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Dive into the research topics where Yuan-Chin Hsieh is active.

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Featured researches published by Yuan-Chin Hsieh.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Functional Production of a Soluble and Secreted Single-Chain Antibody by a Bacterial Secretion System

Chiu-Min Cheng; Shey-Cherng Tzou; Ya-Han Zhuang; Chien-Chiao Huang; Chien-Han Kao; Kuang Wen Liao; Ta-Chun Cheng; Chih-Hung Chuang; Yuan-Chin Hsieh; Ming-Hong Tai; Tian-Lu Cheng

Single-chain variable fragments (scFvs) serve as an alternative to full-length monoclonal antibodies used in research and therapeutic and diagnostic applications. However, when recombinant scFvs are overexpressed in bacteria, they often form inclusion bodies and exhibit loss of function. To overcome this problem, we developed an scFv secretion system in which scFv was fused with osmotically inducible protein Y (osmY), a bacterial secretory carrier protein, for efficient protein secretion. Anti-EGFR scFv (αEGFR) was fused with osmY (N- and C-termini) and periplasmic leader sequence (pelB) to generate αEGFR-osmY, osmY-αEGFR, and pelB-αEGFR (control), respectively. In comparison with the control, both the osmY-fused αEGFR scFvs were soluble and secreted into the LB medium. Furthermore, the yield of soluble αEGFR-osmY was 20-fold higher, and the amount of secreted protein was 250-fold higher than that of osmY-αEGFR. In addition, the antigen-binding activity of both the osmY-fused αEGFRs was 2-fold higher than that of the refolded pelB-αEGFR from inclusion bodies. Similar results were observed with αTAG72-osmY and αHer2-osmY. These results suggest that the N-terminus of osmY fused with scFv produces a high yield of soluble, functional, and secreted scFv, and the osmY-based bacterial secretion system may be used for the large-scale industrial production of low-cost αEGFR protein.


PLOS ONE | 2014

High-Throughput Sorting of the Highest Producing Cell via a Transiently Protein-Anchored System

Kuo-Hsiang Chuang; Yuan-Chin Hsieh; I-Shiuan Chiang; Chih-Hung Chuang; Chien-Han Kao; Ta-Chun Cheng; Yeng-Tseng Wang; Wen-Wei Lin; Bing-Mae Chen; Steve R. Roffler; Ming Yii Huang; Tian-Lu Cheng

Developing a high-throughput method for the effecient selection of the highest producing cell is very important for the production of recombinant protein drugs. Here, we developed a novel transiently protein-anchored system coupled with fluorescence activated cell sorting (FACS) for the efficient selection of the highest producing cell. A furin cleavage peptide (RAKR) was used to join a human anti-epithelial growth factor antibody (αEGFR Ab) and the extracellular-transmembrane-cytosolic domains of the mouse B7-1 antigen (B7). The furin inhibitor can transiently switch secreted αEGFR Ab into a membrane-anchored form. After cell sorting, the level of membrane αEGFR Ab-RAKR-B7 is proportional to the amount of secreted αEGFR Ab in the medium. We further selected 23 αEGFR Ab expressing cells and demonstrated a high correlation (R2 = 0.9165) between the secretion level and surface expression levels of αEGFR Ab. These results suggested that the novel transiently protein-anchored system can easily and efficiently select the highest producing cells, reducing the cost for the production of biopharmaceuticals.


Analytical Chemistry | 2016

Optimization of an anti-poly(ethylene glycol) (anti-PEG) cell-based capture system to quantify PEG and PEGylated molecules

Wen-Wei Lin; Yuan-Chin Hsieh; Yi-An Cheng; Kuo-Hsiang Chuang; Chien-Chiao Huang; Chih-Hung Chuang; I-Ju Chen; Kai-Wen Cheng; Yun-Chi Lu; Ta-Chun Cheng; Yeng-Tseng Wang; Steve R. Roffler; Tian-Lu Cheng

