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Patent 1340846 Summary

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(12) Patent: (11) CA 1340846
(21) Application Number: 1340846
(54) English Title: EXPRESSION OF BIOLOGICALLY ACTIVE PLATELET DERIVED GROWTH FACTOR ANALOGS IN EUCARYOTIC CELLS
Status: Term Expired - Post Grant
Bibliographic Data
(51) International Patent Classification (IPC):
  • C12N 15/18 (2006.01)
  • A61K 38/18 (2006.01)
  • A61K 48/00 (2006.01)
  • C07K 14/49 (2006.01)
  • C07K 19/00 (2006.01)
  • C12N 05/071 (2010.01)
  • C12N 15/48 (2006.01)
  • C12N 15/62 (2006.01)
  • C12N 15/79 (2006.01)
  • C12N 15/81 (2006.01)
(72) Inventors :
  • MURRAY, MARK JOSEPH (United States of America)
  • KELLY, JAMES DARREL (United States of America)
(73) Owners :
  • ZYMOGENETICS, INC.
(71) Applicants :
  • ZYMOGENETICS, INC. (United States of America)
(74) Agent: SMART & BIGGAR LP
(74) Associate agent:
(45) Issued: 1999-12-07
Reissued: 1999-12-07
(22) Filed Date: 1985-10-07
Availability of licence: N/A
Dedicated to the Public: N/A
(25) Language of filing: English

Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT): No

(30) Application Priority Data:
Application No. Country/Territory Date
660,496 (United States of America) 1984-10-12
705,175 (United States of America) 1985-02-25

Abstracts

English Abstract


Biologically active PDGF analogs expressed in
eucaryotic cells are disclosed. The analogs are produced by
eucaryotic cells transformed with a DNA construct comprising a
strong transcriptional promoter directing the expression of a
gene which encodes a protein having substantially the same
biological activity as PDGF. Suitable genes include the v-sis
gene or a derivative of the v-sis gene of simian sarcoma virus
or portions thereof, or the human cDNA gene for PDGF or
portions thereof. In particular, DNA sequences encoding
polypeptides substantially homologous to the B chain of PDGF
are preferred. A secretory signal sequence may be provided
upstream of the gene, enabling secretion of the gene product
from the host cell. Mitogenic activity is one of the biological
activities possessed by these PDGF analogs, making them
useful in promoting the growth of mammalian cells.


French Abstract

On propose des analogues de PDGF actifs sur le plan biologique, exprimés dans des cellules eucaryotes. Les analogues sont produits par des cellules eucaryotes transformées par une construction d'ADN comprenant un promoteur de transcription fort dirigeant l'expression d'un gène codant une protéine ayant essentiellement la même activité biologique que PDGF. On trouve, parmi les gènes adaptés, le gène v-sis ou un dérivé du gène v-sis du virus de sarcome simien ou des parties de celui-ci, ou le gène ADNc humain pour PDGF ou des parties de celui-ci. En particulier, on favorise des séquences d'ADN codant des polypeptides essentiellement homologues à la chaîne B de PDGF. Une séquence de signal de sécrétion peut être prévue en amont du gène, ce qui permet la sécrétion du produit génique de la cellule hôte. L'activité mitogénique est l'une des activités biologiques dont disposent ces analogues PDGF qui servent ainsi à promouvoir la croissance de cellules mammifères.

Claims

Note: Claims are shown in the official language in which they were submitted.


42
THE EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION IN WHICH AN EXCLUSIVE PROPERTY
OR PRIVILEGE IS CLAIMED ARE DEFINED AS FOLLOWS:
1. A DNA construct capable of directing the expression and
secretion of biologically active PDGF analogs in eucaryotic
cells, said DNA construct containing a transcriptional promoter
followed downstream by a DNA sequence encoding a polypeptide
selected from the group consisting of PDGF B chain and a portion
of the v-sis gene product homologous to PDGF B chain, and a
signal sequence positioned upstream and in proper reading frame
with said DNA sequence, said signal sequence directing the
secretion of the polypeptide from the eucaryotic cell whereby
said polypeptide forms a dimer having substantially the same
biological activity as PDGF.
2. The DNA construct of claim 1 wherein the eucaryotic
cell is a yeast cell, and the promoter and signal sequence are
of yeast origin.
3. The DNA construct of claim 1 wherein said DNA sequence
is the v-sis gene of simian sarcoma virus or a derivative thereof
encoding a polypeptide which forms a dimer having the biological
activity of PDGF.
4. The DNA construct of claim 3 wherein the derivative of
the v-sis gene of simian sarcoma virus is the portion of the
v-sis gene encoding a protein homologous to the B chain of PDGF,

43
namely, the nucleotide sequence from nucleotide 551 to nucleotide
877, and shown in Figure 1.
5. The DNA construct of claim 1 wherein said DNA sequence
is the human PDGF B chain sequence or portions thereof encoding
a polypeptide which forms a dimer having the biological activity
of PDGF.
6. A method of preparing biologically active PDGF analogs,
comprising:
introducing into a eucaryotic host cell a DNA construct
capable of directing tree expression and secretion of biologically
active PDGF analogs in eucaryotic cells, said DNA construct
containing a transcriptional promoter followed downstream by a
DNA sequence encoding a polypeptide selected from the group
consisting of PDGF B chain and a portion of the v-sis gene
product homologous to PDGF B chain, and a signal sequence
positioned upstream and in proper reading frame with said DNA
sequence, said signal sequence directing the secretion of the
polypeptide from the eucaryotic host cell;
growing said eucaryotic host cell in an appropriate
medium; and
isolating the polypeptide product of said DNA sequence
from said eucaryotic host cell.
7. The method. of claim 6 wherein the eucaryotic cell is
a yeast cell, and the promoter and signal sequence are of yeast
origin.

44
8. The method of claim 6 wherein said DNA sequence is the
v-sis gene of simian sarcoma virus or a derivative thereof
encoding a polypeptide which forms a dimer having the biological
activity of PDGF.
9. The method of claim 8 wherein the derivative of the
v-sis gene of simian sarcoma virus is the portion of the v-sis gene
encoding a polypeptide substantially homologous to the B chain
of PDGF, namely, the nucleotide sequence from nucleotide 551 to
nucleotide 877, and shown in Figure 1.
10. The method of claim 6 wherein said DNA sequence is the
human PDGF B chain sequence or portions thereof encoding a
polypeptide which forms a dimer having the biological activity
of PDGF.
11. A recombinant protein homodimer of human PDGF B chains,
said protein being essentially free of the A chain of PDGF.
12. A eucaryotic cell transformed with a DNA construct as
claimed in any one of claims 1-3.
13. A eucaryotic cell transformed with a DNA construct as
claimed in any one of claims 4-5.
14. An in-vitro method of promoting the growth of mammalian
cells, comprising incubating the cells with a protein according
to claim 11.

45
15. A DNA construct capable of replication in yeast and
containing the yeast triose phosphate isomerase promoter, said
yeast promoter being followed downstream by the signal sequence
of the gene encoding the yeast mating pheromone alpha-factor,
said signal sequence being followed downstream respectively by
the portion of the v-sis gene encoding a protein substantially
homologous to the B chain of PDGF, namely, the nucleotide
sequence from nucleotide 551 to nucleotide 877, and shown in
Figure 1, and the yeast triose phosphate isomerase terminator.
16. The plasmid pVSBm.
17. A DNA construct capable of directing the expression and
secretion of biologically active PDGF analogs in eucaryotic
cells, said DNA construct containing a transcriptional promoter
followed downstream by a DNA sequence encoding a polypeptide
selected from the group consisting of PDGF B chain and a portion
of the v-sis gene product homologous to PDGF B chain, and a
signal sequence positioned upstream and in proper reading frame
with said DNA sequence, said signal sequence directing the
secretion of the polypeptide from the eucaryotic cell whereby
said polypeptide forms a dimer having substantially the same
biological activity as PDGF.
18. A method of preparing biologically active PDGF analogs,
comprising:
introducing into a eucaryotic host cell a DNA construct
capable of directing the expression and secretion of biologically

46
active PDGF analogs in eucaryotic cells, said DNA construct
containing a transcriptional promoter followed downstream by a
DNA sequence encoding a protein which is substantially homologous
to the B chain of PDGF, namely, the nucleotide sequence from
nucleotide 551 to nucleotide 877, and shown in Figure 1, said
protein having substantially the same biological activity as
PDGF, and a signal sequence positioned upstream and in proper
reading frame with said DNA sequence, said signal sequence
directing the secretion of the protein from the eucaryotic host
cell;
growing said eucaryotic host cell in an appropriate
medium; and
isolating the protein product of said DNA sequence from
said eucaryotic host cell.
19. An in-vitro method of promoting the growth of mammalian
cells, comprising incubating the cells with a biologically active
PDGF analog expressed by a eucaryotic cell transformed with a DNA
construct capable of directing the expression and secretion of
biologically active PDCsF analogs in eucaryotic cells, said DNA
construct containing a transcriptional promoter followed
downstream by a DNA sequence encoding a polypeptide which is
substantially homologous to the B chain of PDGF, namely, the
nucleotide sequence from nucleotide 551 to nucleotide 877, and
shown in Figure 1, and a signal sequence positioned upstream and
in proper reading frame with said DNA sequence, said signal
sequence directing the secretion of the polypeptide from the
eucaryotic cell, whereby said polypeptide forms a diner having

47
substantially the same biological activity as PDGF and wherein
said dimer is essentially free of other proteins of mammalian or
viral origin.
20. A protein homodimer having two polypeptide chains, said
chains being substantially homologous to the B chain of PDGF,
said protein being essentially free of other proteins of
mammalian or viral origin.
21. An in-vitro method of promoting the growth of mammalian
cells, comprising incubating the cells with a biologically active
PDGF analog expressed by a eucaryotic cell transformed with a DNA
construct as claimed in claim 5.
22. A protein homodimer consisting essentially of human
PDGF B chains, said protein being essentially free of the A chain
of PDGF.
23. The protein of claim 22 wherein said protein is
essentially free of other proteins of mammalian or viral origin.
24. A protein consisting essentially of two disulfide
bonded polypeptide chains, each of said chains consisting
essentially of the amino acid sequence shown in Figure 1B,
beginning with serine, number 67, and ending with threonine,
number 175, said protein being essentially free of other proteins
of mammalian or viral origin.

