key: cord-0820095-go826qyo authors: Kim, Kibum; Kang, Yang Joo; Park, Se Ra; Kim, Do-Sun; Lee, Seung-Won; Ko, Kinarm; Ponndorf, Daniel; Ko, Kisung title: Effect of leaf position and days post-infiltration on transient expression of colorectal cancer vaccine candidate proteins GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK in Nicotiana benthamiana plant date: 2021-04-07 journal: PeerJ DOI: 10.7717/peerj.10851 sha: 4c974fc54295516345603035ac6240fc412240b6 doc_id: 820095 cord_uid: go826qyo Immunization with thetumor-associated antigen GA733 glycoprotein, which is highly expressed in colorectal cancer, is considered to be a promising strategy for cancer prevention and treatment. We cloned a fusion gene of GA733 and immunoglobulin Fc fragment (GA733-Fc), and that of GA733-Fc and an endoplasmic reticulum retention motif (GA733-FcK) into the Cowpea mosaic virus (CPMV)-based transient plant expression vector, pEAQ-HT. Agrobacterium tumefaciens (LBA4404) transformed with the vectors pEAQ-HT-GA733-Fc and pEAQ-HT-GA733-FcK was infiltrated into the leaves of Nicotiana benthamiana plants. To optimize harvesting of leaf to express therapeutic glycoproteins both spatially and temporally, protein expression levels at various leaf positions (top, middle, and base) and days post-infiltration (dpi) were investigated. The GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK genes were detected in leaves at 1–10 dpi using PCR. As assessed by western blot, GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK were expressed at the highest levels in the top leaf position at 5 dpi, and GA733-FcK was expressed more than GA733-Fc. The proteins were successfully purified from infiltrated N. benthamiana leaves using protein A affinity chromatography. ELISA verified that an anti-GA733 antibody recognized both purified proteins. Thus, a functional GA733-Fc colorectal cancer vaccine protein can be transiently expressed using a CPMV virus-based vector, with an optimized expression time and leaf position post-infiltration. Tumor-associated antigens (TAAs) are promising immunotherapeutic vaccine candidate proteins for cancer prevention and treatment (Lu et al., 2012; Wong-Arce, González-Ortega & Rosales-Mendoza, 2017) . Immune responses for induction of immunoglobulins to target TAAs have been actively studied (Son, In & Pyo, 2005) . Among TAAs, glycoprotein GA733, or epithelial cell adhesion molecule (EpCAM), is highly expressed on the surface of colorectal cancer cells and has been extensively investigated (Eyvazi et al., 2018; Lu et al., 2012) . Anti-GA733 antibody has been shown to inhibit the growth of colorectal cancer cells, which results from GA733 immunization in mice (Brodzik et al., 2008) . The extracellular domain of GA733 is often used as a target for colorectal cancer vaccination and is fused with a human immunoglobulin Fc fragment (GA733-Fc) to enhance immune responses (Kim, Song & Ko, 2018; Lee & Ko, 2017) . The presence of the Fc domain markedly increases the plasma half-life of the protein, which prolongs therapeutic activity (Czajkowsky et al., 2012) , and it simplifies purification of the protein by binding to protein A (Lee et al., 2020a; Park et al., 2020) . Plants have several advantages over existing mammalian cell-based systems in terms of lower production costs and the absence of human pathogen contamination (Chen et al., 2013; Lee & Ko, 2017; Loh & Wayah, 2014; Shin et al., 2019) . In addition, plants require a simple cultivation environment (sunlight, water, nutrients, and fertilizer) to grow Rigano & Walmsley, 2005) . Moreover, unlike bacterial cells, plants have post-translational modification systems similar to those of mammalian cells, such as glycosylation. Since plant cells are eukaryotic and have an endomembrane system and secretory pathway (Loh & Wayah, 2014) , plants can produce and assemble correctly folded and complex mammalian proteins in their cells (Menassa, Ahmad & Joensuu, 2012; Kim et al., 2020 (IJMS) ; Lee et al., 2020b (Plants) ). Thus, plants are considered as an attractive alternative for the production of therapeutic recombinant proteins (Lee & Ko, 