Literature DB >> 12676675

Expression of heteropolymeric ferritin improves iron storage in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

Hye-Jin Kim1, Hyang-Mi Kim, Ji-Hye Kim, Kyeong-Seon Ryu, Seung-Moon Park, Kwang-Yeup Jahng, Moon-Sik Yang, Dae-Hyuk Kim.   

Abstract

Saccharomyces cerevisiae was engineered to express different amount of heavy (H)- and light (L)-chain subunits of human ferritin by using a low-copy integrative vector (YIp) and a high-copy episomal vector (YEp). In addition to pep4::HIS3 allele, the expression host strain was bred to have the selection markers leu2(-) and ura3(-) for YIplac128 and YEp352, respectively. The heterologous expression of phytase was used to determine the expression capability of the host strain. Expression in the new host strain (2805-a7) was as high as that in the parental strain (2805), which expresses high levels of several foreign genes. Following transformation, Northern and Western blot analyses demonstrated the expression of H- and L-chain genes. The recombinant yeast was more iron tolerant, in that transformed cells formed colonies on plates containing more than 25 mM ferric citrate, whereas none of the recipient strain cells did. Prussian blue staining indicated that the expressed isoferritins were assembled in vivo into a complex that bound iron. The expressed subunits showed a clear preference for the formation of heteropolymers over homopolymers. The molar ratio of H to L chains was estimated to be 1:6.8. The gel-purified heteropolymer took up iron faster than the L homopolymer, and it took up more iron than the H homopolymer did. The iron concentrations in transformants expressing the heteropolymer, L homopolymer, and H homopolymer were 1,004, 760, and 500 micro g per g (dry weight) of recombinant yeast cells, respectively. The results indicate that heterologously expressed H and L subunits coassemble into a heteropolymer in vivo and that the iron-carrying capacity of yeast is further enhanced by the expression of heteropolymeric isoferritin.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12676675      PMCID: PMC154789          DOI: 10.1128/AEM.69.4.1999-2005.2003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol        ISSN: 0099-2240            Impact factor:   4.792


  21 in total

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