Literature DB >> 20161730

Engineering clostridium strain to accept unmethylated DNA.

Hongjun Dong1, Yanping Zhang, Zongjie Dai, Yin Li.   

Abstract

It is difficult to genetically manipulate the medically and biotechnologically important genus Clostridium due to the existence of the restriction and modification (RM) systems. We identified and engineered the RM system of a model clostridial species, C. acetobutylicum, with the aim to allow the host to accept the unmethylated DNA efficiently. A gene CAC1502 putatively encoding the type II restriction endonuclease Cac824I was identified from the genome of C. acetobutylicum DSM1731, and disrupted using the ClosTron system based on group II intron insertion. The resulting strain SMB009 lost the type II restriction endonuclease activity, and can be transformed with unmethylated DNA as efficiently as with methylated DNA. The strategy reported here makes it easy to genetically modify the clostridial species using unmethylated DNA, which will help to advance the understanding of the clostridial physiology from the molecular level.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20161730      PMCID: PMC2817722          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0009038

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


Introduction

Restriction and modification (RM) systems are widespread in bacteria and archea. Analyses of the available genome sequences of bacteria suggest that the bacterial RM systems are quite complex [1]. The occurrence of RM systems in prokaryotes has been explained as an ‘immune system’ to attack invading DNA that has not been properly modified (e.g. methylation) [2]. Most RM systems comprise a DNA methyltransferase (MTase) and a restriction endonuclease (REase). The MTase enables recognition of ‘self’ DNA by methylation of specific nucleotides within particular DNA sequences whereas the REase enzymatically cleaves the ‘foreign’ unmodified DNA [3]. Four groups of RM systems (types I, II, III, and IV) have been identified and described based on enzyme composition, cofactor requirements, and mode of action [4]. The RM system is a genetic barrier for gene transfer among bacteria or phage invasion [5]–[7]. Meanwhile, it is also a barrier for genetic manipulation such as conjugation [8] and transformation [9], which hampers the understanding and exploitation of many important bacteria through genetic manipulation. Clostridium is one of the largest bacterial genera, ranking the second in size next to Streptomyces, and classified as Gram-positive endospore-forming obligate anaerobes [10]–[12]. Many species of Clostridium can cause severe diseases, for example, C. botulinum produces the toxin botulinum [13], C. septicum causes spontaneous gas gangrene or atraumatic myonecrosis [14], and C. difficile causes diarrhea and colitis [15]. On the other hand, some species of Clostridium are also of biotechnological importance [16], for instance C. acetobutylicum and C. beijerinckii used for solvent (acetone and butanol) production [17], and Clostridium bifermentans capable of degrading 2, 4, 6-trinitrotoluene (TNT), a toxic nitroaromatic explosive that accumulates in the environment [18]. Genetic manipulation is essential to understand the Clostridium strains so that strategies for either controlling or utilizing them can be developed. To date, genetic tools for targeted inactivation of genes have been reported for Clostridium strains, most notably in C. acetobutylicum, C. beijerinckii, C. perfringens, and most recently, in C. difficile [19]. The RM system seems to be a major barrier blocking the efficient genetic manipulation of Clostridium strains, which can be seen from the difficulties in conducting conjugation and transformation in a number of different clostridial species [20]–[23]. The objective of this study was to improve the genetic accessibility of clostridial species through manipulation of its RM systems. To this end, C. acetobutylicum was selected as a model clostridial species. The genome sequence of C. acetobutylicum ATCC824 has been determined [24], and several genetic manipulation methods specific to C. acetobutylicum have been developed. This includes a replication vector for gene overexpression [22], a gene inactivation system based on homologous recombination using replicable or nonreplicable vectors [25]–[29], and most recently the group II intron based gene inactivation system [30], [31]. Besides, the antisense RNA technology has also been employed in C. acetobutylicum [32], [33]. However, all these genetic manipulations require methylation of the target vector in a strain bearing pAN1 [34] or pAN2 [30] containing a gene Ф3tI encoding the Ф3TI methyltransferase from the phage Ф3TI of Bacillus subtilis [35]. The methylation step is necessary for transforming foreign DNA into C. acetobutylicum because of the presence of a type II restriction endonuclease Cac824I [22], which could recognize the GCNGC site. Although no research on cloning the gene encoding Cac824I has been reported, the REBASE has predicted that CAC1502 is the putative encoding gene based on genome information [1]. Some reports have indicated that the mutants of B. subtilis [36], Thermosynechococcus elongatus [37], and Borrelia burgdorferi [38] deficient in restriction endonuclease activity exhibited improved transformation efficiency. A genetically modified strain of C. acetobutylicum ATCC824 with disrupted cac824I has been reported [29]. However, the effect of cac824I disruption on clostridial RM activity and the consequent effect on the efficiency of genetic manipulation have not been reported. REBASE predicted that all sequenced 54 Clostridium strains belonging to 24 species have genes encoding restriction endonucleases [1]. Here we report that a CAC1502 disrupted mutant of C. acetobutylicum can happily accept unmethylated DNA. This might provide a general strategy to improve the genetic accessibility for clostridial species.

