidate
title_fullStr Development of rational bioprocess design strategies for a clinically relevant protein candidate
title_full_unstemmed Development of rational bioprocess design strategies for a clinically relevant protein candidate
title_sort development of rational bioprocess design strategies for a clinically relevant protein candidate
publishDate 2012
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/50661
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