The top priority of our research was to develop a versatile method for expression and purification of highly active p70S6K1, suitable for high throughput enzymatic assays. Currently, several options exist for obtaining recombinant S6K1 in a highly active state. For example, commercially available active S6K1 (Thermo Fisher Scientific, #PV3815) was first expressed from baculovirus system and then activated by in vitro phosphorylation at T229 by recombinant PDPK1. Highly active S6K1 has also been produced from transiently transfected mammalian cell cultures [21]. Despite the high quality of the enzymes obtained through such approaches, the methodology used is complicated, laborious, and expensive.
The baculovirus-mediated expression of highly active recombinant p70S6K1 obtained via co-infection with recombinant PDPK1 has been reported and well characterized by Keshwani et al. [22, 23]. Previously, we have tested the expression of active S6K1 via co-infection with the PDPK1 carrying virus (data not shown). We found that the quality and yield of S6K1 produced by co-infection were highly dependent on the optimal ratio of the viruses and the total MOI, both of which varied with different virus stocks. To address this variability, we produced a single construct that co-expressed both S6K1 and PDPK1 proteins. Co-expression of multiple genes from a single baculovirus was predominantly used for production of VLP (virus-like particles), heavy and light chains of antibodies, and multiprotein complexes [24, 25]. Co-expession of the protein kinases in Bac-to-bac system was predominantly focused on regulatory subunits, chaperons or binding partners [26–28]. However, there are very few publications regarding the co-expression of protein kinases for activation purposes using the pFasBac™ Dual vector [29–31]. These publications primarily describe the use of PDPK1 co-expression for either regulatory studies or the production of activated kinases.
In our research we first have successfully demonstrated the expression of activated p70S6K1 using the pFastBac™ Dual vector of Bac-to-Bac baculovirus expression system. The vector possesses two multiple cloning sites controlled by the polyhedrin promoter (PH) and the p10 promoter, enabling the simultaneous expression of two heterologous genes. For the production of T-loop phosphorylated p70S6K1, we utilized an insect expression system, which offers high levels of protein expression with post-translational modifications similar to those in mammalian cells. Therefore, we first constructed the pFastBac™ Dual plasmid loaded with 6His-p70S6K1(ΔAID)-T389D insert under the control of Ppol promotor together with PDPK1(ΔPH) insert controlled by p10 (Fig. 1B). The schematic structure of the recombinant product is shown in Fig. 1A. In this construct, the native form of p70S6K1 was modified adding a 6His-tag to the N-terminal regulatory domain (NR), deleting the C-terminal domain containing autoinhibitory motif (AID), and mutating the T389 site to D389 to mimic phosphorylation by mTORC1. The resultant recombinant plasmid was used to clone 6xHis-tagged S6K1 (residues 3-398, T389D) under the control of the Ppol promoter, along with untagged PDPK1, lacking the membrane-binding plectrin homology (PH) domain (residues 51–359), under the control of the p10 promoter (Fig. 1B). The truncated variant of PDPK1, no longer restricted to the inner membrane surface, was expected to increase S6K1 activation efficiency.
PDPK1-dependent phosphorylation at T229 is a critical regulation point for S6K1 activation that cannot be phosphomimicked. While the phosphorylation-mimicking T389D mutation and removal of the autoinhibitory domain were necessary, these modifications alone were not sufficient to achieve high S6K1 activity. It has been observed that the S6K1 activity of the double mutant (T389E, T229E) protein expressed from baculovirus remained low [22]. Therefore, to achieve high S6K1 activity, T229 must be phosphorylated.
Using the conventional Sf9 suspension cell culture method, single step Ni-NTA affinity chromatography, and subsequent dialysis, we obtained a highly pure recombinant product with molecular weight of ~ 45 kDa (Fig. 2A, Prep 1, 2, 3), corresponding to the calculated molecular mass of His-actS6K1 (46,4kDa). As represented in Fig. 2B, Western-blot analysis using specific anti-pT229 S6K1 antibodies confirmed the presence of the correctly sized protein in 20 µg of total lysate from infected Sf9 cells (lane 2), and 1µg of purified recombinant His-act S6K1 (lane 3). The recombinant protein was not detected in the 20 µg of total lysate from non-infected cells (lane 1). The immunoblot shown in Fig. 2B, demonstrated not only the specificity of the obtained protein but also its effective phosphorylation at its T229 site by co-expressed GST-PDPK1(ΔPH), which is essential for S6K1 activation. The developed protocol facilitates the easy and efficient purification of recombinant S6K1, which is expressed in significant abundance, ensuring streamlined isolation for further research and applications. The protein yield, concentration of the final samples, and enzymatic activity are summarized in Table S2.