Results

Construction of a CAC1502 Disrupted Mutant C. acetobutylicum SMB009

To construct a CAC1502 disrupted mutant, a group II intron based system (ClosTron) [19] was used. Considering the antibiotic marker introduced by the ClosTron vector pMTL007 (GenBank: EF525477), we modified the vector to remove the RAM (Retrotransposition-Activated selectable Marker) [40] in order to construct a marker-free mutant. A potential intron insertion site 71/72a was predicted using the algorithm developed by Perutka [39]. Subsequently, a CAC1502 target vector pMTL007-CAC1502-71a was constructed based on pMTL007. The lacI-traJ-oriT-fac promoter fragment (2874 bp) was replaced by a thiolase promoter (141 bp) to remove the two MluI sites located at 9604 and 11809 in pMTL007. The resulted vector, designated as pMTL008, were digested by MluI and self-ligated to generate a vector pMTL009 without RAM. This vector was transformed into C. acetobutylicum DSM1731, and the CAC1502 disrupted mutant was screened according the reported procedure [30]. Among 900 colonies screened via PCR using the primers of 14-007-R1 and 87-CAC1502-2, one positive colony was obtained and designated as SMB009. The genomic structure of the mutant strain SMB009 was confirmed by Southern blot hybridization (Figure 1). The insertion of the intron into the target site was also confirmed by DNA sequencing (data not shown).
Figure 1

Construction of CAC1502 disrupted mutant C. acetobutylicum SMB009.

A. Schematic show of the position of CAC1502 and the expected disrupted CAC1502 in the chromosome. 86-CAC1502-1 and 87-CAC1502-2 are the primers for generation of CAC1502 probe. B. Identification of the mutant SMB009 by PCR using primers 86-CAC1502-1 and 87-CAC1502-2 flanking the insertion site. C. Southern blot confirmation of intron insertion into CAC1502 using the intron probe and the CAC1502 specific probe.

Construction of CAC1502 disrupted mutant C. acetobutylicum SMB009.

A. Schematic show of the position of CAC1502 and the expected disrupted CAC1502 in the chromosome. 86-CAC1502-1 and 87-CAC1502-2 are the primers for generation of CAC1502 probe. B. Identification of the mutant SMB009 by PCR using primers 86-CAC1502-1 and 87-CAC1502-2 flanking the insertion site. C. Southern blot confirmation of intron insertion into CAC1502 using the intron probe and the CAC1502 specific probe.

No Activity of Cac824I Was Detected in Mutant SMB009

Although the gene CAC1502 in the genome of C. acetobutylicum has been predicted as the gene encoding Cac824I [22] by the REBASE [1], no experimental evidence has been reported to confirm the prediction. The activities of the type II restriction nuclease of the wild type strain DSM1731 and mutant SMB009 were investigated. The whole cell extract was used as the crude enzyme of Cac824I to analyze the nuclease activity using methylated or unmethylated pMTL007 as DNA substrate. The results showed that unmethylated pMTL007 was completely digested by the whole cell extract of the wild type strain DSM1731. In contrast, no significant digestion was observed when using the whole cell extract of the mutant SMB009 (Figure 2A), indicating difference in nuclease activities between the wild type and the mutant strains. Since it has been reported that there are non-specific nucleases located on the cell wall of C. acetobutylicum [22], we isolated the protoplast fractions of the wild type and the mutant strains, and compared the nuclease activities of the protoplast extracts of both strains. Figure 2B shows that the protoplast extract of the wild type strain DSM1731 exhibits the same digestion pattern with the control Fnu4HI, a restriction enzyme that recognizes the GCNGC site as Cac824I does. On the contrary, the protoplast extract of the mutant SMB009 cannot digest the tested DNA, indicating the absence of Cac824I activity.
Figure 2

Detection of Cac824I activity in C. acetobutylicum mutant SMB009 using methylated or unmethylated pMTL007 as DNA substrate.

