T7 RNA polymerase variants with expanded substrate range and enhanced transcriptional yield
09988612 ยท 2018-06-05
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
C12N15/111
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N2320/51
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12P19/34
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N15/115
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
C12N9/12
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N15/115
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N15/11
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
Disclosed are T7 RNA polymerase variants with enhanced transcriptional activity. T7 RNA polymerase variants are known which have the ability to incorporate modified ribonucleotides into growing RNA molecules. However, these variants have relatively low levels of transcriptional activity. Presented herein are mutations that increase the transcriptional activity of the variants with broad substrate range.
Claims
1. A T7 RNA polymerase variant comprising: a) one or more substrate-broadening amino acid substitutions that confer an enhanced ability to incorporate 2-modified mononucleotides compared to a wild-type T7 RNA polymerase, wherein the substrate-broadening amino acid substitutions comprise one of the following sets of substitutions relative to SEQ ID NO: 1: i) G542V, H772R, and H784S; ii) Y639F and H784A; or iii) E593G, Y639V, V685A, and H784G; and b) one or more activity-enhancing amino acid substitutions that increase the transcriptional activity of the T7 polymerase variant relative to T7 polymerase variants without the activity-enhancing amino acid substitutions, wherein the activity-enhancing amino acid substitutions comprise one of the following sets of substitutions relative to SEQ ID NO: 1: i) S430P, N433T, S633P, F849I, and F880Y; and ii) P266L, S430P, N433T, S633P, F849I, and F880Y.
2. The T7 RNA polymerase variant of claim 1, wherein the 2-modified mononucleotides comprise one or more of 2-fluoro CTP, 2-fluoro UTP, 2-fluoro ATP, 2-fluoro GTP, 2-amino CTP, 2-amino UTP, 2-amino ATP, 2-O-methyl UTP, 2-O-methyl ATP, 2-O-methyl CTP, and 2-O-methyl GTP.
3. A T7 RNA polymerase variant comprising the following amino acid substitutions: N433T, E593G, Y639V, V685A, H784G, S430P, S633P, F849I, and F880Y.
4. A nucleic acid molecule encoding the T7 RNA polymerase variant of claim 1.
5. An expression vector comprising the nucleic acid molecule of claim 4.
6. An isolated cell transformed with the expression vector of claim 5, wherein the transformed cell is capable of expressing the T7 RNA polymerase variant.
7. A reaction mixture comprising the T7 RNA polymerase variant of claim 1, a DNA template comprising a T7 RNA polymerase promoter, and one or more 2-modified mononucleotides.
8. The reaction mixture of claim 7, wherein the one or more 2-modified mononucleotides comprise one or more of 2-fluoro CTP, 2-fluoro UTP, 2-fluoro ATP, 2-fluoro GTP, 2-amino CTP, 2-amino UTP, 2-amino ATP, 2-O-methyl UTP, 2-O-methyl ATP, 2-O-methyl CTP, and 2-O-methyl GTP.
9. A method of making an RNA polynucleotide comprising one or more 2-modified mononucleotides, the method comprising incubating the reaction mixture of claim 7 at 37 C., wherein the RNA polynucleotide is a nuclease-resistant aptamer.
10. A method of making a therapeutic RNA polynucleotide comprising one or more 2-modified mononucleotides, the method comprising incubating the reaction mixture of claim 7 at 37 C., wherein the DNA template further comprises a template sequence complementary to the therapeutic RNA polynucleotide, and wherein the therapeutic RNA polynucleotide is an miRNA, a pre-miRNA, or an aptamer.
11. The method of claim 10, wherein the one or more 2-modified mononucleotides comprises one or more of 2-fluoro CTP, 2-fluoro UTP, 2-fluoro ATP, and 2-fluoro GTP.
12. The method of claim 10, wherein the nucleotide sequence of the therapeutic RNA polynucleotide is complementary to a portion of the sequence of a target gene mRNA.
13. The method of claim 12, wherein the one or more 2 modified mononucleotides comprises one or more of 2-O-methyl UTP, 2-O-methyl ATP, 2-O-methyl GTP, and 2-O-methyl CTP.
