| Literature DB >> 18714347 |
Haichun Gao1, Donna Pattison, Tingfen Yan, Dawn M Klingeman, Xiaohu Wang, Joseph Petrosino, Lisa Hemphill, Xiufeng Wan, Adam B Leaphart, George M Weinstock, Timothy Palzkill, Jizhong Zhou.
Abstract
A comprehensive gene collection for S. oneidensis was constructed using the lambda recombinase (Gateway) cloning system. A total of 3584 individual ORFs (85%) have been successfully cloned into the entry plasmids. To validate the use of the clone set, three sets of ORFs were examined within three different destination vectors constructed in this study. Success rates for heterologous protein expression of S. oneidensis His- or His/GST-tagged proteins in E. coli were approximately 70%. The ArcA and NarP transcription factor proteins were tested in an in vitro binding assay to demonstrate that functional proteins can be successfully produced using the clone set. Further functional validation of the clone set was obtained from phage display experiments in which a phage encoding thioredoxin was successfully isolated from a pool of 80 different clones after three rounds of biopanning using immobilized anti-thioredoxin antibody as a target. This clone set complements existing genomic (e.g., whole-genome microarray) and other proteomic tools (e.g., mass spectrometry-based proteomic analysis), and facilitates a wide variety of integrated studies, including protein expression, purification, and functional analyses of proteins both in vivo and in vitro.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18714347 PMCID: PMC2500165 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0002983
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Destination vectors constructed in this study. A variety of destination vectors derived from pDEST17 are shown.
Expression data for S. oneidensis response regulator proteins in E. coli
| ORF | Predicted protein length (a.a) | Protein expression | Soluble or Inclusion body | Annotation |
| SO2538 | 370 | Yes | Inc. body | Response regulator |
| SO4718 | 460 | No | Sigma-54 dependent Response regulator | |
| SO2426 | 237 | No | DNA-binding Response regulator | |
| SO0622 | 224 | No | DNA-binding Response regulator | |
| SO0351 | 198 | Yes | Inc. body | DNA-binding Response regulator |
| SO2193 | 230 | Yes | Inc. body | DNA-binding Response regulator |
| SO2104 | 219 | Yes | Inc. body | DNA-binding Response regulator |
| SO2540 | 192 | No | Response regulator | |
| SO2125 | 208 | Yes | Inc. body | chemotaxis protein CheD |
| SO1860 | 214 | Yes | Inc. body | DNA-binding Response regulator |
| SO1946 | 224 | Yes | Inc. body | Transcriptional regulatory protein, PhoP |
| SO4647 | 231 | Yes | Inc. body | DNA-binding Response regulator |
| SO0860 | 339 | Yes | Inc. body | Response regulator |
| SO2539 | 658 | Yes | Inc. body | Response regulator |
| SO2366 | 525 | Yes | Inc. body | Response regulator |
| SO1416 | 199 | Yes | Inc. body | DNA-binding Response regulator |
| SO3594 | 237 | Yes | Inc. body | Transcriptional regulatory protein, RstA, putative |
| SO0545 | 575 | No | Response regulator | |
| SO2541 | 441 | Yes | Inc. body | Response regulator |
| SO2547 | 121 | No | Response regulator | |
| SO0059 | 229 | Yes | Inc. body | Transcriptional regulatory protein, KdpE |
| SO1558 | 239 | Yes | Inc. body | Phosphate regulon Response regulator, PhoB |
| SO3982 | 209 | Yes | Soluble | DNA-biding nitrate/nitrite Response regulator |
| SO4003 | 357 | Yes | Soluble | Response regulator |
| SO4172 | 183 | No | DNA-binding Response regulator | |
| SO4388 | 227 | Yes | Inc. body | DNA-binding Response regulator |
| SO4477 | 228 | Yes | Inc. body | Transcriptional regulatory protein, CpxR |
| SO4633 | 241 | No | Transcriptional regulatory protein, OmpR | |
| SO4428 | 225 | No | DNA-binding Response regulator | |
| SO4487 | 220 | Yes | Inc. body | DNA-binding Response regulator |
expression of the protein has a strong negative effect on growth of E. coli host cells
Figure 2SDS-PAGE of S. oneidensis NarP expressed from the destination vector pTP247.