2017; Nausch et al., 2012) . In our previous study, plants have been determined to highly produce recombinant GA733-Fc fusion proteins (Park et al., 2015) . In general, there are two approaches to express recombinant proteins in plants, which are transgenic and transient plant expression (Chen et al., 2013; Joh, McDonald & VanderGheynst, 2006; Ma, Li & Wang, 2019; Wydro, Kozubek & Lehmann, 2006) . For transient expression, the vector pEAQ-HT, which is based on the Cowpea mosaic virus (CPMV), has been reported to be an efficient expression vector for therapeutic recombinant proteins (Shah, Almaghrabi & Bohlmann, 2013) . This deconstructed vector lacks the viral coat protein and has been shown to allow high and fast recombinant protein production (Chen et al., 2013; Daniell et al., 2009; Peyret & Lomonossoff, 2013) . In addition, Agrobacterium-mediated transient expression using a syringe or vacuum machine to transfer the CPMV-based pEAQ vector can be faster, cheaper, and more convenient than traditional stable transformation systems, without the need for viral replication (Loh & Wayah, 2014) . However, the expression period and plant tissue position can influence both the quality and quantity of the recombinant protein Yamamoto et al., 2018) . Thus, the goal of our current research is to establish spatial and temporal conditions for the maximum production of the colorectal cancer vaccine candidate proteins GA733-Fc and GA733-Fc with an ER retention motif (GA733-FcK), using the CPMV-based pEAQ transient expression system. In order to study optimal expression of both GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK, the GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK expression vectors were transferred to plant leaves in a laboratory scale using a direct-syringe agroinfiltration method. Gene insertion, protein expression, protein purification, and antibody recognition of both recombinant proteins were investigated along with day post-infiltration and leaf position. To construct the pEAQ vectors for transient expression of GA733, the sequence encoding the GA733 was ligated to that of human IgG Fc to generate the GA733-Fc fusion gene, and this recombinant gene was tagged with an ER retention signal (KDEL) to generate GA733-FcK (Fig. 1) . These sequences were cloned individually into the pEAQ-HT vector (Peyret & Lomonossoff, 2013; Sainsbury, Thuenemann & Lomonossoff, 2009) , which is based on CPMV, a non-enveloped plant virus in the Comovirus family consisting of RNA-1 (6.0 kb) and RNA-2 (3.5 kb) molecules (Peyret & Lomonossoff, 2013) . The T-DNA region of the pEAQ-HT vector possesses the suppressor of gene silencing, P19, and the gene encoding neomycin phosphotransferase III for resistance to kanamycin (Sainsbury, Thuenemann & Lomonossoff, 2009 ). The GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK sequences were cloned into the AgeI site of pEAQ-HT using the In-FusionÒ HD Cloning Kit (Takara, Mountain View, CA, USA) ( Fig. 1 ). In the recombinant pEAQ-HT vectors, expression of GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK was under the control of the Cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter and nopaline synthase terminator (Sainsbury, Thuenemann & Lomonossoff, 2009) (Fig. 1) . Agrobacterium tumefaciens (LBA4404) was transformed with the recombinant binary plasmid vectors, and the resulting transformants were named Ag/pEAQ-GA733-Fc and Ag/pEAQ-GA733-FcK. Nicotiana benthamiana plant was used for agroinfiltration. The seeds of N. benthamiana were sown in commercial, nitrogen-fertilized soil (Seoul Bio, Chungcheongbuk-do, Korea). After 14 days, the seedlings were transplanted into pots containing nitrogenfertilized soil. They were grown in a plant chamber at 25 C with 16 h of light and 8 h of darkness. Water was supplied every 2 days (50-100 ml). The plants were used for experiments after 6 weeks. Agrobacteria carrying each vector pEAQ-GA733-Fc and pEAQ-GA733-FcK were subcultured on LB agar containing antibiotics (10 mg/ml kanamycin) at 28 C for 48 h. Then, 100 ml of infiltrating medium was inoculated in 40 ml of fresh LB medium with 10 