14. A method of making an RNA polynucleotide probe comprising one or more 2-modified mononucleotides, the method comprising incubating the reaction mixture of claim 7 at 37 C., wherein the DNA template further comprises a template sequence complementary to the RNA polynucleotide probe.
15. The T7 RNA polymerase variant of claim 1, wherein the substrate-broadening amino acid substitutions comprise E593G, Y639V, V685A, and H784G and wherein the activity-enhancing amino acid substitutions comprise S430P, N433T, S633P, F849I, and F880Y, and wherein the activity enhancing amino acid substitutions further comprise P266L.
16. The T7 RNA polymerase variant of claim 1, wherein the substrate-broadening amino acid substitutions comprise E593G, Y639V, V685A, and H784G and wherein the activity-enhancing amino acid substitutions comprise S430P, N433T, S633P, F849I, and F880Y, and wherein the T7 RNA polymerase variant is capable of incorporating 2-O-methyl UTP and 2-O-methyl CTP into RNA.
17. The T7 RNA polymerase variant of claim 16, wherein the T7 RNA polymerase variant is further capable of incorporating 2-O-methyl ATP and 2-O-methyl GTP into RNA.
18. The T7 RNA polymerase variant of claim 1, wherein the substrate-broadening amino acid substitutions comprise E593G, Y639V, V685A, and H784G and wherein the activity-enhancing amino acid substitutions comprise S430P, N433T, S633P, F849I, and F880Y, and wherein the T7 RNA polymerase variant is capable of incorporating 2-O-methyl UTP, 2-O-methyl CTP, 2-O-methyl ATP, and 2-O-methyl GTP into RNA in a single reaction mixture.
19. The reaction mixture of claim 1, wherein the one or more 2-modified mononucleotides comprise 2-O-methyl UTP, 2-O-methyl ATP, 2-O-methyl CTP, and 2-O-methyl GTP.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(13) Various features and advantageous details are explained more fully with reference to the non-limiting embodiments that are illustrated in the accompanying drawings and detailed in the following description. It should be understood, however, that the detailed description and the specific examples, while indicating embodiments of the invention, are given by way of illustration only, and not by way of limitation. Various substitutions, modifications, additions, and/or rearrangements will become apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art from this disclosure.
(14) In the following description, numerous specific details are provided to provide a thorough understanding of the disclosed embodiments. One of ordinary skill in the relevant art will recognize, however, that the invention may be practiced without one or more of the specific details, or with other methods, components, materials, and so forth. In other instances, well-known structures, materials, or operations are not shown or described in detail to avoid obscuring aspects of the invention.
A. T7 RNA POLYMERASE
(15) The wild type T7 RNA polymerase has the following sequence (SEQ ID NO: 1):
(16) TABLE-US-00001 MNTINIAKNDFSDIELAAIPFNTLADHYGERLAREQLALEHESYEMGEAR FRKMFERQLKAGEVADNAAAKPLITTLLPKMIARINDWFEEVKAKRGKRP TAFQFLQEIKPEAVAYITIKTTLACLTSADNTTVQAVASAIGRAIEDEAR FGRIRDLEAKHFKKNVEEQLNKRVGHVYKKAFMQVVEADMLSKGLLGGEA WSSWHKEDSIHVGVRCIEMLIESTGMVSLHRQNAGVVGQDSETIELAPEY AEAIATRAGALAGISPMFQPCVVPPKPWTGITGGGYWANGRRPLALVRTH SKKALMRYEDVYMPEVYKAINIAQNTAWKINKKVLAVANVITKWKHCPVE DIPAIEREELPMKPEDIDMNPEALTAWKRAAAAVYRKTRLASLAVSALSS CLSKPISLLTIRPSGSLTTWTGAVRVYAVSMFNPQGNDMTKGRLTLAKGK PIGKEGYYWLKIHGANCAGVDKVSFPERIKFIEENHENIMACAKSPLENT WWAEQDSPFCFLAFCFEYAGVQHHGLSYNCSLPLAFDGSCSGIQHFSAML RDEVGGRAVNLLPSETVQDIYGIVAKKVNEILQADAINGTDNEVVTVTDE NTGEISEKVKLGTKALAGQWLAYGVTRSVTKRSVMTLAYGSKEFGFRQQV LEDTIQPAIDSGKGLMFTQPNQAAGYMAKLIWESVSVTVVAAVEAMNWLK SAAKLLAAEVKDKKTGEILRKRCAVHWVTPDGFPVWQEYKKPIQTRLNLM FLGQFRLQPTINTNKDSEIDAHKQESGIAPNFVHSQDGSHLRKTVVWAHE KYGIESFALIHDSFGTIPADAANLFKAVRETMVDTYESCDVLADFYDQFA DQLHESQLDKMPALPAKGNLNLRDILESDFAFA
B. EXAMPLES
(17) The present invention will be described in greater detail by way of specific examples. The following examples are offered for illustrative purposes only, and are not intended to limit the invention in any manner. Those of skill in the art will readily recognize a variety of noncritical parameters which can be changed or modified to yield essentially the same results.
