Trine Christensen
University of Copenhagen
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Featured researches published by Trine Christensen.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2008
Younhee Cho; Yanjie Zhang; Trine Christensen; Laura Sagle; Ashutosh Chilkoti; Paul S. Cremer
The modulation of the lower critical solution temperature (LCST) of two elastin-like polypeptides (ELPs) was investigated in the presence of 11 sodium salts that span the Hofmeister series for anions. It was found that the hydrophobic collapse/aggregation of these ELPs generally followed the series. Specifically, kosmotropic anions decreased the LCST by polarizing interfacial water molecules involved in hydrating amide groups on the ELPs. On the other hand, chaotropic anions lowered the LCST through a surface tension effect. Additionally, chaotropic anions showed salting-in properties at low salt concentrations that were related to the saturation binding of anions with the biopolymers. These overall mechanistic effects were similar to those previously found for the hydrophobic collapse and aggregation of poly(N-isopropylacrylamide), PNIPAM. There is, however, a crucial difference between PNIPAM and ELPs. Namely, PNIPAM undergoes a two-step collapse process as a function of temperature in the presence of sufficient concentrations of kosmotropic salts. By contrast, ELPs undergo collapse in a single step in all cases studied herein. This suggests that the removal of water molecules from around the amide moieties triggers the removal of hydrophobic hydration waters in a highly coupled process. There are also some key differences between the LCST behavior of the two ELPs. Specifically, the more hydrophilic ELP V5A2G(3)-120 construct displays collapse/aggregation behavior that is consistent with a higher concentration of anions partitioning to polymer/aqueous interface as compared to the more hydrophobic ELP V(5)-120. It was also found that larger anions could bind with ELP V5A2G(3)-120 more readily in comparison with ELP V(5)-120. These latter results were interpreted in terms of relative binding site accessibility of the anion for the ELP.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010
Weiping Gao; Wenge Liu; Trine Christensen; Michael R. Zalutsky; Ashutosh Chilkoti
This paper reports a general in situ method to grow a polymer conjugate solely from the C terminus of a recombinant protein. GFP was fused at its C terminus with an intein; cleavage of the intein provided a unique thioester moiety at the C terminus of GFP that was used to install an atom transfer radical polymerization (ATRP) initiator. Subsequent in situ ATRP of oligo(ethylene glycol) methyl ether methacrylate (OEGMA) yielded a site-specific (C-terminal) and stoichiometric conjugate with high yield and good retention of protein activity. A GFP-C-poly(OEGMA) conjugate (hydrodynamic radius (Rh): 21 nm) showed a 15-fold increase in its blood exposure compared to the protein (Rh: 3.0 nm) after intravenous administration to mice. This conjugate also showed a 50-fold increase in tumor accumulation, 24 h after intravenous administration to tumor-bearing mice, compared to the unmodified protein. This approach for in situ C-terminal polymer modification of a recombinant protein is applicable to a large subset of recombinant protein and peptide drugs and provides a general methodology for improvement of their pharmacological profiles.
Protein Science | 2009
Trine Christensen; Miriam Amiram; Sue Dagher; Kimberly Trabbic-Carlson; Mohammed F. Shamji; Lori A. Setton; Ashutosh Chilkoti
We have previously developed a method to purify recombinant proteins, termed inverse transition cycling (ITC) that eliminates the need for column chromatography. ITC exploits the inverse solubility phase transition of an elastin‐like polypeptide (ELP) that is fused to a protein of interest. In ITC, a recombinant ELP fusion protein is cycled through its phase transition, resulting in separation of the ELP fusion protein from other Escherichia coli contaminants. Herein, we examine the role of the position of the ELP in the fusion protein on the expression levels and yields of purified protein for four recombinant ELP fusion proteins. Placing the ELP at the C‐terminus of the target protein (protein‐ELP) results in a higher expression level for the four ELP fusion proteins, which also translates to a greater yield of purified protein. The position of the fusion protein also has a significant impact on its specific activity, as ELP‐protein constructs have a lower specific activity than protein‐ELP constructs for three out of the four proteins. Our results show no difference in mRNA levels between protein‐ELP and ELP‐protein fusion constructs. Instead, we suggest two possible explanations for these results: first, the translational efficiency of mRNA may differ between the fusion protein in the two orientations and second, the lower level of protein expression and lower specific activity is consistent with a scenario that placement of the ELP at the N‐terminus of the fusion protein increases the fraction of misfolded, and less active conformers, which are also preferentially degraded compared to fusion proteins in which the ELP is present at the C‐terminal end of the protein.