Sensitive determination of the pharmacokinetics of PEGylated molecules can accelerate the process of drug development. Here, we combined different anti-PEG Fab expressing 293T cells as capture cells (293T/3.3, 293T/6.3, and 293T/15-2b cells) with four detective anti-PEG antibodies (3.3, 6.3, 7A4, or 15-2b) to optimize an anti-PEG cell-based sandwich ELISA. Then, we quantified free PEG (mPEG2K-NH2 and mPEG5K-NH2) or PEG-conjugated small molecules (mPEG5K-biotin and mPEG5K-NIR797), proteins (PegIntron and Pegasys), and nanoparticles (Liposomal-Doxorubicin and quantum-dots). The combination of 293T/15-2b cells and the 7A4 detection antibody was best sensitivity for free PEG, PEG-like molecules, and PEGylated proteins with detection at ng mL-1 levels. On the other hand, 293T/3.3 cells combined with the 15-2b antibody had the highest sensitivity for quantifying Lipo-Dox at 2 ng mL-1. All three types of anti-PEG cells combined with the 15-2b antibody had high sensitivity for quantum dot quantification down to 7 pM. These results suggest that the combination of 293T/15-2b cells and 7A4 detection antibody is the optimal pair for sensitive quantification of free PEG, PEG-like molecules, and PEGylated proteins, whereas the 293T/3.3 cells combined with 15-2b are more suitable for quantifying PEGylated nanoparticles. The optimized anti-PEG cell-based sandwich ELISA can provide a sensitive, precise, and convenient tool for the quantification of a range of PEGylated molecules.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Development of Membrane-Bound GM-CSF and IL-18 as an Effective Tumor Vaccine

Chien-Chiao Huang; Kung-Kai Kuo; Ta-Chun Cheng; Chih-Hung Chuang; Chien-Han Kao; Yuan-Chin Hsieh; Kuang-Hung Cheng; Jaw-Yuan Wang; Chiu-Min Cheng; Chien-Shu Chen; Tian-Lu Cheng

The development of effective adjuvant is the key factor to boost the immunogenicity of tumor cells as a tumor vaccine. In this study, we expressed membrane-bound granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) and interleukin-18 (IL-18) as adjuvants in tumor cells to stimulate immune response. B7 transmembrane domain fused GM-CSF and IL-18 was successfully expressed in the cell membrane and stimulated mouse splenocyte proliferation. Co-expression of GM-CSF and IL-18 reduced tumorigenesis (P<0.05) and enhanced tumor protective efficacy (P<0.05) significantly in comparison with GM-CSF alone. These results indicated that the combination of GM-CSF andIL-18 will enhance the immunogenicity of a cell-based anti-tumor vaccine. This membrane-bound approach can be applied to other cytokines for the development of novel vaccine strategies.


Theranostics | 2018

Pre-existing anti-polyethylene glycol antibody reduces the therapeutic efficacy and pharmacokinetics of PEGylated liposomes

Yuan-Chin Hsieh; Hsin-Ell Wang; Wen-Wei Lin; Steve R. Roffler; Ta-Chun Cheng; Yu-Cheng Su; Jia-Je Li; Chao-Cheng Chen; Chun-Han Huang; Bing-Mae Chen; Jaw-Yuan Wang; Tian-Lu Cheng; Fang-Ming Chen

Rationale: Increasing frequency of human exposure to PEG-related products means that healthy people are likely to have pre-existing anti-PEG antibodies (pre-αPEG Ab). However, the influence of pre-αPEG Abs on the pharmacokinetics (PK) and therapeutic efficacy of LipoDox is unknown. Methods: We generated two pre-αPEG Ab mouse models. First, naïve mice were immunized with PEGylated protein to generate an endogenous αPEG Ab titer (endo αPEG). Second, monoclonal αPEG Abs were passively transferred (αPEG-PT) into naïve mice to establish a αPEG titer. The naïve, endo αPEG and αPEG-PT mice were intravenously injected with 111in-labeled LipoDox to evaluate its PK. Tumor-bearing naïve, endo αPEG and αPEG-PT mice were intravenously injected with 111in-labeled LipoDox to evaluate its biodistribution. The therapeutic efficacy of LipoDox was estimated in the tumor-bearing mice. Results: The areas under the curve (AUC)last of LipoDox in endo αPEG and αPEG-PT mice were 11.5- and 15.6- fold less, respectively, than that of the naïve group. The biodistribution results suggested that pre-αPEG Ab can significantly reduce tumor accumulation and accelerate blood clearance of 111In-labeled LipoDox from the spleen. The tumor volumes of the tumor-bearing endo αPEG and αPEG-PT mice after treatment with LipoDox were significantly increased as compared with that of the tumor-bearing naïve mice. Conclusions: Pre-αPEG Abs were found to dramatically alter the PK and reduce the tumor accumulation and therapeutic efficacy of LipoDox. Pre-αPEG may have potential as a marker to aid development of personalized therapy using LipoDox and achieve optimal therapeutic efficacy.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Selective antibody activation through protease-activated pro-antibodies that mask binding sites with inhibitory domains