mg/ml kanamycin and incubated for 21-23 h at 28 C with shaking at 210 rpm until 0.35 optical density at 600 nm was obtained. The agrobacteria were pelleted by centrifugation at 3,000 rpm followed by resuspension in 40 ml of MMA buffer (10 mM 2-N-morpholinoethanesulfonic acid, pH 5.6, 10 mM MgCl 2 , 100 mM acetosyringone) (Sainsbury, Thuenemann & Lomonossoff, 2009) . The abaxial side of each N. benthamiana leaf was pricked using a syringe needle to aid infiltration. Then, MMA buffer containing Ag/pEAQ-GA733-Fc or Ag/pEAQ-GA733-FcK was infiltrated into the undersides of each leaf with soft pressure using a 1 ml syringe (needle removed) until the entire leaf was wet (Loh & Wayah, 2014) . The plant leaves with the same age were used for agrobacterium inoculation. The same leaf size was used for each location grown during the same period. After infiltration, the plants were grown at 25 C in a chamber and watered every 1-2 days to prevent drying. The infiltrated leaves were harvested as described directly below. All samples were taken in triplicate with the same leaf at the same location for each dpi. Nicotiana benthamiana leaf samples were collected at 1, 3, 5, 7, 8, 9, and 10 dpi to determine time-dependent recombinant protein expression levels. The infiltrated top, middle, and base leaves were harvested to investigate spatial protein expression and morphological changes. The agroinfected leaves were harvested according to leaf positions (top, middle, and base leaves) for western blot analysis. After harvesting, the leaf blades were washed with tap water and gently dried with tissue paper. The harvested leaves (100 mg) were homogenized in three volumes (w/v) of 1× PBS (2.7 mM KCl, 137 mM NaCl, 10 mM Na 2 HPO 4 and 2 mM KH 2 PO 4 ) to extract the TSP. Two microliters of each sample was mixed with 0.4 ml of loading buffer (1 M Tris-HCl, 10% SDS, 5% 2-mercaptoethanol, 50% glycerol, and 0.1% bromophenol blue) and 16.6 ml of distilled water. The mixed samples were subjected to 10% SDS-PAGE in SDS running buffer (0.2 M glycine, 25 mM Tris-HCl, 0.1% [w/v] SDS). The protein gel was transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane (Millipore Corp, Billerica, MA, USA). The blotted membranes were transferred to 1× PBS-T buffer (1× PBS with 0.5% [v/v] Tween 20) and then blocked in 5% skim milk (Sigma, St. Louis, MO, USA) for 2 h at room temperature. The membrane was incubated with primary mouse anti-EpCAM mAb (anti-GA733 mAb) (R&D Systems, Minneapolis, MN, USA) (Isotype IgG 2a , 1:5,000 dilution) to detect the GA733 portion of GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK, and then with 1:5,000-diluted secondary HRP-conjugated anti-mouse IgG 2a (Abcam, Cambridge, UK), each for 2 h at room temperature with shaking (110 rpm). The protein bands were detected by using SuperSignal Chemiluminescent Substrate (Pierce, Rockford, IL, USA) and visualized by exposure to X-ray film (Fuji, Tokyo, Japan). EpCAM-Fc from mammalian cell (GA733-Fc M ) (rhEpCAM/Fc Chimera; R&D Systems, Minneapolis, MN, USA) was used as a positive control, and non-transformed N. benthamiana leaves were used as a negative control . Genomic DNA in transfected leaves was isolated using the Genomic DNA Mini Kit (Favorgen, Taiwan), according to the manufacturer's instructions. PCR was conducted to confirm the presence of the GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK genes in the agroinfected leaves using a PCR premix kit (iNtRON Biotechnology, Seoul, Korea). The sequences of the primers were as follows: GA733-Fc forward primer, 5′-CAA ATT CGC GAC CGG ATG GCT ACT CAA CGA AGG-3′ and reverse primer, 5′-GGT GAT GCA TAC CGG TCA ACC CGG GGA CAG GGA-3′; GA733-FcK forward primer, 5′-CAA ATT CGC GAC CGG ATG GCT ACT CAA CGA AGG-3′ and reverse primer, 5′-GGT GAT GCA TAC CGG TCA GAG TTC ATC TTT ACC C-3′. The PCR consisted of an initial denaturation at 94 C for 20 min, followed by 30 cycles of denaturation at 94 C for 20 s, annealing at 64 C for 30 s, and extension at 72 C for 2 min, and then a final extension at 72 C for 2 min. Non-transfected plants were used as a negative control, while vectors carrying the