48
25. A recombinant protein homodimer comprising component
polypeptide chains substantially identical to the B chain of
human PDGF, said protein being essentially free of the A chain
of PDGF.
26. The protein of claim 25 wherein said protein is
essentially free of other proteins of mammalian or viral origin.
27. A recombinant protein homodimer consisting essentially
of component polypeptide chains substantially identical to the
B chain of human PDGF, said protein being essentially free of the
A chain of PDGF.
28. The protein of claim 27 wherein said protein is
essentially free of other proteins of mammalian or viral origin.
29. The use of a protein according to claim 11 for
promoting the growth of mammalian cells by incubating said cells
with said protein.
30. The use of a biologically active PDGF analog expressed
by a eucaryotic cell transformed with a DNA construct capable of
directing the expression and secretion of biologically active
PDGF analogs in eucaryotic cells for promoting the growth of
mammalian cells by incubating the cells with said biologically
active PDGF analog, said DNA construct containing a
transcriptional promoter followed downstream by a DNA sequence
encoding a polypeptide which is substantially homologous to the

-49-
B chain of PDGF, namely, the nucleotide sequence from nucleotide 551 to
nucleotide 877, and
shown in Figure 1, and a signal sequence positioned upstream and in proper
reading frame with
said DNA sequence, said signal sequence directing the secretion of the
polypeptide from the
eucaryotic cell, wherein said polypeptide forms a dimer having substantially
the same
biological activity as PDGF and wherein said dimer is essentially free of
other proteins of
mammalian or viral origin.
31. The use of a biologically active PDGF analog expressed by a eucaryotic
cell
transformed with a construct according to claim 5 for promoting the growth of
mammalian
cells by incubating said cells with said biologically active PDGF analog.
32. The use of a protein according to Claim 11 for the treatment of injuries.
33. The use of a biological active PDGF analog expressed by a eucaryotic cell
transformed with a DNA construct capable of directing the expression and
secretion of
biologically active PDGF analogs in eucaryotic cells for the treatment of
injuries, said DNA
construct containing a transcriptional promoter followed downstream by a DNA
sequence
encoding a polypeptide which is substantially homologous to the B chain of
PDGF, namely, the
nucleotide sequence from nucleotide 551 to nucleotide 877, and shown in Figure
1, and a
signal sequence positioned upstream and in proper reading frame with said DNA
sequence, said
signal sequence directing the secretion of the polypeptide from the eucaryotic
cell, wherein said
polypeptide forms a dimer having; substantially the same biological activity
as PDGF and
wherein said dimer is essentially free of other proteins of mammalian or viral
origin.

-50-
34. The use of a biologically active PDGF analog expressed by a eucaryotic
cell
transformed with a DNA construct according to claim 5 for the treatment of
injuries.

Description

Note: Descriptions are shown in the official language in which they were submitted.


1 1340~3~6
Description
EXPRESSION OF BIOLOGICALLY ACTIVE PDGF
ANALOGS IN EUCARYOTIC CELLS
Technical Field
T'he present invention relates to the production
of PDGF analogs in general, and more specifically, to the
expression of biologically active PDGF analogs in
eucaryotes.
Background F,rt
Human platelet derived growth factor (PDGF) has
been shown t:o beg the major mitogenic protein in serum for
mesenchymal derived cells. This is well documented by
numerous studies of platelet extracts or purified PDGF
induction of either cell multiplication or DNA synthesis (a
pre-requisite for cell division) in cultured smooth muscle
cells, fibroblasts and glial cells (Ross et al., PNAS 71:
1207, 1974; Kohl_er and Lipton, Ex~ Cell Res. 87: 297,1974;
Westermark and Wasteson, Exp. Cell Res. 98: 170, 1976;
Heldin et a:l., _~T_. Cell Physiol. 105: 235, 1980; Raines and
Ross, J. Bi_ol. _Chem 257: 5154, 1982). Furthermore, PDGF is
a potent ch~~moat:tractant for cells that are responsive to
it as a mit:ogen (Grotendorst et al., J. Cell Physiol. 113:
261, 1982; ,Seppa et al., J. Cell Biol. 92: 584, 1982) . It
is not generally the case that mitogens also act as chemo-
tactic agents. Due to its mitogenic activity, PDGF is
useful as an important component of a defined medium for
the growth of mammalian cells in culture, making it a
valuable research reagent with multiple applications in the
study of animal cell biology.
_In _v_ivo, PDGF normally circulates stored in the
alpha granules of: platelets. Injury to arterial endothelial
linings causes ~~latelets to adhere to the exposed connec

2
134084
tive tissue and release their granules. The released PDGF
is thought to chemotactically attract fibroblasts and
smooth muscle cells to the site of injury and to induce
their focal proliferation as part of the process of wound
repair (Ross and Glomset, N. England Journal of Medicine
295: 369, 1976 ) .
I:t has been postulated that as a part of this
response to injury, PDGF released by platelets may play a
causative role in the development of the proliferative
lesions of atherosclerosis (Ross and Glomset, ibid.) which
is one of the principal causes of myocardial and cerebral
infarction. Strategies for the prophylaxis and treatment
of atherogenesi.s in the past have been narrowly directed
toward reducing risk factors for the disease, such as lower-
ing blood pressure in hypertensive subjects and reducing
elevated cholesterol levels in hypercholesterolemic
subjects.
Recent: studies have shown that one of the two
Protein chains comprising PDGF and the putative transform
ing protein of simian sarcoma virus (SSV), an acute trans
forming retrovirus, appear to have arisen from the same or
closely related cellular genes. In particular, computer
analysis of a partial amino acid sequence of PDGF has
revealed ex:ten:>ive homology with the gene product, p28sis~
of SSV (Doolit:tle, Waterfield and Johnsson, ibid.).
Further, more recent studies have illustrated that p28sis
and PDGF show antigenic as well as structural similarities
(Bobbins et. al., Nature 305: 605, 1983; Niman, Nature 307:
180, 1984).
~~lthough previous attempts, such as that sum-
marized in D evare et al., (Cell 36: 43, 1984), have been
made to express the v-sis gene in a transformed micro-
organism, t=hey have not been successful in producing
mitogenic material. More recently, investigators have
described the production of p28sis in E. coli as a fusion
protein. (Wang et al., J. Biol. Chem 259: 10645, 1984).

- 3 1340846
This protein appears to compete with PDGF for binding to
PDGF recepi_or sites. While SSV transformed rodent cells
have been shown to exhibit a mitogenic activity similar to
PDGF (Deuel et a7.., Science 221: 1348, 1983; Owen et al.,
Science 225: 54, 1984), it is not clear that this activity
is due to a gene product from SSV (i.e., p28sis), Further-
more, cells transformed by a variety of viruses other than
SSV produce a PDGF-like mitogen into the culture medium
(Bowen-Pope et al.., PNAS 81: 2396, 1984).
While natural PDGF may be isolated from human
plasma or platelets as starting material, it is a complex
and expensive process, in part due to the limited avail-
ability of the starting material. In addition, it is dif-
ficult to purify PDGF with high yield from other serum com-
ponents due to i.ts extremely low abundance and biochemical
properties. Furthermore, the therapeutic use of products
derived from human blood carries the risk of disease trans-
mission due to contamination by, for example, hepatitis
vi rus , cytomegal.ovi rus , or the causative agent of Acquired
Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS).
I:n vi<~w of PDGF's clinical applicability in the
treatment of lIljuries in which healing requires the prolif-
eration of fibroblasts or smooth muscle cells and its value
as an important. component of a defined medium for the
growth of rnammalian cells in culture, the production of
useful quantities of protein molecules similar to authentic
PDGF which possess mitogenic activity is clearly invaluable.
In addition, the ability to produce relatively
large amounts of PDGF would be a useful tool for elucidat
ing the put=ative role of the v-sis protein, p28sis, in the
neoplastic process.
Further, since local accumulation of smooth
muscle cells in t_he intamal layer of an arterial wall is
central to the development of atherosclerotic lesions (Ross
and Glomset,, ibi.d. ) , one strategy for the prophylaxis and
treatment of at=herosclerosis would be to suppress smooth

4 v134fl 8~6
muscle cell proliferation. The ability to produce large
amounts of PDGF would be useful in developing inhibitors or
designing specific approaches which prevent or interfere
with the in vivo activity of PDGF in individuals with
atherosclerosis.
Disclosure of The Invention
Briefly stated, the present invention discloses
a DNA construct capable of directing the expression and
secretion of biologically active PDGF analogs in eucaryotic
cells. The DNA construct contains a transcriptional
promoter followed downstream by a gene encoding a protein
having substantially the same structure and/or mitogenic
activity as PDGF, and a signal sequence capable of direct-
ing the secretion of the protein from the eucaryotic cell.
The gene may be the v-sis gene or a derivative of the v-sis
gene of simian sarcoma virus or portions thereof which
encode a protein having biological activity. Further, the
derivative of the v-sis gene may be the portion of the
v-sis gene which is substantially homologous to the B chain
of PDGF. In addition, the gene may be the human cDNA gene
for PDGF o:r portions thereof encoding a protein having
biological activity.
Another aspect of the invention discloses a
method of preparing biologically.active PDGF analogs by
introducing into a eucaryotic host a DNA construct capable
of directing the expression and secretion of biologically
active PDGF analogs in eucaryotic cells. The DNA construct
contains a transcx-iptional promoter followed downstream by
a gene encoding a protein having substantially the same
structure and/or mitogenic activity as PDGF and a signal
sequence ca pabl.e of directing the secretion of the protein
from the eucaryotic cell. Subsequent to introducing the
DNA construct into the eucaryotic host, the method includes
growing the eucaryotic host in an appropriate medium and
then isolai=ing the protein product of the gene from the

yy~.~.. ~- 1 . ..
- 5 '~Y~
eucaryotic host.. Eucaryotic host cells transformed with
such a DNA construct are also disclosed.
The prE~sent invention further provides a method
for promoting the growth of mammalian cells through
incubating t:he ce_Lls with a biologically active PDGF analog
expressed by a eucaryotic cell transformed with a DNA
construct capable of directing the expression and secretion
of biologically active PDGF analogs in eucaryotic cells.
The DNA construct contains a transcriptional promoter
followed downstream by a gene encoding a protein having
substantially the same structure and/or mitogenic activity
as PDGF and a signal sequence capable of directing the
secretion of: the protein from the eucaryotic cell.
7:n one embodiment of the invention, the eucary-
otic cell niay be a yeast cell, and the DNA construct more
appropriately termed an extrachromosomal element.
Other aspects of the invention will become
evident upon reference to the following detailed descrip
tion and attached drawings.
Brief Description of The Drawings
Figure :LA is a schematic restriction map of the
proviral genome of SSV.
Figure 1B depicts the nucleotide sequence and
predicted amino acid sequence encoded by the v-sis region
of the SSV genome .
Figure 2 illustrates the construction of a plas
mid which contains the MFal promoter and secretory signal
sequence upstream of the v-sis gene.
F:figure 3 illustrates the construction of plasmid
p192 .
Figure 4 illustrates the oligonucleotide directed
deletion mutagenesis of the amino terminal sixty-six v-sis
codons.
Figure 5 illustrates the construction of plasmid
p270.

-,
-... 6
F:figure 6 illustrates the insertion of v-sis
expression units upstream of the TPI terminator.
Figure '7 illustrates the replacement of the MFa 1
promoter with the TPI promoter and inclusion of the VS2a
construction in the pCPOT vector.
Figure ~3 illustrates the construction of plasmid
pTVS2aT.
Figure 9 illustrates the construction of a B
chain expression unit VSB and its introduction into the
pMPOT2 vector .
Figure 10 depicts the electrophoretic and subse-
quent hybridization analysis of total RNA isolated from a
yeast host transformed with various plasmids probed with a
nick-translated v~-sis gene fragment.
Figure 11 depicts the results of an ELISA of
concentrated culture media from the yeast transformants
containing plasmids pVSa, pVS2a, p117-2 and pCPOT.
Figure :12 is a dose response curve of mitogenic
activity of concentrated culture media from yeast transform
ants containing plasmids pVSa and p117-2, compared to
purified PD(~F.
Figure 13 is a dose response curve of PDGF recep
tor binding by media concentrates from y east transformants
containing plasmids pVSam, PVS2am, pVSBm and pMPOT2
compared to authentic PDGF.
Figure 14 is a dose response curve of mitogenic
activity of: media concentrates from yeast transformants
containing pl<~smids pVSam, pVS2am, pVSBm, and pMPOT2
compared to authentic PDGF.
Figure 15 is a graph illustrating the mitogenic
activity cf they VSB encoded protein fractionated by
polyacrylam:ide gel electrophoresis.