A. Digestion of pMTL007 using the whole cell extracts of the wild type strain DSM1731 and the mutant SMB009 respectively. B. Digestion of pMTL007 using the protoplast extracts of the wild type strain DSM1731 and the mutant SMB009.

Detection of Cac824I activity in C. acetobutylicum mutant SMB009 using methylated or unmethylated pMTL007 as DNA substrate.

A. Digestion of pMTL007 using the whole cell extracts of the wild type strain DSM1731 and the mutant SMB009 respectively. B. Digestion of pMTL007 using the protoplast extracts of the wild type strain DSM1731 and the mutant SMB009.

The Mutant SMB009 Could Efficiently Accept Unmethylated DNA

The methylated and unmethylated shuttle vector pIMP1 [22] were transformed into the wild type strain DSM1731 and the mutant SMB009 to evaluate the effect of disrupting CAC1502 on the transformation performance of the host. The results showed that both C. acetobutylicum DSM1731 and SMB009 presented a similar efficiency to accept the methylated pIMP1, but only SMB009 could accept unmethylated pIMP1 as efficiently as accept the methylated DNA (Figure 3). For the mutant SMB009, the transformation efficiency of unmethylated pIMP1 is slightly higher than that of the methylated DNA (Figure 3). This might be due to that the methylated pIMP1 is a mixture of pIMP1 and pAN1, making it difficult to quantify the absolute amount of methylated pIMP1 in that mixture. Because the total DNA amount is considered as the pIMP1 amount in this work, the actual amount of methylated pIMP1 is less than the unmethylated DNA from E. coli ER2275.
Figure 3

Electrotransformation performance of C. acetobuytlicum DSM1731 and SMB009 with methylated pIMP1 (pIMP1(m)) or unmethylated pIMP1.

A. Strain DSM1731 transformed with pIMP1. B. Strain DSM1731 transformed with pIMP1(m). C. Strain SMB009 transformed with pIMP1. D. Strain SMB009 transformed with pIMP1(m). The italic numbers indicate corresponding transformation efficiency (105 transformants/µg DNA) with standard deviations (n = 3) shown in parentheses. pIMP(m), methylated pIMP1 which was a mixture with pAN1.

Electrotransformation performance of C. acetobuytlicum DSM1731 and SMB009 with methylated pIMP1 (pIMP1(m)) or unmethylated pIMP1.

A. Strain DSM1731 transformed with pIMP1. B. Strain DSM1731 transformed with pIMP1(m). C. Strain SMB009 transformed with pIMP1. D. Strain SMB009 transformed with pIMP1(m). The italic numbers indicate corresponding transformation efficiency (105 transformants/µg DNA) with standard deviations (n = 3) shown in parentheses. pIMP(m), methylated pIMP1 which was a mixture with pAN1.

Genetic Manipulation of C. acetobutylicum SMB009 Using Unmethylated DNA

To prove that C. acetobutylicum SMB009 can be genetically manipulated with unmethylated DNA, a recombinant plasmid pITF containing fdh gene from Candida boidinii (encoding formate dehydrogenase, GenBank: DQ458777) was isolated from E. coli JM109 without methylation, and transformed into C. acetobutylicum SMB009, resulting in SMB009(pITF). The expression of fdh gene in strain SMB009(pITF) was confirmed by SDS-PAGE (Figure 4A), suggesting a functional gene located on a unmethylated vector can be introduced into strain SMB009. Moreover, a ClosTron-based pMTL007-adc containing the modified intron targeting the adc gene (encoding acetoacetate decarboxylase) was constructed and isolated from E. coli JM109 without methylation. pMTL007-adc was electrotransformed into strain SMB009. The adc disrupted mutant SMB009(adc::CTermB) was identified by PCR with the primers of 12-adc1 and 13-adc2 flanking the insertion site (Figure 4B) and the insertion site was confirmed by sequencing the PCR product generated with primers of 12-adc1 and 13-adc2, and genomic DNA of SMB009(adc::CTermB) as template (Figure 4B). This suggests that genes in strain SMB009 can be inactivated using unmethylated vectors.
Figure 4

Genetic manipulation of C. acetobutylicum SMB009 using unmethylated DNA.