Current protocols in protein science | 2010
Wafa Hassouneh; Trine Christensen; Ashutosh Chilkoti
This unit presents a recombinant protein purification method that employs an elastin‐like polypeptide (ELP) as a purification tag. ELPs undergo a sharp and reversible phase transition when heated above their lower critical solution temperature. ELPs retain this behavior when they are fused to a protein, and thereby provide a simple method to isolate a recombinant ELP fusion protein from cell contaminants by cycling the solution through the insoluble and soluble phase of the ELP fusion protein using a procedure that is termed Inverse Transition Cycling. This method does not require the use of chromatography, so it is cost‐effective, easy to scale up, and easy to multiplex. Curr. Protoc. Protein Sci. 61:6.11.1‐6.11.16.
Biomacromolecules | 2013
Trine Christensen; Wafa Hassouneh; Kimberley Trabbic-Carlson; Ashutosh Chilkoti
Elastin-like polypeptides (ELPs) are thermally sensitive peptide polymers that undergo thermally triggered phase separation and this behavior is imparted to soluble proteins when they are fused to an ELP. The transition temperature of the ELP fusion protein is observed to be different than that of a free ELP, indicating that the surface properties of the fused protein modulate the thermal behavior of ELPs. Understanding this effect is important for the rational design of applications that exploit the phase transition behavior of ELP fusion proteins. We had previously developed a biophysical model that explained the effect of hydrophobic proteins on depressing the transition temperature of ELP fusion proteins relative to free ELP. Here, we extend the model to elucidate the effect of hydrophilic proteins on the thermal behavior of ELP fusion proteins. A linear correlation was found between overall residue composition of accessible protein surface weighted by a characteristic transition temperature for each residue and the difference in transition temperatures between the ELP protein fusion and the corresponding free ELP. In breaking down the contribution of residues to polar, nonpolar, and charged, the model revealed that charged residues are the most important parameter in altering the transition temperature of an ELP fusion relative to the free ELP.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008
Kanchan Anand; Irantzu Pallarès; Zuzana Valnickova; Trine Christensen; Josep Vendrell; K. Ulrich Wendt; Herman A. Schreuder; Jan J. Enghild; Francesc X. Avilés
Mature thrombin-activable fibrinolysis inhibitor (TAFIa) is a highly unstable metallocarboxypeptidase that stabilizes blood clots by clipping C-terminal lysine residues from partially degraded fibrin. In accordance with its in vitro antifibrinolytic activity, animal studies have reported that inhibition of mature TAFI aids in the prevention of thrombosis. The level of TAFI activity is stringently regulated through (i) controlled proteolytic truncation of the zymogen (TAFI), generating the mature enzyme, TAFIa, and (ii) the short half-life of TAFIa. TAFI itself exhibits an intrinsic enzymatic activity, which is likely required to provide a baseline level of antifibrinolytic activity. The novel crystal structure presented here reveals that the active site of TAFI is accessible, providing the structural explanation for the its intrinsic activity. It also supports the notion that an “instability region” exists, in agreement with site-directed mutagenesis studies. Sulfate ions, bound to this region, point toward a potential heparin-binding site and could explain how heparin stabilizes TAFIa.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Trine Christensen; Line Flytkjær Jensen; Elena V. Bouzinova; Ove Wiborg
Objective This study systematically investigated the effect of chronic mild stress and response to antidepressant treatment in the lateral habenula at the whole genome level. Methods Rat whole genome expression chips (Affymetrix) were used to detect gene expression regulations in the lateral habenula of rats subjected to chronic mild stress (mild stressors exchanged twice a day for 8 weeks). Some rats received antidepressant treatment during fifth to eights week of CMS. The lateral habenula gene expression profile was studied through the gene ontology and signal pathway analyses using bioinformatics. Real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) was used to verify the microarray results and determine the expression of the Fcrla, Eif3k, Sec3l1, Ubr5, Abca8a, Ankrd49, Cyp2j10, Frs3, Syn2, and Znf503 genes in the lateral habenula tissue. Results In particular we found that stress and antidepressant treatment affected intracellular cascades like growth factor receptor signaling, G-protein-coupled receptor signaling, and Wnt signaling – processes involved in the neuroplastic changes observed during the progression of depression and antidepressant treatment. Conclusion The present study suggests an important role of the lateral habenula in the development of depression-like conditions and correlates to previous studies demonstrating a significant role of the lateral habenula in depressive-like conditions and antidepressant treatment.