,~ ,
7
Best Mode For Carrying Out the Invention
Prior to setting forth the invention, it may be
helpful to an understanding thereof to set forth defini
tions of ceri:ain terms to be used hereinafter.
Po:ly~ptide: A polymer of amino acids.
_Re_ading Frame: The arrangement of nucleotide
codons which encode an uninterrupted stretch of amino acids.
During translation of a mRNA, the proper reading frame must
be maintained. For example, the sequence GCUGGUUGUAAG may
be translated into three reading frames or phases, depend-
ing on whether one starts with G, with C, or with U, and
thus may yield three different peptide products. Transla-
tion of the template begins with an AUG codon, continues
with codons for :specific amino acids, and terminates with
one of the translation termination codons.
_Cc>ding Sequence: DNA sequences which in the
appropriate reading frame directly code for the amino acids
of a protein..
_Complementary DNA: or cDNA. A DNA molecule or
sequence which has been enzymatically synthesized from the
sequences present in a mRNA template.
SE~cretory Signal Sequence: That portion of a
gene encoding a signal peptide. A signal peptide is the
amino acid sequence in a secretory protein which signals
its translocatic>n into the secretory pathway of the cell.
Signal peptides generally occur at the beginning (amino
terminus) of the protein and are 20-40 amino acids long
with a stretch of 9-10 hydrophobic amino acids in their
center. Ve~~y often the signal peptide is proteolytically
cleaved from the protein during the process of secretion.

13~~~'~~
Cell Surface Receptor: A protein molecule at the
surface of a cell which specifically interacts with or
binds a molecule approaching the cell's surface. Once the
receptor hay; bound the cognate molecule, it effects speci-
fic changes in thE~ physiology of the cell.
Mitogen: A molecule which stimulates cells to
undergo mitosis. Mitosis is asexual somatic cell division
leading to two daughter cells, each having the same number
of chromosomes as the parent cell.
Transformation: The process of stably and
hereditably altering the genotype of a recipient cell or
microorganism by the introduction of purified DNA. This is
typically detected by a change in the phenotype of the
reci pi ent or-gani scn .
Transcription: The process of producing a mRNA
template from a structural gene.
Expression: The process, starting with a struc-
tural gene, of producing its polypeptide, being a combina-
tion of transcription and translation. An expression
vector is a plasmid derived construction designed to enable
the expressuon of a gene carried on the vector.
P:Lasmid: An extrachromosomal double stranded DNA
sequence comprising an intact "replicon" such that the
plasmid is replicated in a host cell. When the plasmid is
placed within a unicellular organism, the characteristics
of that organism may be changed or transformed as a result
of the expression of the DNA sequences of the plasmid. For
example, a. plasmid carrying the gene for tetracycline
resistance (tet~Z) transforms a cell previously sensitive to
tetracycline= int=o one which is resistant to it.
.....~.....~.~.... _. _ . ._...~.~,......~__..__._. _ ... . __...-.~.~__..~
_._....~_.._

fsaa~r" r
g _ ''" .
Yeast Promoter: DNA sequences upstream from a
yeast gene which promote its transcription.
Biological Activity: Some function or set of
activities performed by a molecule in a biological context
(i.e., in a:n organism or an in vitro facsimile). In the
case of PDGF, these biological activities include binding
to cell. surface receptor molecules, inducing chemotaxis and
inducing mitogenesis of responsive cell types.
As noted above, human platelet derived growth
factor (PDGF) ha.s been shown to be a major mitogenic
protein in serum. PDGF is known to be composed of two
polypeptide chains, an A chain and a B chain, which are
held together by disulfide bonds to form the biologically
active molecule. The A chain and B chain alone do not
appear to exhibit. any mitogenic activity, (Raines and Ross,
ibid.) and attempts to reconstitute activity by reoxidation
of the reduced polypeptides have not been successful.
Recently, the amino acid sequence of the B chain has been
shown to be substantially homologous to a portion of the
v-sis gene product:, p28sis (Doolittle et al., Science 221:
2 75 , 1983 ; 4Vatc~rf field et al . , Nature 304 : 35 , 1984 ; and
Johnsson et al . , F~nbo 3 : 921, 1984 ) . The homology between
these two proteins strongly suggests that they are derived
from the same or closely related cellular genes.
Given the fact that biologically active PDGF was
known to contain equimolar amounts of A and B chain, and
that previous attempts directed toward expressing v-sis
sequences in E.. coli did not yield mitogenic material, it
would not be expec:ted that merely expressing a portion of
the v-sis gene homologous to a portion of the PDGF gene in
a microorganism would result in a molecule which exhibited
mitogenic activity. The present invention however, unlike
the previous; attempts noted above, was designed to express
the v-sis gene or portions thereof absent of heterologous

~'°''
.._
sequences, such that the expressed molecules are more
closely related t:o the B chain of PDGF. Further, the
expression aystem of the present invention was designed to
5 produce the gene product via a eucaryotic secretory pathway.
This enables the expressed protein molecules to be properly
processed and assembled such that they exhibit biological
activity. Indee<i, the present invention, in contrast to
previous efforts, results in the secretion of PDGF analogs
10 which are biologically active.
In its active form, PDGF is a heat stable protein
composed of heterogeneously sized species of between 28,000
and 31,000 Daltons, all of the individual species being
active in ;stimulating DNA synthesis (Raines and Ross,
ibid.; Deuel et al.., J. Biol. Chem 256: 8896, 1981; Antoni-
ades, PNAS 78: 7:314, 1981). Where individual species with
molecular weight; of 27,000; 28,500; 29,000; and 31,000
Daltons have been isolated and assayed, they have been
found to have comparable mitogenic activity and amino acid
composition (R.aines and Ross, ibid.) Further, these
species show extensive tryptic peptide homology. The
slight variations in size among the species are most prob-
ably due to differences in carbohydrate composition and
proteolysis.
Through studies of PDGF which has been extensive-
ly purified from. platelet-rich human plasma, it is likely,
as noted above, that PDGF is composed of two polypeptide
chains, an F. chain (14,000 Daltons) and a B chain (16,000
Daltons), which are disulfide bonded together to form the
biologically active dimer molecule (Raines & Ross, Deuel et
al., Antoniades, ibid.). The PDGF nomenclature found in
the literature is not consistent (Doolittle et al., Water-
field et a:L., Raines and Ross, Johnsson et al., ibid.).
The nomenc:Latur~~ of Johnsson et al. (ibid.> has been
adopted, wherein the two polypeptides found in pure PDGF
are called "A chain" and "B chain." The B chain is
homologous to p28sis and was previously called "peptide I"

~.Y. .
11
1~~~~~~
(Waterfield et al., ibid.) or "la" (Doolittle et al.,
ibid.). The A chain was previously termed "peptide II"
(Waterfield et al., ibid.) or "2a" (Doolittle et al.,ibid.).
Data derived from a partial amino acid sequence of PDGF
indicate that the two polypeptide chains (A chain and B
chain) show some homology (Doolittle et al., ibid.,
Waterfield et al., ibid., and Johnsson et al., ibid.,
Antoniades a.nd Hunkapiller, Science 220: 963, 1983). The A
chain and B chain alone do not appear to exhibit any
mitogenic activity, and attempts to reconstitute activity
by reoxidation of the reduced polypeptides have not been
successful fRaines & Ross, ibid.>.
The v-sis gene, as mentioned above, is the
transformir.~g gene of simian sarcoma virus (SSV). The v-sis
gene has b<~en c:Loned and its DNA sequence determined
(Devare et al., PNAS 79: 3179, 1982; Devare et al., PNAS
_80: 731, 1983). Analysis of this sequence revealed an open
reading frame which could encode a 28,000 Dalton protein,
designated p28sis. Subsequently, such a protein was identi-
fied in SSV infected cells (Niman, ibid.; Bobbins, ibid.) .
The predicted amino acid sequence of the v-sis gene pro-
duct, p28S~-s, was found to have a high degree of homology
with the actual amino acid sequence of a portion of the B
chain of PDGF (Johnsson, ibid.). The homology of the PDGF
B chain to the v-sis gene product begins at amino acid 67
of p28sis, a serine, and continues for approximately 109
amino acids to a threonine residue at amino acid 175. The
amino acid sequences preceding and following the B chain
homologous region of p28sis are not homologous to either
the A or B chains of mature PDGF (Johnsson, ibid.) In
addition, PDGF and p28sis have been shown to be similar
antigenically (2diman, ibid.; Bobbins, ibid.) . The v-sis
gene product, p28sis, a protein of approximately 225 amino
acids, appears to be proteolytically processed to a protein
of approximately 20,000 Daltons (p20sis) in SSV infected
cells (Niman, ibid.; Bobbins, ibid.). This 20,000 Dalton

- ~y J ..
12
13~~~~~
protein can be immunoprecipitated with antiserum against
PDGF.
As noted above, previous attempts at expressing
v-sis sequences i.n prokaryotes did not yield biologically
active material. Further, the v-sis gene product p28sis~
as well as PDGF itself, are secreted mammalian proteins.
In order to achieve biologically active material, the
present invention utilizes the secretory pathway of
eucaryotic cells to express the v-sis gene and derivatives
of the v-sis gene. Expression and secretion of the v-sis
gene produci~ frorx~ a eucaryotic cell enables processing and
assembly which results in molecules with native and active
conformation.
The secretory pathways of most eucaryotes are
believed to be similar. In particular, mammalian cell and
yeast cell secret:ory pathways are well characterized and
are homologous. The presence of a secretory signal
sequence on the expressed polypeptide is an important
element in eucaryotes, due to its role in introducing the
molecule into t:he secretory pathway, thereby leading to
proper assembling and processing. Provided that appropri-
ate transcriptional promoter and secretory signal sequences
are utilized, generally any eucaryote could express and
secrete the v-sis gene product in a biologically active
form.
An. easily manipulable and well characterizes
eucaryote is the yeast cell. For these reasons, yeast was
chosen as a model. example of an appropriate eucaryotic cell
within the present: invention. Accordingly, the v-sis gene
and fragments thereof encoding the 109 amino acids with
homology to the PDGF B chain were inserted into yeast
extrachromosomal elements containing a yeast promoter
capable of directing the expression of biologically active
pDGF analogs. In accordance with the present invention,
the yeast promoter is followed downstream by a fragment of

_ _ - -
13 ~''
~.~~~46
the v-sis gf~ne which encodes a protein having substantially
the same structure and/or mitogenic activity as PDGF.
Genes which encode a protein having substantially
the same structure and/or mitogenic activity as PDGF in
clude the v-sis gene or a derivative of the v-sis gene of
simian sarcoma virus (SSV) or portions thereof or the human
cDNA gene for PDGF or portions thereof. Specifically, DNA
sequences encoding polypeptides substantially homologous to
the B chain of PDGF are preferred. The genes to be
utilized in the E~xtrachromosomal element may be isolated
using standard recombinant DNA techniques.
The human PDGF cDNA gene may be isolated from a
human cDNA library made from an appropriate source of mes
senger RNA by using the v-sis gene or a fragment thereof as
a hybridization probe. A preferred source of mRNA is human
umbilical vein endothelial cells. These cells can be cul-
tured _in _vitro for short periods of time and are known to
secrete PDGP' into the culture medium (DiCorleto and Bowen-
pope, PNAS 80: 1019, 1983). The identity of this cDNA gene
as that encoding PDGF may be verified by DNA sequencing.
Promoters which may be utilized in yeast include
the yeast alpha-factor (MFal> promoter and the yeast triose
phosphate isomerase (TPI) promoter. Promoters may also be
obtained from other yeast genes, e.g., Alcohol Dehydro
genase 1 (ADHl), Alcohol Dehydrogenase 2 (ADH2).
The constructions described herein were designed
such that t;he v-sis gene product would be secreted from the
yeast cell into the media. This was accomplished through
use of the secretory signal sequence of the yeast mating
pheromone alpha-factor (Kurjan and Herskowitz, Cell 30:
933, 1982; Julius et al., Cell _36: 309, 1984; and Brake et
al., PNAS _81: 4642, 1984) although other secretion signals
may be used . To ensure the efficient transcription termi-
nation and polyadenylation of mRNA, a yeast terminator
sequence, such as the triose phosphate isomerase termi-