expression cassettes of GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK in Escherichia coli were used as positive controls. To purify GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK, 100 g of agroinfected leaves were homogenized in extraction buffer (37.5 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 50 mM NaCl, 15 mM EDTA pH 8.0, 75 mM sodium citrate, and 0.2% sodium thiosulfate) using an aluminum blender (Hanil, Seoul, Korea) and then centrifuged at 7,000×g for 30 min at 4 C. The supernatant was collected, further clarified using Miracloth (Biosciences, La Jolla, CA, USA), and adjusted to pH 5.1 with acetic acid. The protein solution was then centrifuged at 10,000×g for to pH 7.0 with 3 M Tris-HCl. Eight percent of the total supernatant volume of ammonium sulfate was added to the supernatant, and the solution was incubated at 4 C for 2 h, and then 22.6% ammonium sulfate was added to the total solution volume. The mixture was incubated overnight at 4 C and then centrifuged at 8,000×g for 30 min at 4 C. The pellet was resuspended in 1/10 of the original volume of extraction buffer, and then centrifuged again at 8000×g for 30 min at 4 C. The supernatant was filtered through a 0.45-mm syringe filter (MILLEX, Darmstadt, Germany) and loaded on a protein A resin column (Sepharose 4 Fast Flow, GE Healthcare, Sweden, NJ, USA). The target proteins were eluted using elution buffer according to the manufacturer's recommendations. The final eluted protein fractions were subjected to SDS-PAGE to assess their purity. To investigate morphological changes in the plant leaves after agroinfiltration, the leaf morphology of N. benthamiana plants agroinfiltrated with Agrobacterium carrying pEAQ-GA733-Fc (Ag/pEAQ-GA733-Fc) and Ag/pEAQ-GA733-FcK was examined according to days post-infiltration (dpi) and leaf position (top, middle, and base) (Fig. 2) . In plants agroinfiltrated with Ag/pEAQ-GA733-Fc, leaf chlorosis was not observed (top, middle, and base leaves) until 3 dpi ( Fig. 2A) . The base leaves started to show chlorosis at 5 dpi. The middle and top leaves showed chlorosis at 7 dpi ( Fig. 2A) . Serious necrosis was observed on the base leaves at 8 dpi, while necrosis was observed on the middle and top leaves at 9 and 10 dpi, respectively. In plants agroinfiltrated with Ag/pEAQ-GA733-Fc and Ag/pEAQ-GA733-FcK, chlorosis and necrosis began on the base leaves at 5 and 7 dpi, respectively (Fig. 2B) . The middle and top leaves both showed chlorosis and necrosis at 7 and 8 dpi, which was 2-3 days later than the base leaves ( Fig. 2B) . At 10 dpi, all the base leaves agroinfiltrated with both vectors showed necrosis (Fig. 2) . After 7 dpi, regardless of the transgene, all the base leaves showed chlorosis and necrosis with wilting, and the leaf mass decreased rapidly (Fig. 2) . PCR confirmation of GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK genes in agroinfiltrated leaves of N. benthamiana PCR analysis was conducted to confirm the presence of the genes encoding GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK in the agroinfiltrated leaves at each leaf position (top, middle, and base leaves) (Fig. 3) . The expected sizes of the amplified GA733-Fc (1,461 bp) and GA733-FcK (1,473 bp) bands were observed regardless of leaf position (Fig. 3) . There was no band in the genomic DNA sample from a plant not infiltrated with Agrobacterium (Fig. 3) . In plants agroinfiltrated with Ag/pEAQ-GA733-Fc, the top and middle leaves produced PCR bands at all observed dpi (Fig. 3A) . All the base leaves at 1, 3, 5, and 7 dpi produced the PCR band. In plants agroinfiltrated with Ag/pEAQ-GA733-FcK, the PCR band trends were similar to those with Ag/pEAQ-GA733-Fc (Fig. 3B) . The agroinfiltrated base leaves at 8, 9, and 10 dpi were not included for PCR analysis owing to the lack of sample mass caused by severe chlorosis, necrosis, and wilting. Western blot analysis to determine the expression levels of GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK according to leaf position Western blot analysis was performed to investigate the differences in expression levels of GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK depending on the leaf position (top, middle, and base leaves) and dpi (Fig. 4) . To compare the protein expression level, 2 ml of each sample extracted from equal biomasses was loaded in each western blot lane. In GA733-Fc, there were a 65 kDa and >240 kDa protein bands for the top leaves at 3, 5, and 7 dpi. At 5 dpi, the 65 kDa band density was the strongest among the others in the leaves agroinfiltrated with Ag/pEAQ-GA733-Fc (Fig. 4A ). In the middle and base leaves, the 65 kDa band was not detected. However, in the middle leaves at 3-10 dpi, several bands larger than 240 kDa were detected. In plants agroinfiltrated with Ag/pEAQ-GA733-FcK, there were 65 and~240 kDa protein bands for the top leaves at all dpi (Fig. 4A) . The middle leaves also showed the~65 and~240 kDa protein bands at 5, 7, 8, and 9 dpi, whereas at 3 and 10 dpi, the bands were barely detected (Fig. 4A right middle) . In the base leaves, only the~240 kDa protein band was detected at 8 dpi. In general, protein expression was higher for GA733-FcK than for GA733-Fc (Fig. 4B ). The top leaf position showed relatively high expression regardless of the vector type (Fig. 4B ). There was almost no protein expression in the base leaf position (Fig. 4) . From the highest to the lowest, the relative protein density levels were ranked top, middle, and base. In general, the highest band density was observed at 5 dpi in the top leaves (Fig. 4) . Purification of GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK from agroinfected N. benthamiana plant leaves GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK transiently expressed in N. benthamiana leaves were purified (Fig. 5) . The SDS-PAGE analysis showed that the GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK proteins were successfully purified using protein A affinity chromatography (Fig. 5) . Monomer protein bands of the expected size (~65 kDa) were detected for both plant-derived GA733-Fc (GA733-Fc P ) and GA733-FcK P . The dimeric protein band (~140 kDa) was also observed in the purified GA733-FcK P . The protein band intensity was stronger for GA733-FcK than for GA733-Fc (Fig. 5) . Indeed, 1.12 mg of GA733-Fc and 11.82 mg of GA733-FcK were purified from 100 g of infiltrated N. benthamiana leaves (5 dpi). ELISA to confirm binding of GA733-Fc P and GA733-FcK P proteins to anti-GA733 antibody ELISA was conducted to compare the binding of GA733-Fc P and GA733-FcK P to an anti-GA733 antibody. The 96-well plate was coated with anti-EpCAM antibody (anti-GA733) (50 ng/well), and the purified GA733-Fc P and GA733-FcK P proteins were applied (Fig. 6B) . Anti-human IgG Fc antibody conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (HRP) was used as a secondary antibody to bind the Fc region of both GA733-Fc P and GA733-FcK P (Fig. 6B) . The signal from GA733-Fc P and GA733-FcK P was higher than that from EpCAM-Fc M . The GA733-FcK P showed a higher absorbance compared to the GA733-Fc P (Fig. 6) . genome. This transgenic approach has some advantages in terms of scaling up production since the transgene is stably inherited through generations and transgenic seeds can be stored for large-scale cultivation (Chen et al., 2013; Daniell et al., 2009; Peyret & Lomonossoff, 2013) . However, it has some disadvantages; for instance, generating plant lines requires a long time with low yields of the target protein. On the contrary, plant transient expression system can overcome these drawbacks of time and yield. For transient expression, plant viral or non-viral vectors are utilized to express genes of interest in plants (Chen et al., 2013) . Among these strategies, deconstructed viruses that lack the viral coat protein gene allow for production of heterologous proteins in a few days (Alamillo et al., 2006; Chen et al., 2013; Peyret & Lomonossoff, 2013) . Elimination of the region encoding the coat protein enhances the transgene capacity of the virus, enabling it to efficiently produce large recombinant proteins (Chen et al., 2013) . In addition, the deconstructed virus vector can replicate in plant cells to a higher level than