Photochemistry and Photobiology | 2006
Jennifer L. Perry; Michael R. Goldsmith; T. Richard Williams; Kyle P. Radack; Trine Christensen; Justin Gorham; Melissa A. Pasquinelli; Eric J. Toone; David N. Beratan; John D. Simon
Abstract Sudlow Site I of human serum albumin (HSA) is located in subdomain IIA of the protein and serves as a binding cavity for a variety of ligands. In this study, the binding of warfarin (W) is examined using computational techniques and isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC). The structure of the docked warfarin anion (W−) to Site I is similar to that revealed by X-ray crystallography, with a calculated binding constant of 5.8 × 105 M−1. ITC experiments (pH 7.13 and I = 0.1) carried out in three different buffers (MOPs, phosphate and Tris) reveal binding of W− is accompanied by uptake of 0.30 ± 0.02 protons from the solvent. This measurement suggests that the binding of W− is stabilized by an ion-pair interaction between protonated H242 and the phenoxide group of W−.
Behavioural Pharmacology | 2012
Kim Henningsen; Mads Dyrvig; Elena V. Bouzinova; Sofie Laage Christiansen; Trine Christensen; Jesper T. Andreasen; Rupert Palme; Jacek Lichota; Ove Wiborg
In the present study we report the finding that the quality of maternal care, in early life, increased the susceptibility to stress exposure in adulthood, when rats were exposed to the chronic mild stress paradigm. Our results indicate that high, as opposed to low maternal care, predisposed rats to a differential stress-coping ability. Thus rats fostered by low maternal care dams became more prone to adopt a stress-susceptible phenotype developing an anhedonic-like condition. Moreover, low maternal care offspring had lower weight gain and lower locomotion, with no additive effect of stress. Subchronic exposure to chronic mild stress induced an increase in faecal corticosterone metabolites, which was only significant in rats from low maternal care dams. Examination of glucocorticoid receptor exon 17 promoter methylation in unchallenged adult, maternally characterized rats, showed an insignificant tendency towards higher total cytosine methylation in rats from low maternal care dams. Assessment of methylation in the resilient versus anhedonic-like rat phenotypes, revealed only minor differences. Thus, maternal care status seems to be a strong predictor or trait marker for the behavioural phenotype.
Methods in Enzymology | 2003
Trine Christensen; Eric J. Toone
Publisher Summary A variety of competitive assays have been developed for the analysis of protein–carbohydrate binding. The most widely used of this group is the inhibition of hemagglutination, or HIA, assay. Although HIA is a useful tool for ordering a series of reasonably homologous ligands, it is not a useful technique for the evaluation of true binding constants. The more recently developed enzyme-linked lectin assay, or ELLA, circumvents some of the limitations of HIA. Many other biophysical techniques have been used to measure the affinity of protein–carbohydrate binding including surface plasmon resonance, steady state and stopped-flow fluorescence spectroscopy, and nuclear magnetic resonance. Isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) has emerged as a general and powerful technique for the study of a wide range of binding events. ITC has been profitably employed for the study of protein–carbohydrate interaction and has contributed in an important way to a fundamental knowledge of the molecular basis of carbohydrate affinity. ITC is the only experimental technique that directly measures binding enthalpies. ITC is the only practical method of measuring changes in molar heat capacity accompanying binding; this parameter is of great value when considering the molecular basis of bulk thermodynamic binding parameters. This chapter describes the operational parameters, limitations, and pitfalls of ITC, especially as it pertains to the study of protein–carbohydrate interaction.