._~. ~. ..
14
nator, was added. (Alber and Kawasaki, J. Molec. Genet.
Appl. l: 419, 1982.)
Once an appropriate DNA fragment containing the
gene of interest. is identified, it is ligated to an appro
priate promoter and secretory signal sequence. Methods of
ligation of DNA fragments have been amply described
(Maniatis e~t al., Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual,
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 1982) and are well within the
skill of those of ordinary skill in the art to perform.
After preparation of the v-sis expression constructions,
the constructs are inserted into a yeast expression vector.
The replicating plasmid YEpl3, containing an
origin of :replication and a selectable marker, the LEU2
gene, was used for the initial expression constructions.
The use of the selectable marker LEU2 in yeast cells defi-
cient in their a.b:ility to synthesize leucine allows for the
positive selection of those cells containing the LEU2
plasmid by 'their ability to grow on minus leucine growth
media. Although these constructions directed the expres-
sion of a F~roduct having some mitogenic activity, it is
preferable to usE~ an expression vector which is more stably
maintained within the host cell in order to produce more
mitogenic activity per culture.
SuitablE~ yeast expression vectors in this regard
are the pla:~mids pCPOT and pMPOT2, which include the Schizo-
saccharomyces ~mbe gene encoding the glycolytic enzyme
triose pho~;phate isomerase (POT1 gene). Inclusion of the
POT1 gene ensures the stable maintenance of the plasmid in
an appropriate host cell due to its ability to complement
the correspo ndinc~ gene deletion present within this host
cell. In a~ddit:ion, the MFal promoter was replaced by the
Saccharomyces cerevisiae TPI promoter with the intention of
further increasin~3 transcription and expression.
Ai:ter preparation of. the DNA construct incorporat-
ing the TPI promoter, the alpha factor secretory signal
sequence, the appropriate segment of the v-sis gene or the