the full-virus system, allowing a larger amount of recombinant protein to be harvested (Chen et al., 2013) . In the present study, we hypothesized that the transient protein expression levels of GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK varied depending on the leaf position (top, middle, and base) and transfection periods. Thus, the ultimate goal of this study was to optimize the leaf position for agroinfiltration and leaf harvesting time to enhance production of GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK using the plant transient expression system. First, the morphological changes in the leaves (top, middle, and base) at the dpi were investigated. According to the data, 5-7 dpi was the best time for leaf harvesting and purification of recombinant protein since the leaves during these days showed the least damage (i.e., chlorosis, necrosis, and wilting), and the area of the leaves did not reduce when compared to those on the other later days. The loss of chloroplasts results in loss of energy-generating capacity and reduced protein production capacity (Munné-Bosch & Alegre, 2002) . Thus, the chlorosis, necrosis, and wilting of leaves induced by Agrobacterium infiltration might affect production of the recombinant protein. To confirm GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK gene insertion, PCR analysis was conducted. The expected sizes of the amplified PCR bands were observed (GA733-Fc: 1,461 bp, GA733-FcK: 1,473 bp). However, the base leaves of both GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK plants at 8, 9, and 10 dpi were not included in the analysis since the sample mass was insufficient for PCR analysis owing to chlorosis, necrosis, and wilting. All the tested leaf samples produced the expected PCR products, indicating that the infiltration properly delivered both the GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK gene expression cassettes. However, the presence of the transgene in the leaf does not necessarily mean expression of the GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK proteins. Thus, western blotting was carried out to confirm their protein expression. The band of mammalian-derived GA733-Fc was slightly different from plant-derived GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK. It is speculated that the discrepancy is due to difference between mammalian and plant glycosylation, which affects molecular weight, altering protein migration on a western blot (Unal et al., 2008) . Accordingly, the protein expression of GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK increased until 5 dpi in the top and middle leaves and then decreased, while the protein expression level in the base leaves was relatively low. In the leaves infiltrated with Agrobacterium carrying the GA733-Fc expression vector, the GA733-Fc protein (~65 kDa) was detected in the upper leaves only at 3, 4, and 5 dpi. The fluctuation of protein expression of GA733-FcK is due to the extreme transient expression of foreign proteins localized in ER during 5~7 dpi resulting in temporary plant cell stress such as ER stress (Howell, 2013) or temporary protease expression and activation (Mandal et al., 2016) . In addition, the western blot analysis showed that the protein expression level was higher in the leaves infiltrated with Agrobacterium carrying the GA733-FcK expression vector than in the leaves infiltrated with the GA733-Fc expression vector. These results indicate that the KDEL ER retention signal affected the production level of the GA733-Fc fusion protein in the transient plant expression system. In previous studies, KDEL tagging to recombinant antibodies and antigens localized and accumulated them in the ER, eventually increasing their production levels in transgenic plants Lee et al., 2013 Lee et al., , 2020a Park et al., 2020; So et al., 2013; Song et al., 2018) . Indeed, N-glycosylation analysis showed that GA733-FcK had mainly oligo-mannose compared to GA733-Fc, indicating the KDEL induced ER retention of GA733-FcK (Fig. S1 ). Both GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK expression levels in the