Therefore, to further investigate the activity of the expressed protein, several kinase assays were performed (Fig. 3). The results shown in Fig. 3 (A, B) demonstrate the levels of ribosomal protein S6 phosphorylation by the purified His-actS6K1 at various sites, as detected by different antibodies (pSer235/236 and pSer240/244). The preparations (preps) obtained from the co-expression approach displayed significantly higher activity as compared to the commercial enzyme (Fig. 3B). The average activity of the three preps was 137.9 ± 13.7 (U/mg) compared to 69 ± 3.2 (U/mg) for the commercial standard (Enzo Life Sciences, #SE-345). We also tested the preps of His-actS6K1 using the Kinase-Glo assay with a synthetic rpS6 peptide as the substrate (Fig. 3C). This assay monitors the activity of purified kinases by quantifying ATP consumption. We conducted the Kinase-Glo assay for preps in the presence and absence of the peptide substrate and found that catalytic ATP consumption was dose-dependent, substrate-dependent and essentially free of non-specific ATP degradation.
To further verify the specificity of the recombinant protein, we analysed the sensitivity of purified aсtS6K1 to both nonspecific and specific S6K1 inhibitors: staurosporin and LY2584702, respectively. As shown in Fig. 4, both compounds effectively inhibited actS6K1, suggesting that the protein obtained would be useful for following enzymatic studies, especially in determining potential S6K1 inhibitors by in vitro kinase assays.
The biotinylated rpS6 peptide substrate was primarily designed for an AlphaScreen platform-based S6K1 assay, which was intended for high-throughput screening of S6K1 inhibitors. We used the purified His-actS6K1 (Prep #1) to optimize the parameters for both the reaction and the development steps of the AlphaScreen S6K1 assay. The assay demonstrated high sensitivity of His-actS6K1 to the tested inhibitors, including the pan-kinase inhibitor staurosporine and the model S6K1-specific inhibitor LY2584702 (Merck) (Fig. 4).
The primary data from four independent experiments were processed using GraphPad Prism 9. The calculated IC50 values for staurosporine and LY2584702 were 12.8 nM, (95%CI = 10.8 to 14.9) and 4.2 nM, (95%CI = 3.6 to 4.9) respectively. The staurosporine IC50 measured by the AlphaScreen assay for His-actS6K1 was consistent with the reported ranges of 125.6 nM, 64.1 nM, and 9 nM from other studies [32] and commercial suppliers (Promega, #V4030; Eurofins, #2883). The wide range of staurosporine IC50 values is understandable, given the differences in assay platforms, enzyme sources, substrates, and other variables used in the tests. Therefore, we were pleased to find that the IC50 for the inhibition of His-actS6K1 activity by the S6K1-selective inhibitor LY2584702 was very close to the value reported by the supplier (~ 4 nM, Merck, #SML2892).
In summary, we found that the co-expression of RPS6KB1 and PDPK1 genes, driven by a single Bac-to-Bac baculovirus expression vector, provides a reliable and reproducible high-yield source of p70S6K1 with high catalytic activity. Utilizing the developed baculovirus expression vector system and the associated expression/purification protocol, we isolated the activated kinase domain with activity and purity sufficient for several enzymatic assay platforms. The conducted tests yielded consistent and reproducible results in immunoblotting, Kinase-Glo, and AlphaScreen assays. The AlphaScreen assay was optimized for a 384-well plate format, and later used to test two model S6K1 inhibitors. Our analysis revealed that the assay is highly sensitive, leading us to conclude that the produced recombinant S6K1 kinase is well-suited for the developed AlphaScreen assay and can be utilized in further high-throughput screening projects.