~:.~ r_ "
~~~0~~-G
human cDNA gene for PDGF, and the TPI terminator in an
appropriate vector, the construct is transformed into the
yeast host with a TPI deletion. Procedures for transform-
s ing yeast are wel:1 known in the literature.
The transformed yeast cells may be selected by
growth on conventional complex medium containing glucose
when the pCl?OT vector is utilized. A conventional medium
such as YEPD (20 grams glucose, 20 grams Bacto-peptone, 10
10 grams yeast extract per liter) may be used. Once selected,
transformants containing the v-sis expression constructions
are grown t:o stationary phase on conventional complex
media, the cells removed, and the medium concentrated.
Noting that authentic human PDGF is a highly cationic and
15 hydrophobic protein (Raines and Ross, ibid.; Antoniades,
ibid.; DeueJ_ et al., 1981, ibid.), it was expected that the
putative yeast product would possess similar characteris-
tics, allowing it to be concentrated on a hydrophobic
chromatography matrix such as C8-Sepharose (Pharmacia Fine
Chemicals AF3, Uppsala, Sweden).
Llsing a variety of assays, it is demonstrated
that growth media from yeast cultures expressing the v-sis
derivative; possess biological activities identical to
authentic human PDGF.
E:cpression of biologically active v-sis deriva-
tives in eucaryotic cells other than yeast can be achieved
by a person skil:~led in the art by using the appropriate
expression/regulatory signals. Transcriptional promoters
capable of directing the expression of v-sis sequences are
chosen for their ~~bility to give efficient and/or regulated
expression in t:he particular eucaryotic cell type. Signal
sequences capable of directing the v-sis gene product into
the cell's secretory pathway are chosen for their function
in the appropriate cell type. Other useful regulatory
signals, such as transcription termination signals, poly-
adenylation signals and transcriptional enhancer sequences,
are also chosen for their function in the appropriate cell

,.-.. ~u~r ~ n
16
1~~0846
type, the selection of which would be apparent to an
individual skilled in the art.
The techniques of cell culture have advanced con-
siderably i:n the last several years as have the number and
varieties of mammalian cells which will grow in culture.
Central to these advances is a better understanding of the
nutritional requirements (i.e., hormones and growth fac-
tors) of cultured cells (Barnes and Sato, Cell 22: 649,
1980) . The types of cells able to grow in culture can be
crudely classifiE~d in two groups: normal and transformed.
So-called "normal" cells are generally not immortal in
culture, t hey do not form tumors when injected into animals
and they retain a normal diploid karyotype. Normal cells
may also retain much of their differentiated character in
culture. Within the category of normal cells are those
which will only grow for a limited number of generations in
culture, termed "cell strains" or "primary cultures." Some
normal cell line:, while not meeting all the criteria of
transformation, may grow indefinitely in culture. Trans-
formed cel:Ls ar~~ immortalized for growth in culture,
typically have lost their differentiated phenotype, and
have acquired karyotypic aberrations. They may also be
independent of anchorage for growth and induce tumors when
injected into the appropriate host animal. Cells in any of
these categories which grow in vitro and possess PDGF
receptors will b~~ responsive to the PDGF analogs of this
invention in culture.
To summarize the examples which follow, EXAMPLE I
demonstrates the construction of a v-sis subclone of
pSSV-11 in the E. coli replicating plasmid pUCl3, subse
quently designated pVSIS/Pst. EXAMPLE II demonstrates the
construction of t he plasmid pVSa, which includes the liga
tion of v-sis to the MFal promoter and secretory signal
sequence. EXAMPLE III demonstrates the oligonucleotide
directed deletion mutagenesis of the first 195 base pairs
of the v-sis gene using a technique which employs single

y~J .
.-.. 17
131,p~~.~
stranded bacteriophage M13, in order to eliminate the first
sixty-six amino acids of the v-sis gene product, p28sis~
which are not homologous to the B chain of PDGF. A result-
s ing phage with the correct deletion was designated mllvs2a.
EXAMPLE IV demonstrates the incorporation of the v-sis
related constructions described in Examples II and III into
the yeast replica ting vector YEpl3 and addition of yeast
TPI terminator sequences. Subsequently, VS2a sequences
were inserted into the plasmid pCPOT, which ensures the
stable maintenance of the plasmid in the host cell. This
plasmid was designated p117-2. This example also demon-
strates the construction of the plasmid pVSB and the expres-
sion vector pMP(7T2. EXAMPLE V demonstrates the transforma-
tion of yeast host. cells with the plasmids YEpVSa, YEpVS2a,
p117-2 and control plasmids p270 and pCPOT, and subsequent
transcriptional analysis. EXAMPLE VI demonstrates the
concentration of the spent yeast growth media from cultures
containing the v--sis expressing transformants and their
subsequent analy:~is for PDGF-like material by the ELISA,
radioreceptor and mitogenesis assays. Clear evidence is
presented that these yeast media containing the v-sis
related gene products described herein possess biological
activities identical to authentic human PDGF.
The following examples are offered by way of
illustration, and not by way of limitation.
cvr~~rnr ~e
Unless otherwise indicated, standard molecular
biological rnethod.s were used. Restriction endonucleases
and other DNA mo<~ification enzymes (i.e., T4 polynucleotide
kinase, calf alkaline phosphatase, Klenow DNA polymerase)
were obtained from Bethesda Research Laboratories, New
England Biolabs, Boehringer-Mannheim or Collaborative
Research and werE~ used as the manufacturer suggested unless
indicated otherwise. M13 phage and pUC plasmid vectors and

_ ",.~ .
~. 18
appropriate host strains were obtained from Bethesda
Research Laboratories. E. coli cultures were transformed
by the calcium chloride method of Dagert and Ehrlich (Gene
6: 23, 1979). Yeast cultures were transformed as described
by Beggs (Nature 275: 104, 1978). Plasmid and M13 replica-
tive form (RF) DNA were prepared from E. coli transformants
by the method of Birnboim and Doly (Nucleic Acids Research
7: 1513, 1979). Single stranded M13 phage DNA was pre-
pared as describE~d by S. Anderson (Nucleic Acids Research
13: 3015, 1981). DNA fragments were extracted from agarose
gels by the method of J. Langridge et al. (Analyt. Biochem.
103: 264, 1980). DNA sequencing was performed by the dide
oxy method on M1:3 templates (Messing, Meth. in Enzymology
101 : 20 , 1983 ) .
w~r..~nr c r
Subcloning of V-SIS from pSSV-11
Th.e SSV retroviral genome was cloned from SSV-11
nonproductively infected normal rat kidney (NRK) cells
which had SSV integrated into their genome (Devare et al.,
1982, ibid.). The SSV DNA was isolated as a 5.8 kilobase
(kb) Eco R7. fragment and subsequently inserted into the
plasmid pBR322, resulting in the clone pSSV-11. This clone
was obtained from S. Aaronson (National Institutes of
Health, Bethesda, MD).
Figure lA is a schematic restriction map of the
5.8 kilobase~ provi.ral genome of SSV. Only the restriction
sites relevant to the present invention are indicated. The
open box designates the p28sis coding portion of the v-sis
gene .
Figure 1B depicts the nucleotide sequence of the
v-sis gene a.nd some flanking SSV sequences. The v-sis gene
is inserted 19 nucleotides 3' of the putative ATG initia
tion colon of the envelope (env) gene of SSV (Devare et

,~.., _
.- 19
al., 1982, ibid.l. It is believed that transcription and
translation of v-sis sequences are directed by SSV
sequences resuli:ing in an env-sis fusion protein. The
nucleotide sequence shown in Figure 1B is corrected from
that published by Devare et al. in 1982 (ibid.). The
corrections include those made by Devare et al. in 1983
(ibid.) and by the inventors herein. The original number-
ing scheme of Devare et al. (1982, ibid.) is retained here
for ease of reference. The numbers assigned to the restric-
tion sites in Figure lA are from Figure 1B.
A subclone of pSSV-11 (Figure 2) containing a
portion of t he v--sis gene was constructed in the E. coli
replicating plasmid pUCl3 (Vieira and Messing, Gene, 19:
259, 1982; and Messing, Meth. in Enzymology 101: 20, 1983).
Five micrograms (ug) of pSSV-11 was digested with the
restriction endon.uclease Pst I and the 1.2 kb fragment con-
taining sequences numbered 454-1679 (Figure 1) was purified
by agarose gel e_Lectrophoresis (0.9~> and extracted from
the gel with cet~~ltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) plus
butanol (Langridge et al., ibid.). Two ug of pUCl3 was
also digested with Pst I, phenol/chloroform (CHC13)
extracted and ethanol (EtOH) precipitated. Forty ng of
the 1.2 kb v-sis fragment and 50 ng of Pst I cut pUCl3
were ligated overnight at room temperature with 40 units
(u) of T4 DNA ligase. The ligation mixture was used to
transform E. cola K-12 strain JM83 (Messing, Recombinant
DNA Technical Bulletin, NIH Publication No. 79-009, 2, No.
2, 43-48, 7_979) in the presence of 5-bromo,4-chloro, 3-
indolyl-~-D-galactoside (X-gal> and isopropyl S-D-thio-
galactoside ( IPTG ) . Plasmid DNA prepared from ampicillin
resistant white colonies was digested with Pst I to verify
the presence of the insert and the resulting plasmid was
designated pVSIS/1?st .

.w 20
EXAMPLE II
Construction of the Plasmid pVSa
A. Preparation of V-SIS for Fusion to MFal.
Six hundred ug of plasmid pSSV-11 (Figure 2) was
digested with restriction endonucleases Bam HI and Pvu II
in 200 microlite:rs (ul) of 50 mM NaCl, 10 mM MgCl2, 10 mM
Tris pH 7.5 (med.ium salt buffer), and 100 ug/ml bovine
serum albumin (BSA), overnight at 37°C. The digestion pro-
ducts were electrophoresed through a 1.1~ agarose gel and
the 1100 base p~~ir ( by ) Bam HI-Pvu II fragment (Figure 2 )
cut out, extracted and EtOH precipitated. The DNA pellet
was dissolved in 75 ul Hph T buffer to which was added 20
ul of 1 mg/m.l BSA and 5 ul Hph I. After overnight digestion
at 37°C the mixture was electrophoresed through a 1.25$
agarose gel and the 396 by Hph I-Pvu II fragment isolated
from the gel and. EtOH precipitated. The DNA pellet was
dissolved in 30 ul. of Klenow buffer (6mM Tris pH 7.5, 6 mM
MgCl2, 60 mM NaCI_) and the 3' overhanging nucleotide at the
Hph I cleavage site removed by treatment with 5 a of Klenow
polymerase for 5 minutes at 37°C. One ul of a mixture
containing all four deoxyribonucleotides each at 1 mM was
added and the reaction mixture incubated an additional 10
minutes. Ai:ter ~~henol/CHC13/ether (Et20) extraction and
EtOH precipitation, the DNA pellet was dissolved in 30 ul
of medium salt buffer and digested with 5 a of Bgl II for
three hours at 3'7°C. The DNA was electrophoresed through a
1.25 agarose gel and the 269 by Hph I - Bgl II fragment
extracted and EtOH precipitated. The Hph I cleavage
terminus of this Klenow blunted fragment begins with the
tri-nucleotide sequence
S~ATG.....(Figure 2)
3~TAC.....

r
.. 21 ~~4~~~~' _
B. MFc~l Promoter and Secretory Leader Fragment.
Plasmid p192 (Figure 3) comprises a portion of
the gene for the yeast mating pheromone a-factor (MFal
gene) cloned in the bacterial plasmid pUCl3 (Vieira and
Messing, ib:id.; and Messing, Meth. in Enzymology 101: 20,
1983). Cloning of the MFal gene from a genomic library has
been described by Kurjan and Herskowitz (ibid.). The gene
was isolated in this laboratory in a similar manner, using
as starting material a yeast genomic library of partial Sau
3A fragments cloned into the Bam HI site of YEpl3 (Nasmyth
and Tatchell, Cell 19: 753, 1980). From this library, a
plasmid was isolated which expressed a -factor in a diploid
strain of yeast homozygous for the mat a2-34 mutation
(Manney et al., J. Cell Biol 96: 1592, 1983). The clone
contained an insert overlapping with the MFal gene charac-
terized by Kurj~~n and Herskowitz (ibid). This plasmid,
known as pZA2 (Figure 3>, was cut with Eco RI and the 1700
by fragment. comprising the MFal gene was purified. This
fragment wars then subcloned into the Eco RI site of pUCl3
to produce the plasmid p192.
Fifteen ug of plasmid p192 was digested in 30 ul
of medium salt buffer with 20 units of Hind III overnight
at 37°C. 'f'lhe reaction mixture was diluted to 60 ul with
Klenow buff.=r and the four deoxyribonucleotides added to a
final concentration of 50 uM each. Ten units of Klenow
polymerase were added to the ice-cold mixture and incuba-
tion allowed to proceed 12 minutes at 15°C. Following
phenol/CHC'.13/Et:20 extraction, the aqueous phase was
concentrated by lyophilization to a volume of 10 ul and