leaves decreased in the order of top, middle, and base. The bottom leaves become the main leaves first after germination. These leaves are older with fewer chloroplasts, resulting in lower energy and protein production than the middle and top leaves, which are younger (Munné-Bosch & Alegre, 2002) . Such low recombinant protein expression is probably related to the low concentration of total soluble protein in the old leaves (Halfhill et al., 2003) . For purification of both GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK, protein A affinity chromatography was utilized since the Fc domain was fused to the GA733 protein (Lee et al., 2020a; Park et al., 2015 Park et al., , 2020 Shin et al., 2019) . SDS-PAGE showed that the purified GA733-FcK had stronger band intensity than the purified GA733-Fc. The concentration of the purified GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK proteins was 0.112 and 1.82 mg/ml, respectively, representing 16.25 times higher production of GA733-FcK than GA733-Fc. The enhanced protein production of GA733-FcK in the current study is consistent with that in a previous study, where the transient expression of ER-targeted human interleukin-6 represented 7% of the total soluble protein (TSP) in N. benthamiana (Munné-Bosch & Alegre, 2002) . We speculate that the ER-retained GA733-Fc protein molecules interacted with ERresident chaperones to promote correct folding (Benchabane et al., 2008) and were less exposed to proteases in the ER (Vitale & Pedrazzini, 2005 ) in transient plant system. In this present study, we confirmed that the protein expression varied with the dpi. After agroinfiltration of the GA733-FcK vector, the top leaves began to express the protein at 3 dpi, with strong expression from 5 to 9 dpi, except for 7 dpi. For the middle leaves, the highest expression was observed at 5 dpi. These results suggest that the best leaf harvesting time for purification of GA733-FcK proteins is 5 dpi and that GA733-Fc can be transiently expressed using the CPMV virus-based vector with an optimized transfection period and leaf position. According to the current results, this harvesting time is applicable for top leaves infiltrated with Agrobacterium carrying the GA733-Fc vector. Previous studies also showed high expression of recombinant proteins at 4-6 dpi Sandwich ELISA was performed to detect the binding of each purified GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK protein to an anti-GA733 antibody. The resulting absorbance of GA733-FcK was stronger than that of GA733-Fc. These results suggest that the antibody is able to bind GA733-FcK better than GA733-Fc, and they are similar to our previous studies where recombinant proteins tagged with KDEL showed better interactions with antibodies regardless of the specific antigen or antibody Use of virus vectors for the expression in plants of active full-length and single chain anti-coronavirus antibodies Preventing unintended proteolysis in plant protein biofactories Plant-derived EpCAM antigen induces protective anti-cancer response Agroinfiltration as an effective and scalable strategy of gene delivery for production of pharmaceutical proteins Fc-fusion proteins: new developments and future perspectives Plant-made vaccine antigens and biopharmaceuticals Antibody based EpCAM targeted therapy of cancer, review and update Additive transgene expression and genetic introgression in multiple green-fluorescent protein transgenic crop× weed hybrid generations Endoplasmic reticulum stress responses in plants Evaluating extraction and storage of a recombinant protein produced in agroinfiltrated lettuce Effect of nitrogen deficiency on recombinant protein production and dimerization and growth in transgenic plants Low risk of pollen-mediated gene flow in transgenic plants under greenhouse conditions A Plant-Derived Antigen-Antibody Complex Induces Anti-Cancer Immune Responses by Forming a Large Quaternary Structure Intracellular reprogramming of expression, glycosylation, and function of a plant-derived antiviral therapeutic monoclonal antibody Production of recombinant anti-cancer vaccines in