Example 1
Materials and Methods
(18) Preparation of T7 RNA Polymerase Variants
(19) The T7 RNA polymerase ORF was cloned into pQE-80L (Qiagen). All T7 RNA polymerase variants were derived from this plasmid either by Mega-primer PCR (Bryksin & Matsumura, 2010) or Isothermal assembly (Gibson, 2011). Plasmids were transformed into BL21-gold (Agilent) E. coli cells. Cells were grown in 2YT media at 37 C. overnight. Subcultures were grown at 37 C. until reaching OD600 0.7-0.8 at which point 1 mM IPTG was added. Cells were grown four hours at 37 C., pelleted, and frozen at 80C. Pellets were resuspended in binding buffer (50 mM Tris-Hcl, pH8.0, 0.5 M NaCl, 5 mM imidazole). Resuspended cells were lysed via sonication on ice using 50% probe amplitude for 3 minutes (1s ON, 1s OFF). Cell debris was pelleted by centrifugation (30 min: 10,000 g). His-tagged T7 RNA polymerase was purified by immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC). The lysate was run over 1 ml (bead volume) Ni-NTA (Fisher) gravity column pre-equilibrated with binding buffer. The column was washed with 10 column volumes of wash buffer (50 mM Tris-Hcl, pH 8.0, 0.5 M NaCl, 20 mM imidazole). T7 RNA polymerase was eluted off the column by the addition of 3 column volumes of elution buffer (50 mM Tris-Hcl, pH 8.0, 0.5 M NaCl, 250 mM imidazole). Dialysis was performed in final storage buffer (50 mM Tris-Hcl, pH 8.0, 100 mM NaCl, 1 mM DDT, 1 mM EDTA). Dialates were adjusted to 1 mg/ml and added to an equal volume of glycerol (final concentration 0.5 mg/ml).
(20) In Vitro Transcription Assays
(21) Real-time transcription reactions (
(22) End point transcription reactions contained 40 mM Tris-HCl pH 8.0, 30 mM MgCl2, 6 mM spermadine, 6 mM each NTP (or modified NTP), 10 mM DTT, 500 mM T7 RNA polymerase, 500 mM DNA template. Reactions were incubated for up to 4 or 20 hours at 37 C. DNA templates were made as above. rVmU reactions (
(23) mN in the permissive buffer (
(24) 32P gels were exposed to a storage phosphor screen (Molecular Dynamics) before imaging on a STORM 840 Phospoimager (GE Healthcare). Autoradiographs were analyzed using ImageQuant (GE Healthcare).
(25) Thermal Melt Measurements
(26) The relative thermal stability of each T7 RNA polymerase was assessed by incubating 0.5 mg/ml enzyme in PBS buffer with TexasRed dye (Invitrogen). Enzyme/dye mixtures were equilibrated at 37 C. for 10 minutes and heated at a rate of 0.07 C./s to 97 C. using a LightCycler 96 thermocycler, while fluorescence was monitored (Excitation 577 nm/Emission 620 nm). The first derivatives of the change in fluorescence as a function of time were used to approximate the relative T.sub.m. Data were analysed using Roche thermocycler software.