digested with 20 units of Eco RI for 70 minutes at 37°C.
The products were electrophoresed through a 0.9$ agarose
gel and the 1.2 kb Eco RI-Hind III ( blunted) MFal fragment
extracted <~nd EtOH precipitated. This DNA fragment contains
the transciptional promoter and secretory signal sequences
of MFal.

2 2 'r'
13408~~
C. Preparation of v-sis 3' Sequences and Cloning
Vector pUCl2; Fragment Ligation.
Twenty ug of plasmid pVSIS/Pst was digested with
Bgl II and X:ba I in 40 ul of medium salt buffer. Subse-
quent electrophoresis through 1~ agarose, extraction of the
DNA and EtOH precipitation provided the purified v-sis 756
by Bgl II-Xba I i=ragment (Figure 2). E. coli replicating
plasmid pUCl2 (5 u.g) was digested with Eco RI and Xba I and
gel purified as above (Figure 2).
Referring to Figure 2, equimolar amounts of the
four DNA fragmeni:s described above, adjusted to 10 ng of
the 296 by Hph I-H,gl II v-sis fragment, were mixed in 15 ul
of ligase buffer (6 mM Tris pH 7.6, 6.6mM MgCl2~ 0.4 mM
ATP, 2 mM spermidine, 20 mM DTT, and 100 ug/ml BSA) and
ligated with 40 units of T4 DNA ligase overnight at 14°C.
The reaction mixture was brought to room temperature, an
additional 150 units of T4 ligase added, and incubated 10
more hours. Seven ul of the ligation mix was used to trans-
form E. co7_i K-12 RR1 (ATCC #31343; Bolivar, E. et al.,
Gene _2: 95, 1977),. and ampicillin resistant transformants
selected. Plasmid DNA was prepared from 12 such bacterial
colonies and. digested with Xba I. Two clones gave a '2.2
kb band predicted by the proper fragment alignment (Figure
2). Further analysis of these by Bgl II-Xba I restriction
mapping gave expected bands of approximately 1.5 kb from
the MFal/v-~;is fusion and 760bp for the Bgl II-Xba I v-sis
fragment. DNA se<;uence analysis verified the desired nucle-
otide sequence at the MFal/v-sis junction. The resultant
plasmid was designated pVSa.

,~..-
2 3 ''"
134~8~~
EXAMPLE III
Oligonucleotide Directed Deletion Mutagenesis of
66 Amino Terminal v-sis Codons
Ho~molog~y between the v-sis protein p28sis and
PDGF begins at amino acid 67 of p28sis~ a serine residue
corresponding to the NH2 terminal residue of the PDGF B
chain (Johnsson, ibid.)
Proteolytic processing of the MFal primary trans-
lation product oc curs at the Lys-Arg cleavage signal 85
amino acids from the initiator methionine (Kurjan and
Herskowitz, ibid.). A v-sis derivative was constructed in
which the first Ei6 codons of p28sis were removed such that
serine residue 6'l of v-sis immediately follows the MFal
Lys-Arg processing signal.
Referring to Figure 4, approximately 40 ng of the
gel purified 2.2 k.b Xba I fragment of pVSa was ligated with
120 ng of :~ba I digested, alkaline phosphatase treated
M13mp11 DNA (Mes:~ing, Meth. in Enzymology, ibid.). The
ligation mixture was used to transform E. coli K-12 strain
JM101 (ATCC 3387~i) in the presence of X-gal and IPTG.
Isolated white p:Laques were picked and used to infect 3 ml
cultures of log phase growth JM101 cells. Replicative form
(RF> DNA was prepared and clones identified which carried
the insert fragment in the same orientation as the positive
(+) strand form of the single stranded mature phage.
Single-stranded phage DNA was prepared from one such clone
and designated mll.VS a.
To precisely remove codons 1-66 of v-sis, oligonu-
cleotide directed mutagenesis was performed essentially
according to the two primer method of Zoller (Zoller, et
al., Manual for Advanced Technigues in Molecular Cloning
Course, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 1983). Oligonucleo-
tide ZC 1..0 (3' AGAAACCTATTTTCC'rCGGACCCA 5') was
synthesized on an Applied Biosystems 380-A DNA synthesizer.

_. ~ .
'.. ..,
_ ..~r ~ 'rr..
24 13
l ~
Fifty pmolE~s of ZC 130 were kinased in 10 ul of kinase
buffer (BRL) with 4 units of T4 polynucleotide kinase for
45 minutes at 37"C. The enzyme was inactivated by heating
at 65°C for 10 minutes.
One-half pmole of mllVSa was annealed with 1 pmole
of kinased Z~C 130 and 1.5 pmoles of universal sequencing
primer (BRL) using the conditions described (Zoller et al.,
ibid.), except that the annealing mixture was first heated
to 65°C for 10 minutes, shifted to 37°C for 10 minutes, and
then quickly chilled on ice. The annealed mixture was then
treated with Klen ow polymerase as described by Zoller et
al. (ibid.) to create circular duplex DNA. Portions of the
elongation mixture were used to transform E. coli K12 JM
101 cells. The resulting phage plaques were screened for
the proper deletion by transfer onto nitrocellulose filters
and subsequent hybridization with 32P phosphorylated ZC 130
at 65°C. ~~orrectly juxtaposed sequences formed stable
duplexes with the radioactive probe at the stringent hybrid-
ization temperature employed. Approximately 1$ of the
transformants screened gave positive signals by autoradi-
ography. Ten clones were plaque-purified and RF DNA was
prepared for restriction enzyme analysis. Five isolates
showed the expected decrease in size of 195 by to the 1450
by Hind III-~Bgl IT fragment (Figure 4). DNA sequence analy-
sis of two isolates confirmed the correct fusion junction
had been made, thus maintaining the proper translational
reading frame. One of these phage was designated m11VS2a.
EXAMPLE IV
'.~Ceast Expression Vectors
A. Construction of Plasmids YEpVSa and YEpVS2a.
Yeast replicating vector YEpl3 (Broach et al.,
Gene 8: 121, 1971) was used as an expression vehicle for

._. 2 5 . ~. ~ r~
v-sis derived constructions described in Examples II and
III. YEpl3 is a multicopy extrachromosomal plasmid contain-
ing a 2 micron rE~plication origin and the yeast LEU2 gene.
This allows for selection of the plasmid in yeast strains
possessing .a defective chromosomal LEU2 gene when grown on
synthetic medium lacking leucine. Addition of yeast termi-
nator sequences to foreign genes expressed in yeast ensures
efficient transcription termination and polyadenylation of
mRNA. The v-sis expression units VSa and VS2a were placed
adjacent to the TPI terminator fragment which was previ-
ously cloned into YEpl3 (below>.
Plasmid p270 (see Figure 5) contains the trans
cription terminator region of the yeast triose phosphate
isomerase (TPI) gene. It was constructed in the following
manner. The yeast TPI terminator fragment was obtained
from plasmid pFGl (Alber and Kawasaki, ibid.). It encom-
passes the region from the penultimate amino acid codon of
the TPI gene to the Eco RI site approximately 700 base
pairs downstream. A Bam HI site was substituted for this
unique Eco RI site of pFGl by first cutting the plasmid
with Eco RI, them blunting the ends with DNA polymerase I
(Klenow fragment>, adding synthetic Bam HI linkers
(CGGATCCA), and re-ligating to produce plasmid p136. The
TPI terminator was then excised from p136 as a Xba I-Bam HI
fragment. This fragment was ligated into YEpl3 (Broach et
al., ibid.> which had been linearized with Xba I and Bam HI.
The resulting plasmid is known as p213. The Hind III site
was then removed from the TPI terminator region of p213 by
digesting the plasmid with Hind III, blunting the resultant
termini wii:h DNA polymerase I (Klenow fragment>, and
recircularizing the linear molecule using T4 DNA ligase.
The resulting pla;smid is p270.
A7_terna~tively, p270 may be constructed by digest
ing plasmid pM220 (see below) with Xba I and Bam HI, puri
fying the Tl?I terminator fragment (~700bp), and inserting
this fragment int~~ XbaI and Sam HI digested YEpl3.

2 6 ~ ~,. , ,
~3~~~~.6.~
Referring to Figure 6, plasmid p270 DNA was
digested with Xba I and treated with calf alkaline phos-
phatase to prevent religation of the cohesive vector ends.
V-sis expression units VSa and VS2a were prepared by Xba I
digestion and agarose gel purification of pVSa and mllvs2a,
respectively. Each of the isolated fragments was ligated
with an approximately equimolar amount of phosphatased p270
vector in th.e presence of 40 units of T4 DNA ligase and the
ligation mixtures transformed into E. coli K-12 RR1. Plas-
mid DNA was prepared from ampicillin-resistant colonies and
restriction enzyme analysis performed in order to identify
clones which possessed the TPI terminator adjacent to 3'
v-sis sequences. Presence of 3.3 kb or 3.1 kb Bgl II
fragments after g<~1 electrophoresis indicated the correct
orientation of YEpVSa and YEpVS2a, respectively.
B. In:~ertio~a of VS2a Expression Unit into pCPOT.
In order to achieve maximal protein production
from a yea~ct culture, it is desirable to use expression
vehicles which a.re very stably maintained in the host cell.
Plasmid pCPOT is such a preferred expression vehicle.
_E. _col_i._ HB101 transformed with pCPOT has been
deposited with American Type Culture Collection under
accession number 39685. Plasmid pC POT comprises the 2
micron circle g~~nome (Hartley and Donelson, Nature 286:
860, 1980), E. c_oli plasmid pBR322 replication and selec
tion sequences, and the Schizosaccharomyces op mbe DNA
sequences encoding the glycolytic enzyme triose phosphate
isomerase ( PO'rl. ) . Presence of the POT1 gene in pCPOT
ensures stable maintenance of the plasmid in the appropri-
ate host b<~ckg.rc>und during growth on nonselective medium
utilizing glucose as a carbon source.
The :>_. cerevisiae TPI promoter was used to
control expression of VS2a sequences in pCPOT. Plasmid
pM220 contains the TPI promoter fused to the MFal signal

r
27 134040
sequence . E. coli RRI transformed with pM220 has been
deposited with American Type Culture Collection under
accession number 39853.
Referring to Figure 7, plasmid pM220 was digested
with Bgl II and Bam HI, electrophoresed through a 0.9$
agarose gel, and the 2.2 kb TPI promoter, MFal gene frag-
ment extracted. The purified fragment was digested with
Pst I and tike resulting 1 kb Bgl II-Pst I fragment agarose
gel-purified as above. Plasmid YEpVS2a was digested with
Pst I and Bam HI,, and the 1.8 kb MFal/v-sis/TPI terminator
fusion fragment gel-isolated. Plasmid pCPOT was digested
with Bam HI, trE~ated with calf alkaline phosphatase,
phenol/CHC13 extracted, then purified by electrophoresis
through ac)arose, extracted from the gel and EtOH
precipitated.
Approximately equimolar amounts of the three
isolated fragments described above (Figure 7) were ligated
overnight at 12°~~ and the ligation mixture used to trans-
form E. coli K-12 strain DH1 (Hanahan, D. and Meselson, M.,
J. Mol. Biol. 166: 577, 1983) to ampicillin resistance.
Plasmid DNA was prepared from transformants and restriction
digest analysis used to ascertain the orientation of the
insert fragments. Presence of the "1500 by Bam HI-Sal I
fragment indicatE~s that the Bam HI cohesive end of the TPI
terminator fragment is oriented as shown in Figure 7. The
opposite orientation would create a Bam HI/Bgl II fusion,
not cleavable by Bam HI, and hence would not yield this
fragment. The 8C10 by Sph I fragment indicated that the TPI
promoter and. v-si:~ fragments were properly fused at the Pst
I site (Figu.re 7).. This plasmid was designated p117-2.
C. Construction of the Plasmid pVSB.
BE~cause~ the product encoded by pVS2a is larger
than authentic human PDGF B chain and because a smaller
product might result in higher expression levels in a

",.:.
28
~34~0~~~
transformed yeast host cell, a vector was constructed
comprising t:he v-sis sequence of pVS2 truncated at the 3'
end. The polypeptide encoded by this sequence comprises
amino acids 67 to 175 of p28sis and is homologous to the B
chain of PDGF.
An expression vector containing this "B chain"
sequence wasp constructed by combining elements of the pVS2a
expression unit with a partial v-sis gene and a synthetic
double-strap ded I)NA fragment encoding amino acids 158 to
175 of p28~sis, This synthetic fragment was designed to
substitute preferred yeast codons for many of the 13 v-sis
codons it replaces, and to supply a stop codon at the end
of the coding sequence. The construction of this vector is
i llustrated i n F'i~3ures 8 and 9 .
P7_asmid YEpVS2a was digested with Pst I and Bam
HI and the 1.8 );b fragment comprising the partial MFal,
v-sis, and TPI terminator sequences was purified by agarose
gel electrophoresis. Plasmid pICl9R (obtainable from Dr.
J. Lawrence Marsh, University of California, Irvine),
comprising the polylinker shown in Chart 1 inserted into
the Hind II:I site of pUCl9 (Norrander et al., Gene 26:
101-106, 1983), was digested with Pst I and Bam HI, and the
vector fragrnent was gel purified and joined to the 1.8 kb
fragment from pVS2a to produce plasmid pVS2aT.
CHART 1
GAATTCATCGATATCTAGATCTCGAGCTCGCGAAAGCTT
loco R1 Eco RV Bgl II Sac I Hind III
Cla I Xba I Xho I Nru I
Plasmid pM:?20 wa.s digested with Bgl II and Pst I, and the
