4.7 Article

Enhancing Protein Production Yield from Chinese Hamster Ovary Cells by CRISPR Interference

Journal

ACS SYNTHETIC BIOLOGY
Volume 6, Issue 8, Pages 1509-1519

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.7b00020

Keywords

CRISPRi; CHO cell; cell engineering; DHFR; MTX selection; protein production

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan [MOST 105-2622-8-007-009, 104-2622-8-007-001, 103-2622-E-007-025]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells are an important host for biopharmaceutical production. Generation of stable CHO cells typically requires cointegration of dhfr and a foreign gene into chromosomes and subsequent methotrexate (MTX) selection for coamplification of dhfr and foreign gene. CRISPR. interference (CRISPRi) is an emerging system that effectively suppresses gene transcription through the coordination of dCas9 protein and guide RNA (gRNA). However, CRISPRi has yet to be exploited in CHO cells. Here we constructed vectors expressing the functional CRISPRi system and proved effective CRISPRi-mediated suppression of dhfr transcription in CHO cells. We next generated stable CHO cell clones coexpressing DHFR, the model protein (EGFP), dCas9 and gRNA targeting dhfr. Combined with MTX selection, CRISPRi-mediated repression of dhfr imparted extra selective pressure to force CHO cells to coamplify more copies of dhfr and egfp genes. Compared with the traditional method relying on MTX selection (up to 250 nM), the CRISPRi approach increased the dhfr copy number similar to 3-fold, egfp copy number similar to 3.6-fold and enhanced the EGFP expression similar to 3.8-fold, without impeding the cell growth. Furthermore, we exploited the CRISPRi approach to enhance the productivity of granulocyte colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) similar to 2.3-fold. Our data demonstrate, for the first time, the application of CRISPRi in CHO cells to enhance recombinant protein production and may pave a new avenue to CHO cell engineering.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available