MOLECULAR CLONING AND EXPRESSION OF A FUNGAL IMMUNOMODULATORY PROTEIN, FIP-FVE, FROM FLAMMULINA VELUTIPES

1997 
: FIP-fve, a fungal immunomodulatory protein, was isolated from the fruiting bodies of the edible mushroom, Flammulina velutipes. FIP-fve was shown to stimulate blast-forming activity of human peripheral blood lymphocytes and gene expression of interleukin-2, interferon-gamma and tumor necrosis factor-alpha. Repeated administration of FIP-fve to mice inhibits the Arthur and systemic anaphylaxis reactions. FIP-fve cDNA was cloned and sequenced, and the amino acid sequence of FIP-fve deduced from the nucleotide sequence is identical to that previously determined by protein sequencing. FIP-fve cDNA was amplified by polymerase chain reaction, ligated into the expression vector, pGEX-2T, and expressed in Escherichia coli as a fusion protein of glutathione S-transferase (GST) and FIP-fve. The GST-FIP-fve fusion protein was soluble, and the yield of recombinant FIP-fve was about 5 mg/L of induced culture. The recombinant FIP-fve was obtained by cleaving the GST-FIP-fve fusion protein with thrombin and purifing to homogeneity. The recombinant FIP-fve had about 50% of the immunomodulatory activity of the native FIP-fve.
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