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Molecular engineering of insulin for recombinant expression in yeast

Thomas Kjeldsen, Asser S. Andersen, František Hubálek, Eva Johansson, Frederik Flindt Kreiner, Gerd Schluckebier, Peter Kurtzhals

2023Trends in biotechnology28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Since the first administration of insulin to a person with diabetes in 1922, scientific contributions from academia and industry have improved insulin therapy and access. The pharmaceutical need for insulin is now more than 40 tons annually, half of which is produced by recombinant secretory expression in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. We discuss how, in this yeast species, adaptation of insulin precursors by removable structural elements is pivotal for efficient secretory expression. The technologies reviewed have been implemented at industrial scale and are seminal for the supply of human insulin and insulin analogues to people with diabetes now and in the future. Engineering of a target protein with removable structural elements may provide a general approach to yield optimisation.

Topics & Concepts

InsulinSaccharomyces cerevisiaeYeastRecombinant DNAHuman insulinAdaptation (eye)Scale (ratio)Protein engineeringBiotechnologyBiologyComputational biologyBiochemistryGeneNeuroscienceEnzymeGeographyCartographyFungal and yeast genetics researchTransgenic Plants and ApplicationsBiofuel production and bioconversion
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