A. Lane 1: protein marker; Lane 2: Soluble protein after lysis of E. coli expressing NarP protein. B. Electrophoretic gel shift assays of NarP and phosphorylated NarP-P. Increasing concentrations (0, 0.65, 1.3, 2.6, and 5 µM) of unphosphorylated NarP and phosphorylated NarP are shown. DNA is stained with CyberGreen. The 100bp ladder was used in the experiments.
Figure 3Expression of S. oneidensis ORFs from the pTP248 double-tag destination plasmid.
A. The protein expression levels of ORFs were evaluated from whole cell protein lysates of E. coli by SDS-Page fractionation and immunodetection using anti-GST antibody. The S. oneidensis ORF number is shown above each lane. The red asterisks indicate the position of a band that is consistent with the predicted molecular weight of the fusion protein. Note that for ORFs SO0047 and SO0056, a band is not visible in panel A but is visible in the longer film exposure of panel B. The predicted molecular weights (kDa) of the fusion proteins are: SO0037, 40.7; SO0038, 65.1; SO0040, 61.2; SO0041, 41.4; SO0044, 39.7; SO0047, 75.1; SO0049, 86.9; SO0051, 34.3; SO0053, 66.8; SO0054, 74.2; SO0055, 94.7; SO0056, 59.3; SO0057, 79.9; SO0059, 57.1. B. Identical to A. but with a longer film exposure.
Figure 4Phage display destination vector constructed in this study.
M13 filamentous phage display vector pTP262 is a destination plasmid that can be used for insertion of ORFs from the pDONR clone set to create phage display plasmids.
Figure 5In vitro biopanning protocol.
Briefly, phages were incubated with immobilized anti-E. coli thioredoxin antibody, non-binders were removed by washing, bound phage were eluted, amplified, and the process was repeated. Eluted phage clones from round 3 were DNA sequenced.
Strains, plasmids, and primers used in this study
| Strain or plasmid | Characteristic or relevant feature | Reference or source |
|
| ||
| DH5α | F- φ80 | Invitrogen |
| BL21 | F- | Invitrogen |
| DB3.1 | F- | Invitrogen |
| XL1-Blue |
| Stratagene |
| Plasmids | ||
| pDONR221 | Entry vector, Kmr | Invitrogen |
| pDEST17 | Destination expression vector of the Gateway system (His-tag), Apr | Invitrogen |
| pDEST24 | Destination expression vector of the Gateway system (GST), GST donor, Apr | Invitrogen |
| pTP145 | Phage display vector, Cmr | 37 |
| pKRP13 | Spectinomycin resistance gene donor, Spr | 53 |
| pTP245 | Phage display vector derived from pTP145, containing the | This study |
| pTP247 | Expression vector derived from pDEST17, containing a stop codon at the position 1846, Apr | This study |
| pTP248 | Expression vector derived from pDEST17, containing both His- and GST tags, Apr | This study |
| pTP249 | Expression vector derived from pDEST17, containing a DNA fragment encoding a | This study |
| pTP262 | Phage display vector derived from pTP145, containing the | This study |
| Primers | ||
|
|
| Invitrogen |
|
|
| Invitrogen |
| DONRF-2 |
| This study |
| DEST17-STOP |
| This study |
| PELB-F |
| This study |
| PELB-R |
| This study |
| DEST-XHOI |
| This study |
| DEST-XBAI |
| This study |
| NPAP-F |
| This study |
| NPAP-R |
| This study |
The 25 bp attB1site is underlined.
The 25 bp attB2 site is underlined, N represents A, G, C, or T.