Literature DB >> 17169451

A T7-expression system under temperature control could create temperature-sensitive phenotype of target gene in Escherichia coli.

Rubing Liang1, Xipeng Liu, Jianhua Liu, Qiushi Ren, Peiji Liang, Zhixin Lin, Xiangming Xie.   

Abstract

Temperature-sensitive (TS) mutants of a gene are ones of which the activity or phenotype is very similar to that of wild type only at certain temperature and they provide extremely powerful tool for studying protein function in vivo. Here we report a novel strategy to generate TS phenotype of the interest gene in Escherichia coli based on a temperature-sensitive T7-expression system. A TS T7-RNA polymerase is generated by interrupting it with a TS intein from Saccharomyces cerevisiae vacuolar ATPase subunit (VMA), resulting that the gene flanked by T7-promoter and T7-terminator will be transcribed only at the permissive temperature (18 degrees C), not at the restrictive temperature (37 degrees C). The feasibility to create TS phenotype of this strategy was detected using lacZ as target. Reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (PCR) indicated that at 18 degrees C, transcripts of T7-promoter controlled lacZ were at least 85 times more than those at 37 degrees C. Western blot analysis and enzymatic assay showed that large amounts of active His6-tagged LacZ produced at 18 degrees C but little at 37 degrees C. This strategy appears more promising than other TS creation methods because the target is pre-designed, no modification is introduced, and only simple DNA manipulation is required.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17169451     DOI: 10.1016/j.mimet.2006.10.016

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Microbiol Methods        ISSN: 0167-7012            Impact factor:   2.363


  4 in total

1.  Temperature-sensitive mutations made easy: generating conditional mutations by using temperature-sensitive inteins that function within different temperature ranges.

Authors:  Guihong Tan; Ming Chen; Christopher Foote; Change Tan
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2009-07-13       Impact factor: 4.562

2.  Construction of a bacterial assay for estrogen detection based on an estrogen-sensitive intein.

Authors:  Rubing Liang; Jing Zhou; Jianhua Liu
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2011-02-11       Impact factor: 4.792

3.  Genetic sensor for strong methylating compounds.

Authors:  Felix Moser; Andrew Horwitz; Jacinto Chen; Wendell Lim; Christopher A Voigt
Journal:  ACS Synth Biol       Date:  2013-10-18       Impact factor: 5.110

4.  Recent advances in in vivo applications of intein-mediated protein splicing.

Authors:  Natalya I Topilina; Kenneth V Mills
Journal:  Mob DNA       Date:  2014-02-04
  4 in total

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