Example 2
Stabilizing Mutations Increase the Activity of the T7 RNA Polymerase Mutant G542V H784S
(27) Previous experiments selecting for RNA polymerases with altered substrate specificity (Chelliserrykattil & Ellington, 2004) focused on the four amino acids that are proximal to the incoming nucleotide (Cheetham, 1999; Temiakov, et al., 2004), and thus likely played a role in substrate recognition. One of the resulting mutants, called VRS, could incorporate 2F-modified pyrimidines. VRS had mutations at two of the randomized residues (ie G542V and H784S). Interestingly, an H772R mutation also arose during the selection, despite H772 not being randomized. H772R is not near the substrate recognition domain, but has been seen in other selections for T7 RNA polymerase activity (Ellefson, et al., 2013; Dickinson, et al., 2013). To test whether H772R is a general stabilizing mutation, a derivative of VRS without H772R, termed VS, was constructed. Purified enzymes were tested for their ability to polymerase RNA composed either of natural NTPs (rN) or of ribo-purines and 2-F-pyrimidines (rRfY;
(28) Notably, VS showed a decrease in activity for each substrate composition. This suggests that H772R contributes to the overall activity of VRS, apart from any substrate preference considerations. Several more derivatives of VRS with additional mutations were created and tested for their ability to increase the activity of VRS. The so-called M5 (S430P, N433T, S633P, F849I, and F880Y; (U.S. Pat. No. 7,507,567) and M6 (M5 with the additional P266L mutation, associated with promoter clearance (Guillerez, et al., 2005) sets of mutations increased activity of the VRS mutant, both for rN and rRfY incorporation.
Example 3
The M5 Mutations Increase the Activity of Several T7 RNA Polymerase Substrate Specificity Mutants
(29) The M5 mutations arose in a T7 RNA polymerase selection for transcriptional activity at higher temperatures. In a wild type background, these mutations increase the half-life of enzyme at 50C and allow for transcription at that temperature. The M5 protein was crystalized, and few gross morphological differences to the wild-type T7 RNA polymerase crystal (Cheetham, 1999) are apparent (
(30) It was then tested whether the M5 and M6 mutations could increase the activity of other T7 RNA polymerase mutants. Several known polymerases with altered ribose specificity namely WT, Y639F, FA, RGVG, VRS, and R425C (Table 1) were tested. To each of these specificity mutants was added a set of stability mutations, namely L (P266L), M5, and M6. Also included was a recently described mutant, 2P16, which is likely a stabilized version of RGVG. These 25 polymerases were purified and assayed for transcriptional activity in vitro (
(31) TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 1 List of T7 RNA polymerase mutants Enzyme Sequence WT WT T7 RNAP VS G542V, H784S VRS G542V, H772R, H784S VRS-L P266L, G542V, H772R, H784S VLRS G542V, V625L, H772R, H784S VRIS G542V, H772R, V783I, H784S VLRIS G542V, V625L, H772R, V783I, H784S VRSY G542V, H772R, H784S, F880Y VRS-M5 S430P, N433T, G542V, S633P, H772R, H784S, F849I, F880Y VRS-M6 P266L, S430P, N433T, G542V, S633P, H772R, H784S, F849I, F880Y M5 S430P, N433T, S633P, F849I, F880Y L P266L M6 P266L, S430P, N433T, S633P, F849I, F880Y Y639F Y639F Y639F-M5 S430P, N433T, S633P, Y639F, F849I, F880Y Y639F-L P266L, Y639F Y639F-M6 P266L, S430P, N433T, S633P, Y639F, F849I, F880Y FA Y639F, H784A FA-M5 S430P, N433T, S633P, Y639F, H784A, F849I, F880Y FA-L P266L, Y639F, H784A FA-M6 P266L, S430P, N433T, S633P, Y639F, H784A, F849I, F880Y R425C R425C R425C-M5 R425C, S430P, N433T, S633P, F849I, F880Y R425C-L P266L, R425C R425C-M6 P266L, R425C, S430P, N433T, S633P, F849I, F880Y RGVG E593G, Y639V, Y685A, H784G RGVG-M5 S430P, N433T, E593G, S633P, Y639V, V685A, H784G, F849I, F880Y RGVG-L P266L, E593G, Y639V, Y685A, H784G RGVG-M6 P266L, S430P, N433T, E593G, S633P, Y639V, V685A, H784G, F849I, F880Y 2P16 I119V, G225S, K333N, D366N, F400L, E593G, Y639V, S661G, V685A, H784G, F880Y