I-Ju Chen; Chih-Hung Chuang; Yuan-Chin Hsieh; Yun-Chi Lu; Wen-Wei Lin; Chien-Chiao Huang; Ta-Chun Cheng; Yi-An Cheng; Kai-Wen Cheng; Yeng-Tseng Wang; Fang-Ming Chen; Tian-Lu Cheng; Shey-Cherng Tzou

Systemic injection of therapeutic antibodies may cause serious adverse effects due to on-target toxicity to the antigens expressed in normal tissues. To improve the targeting selectivity to the region of disease sites, we developed protease-activated pro-antibodies by masking the binding sites of antibodies with inhibitory domains that can be removed by proteases that are highly expressed at the disease sites. The latency-associated peptide (LAP), C2b or CBa of complement factor 2/B were linked, through a substrate peptide of matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2), to an anti-epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) antibody and an anti-tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) antibody. Results showed that all the inhibitory domains could be removed by MMP-2 to restore the binding activities of the antibodies. LAP substantially reduced (53.8%) the binding activity of the anti-EGFR antibody on EGFR-expressing cells, whereas C2b and CBa were ineffective (21% and 9.3% reduction, respectively). Similarly, LAP also blocked 53.9% of the binding activity of the anti-TNF-α antibody. Finally, molecular dynamic simulation showed that the masking efficiency of LAP, C2b and CBa was 33.7%, 10.3% and −5.4%, respectively, over the binding sites of the antibodies. This strategy may aid in designing new protease-activated pro-antibodies that attain high therapeutic potency yet reduced systemic on-target toxicity.


PLOS ONE | 2016

A Secondary Antibody-Detecting Molecular Weight Marker with Mouse and Rabbit IgG Fc Linear Epitopes for Western Blot Analysis.

Wen-Wei Lin; I-Ju Chen; Ta-Chun Cheng; Yi-Ching Tung; Pei-Yu Chu; Chih-Hung Chuang; Yuan-Chin Hsieh; Chien-Chiao Huang; Yeng-Tseng Wang; Chien-Han Kao; Steve R. Roffler; Tian-Lu Cheng

Molecular weight markers that can tolerate denaturing conditions and be auto-detected by secondary antibodies offer great efficacy and convenience for Western Blotting. Here, we describe M&R LE protein markers which contain linear epitopes derived from the heavy chain constant regions of mouse and rabbit immunoglobulin G (IgG Fc LE). These markers can be directly recognized and stained by a wide range of anti-mouse and anti-rabbit secondary antibodies. We selected three mouse (M1, M2 and M3) linear IgG1 and three rabbit (R1, R2 and R3) linear IgG heavy chain epitope candidates based on their respective crystal structures. Western blot analysis indicated that M2 and R2 linear epitopes are effectively recognized by anti-mouse and anti-rabbit secondary antibodies, respectively. We fused the M2 and R2 epitopes (M&R LE) and incorporated the polypeptide in a range of 15–120 kDa auto-detecting markers (M&R LE protein marker). The M&R LE protein marker can be auto-detected by anti-mouse and anti-rabbit IgG secondary antibodies in standard immunoblots. Linear regression analysis of the M&R LE protein marker plotted as gel mobility versus the log of the marker molecular weights revealed good linearity with a correlation coefficient R2 value of 0.9965, indicating that the M&R LE protein marker displays high accuracy for determining protein molecular weights. This accurate, regular and auto-detected M&R LE protein marker may provide a simple, efficient and economical tool for protein analysis.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Author Correction: Poly-protein G-expressing bacteria enhance the sensitivity of immunoassays

Wen-Rui Hao; Michael Chen; Yi-Jou Chen; Yu-Cheng Su; Chiu-Min Cheng; Hsiang-Yin Hsueh; An-Pei Kao; Yuan-Chin Hsieh; Johny Chang; Ming-Yang Tseng; Kuo-Hsiang Chuang

A correction to this article has been published and is linked from the HTML and PDF versions of this paper. The error has been fixed in the paper.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Poly-protein G-expressing bacteria enhance the sensitivity of immunoassays

