Down-regulated expression of plant-specific glycoepitopes in alfalfa

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Abstract

Compared with other plant expression systems used for pharmaceutical protein production, alfalfa offers the advantage of very homogeneous N-glycosylation. Therefore, this plant was selected for further attempts at glycoengineering. Two main approaches were developed in order to humanize N-glycosylation in alfalfa. The first was a knock-down of two plant-specific N-glycan maturation enzymes, β1,2-xylosyltransferase and α1,3-fucosyltransferases, using sense, antisense and RNA interference strategies. In a second approach, with the ultimate goal of rebuilding the whole human sialylation pathway, human β1,4-galactosyltransferase was expressed in alfalfa in a native form or in fusion with a targeting domain from N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase I, a glycosyltransferase located in the early Golgi apparatus in Nicotiana tabacum. Both knock-down and knock-in strategies strongly, but not completely, inhibited the biosynthesis of α1,3-fucose- and β1,2-xylose-containing glycoepitopes in transgenic alfalfa. However, recombinant human β1,4-galactosyltransferase activity in transgenic alfalfa completely prevented the accumulation of the Lewis a glycoepitope on complex N-glycans. © 2008 The Authors.

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Sourrouille, C., Marquet-Blouin, E., D’Aoust, M. A., Kiefer-Meyer, M. C., Seveno, M., Pagny-Salehabadi, S., … Gomord, V. (2008). Down-regulated expression of plant-specific glycoepitopes in alfalfa. Plant Biotechnology Journal, 6(7), 702–721. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-7652.2008.00353.x

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