# Construction of a plasmid coding for green fluorescent protein tagged cathepsin L and data on expression in colorectal carcinoma cells

**Authors:** Tripti Tamhane, Brit K. Wolters, Rukshala Illukkumbura, Gunhild M. Maelandsmo, Mads H. Haugen, Klaudia Brix

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.dib.2015.09.022 · 2015-09-30

## TL;DR

This paper describes the creation of a plasmid that produces a green fluorescent protein-tagged version of cathepsin L and its effects in colorectal cancer cells.

## Contribution

The novel contribution is the construction of a plasmid encoding a fluorescently tagged human cathepsin L for studying its expression and function in cancer cells.

## Key findings

- A plasmid coding for human cathepsin L fused with green fluorescent protein was successfully constructed and transfected into HCT116 cells.
- Expression of the tagged cathepsin L affected the proliferation and metabolic state of HCT116 cells within 24 hours post-transfection.
- Endogenous cathepsin L levels were higher than the engineered fluorescent protein chimera in transfected cells.

## Abstract

The endo-lysosomal cysteine cathepsin L has recently been shown to have moonlighting activities in that its unexpected nuclear localization in colorectal carcinoma cells is involved in cell cycle progression (Tamhane et al., 2015) [1]. Here, we show data on the construction and sequence of a plasmid coding for human cathepsin L tagged with an enhanced green fluorescent protein (phCL-EGFP) in which the fluorescent protein is covalently attached to the C-terminus of the protease. The plasmid was used for transfection of HCT116 colorectal carcinoma cells, while data from non-transfected and pEGFP-N1-transfected cells is also shown. Immunoblotting data of lysates from non-transfected controls and HCT116 cells transfected with pEGFP-N1 and phCL-EGFP, showed stable expression of cathepsin L-enhanced green fluorescent protein chimeras, while endogenous cathepsin L protein amounts exceed those of hCL-EGFP chimeras. An effect of phCL-EGFP expression on proliferation and metabolic states of HCT116 cells at 24 h post-transfection was observed.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** colorectal carcinoma (MONDO:0024331)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** CTSL (cathepsin L) [NCBI Gene 1514] {aka CATL, CTSL1, MEP}
- **Diseases:** colorectal cancer (MESH:D015179)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Escherichia coli (E. coli, species) [taxon 562]
- **Cell lines:** -N1 — Mus musculus (Mouse), Transformed cell line (CVCL_D425), pEGFP-N1 — Trachinotus blochii (Snubnose pompano), Spontaneously immortalized cell line (CVCL_YC97), HaCaT — Spodoptera frugiperda (Fall armyworm), Spontaneously immortalized cell line (CVCL_A2IM), HCT116 — Homo sapiens (Human), Colon carcinoma, Cancer cell line (CVCL_0291)

## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC4610946/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC4610946