plants Expression, function, and glycosylation of anticolorectal cancer large single-chain antibody (LSC) in plant Expression of colorectal cancer antigenic protein fused to IgM Fc in chinese cabbage (Brassica rapa) Effect of the developmental stage and tissue position on the expression and glycosylation of recombinant glycoprotein GA733-FcK in transgenic plants Optimizations of laboratoryscale vacuum-assisted agroinfiltration for delivery of a transgene in Nicotiana benthamiana Expression of GA733-Fc fusion protein as a vaccine candidate for colorectal cancer in transgenic plants Production of bioactive recombinant rPA (reteplase) by virus-based transient expression system in nicotiana benthamiana Tackling unwanted proteolysis in plant production hosts used for molecular farming Transient expression using agroinfiltration and its applications in molecular farming Plant aging increases oxidative stress in chloroplasts High-level transient expression of ER-targeted human interleukin 6 in Nicotiana benthamiana Improving agroinfiltration-based transient gene expression in Nicotiana benthamiana Optimization of ammonium sulfate concentration for purification of colorectal cancer vaccine candidate recombinant protein GA733-FcK isolated from plants Expression and in vitro function of anti-breast cancer Llama-based single domain antibody VHH expressed in tobacco plants The pEAQ vector series: the easy and quick way to produce recombinant proteins in plants Expression systems and developments in plant-made vaccines pEAQ: versatile expression vectors for easy and quick transient expression of heterologous proteins in plants Comparison of expression vectors for transient expression of recombinant proteins in plants Immune response of heterologous recombinant antigenic protein of viral hemorrhagic septicemia virus (VHSV) in mice Glycomodification and characterization of anti-colorectal cancer immunotherapeutic monoclonal antibodies in transgenic tobacco Cancer vaccines Endoplasmic reticulum retention motif fused to recombinant anti-cancer monoclonal antibody (mAb) CO17-1A affects mAb expression and plant stress response N-linked glycosylation and its impact on the electtrophoretic mobility and function of the human proton-coupled folate transporter (HsPCFT) Recombinant pharmaceuticals from plants: the plant endomembrane system as bioreactor Plant-made vaccines in the fight against cancer Optimization of transient Agrobacterium-mediated gene expression system in leaves of Nicotiana benthamiana Improvement of the transient expression system for production of recombinant proteins in plants We thank Professor George Lomonossoff (John Innes Centre, Norwich, United Kingdom) for providing the plant viral pEAQ-HT vector. This study was conducted in Department of Medicine, Therapeutic Protein Engineering Lab, College of Medicine, Chung-Ang University. The authors declare that they have no competing interests. The following information was supplied regarding data availability: Raw data are available in the Supplemental Files. Supplemental information for this article can be found online at http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/ peerj.10851#supplemental-information. In this study, we determined the optimal leaf position and dpi for the transient expression of GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK. In addition, we confirmed that KDEL tagging of GA733-Fc enhanced its production in the transient plant expression system. Taken together, the Fc fusion protein GA733-Fc can be expressed using a CPMV virus-based vector in transient plant system. Plants are in the spotlight as an excellent therapeutic protein production platform. We have expressed and purified colorectal cancer vaccine recombinant protein GA733-Fc and GA733-Fc with KDEL (GA733-FcK) by transient expression system using pEAQ-HT vector with reduced labor than transgenic expression system. By using our currently described optimized GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK transient expression condition, it is expected that mass production of GA733-Fc and GA733-FcK would be realized in the future.