(32) Whether transcribing natural ribotides (rN;
(33) A subset of the most active polymerases were assayed for the ability to incorporate 2-O-methyluridine (rVmU), 2-O-methylpyrimidines (rRmY), and 2-O-methyladenosine and 2-O-methylpyrimidines (rGmH) (
(34) Thermal-melt assays confirmed that, for all T7 RNA polymerase variants tested, addition of the M5 mutations increased their thermal stability (
Example 4
T7 RNA Polymerase R6 is Effective for High-Yield Transcription of Fully Modified RNA
(35) After demonstrating that RGVG-M6 could catalyse the formation of RNA containing three 2-O-methylnucleotides, its ability to generate fully-modified RNA was assayed. RGVG-M6 was able to polymerase using a combination 2-F-purines and 2-O-methylpyrimidines (fRmY) as well as a combination of 2-F-guanosine, 2-O-methyladenosine, and 2-O-methylpyrimidines (fGmH) (
(36) Previous reports of mN incorporation have used more permissive buffer compositions, including manganese as well as rGMP and/or rGTP. RGVG-M6's ability to synthesize mN RNA in several such permissive buffers was tested (
(37) Although certain embodiments have been described above with a certain degree of particularity, or with reference to one or more individual embodiments, those skilled in the art could make numerous alterations to the disclosed embodiments without departing from the scope of this invention. Further, where appropriate, aspects of any of the examples described above may be combined with aspects of any of the other examples described to form further examples having comparable or different properties and addressing the same or different problems. Similarly, it will be understood that the benefits and advantages described above may relate to one embodiment or may relate to several embodiments.
(38) The claims are not to be interpreted as including means-plus- or step-plus-function limitations, unless such a limitation is explicitly recited in a given claim using the phrase(s) means for or step for, respectively.
REFERENCES
(39) The following references, to the extent that they provide exemplary procedural or other details supplementary to those set forth herein, are specifically incorporated herein by reference. U.S. Pat. No. 7,507,567 U.S. Pat. No. 8,105,813 Beaudry, et al., Chem Biol. 7:323-34, 2000. Brieba & Sousa, Biochemistry. 39:919-23, 2000. Bryksin & Matsumura, Biotechniques. 48:463-5, 2010. Burmeister, et al., Chem Biol. 12:25-33, 2005. Cheetham & Steitz, Science. 286:2305-2309, 1999. Chelliserrykattil & Ellington, Nat Biotechnol. 22:1155-60, 2004. Dean & Bennett, Oncogene. 22:9087-96, 2003. Dickinson, et al., Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 32(1):97-101, 2013. Ellefson, Nat Biotechnol. 32(1):97-101, 2014. Ellington & Szostak, Nature. 346:818-822, 1990. Gibson, Methods Enzymol. 498:349-61, 2011. Guillerez, et al., Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 102(17):5958-63, 2005. Healy, et al., Pharm Res. 21:2234-46, 2004. Huang, et al., Biochemistry. 36:8231-42, 1997. Ibach, J Biotechnol. 167:287-95, 2013. Jackson, et al., RNA. 12(7):1197-205, 2006. Keefe & Cload, Curr Opin Chem Biol. 12: 448-56, 2008. Knudsen, et al., Curr Protoc Nucleic Acid Chem. Chapter 9, Unit 9.6, 2002. Kostyuk, et al., FEBS Lett. 369:165-8, 1995. Kraynack & Baker, RNA. 12(1):163-76, 2006. Layzer, RNA. 10:766-771, 2004. Lupold, et al., Cancer Res. 62(14):4029-33, 2002. Majlessi, et al., Nucleic Acids Res. 26:2224-9, 1998. Padilla & Sousa, Nucleic Acids Res. 30:e138, 2002. Romero & Arnold, Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol. 10:866-76, 2009. Siegmund, et al., Chem Commun. (Camb), 48:9870-2, 2012. Sousa & Padilla, EMBO J. 14:4609-21, 1995. Temiakov, et al., Cell. 116:381-91, 2004. Van Nies, et al. ChemBioChem 14:1963-66, 2013. Wang, et al., J Mol Biol. 320:85-95, 2002. Waters, et al., Blood. 117:5514-22, 2011. Wilson & Keefe, Curr Opin Chem Biol. 10:607-14, 2006.