ca. 1 kb fragment comprising the TPI promoter and the 5'
portion of the MFal sequence was isolated and cloned in Bgl
II + Pst I dige~;ted pICl9R. The resultant plasmid was
digested with Cl.a I and Pst I, and the TPI promoter - MFal

".-..
,- 2 9
1~4~~~6
fragment was gel purified. Plasmid pVS2aT was then cut
with Cla I and Pst I and joined to the TPI promoter - MFal
fragment. The correct construct was identified by the
presence of a ~'..6 kb Cla I - Bam HI fragment and was
designated pTVS2~~T.
Ten ug~ of plasmid pVSa was digested with Xma I
and Sph I t.o completion. The resulting ca. 4.9 kb vector
fragment, which also comprises most of the v-sis sequence,
was purified by agarose gel electrophoresis, extraction of
the DNA and! EtOH precipitation.
In order to supply a new 3' terminus for the
v-sis sequence, a double-stranded DNA fragment was con-
structed from oligonucleotides synthesized on an Applied
Biosystem;s Model 380-A DNA synthesizer. 0.7 pmole of
oligonucleotide ZC299 (Table 1) was heated with an equi-
molar amount of oligonucleotide ZC300 in a volume of 10 ul
containing 40 mM NaCl for 5 minutes at 65°C.
TABLE 1
ZC299: S~TAAG TCiT GAA ATC GTT GCC GCG GCT AGA GCT GTT ACC
TAA TCT AGA3
ZC300: 3~GTACA TTC ACA CTT TAG CAA CGG CGC CGA TCT CGA CAA
TGG ATT AGA TCT GGCCS~
The mixture was then incubated at 37°C for 5 minutes and
allowed to cool to room temperature. 0.2 pmole of the puri-
fied 4.9 kb vector fragment was added, the mixture ligated
for 18 hours at. 12°C and used to transform E. coli HB101
(ATCC 33694) to ampicillin resistance. DNA was prepared
from ampicillin-resistant colonies and digested with Bgl II
and Xba I,. Afi_er electrophoresis through agarose, the
desired clone (kn;own as pVSaB) was identified by loss of a
ca . 7 5 0 b~~ Bgl_ II--Xba I fragment and appearance of two
smaller fragments of approximately 500 and 260 bp.

.~,r., .
3 0 's4
13408-~
Approximately 8 ug of plasmid pTVS2aT was digested
to completion with Xba I in a volume of 10 ul. The volume
was increased to 40 ul with Bgl II buffer, and 6 units of
Bgl II were added and the mixture was incubated at 37°C.
Ten ul aliquots were removed to a stop buffer containing 50
mM EDTA at 15 and 30 minutes, and the remaining 20 ul
stopped at 45 minutes. The resulting mixtures were sepa-
rated by electrophoresis through 0.7$ agarose. The ca. 4.6
kb Bgl II---Xba 7: vector fragment was cut out, extracted
from the gel, and EtOH precipitated. Plasmid pVSaB was
digested with Bg:L II and Xba I, and the ca. 260 by fragment
containing the synthetic 3' terminus and stop codon was
isolated b;y elec:trophoresis through agarose, subsequent
extraction from the gel, and EtOH precipitation.
The 4 .6 kb Bgl I I-Xba I vector fragment f rom
pTVS2aT and the 260 by Bgl II--Xba I fragment from pVSaB
were ligated in tlae presence of T4 DNA ligase for 7 hours
at room temperature. The reaction mixture was used to
transform E.. coli HB101 to ampicillin resistance. DNA was
prepared from tr,ansformants and the presence of the desired
insert was confirmed by screening for a 550 by Pst I--X ba I
band on an agarose gel. A plasmid having the correct
configuration was designated pVSB.
D. Construction of pMPOT2.
For expression of the v-sis derivations in yeast,
a stable expression vector comprising the REP1, RE P2, REP3,
and on se<~uence~s from yeast 2 micron DNA and the Schizo-
saccharomyc~~s p~mbe triose phosphate isomerase (POT1) gene
was constructed. The POTl gene provides for plasmid main-
tenance in a transformed yeast host grown in complex media
if such host is defective for triose phosphate isomerase.
The POTl gene was obtained from the plasmid
pFATPOT. :S. cerevisiae strain E18 transformed with pFATPOT
has been deposited with ATCC under accession number 20699.

31
The plasmid may be purified from the host cells by conven-
tional technique:. The POT1 sequence was removed from
pFATPOT by digestion of the plasmid with Sal I and Bam HI.
This 1600 by fragment was then ligated to pICl9R, which
had first been linearized by digestion with Sal I and Bam
HI. The Bam HI, Pst I and Sal I sites in the resultant
plasmid were destroyed in two steps to produce plasmid
pICPOT*. The Pst I and Sal I sites were removed by cutting
with Pst I and Sal I; the ends were blunted by digesting
the Pst I 3' overhang with DNA polymerase I (Klenow frag-
ment) and filling in the Sal I 5' overhang with Klenow
fragment. '.the bl.unt ends were then ligated. The Bam HI
site was then removed by cutting the plasmid with Bam HI,
filling in the ends with DNA polymerase I (Klenow fragment)
and religating thE~ blunt ends.
The 2u sequences were obtained from the plasmids
YEpl3 (Broach et al., Gene 8: 121-133, 1979) and C1/1.
C1/1 was constructed from pJDB248 (Beggs, Nature 275:
104-109, 1978) by removal of the pMB9 sequences by partial
digestion with Eco RI and replacement by Eco RI-cut pBR322.
The REP3 and on :sequences were removed from YEpl3 by diges-
tion with P:~t I and Xba I and gel purification. REP2 was
obtained from Cl/1 by digestion with Xba I and Sph I and
gel purification., The two fragments were then joined to
pUCl8 (Norrander et al., Gene 26: 101-106, 1983) which had
been linearized with Pst I and Sph I to produce plasmid
pUCREP2,3. REP1 was obtained from C1/1 by digestion with
Eco RI and ~;ba I ;end gel purification of the 1704 by frag-
ment. The Eco RI--Xba I fragment was cloned into pUCl3
which had k>een linearized with Eco RI and Xba I. The
resultant F>lasmid was designated pUCl3 + REP1. The pUCl3 +
REP1 plasm:id wars cut with Hind II and ligated in the
presence of Eco :RI linkers (obtained from Bethesda Research
Laboratorie:~). The REP1 gene was then removed as an Eco RI
fragment of approximately 1720 bp. This Eco RI fragment
was cloned into pIC7 (comprising the polylinker sequence

-",irsc : -
.... 32 ~~~~~
shown in Chart 1 inserted into the Hind III site of pUC8),
which had been linearized with Eco RI and Xba I. The
resultant pl;~smid was designated pICREPl#9.
To construct the final expression vector pMPOT2,
pICPOT* was linearized by a partial Hind III digestion and
complete Sst I digestion. Plasmid pUCREP2,3 was cut with
Hind III and Sst I, and the fragment comprising REP2, REP3
and on sequences was gel purified and joined to the linear-
ized pICPOT*. '.Che resultant plasmid, comprising REP2,
REP3, ori, P~OT1 and ampr sequences, was designated pMPOTl.
REP1 was then removed from pICREPl #9 as a Bgl II--Nar I
fragment and was ligated to pMPOTl, which had been cleaved
with Bgl II and Nar I. The product of this ligation was
designated pMPOT2 (deposited with ATCC, accession number
20744). Pl.asmid pMPOT2 was digested with Cla I and Bam HI,
and the vector f:ra.gment was purified as above.
E. Insertion of v-sis Expression Units in pMPOT2.
1. Insertion of VSa expression unit into pMPOT2.
Apf>roximately 10 ug of plasmid pVSa was digested
with Bst EII to completion in a volume of 20 ul. Five
units of Pst I were added, the mixture was incubated 30
minutes and the reaction stopped by the addition of EDTA.
The quenched reaction mixture was immediately electropho-
resed through a 1~> agarose gel, and the ca. 800 by partial
Pst I--Bst EII band (comprising most of the MFal prepro
sequence and. the Vii' portion of v-sis) was cut out, extract-
ed from the gel, and EtOH precipitated.
Pl.asmid pTVS2aT was digested to completion with
Pst I and Bst EII and purified by agarose gel electro-
phoresis. The resulting ca. 4.8 kb vector fragment and the
800 by Pst I--Bsi= EII fragment were ligated in the presence
of T4 DNA li.gase i=or 6 hours at room temperature, and the
ligation m:ixturE~ was used to transform E. coli HB101 to

- 3 3
134~~~fi
ampicillin resistance. A plasmid was identified which
contained a ~ea. 150 by Bgl II fragment, which indicated
the presence of thE~ insert . It was designated pTVSa .
Plasmid pTVSa was digested to completion with Cla
I and Bam HI, and the ca. 2.9 kb fragment containing VSa
sequences was isol;~ted by electrophoresis through agarose,
extraction from the gel, and EtOH precipitation. The ca.
2.9 kb Cla I--Bam HI VS fragment was ligated with Cla I
and Bam HI digested pMPOT2 as described for pVS2a m (below).
A plasmid containing a 2.9 kb Cla I--Bam HI insert was
identified a:nd designated pVSam.
2. Insertion of VS2a expression unit into MPOT2.
Plasmid pTVS2aT was digested to completion with
Cla I and Bam HI in Bam HI buffer. The buffer was adjusted
to high sa:Lt (Maniatis et al, ibid.) and the DNA was
digested to completion with Pvu I, which cuts the vector
sequences twice ~~nd permits resolution of the ca. 2.7 kb
Cla I--Bam HI fragment containing the VS2a sequences on an
agarose ge:L. This fragment was electrophoresed through
0.9$ agarose, extracted, and EtOH precipitated. The frag-
ment was then licfated with Cla I--Bam HI digested pMPOT2 in
the presence of T4 DNA ligase for 20 hours at 13°C. The
ligated DNA. was used to transform E. coli HB 101 to ampi
cillin resi,stancE~, and plasmid DNA was prepared from the
resulting colonies. A plasmid was identified which
contained the 2.7 kb Cla I--Bam HI VS2a fragment and was
designated pVS2am.
3. Insertion of VSB expression unit into pMPOT2.
Plasmid pVSB was digested with Cla I and Bam HI,
and the 2.2 kb fragment containing the "B chain" expression
unit purified by agarose gel electrophoresis and EtOH preci-
pitation. The fragments were ligated overnight at room

.~.. 34 .~.~,~r . ~.
~340$~6
temperature in the presence of T4 DNA ligase and the reac-
tion mixtures used to transform E. coli HB101 to ampicillin
resistance. DNA was prepared from transformants and the
presence of the insert verified by digestion with Cla I and
Bam HI and agarose gel electrophoresis. The resulting
expression Vector was designated pVSBm.
EXAMPLE V
Yeast Tran~>formation; and Analysis of v-sis Transcription
S. cer~~visiae strain E8-llc (MAT aleu2-3, 112
pep 4-3; a haploid segregant of the cross E2-7B [ATCC
20689] x GIs; 100 [ATCC 20689]) was transformed with plasmids
YEpVSa, YEpVS2a., p270, p117-2 and pCPOT. Transformants
were selected and maintained in synthetic medium lacking
leucine.
S. cerevisiae strain E11-3c (ATCC Accession
#20727) (MA'r a pep4-3 tail) was transformed with plasmids
pCPOT and p11.7-2. Transformants were selected and
maintained i_n YEP:D.
Referring to Figure 8 , presence of v-sis related
mRNA transcripts was confirmed by electrophoretic and subse
quent hybridization analysis of total RNA. Total RNA from
the above-d<~scribed transformants in strain E8-llc was pre
pared by guanidinium thiocyanate extraction as described by
Maniatis et al. (ibid.) with the following modifications:
100m1 cultures were grown to a density of 1x108 cells/ml.
The cells were pelleted by centrifugation and washed three
times with H20, 2 mls of guanidinium lysis solution was
added, fol:Lowed by 0.5mm glass beads to just below the
meniscus. The tubes were vortexed three times for 1
minute, wit'n cooling on ice between bursts. The solution
was pipetted ofE and the RNA isolated by centrifugation
through CsCl2 as described (Maniatis et al., ibid.).

r ""« .
Fifteen ug of RNA from plasmid transformants p270, YEpVSa,
YEpVS2a, p~CPOT and p117-2 was glyoxylated, electrophoresed
through a 0.9$ agarose gel and transferred to nitrocellu-
5 lose as described by Thomas (PNAS 77: 5201, 1980). The
purified Pst I: v-sis fragment from pVSIS/Pst was nick-
translated and hybridized to the filter bound RNA, and the
hybridizing species detected by autoradiography (Figure 10>.
Transcripi~ bands of 1900 by from YEpVSa, 1650 by from
10 YEpVS2a, and 1.700 by from p117-2 confirmed the transcrip-
tion of the v-sis fusion constructs and the use of the
transcription start and stop signals in the constructions.
No v-sis related transcripts were detected in negative
controls p270 and pCPOT.
15 Plasmids pVSam, pVS2a m, pVSBm, and pMPOT2 were
used to transform S. cerevisiae strain E18. Strain E18 is
a diploid produced by crossing strains E11-3c (ATCC No.
20727) and ptpi 29. ~tpi 29 is produced by disrupting the
triose phosphate isomerase gene of strain E2-7B (ATCC No.
20 20689), e;~senti.ally as described by Rothstein (Meth. in
Enzymology 101: 202-210, 1983).
EXAMPLE VI
Analysis of si.s-related Products Expressed by Yeast; and
25 P~iological Activity Assays
A. Concentration of Yeast Culture Medium.
Transformants carrying YEpl3 and pCPOT derived
30 v-sis constructions were grown in the appropriate media at
30°C (1.2 liter cultures) to stationary phase on a rotary
air shaker with agitation at 220 rpm. Cultures were
harvested, the cells removed by centrifugation, and the
medium concentrated on a C-8 Sepharose*(Pharmacia Fine
35 Chemicals AB, C~ppsala, Sweden) column which binds molecules
of a hydrophobic' nature. Authentic human PDGF is a highly