Wen-Rui Hao; Michael Chen; Yi-Jou Chen; Yu-Cheng Su; Chiu-Min Cheng; Hsiang-Yin Hsueh; An-Pei Kao; Yuan-Chin Hsieh; Johny Chang; Ming-Yang Tseng; Kuo-Hsiang Chuang

The sensitivities of solid-phase immunoassays are limited by the quantity of detection antibodies bound to their antigens on the solid phase. Here, we developed a poly-protein G-expressing bacterium as an antibody-trapping microparticle to enhance the signals of immunoassays by increasing the accumulation of detection antibodies on the given antigen. Eight tandemly repeated fragment crystallisable (Fc) binding domains of protein G were stably expressed on the surface of Escherichia coli BL21 cells (termed BL21/8G). BL21/8G cells showed a higher avidity for trapping antibodies on their surface than monomeric protein G-expressing BL21 (BL21/1G) cells did. In the sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), simply mixing the detection antibody with BL21/8G provided a detection limit of 6 pg/mL for human interferon-α (IFN-α) and a limit of 30 pg/mL for polyethylene glycol (PEG)-conjugated IFN-α (Pegasys), which are better than that of the traditional ELISA (30 pg/mL for IFN-α and 100 pg/mL for Pegasys). Moreover, the sensitivity of the Western blot for low-abundance Pegasys (0.4 ng/well) was increased by 25 folds upon mixing of an anti-PEG antibody with BL21/8G cells. By simply being mixed with a detection antibody, the poly-protein G-expressing bacteria can provide a new method to sensitively detect low-abundance target molecules in solid-phase immunoassays.


Analytical Chemistry | 2017

Enhancement Effect of a Variable Topology of a Membrane-Tethered Anti-Poly(ethylene glycol) Antibody on the Sensitivity for Quantifying PEG and PEGylated Molecules

Wen-Wei Lin; Yi-An Cheng; Chien-Han Kao; Steve R. Roffler; Yu-Chi Lee; Bing-Mae Chen; Yuan-Chin Hsieh; I-Ju Chen; Bo-Cheng Huang; Yeng-Tseng Wang; Yi-Ching Tung; Ming-Yii Huang; Fang-Ming Chen; Tian-Lu Cheng

Sensitive quantification of the pharmacokinetics of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) and PEGylated molecules is critical for PEGylated drug development. Here, we developed a sensitive sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for PEG by tethering an anti-PEG antibody (AGP3) via tethers with different dimensions on the surface of 293T cells (293T/S-αPEG, short-type cells; 293T/L-αPEG, long-type cells; 293T/SL-αPEG, hybrid-type cells) to improve the binding capacity and detection limit for free PEG and PEGylated molecules. The binding capacity of hybrid-type cells for PEG-like molecules (CH3-PEG5K-FITC (FITC = fluorescein isothiocyanate) and eight-arm PEG20K-FITC) was at least 10-80-fold greater than that of 293T cells expressing anti-PEG antibodies with uniform tether lengths. The detection limit of free PEG (OH-PEG3K-NH2 and CH3-PEG5K-NH2) and PEG-like molecule (CH3-PEG5K-FITC, CH3-PEG5K-SHPP, and CH3-PEG5K-NIR797) was14-137 ng mL-1 in the hybrid-type cell-based sandwich ELISA. 293T/SL-αPEG cells also had significantly higher sensitivity for quantification of a PEGylated protein (PegIntron) and multiarm PEG macromolecules (eight-arm PEG20K-NH2 and eight-arm PEG40K-NH2) at 3.2, 16, and 16 ng mL-1, respectively. Additionally, the overall binding capacity of 293T/SL-αPEG cells for PEGylated macromolecules was higher than that of 293T/S-αPEG or 293T/L-αPEG cells. Anchoring anti-PEG antibodies on cells via variable-length tethers for cell-based sandwich ELISA, therefore, provides a sensitive, high-capacity method for quantifying free PEG and PEGylated molecules.

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Tian-Lu Cheng

Kaohsiung Medical University

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Ta-Chun Cheng

Kaohsiung Medical University

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Chih-Hung Chuang

Kaohsiung Medical University

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Wen-Wei Lin

National Sun Yat-sen University

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Chien-Chiao Huang

Kaohsiung Medical University

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Chien-Han Kao

Kaohsiung Medical University

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Yeng-Tseng Wang

Kaohsiung Medical University

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Chiu-Min Cheng

National Kaohsiung Marine University

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Fang-Ming Chen

Kaohsiung Medical University

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