cationic ~~nd hydrophobic protein (Heldin et al., PNAS 76:
*Tr~r7nmar~~

_ - ~r .
... 3 6
~3~~~~6
3722, 1979; Raines and Ross, ibid.>. The sis-related
putative yeast product was expected to possess similar
characteristics. The sis product's expected hydrophobic
character w<~s exploited to concentrate it from the yeast
media into which it was expected to be secreted. Molecules
bound to the C-8 column were eluted from the matrix with
suitable hydrophobic solvents.
Spent growth media from the transformed yeast
cultures wa.s adjusted to 5~ EtOH and passed through an 8 ml
C-8 Sepharo_~e column at a flow rate of 2-~ ml per minute.
The column was then washed with 100m1s of 5~ EtOH in 20 mM
ammonium bicarbonate (NH4HC03). The bound material was
eluted with 20$ propanol in 20mM NH4HC03 and the eluate
collected in 1-2 ml fractions. Fractions were assayed for
protein content by light absorption at 280 nm, (A2gp of
1.4=1.0 mg protein/ml) or by the method of Lowry et al.
(J. Biol. C:hem 1!~3: 265, 1951). The concentrated fractions
were combined, lyophilized, and then resuspended in 500-700
ul of PBS (phosphate buffered saline, pH 7.4).
Transfo.rmant p117-2 in strain E11-3c grown under
POT1 selection ('with glucose as carbon source) was expected
to produce significantly higher levels of PDGF-like materi-
al in the media and thus was analyzed after dialysis of the
media against PBS without concentration.
M~=dia samples from the transformants pVSam,
pVS2am, pV:>Bm and pMPOT2 were concentrated by adsorption to
CM-sephadex and elution with 1M NaCl in 1M acetic acid, pH
4.5. The concentrated media were dialyzed against 0.1 M
acetic acid, pH 7 and the amount of PDGF-like material in
the concent~_-ates was determined by ELISA.
B. Detection of PDGF-like Material by Enzyme-Linked
Inununosorbent Assay (ELISA)
The expression of PDGF-like molecules by the
yeast transformants was examined by ELISA and quantitated

.~.,.- .
.- 3 7
by comparison to a standard curve developed with purified
human PDGF (Raines and Ross, ibid.>. A typical standard
curve was prepared as follows:
Purified human PDGF, 2.5 ng/ml in PBS, was incubated
overnight with Immulon II*(Dynatech Laboratories, Inc.) 96
well microti.ter p:Lates (100 ul/well) at 4°C. This coating
solution wa.s removed and 100 ul/well of 0.1$ rabbit albumin
in PBS was added and the plates incubated for 1 hour at
37°C. Samples of purified PDGF (0.1-40ng/ml) were sepa-
rately incubated with goat anti-PDGF IgG (5 ug/ml) in PBS
containing 0.05$ Tween 20*and 1 mg/ml rabbit albumin (RSA).
The microtit:er plates were washed 5 times with 0.9~ NaCl,
.05$ Tween 20, drained, and 100 ul of each test solution
was added to the microtiter wells and incubated 2 hours at
37°C. The plates were washed as before, and peroxidase-
conjugated swine .anti-goat IgG (Tago, Inc.> diluted 1:1000
in PBS containing 0.05$ Tween 20 and 1 mg/ml RSA was added
for 2 hours at 37°C. The plates were washed as before and
freshly prepared .04$ o-phenylene diamine containing .012
hydrogen peroxide (H202) (100 ul/well) was added for 50
minutes at room temperature and the reaction stopped at 50
minutes by 1_he addition of 4N H2S04 (50 ul/well). Absorb-
ance at 492 nm was determined using a Dynatech plate
scanner. Each test point was measured in triplicate and
plotted as the mean + standard error. C-8 eluates of yeast
culture media and unconcentrated media samples were diluted
in PBS, assayed. as described and compared to the PDGF
standard curve. 'Table 2 is a summary of assay results for
a representative series of experiments. Figure 11 depicts
an ELISA of a range of C-8 eluate sample volumes measured,
generating a dose-response curve which is compared to a
standard curve from purified PDGF.
Raw ELISA data for the MPOT constructions are not
shown, but have been incorporated into the radioreceptor
and mitogenesis assay data as shown in Figures 13 and 14.
*Trademark
_..~___._.._._..~._._,~._. _ . .. ___.. __..~ ,._...w... _ .._
...~.~...._....~....._.__.~.._~._

... 38 1~4fl8~6
C. Radioreceptor Assay (RRA) for PDGF.
The radioreceptor assay for PDGF (Bowen-Pope and
Ross, J. Biol. (:hem 257: 5161, 1982) is a specific and
sensitive (.2-2 ng/ml PDGF) method f or detecting biological-
ly active PDGF-like material in yeast. In this assay,
PDGF-like material is tested for its ability to compete
with purified, radio-labeled 1251 pDGF for binding sites on
cell surface PDC~F receptors. Results are interpreted by
comparison to a standard curve generated with purified,
unlabeled PDGF. Comparison of results obtained with other
assay methods (e.g., ELISA) provides an indication of the
strength o:E the receptor/ligand interaction in addition to
quantitation of the material bound. The assay is conducted
as follow_~: Subconfluent monolayers of diploid human
fibroblasts are prepared by plating 1.5x104 cells per 2cm2
culture well in Costar 24 well cluster trays in Dulbeccos
Modified Eagles Medium (DMEM) supplemented with 1$ human
plasma-derived serum (PDS). Cultures are set on an ice
tray and rinsed once with ice-cold binding rinse (Ham's
medium F-1:Z buffered at pH 7.4 with 25mM HEPES and supple-
mented with 0.25$ BSA). One ml/well of test substance in
binding medium is added and the cultures incubated in a
refrigerated room on an oscillating platform for 3-4 hours.
The trays <~re then placed on ice, aspirated, rinsed once
with cold binding rinse, and incubated for one hour as
above with 1 ml/'well binding medium containing 0.5 ng/ml
1251-pDGF. Labeling is terminated with 4 rinses of binding
rinse and ~~ell-associated 1251- pDGF determined by extrac-
tion with solubilization buffer. Standard curves are
obtained using 0, 0.05, 0.1, 0.2, 0.4, and 0.8 ng/ml
purified PDGF and test samples compared to these values.
Results obtained by RRA for yeast C-8 eluates and
1X media samples are given in Table 2.
In addition, PDGF receptor binding by CM-sepha-
dex media concentrates from yeast transformants containing

39
plasmids pVSa m, pVS2am, pVSBm, and pMPOT2 was compared to
authentic F~DGF. The results were interpreted by comparison
to a standard curve generated with purified, unlabeled
PDGF, as shown in Figure 13. Media from cultures trans-
formed with the v-sis constructions are shown to compete
with 125I-pDGF ~Eor binding to the PDGF receptor. Media
f rom yeast: cells transformed with pMPOT2 do not compete
with radio-labeled PDGF for receptor binding.
D. Mitogenesis Assay.
The ability of PDGF to stimulate DNA synthesis
and cell growth in culture was the basis for its definition
and discovery. 3H-Thymidine incorporation into DNA of cul-
tured cells responsive to PDGF (Raines and Ross, Meth. in
Enzymology 109: in press) is a preferred method for demon-
strating the biological activity of PDGF-like molecules
produced in yeast..
Test samples in lOmM acetic acid (100 ul/well)
are added to quiescent cultures of mouse 3T3 cells in 2cm2
Costar 24-well culture dishes (2-3x108 cells/well in 1 ml).
Quiescent test cultures can be obtained by plating the
cells in 10$ serum and allowing them to deplete the medium,
4-5 days. The test samples are removed from the wells at
20 hours a;nd replaced with 0.5 ml of fresh medium per well
containing 2 uCi/ml [3H]-Thymidine and 5~ (v/v> calf serum.
After an additional 2-hour incubation at 37°C the cells are
harvested by: aspirating off the medium, washing the wells
twice each with 1 ml of ice-cold 5$ TCA; solublizing TCA-
insoluble material in 0.8 ml 0.25N NaOH with mixing; and
counting 0.6 ml. of this solution in 5 ml Aquasol in a
liquid scintillation counter. Fold stimulation over con-
trol wells (100 ul of lOmM acetic acid alone) is determined
(normally 30-50 fold maximal stimulation) and compared to a
standard curve obtained using purified PDGF preparations.

"~.-- .
4 0 y°''
.~3408~~
Table 2 presents results obtained in the mito-
genesis as~;ay for. PDGF-like material produced in yeast and
compares the activities of the PDGF-like material as
measured by the above-described assay methods. Figure 12
depicts th a mitogenic response elicited by concentrated
media from p117-:? transformed E11-3c and pVSa transformed
E8-llc compared t:o that obtained with purified human PDGF.
TABLE 2
ug/ml ng/ml PDGF by
Preparation. Transformant Protein ELISA RRA MITOGENESIS
C-8 Eluates
pVSa~'E8-llc 2.00 188 4.6 102
pVS2o;/E8-llc 16.00 864 16-97 310
p117--2/E11-3c 1.44 120 13.9 87
1X Media p117--2/E11-3c -- 4.2 0.18 2.5
In addition, the mitogenic response elicited by
CM-sephadex: concentrates from yeast transformants contain-
ing plasmids pVSa m, pVS2a m, pVSBm, and pMPOT2 was compared
to that obtained with authentic PDGF. Referring to Figure
14, media from cultures transformed with the v-sis construc-
tions stimulated uptake of 3H-thymidine by quiescent 3T3
cells. As noted above, uptake of 3H-thymidine by quiescent
3T3 cells is taken to be indicative of mitogenic stimula-
tion. Media from yeast cells transformed with pMPOT2
showed no m.itogenic activity.
'fhe data present clear evidence that growth media
from the yeast strains constructed herein possess biologi
cal activities identical to authentic human PDGF. Further,
these activities are readily detectable in nonconcentrated

~_~ . ,
~. 41 134084
(1X) media from p117-2 transformed strain E11-3c grown
under POT1 selection .
The VSB preparation was further characterized by
SDS-polyacryamide gel electrophoresis and subsequent mito
genesis assay of: gel fractionated material. Ninety percent
of the VSB mitogenic activity is recovered from the 30 kilo
dalton region of the gel (Figure 15>. This indicates that
this expression unit produces a very homogeneous and likely
i
fully processed material. In this sense, the VSB protein
is superior to the VS2a and VSa proteins described above,
which are quite heterogeneous. In addition, the VSB materi-
al is a po~~itive chemoattractant, indicating that it may
possess the full spectrum of PDGF biological activities.
From the foregoing, it will be appreciated that,
although specific embodiments of the invention have been
described herein for purposes of illustration, various
modifications may be made without deviating from the spirit
and scope of the invention. Accordingly, the invention is
not limited except as by the appended claims.
30

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Event History

Description Date
Inactive: Expired (old Act Patent) latest possible expiry date 2015-12-15
Inactive: IPC deactivated 2013-11-12
Inactive: IPC deactivated 2013-11-12
Inactive: IPC assigned 2013-09-16
Inactive: IPC assigned 2013-09-16
Inactive: IPC assigned 2013-09-16
Inactive: IPC assigned 2013-09-16
Inactive: IPC assigned 2013-09-16
Inactive: IPC assigned 2013-09-16
Inactive: IPC assigned 2013-09-16
Inactive: IPC removed 2013-09-16
Inactive: IPC assigned 2013-09-16
Inactive: IPC expired 2010-01-01
Inactive: IPC expired 2010-01-01
Letter Sent 2003-05-05
Letter Sent 2003-01-15
Letter Sent 2001-12-04
Inactive: CPC assigned 1999-12-20
Inactive: Cover page published 1999-12-08
Inactive: CPC assigned 1999-12-07
Inactive: CPC assigned 1999-12-07
Inactive: IPC assigned 1999-12-07
Inactive: IPC assigned 1999-12-07
Inactive: IPC assigned 1999-12-07
Inactive: IPC assigned 1999-12-07
Grant by Issuance 1999-12-07
Inactive: First IPC assigned 1999-12-07
Reissue Requirements Determined Compliant 1999-12-07
Inactive: CPC assigned 1999-12-07
Inactive: CPC assigned 1999-12-07

Abandonment History

There is no abandonment history.

Owners on Record

Note: Records showing the ownership history in alphabetical order.

Current Owners on Record
ZYMOGENETICS, INC.
Past Owners on Record
JAMES DARREL KELLY
MARK JOSEPH MURRAY
Past Owners that do not appear in the "Owners on Record" listing will appear in other documentation within the application.
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Document
Description 
Date
(yyyy-mm-dd) 
Number of pages   Size of Image (KB) 
Claims 1999-12-07 9 302
Drawings 1999-12-07 14 296
Abstract 1999-12-07 1 29
Descriptions 1999-12-07 41 1,942
Correspondence 2003-01-14 1 12
Correspondence 2003-05-05 1 19
Correspondence 2008-03-09 1 28
Correspondence 2007-12-10 2 71
Prosecution correspondence 1999-06-10 4 156
Examiner Requisition 1999-12-28 1 10
Courtesy - Office Letter 1999-11-22 1 49
Examiner Requisition 1987-07-20 1 73
Examiner Requisition 1989-11-26 2 157
Prosecution correspondence 1987-10-20 2 70
Prosecution correspondence 1990-05-23 5 231
Prosecution correspondence 1991-08-08 1 31
Examiner Requisition 1991-11-05 2 97
Prosecution correspondence 1992-02-03 4 160
Prosecution correspondence 1992-04-20 1 31
Examiner Requisition 1996-08-15 2 142
Prosecution correspondence 1996-11-13 7 205
PCT Correspondence 1998-07-26 1 48