A. Overexpression of fdh gene in C. acetobutylicum SMB009. The cells were grown to OD600 = 2∼3 in mRCM broth containing 50 µg/ml of erythromycin at 37°C. The boiled cell lysates were analyzed by SDS-PAGE (12% polyacrylamide gel). The overexpressed protein FDH (theoretical molecular weight 40 kDa predicted by DNAMAN Version 5) is indicated by the arrow on the right. B. Disruption of adc gene in C. acetobutylicum SMB009. Insertion of CTermB fragment into adc ORF was confirmed by PCR using the primers of 12-adc1 and 13-adc2 (corresponding to adc ORF positions 41-58 and 523-540 respectively). The insertion site of CTermB in adc ORF was validated by sequencing the PCR product of strain SMB009(adc::CTermB) amplified using the primers of 12-adc1 and 13-adc2.

Genetic manipulation of C. acetobutylicum SMB009 using unmethylated DNA.

A. Overexpression of fdh gene in C. acetobutylicum SMB009. The cells were grown to OD600 = 2∼3 in mRCM broth containing 50 µg/ml of erythromycin at 37°C. The boiled cell lysates were analyzed by SDS-PAGE (12% polyacrylamide gel). The overexpressed protein FDH (theoretical molecular weight 40 kDa predicted by DNAMAN Version 5) is indicated by the arrow on the right. B. Disruption of adc gene in C. acetobutylicum SMB009. Insertion of CTermB fragment into adc ORF was confirmed by PCR using the primers of 12-adc1 and 13-adc2 (corresponding to adc ORF positions 41-58 and 523-540 respectively). The insertion site of CTermB in adc ORF was validated by sequencing the PCR product of strain SMB009(adc::CTermB) amplified using the primers of 12-adc1 and 13-adc2.

Discussion

The very low efficiency of genetically modifying Clostridium strains has greatly hampered the progress for studying the physiology of this medically and biotechnologically important genus [19]. In this study, a mutant of C. acetobutylicum that can efficiently take up unmethylated DNA was obtained by only knocking out one gene CAC1502. Disruption of CAC1502 leads to the loss of the activity of a type II restriction nuclease, providing experimental evidence that CAC1502 encodes Cac824I as predicted by REBASE [1]. The feasibility of genetic manipulation in C. acetobutylicum SMB009 using unmethylated DNA was proved by overexpression of fdh gene from C. boidinii, and disruption of the native adc gene in SMB009 using unmethylated vectors. Strain SMB009 now has a foreign intron fragment (0.9 kb) on the chromosome. This does not affect making further mutants, as we have successfully inactivated the adc gene in strain SMB009 using pMTL007. However, the introduction of multiple ClosTron might result in repeated sequences in the genome, which might trigger homologous recombination event, although in a very low probability. Cac824I is the third restriction nuclease found in clostridial species apart from CacI [41] and CacII [22]. REBASE [1] also predicts two other sets of RM systems in C. acetobutylicum ATCC824, one is CAC824ORF3534P RM system (Type II), and the other one is Cac824MrrP RM system (Type IV). In this work, no significant difference on the efficiency of transforming the methylated or unmethylated DNA into mutant SMB009 was observed, suggesting the Type II and Type IV RM systems might not be functional in C. acetobutylicum. In addition, no obvious degradation of DNA was observed when the DNA extracted from E. coli JM109 was digested by the whole cell extract of SMB009 (Figure 2), indicating that other predicted putative RM systems (except for Cac824I) did not show activities under experimental conditions. To overcome the barrier effects of the RM systems on gene transfer, several strategies have been reported in the literatures. This includes: Pre-modification of the vector before gene transfer [34], [42], [43]. The key to the success of this strategy is to select a proper methyltransferase, which is usually difficult due to the diversity and complexity of the RM systems in different hosts; Using plasmids containing no or less restriction sites recognized by the RM systems of the host [8], [44]. The problem for this strategy is that reducing the restriction sites cannot be universally applied to different hosts; Temporary inactivation of the RM systems under some abnormal conditions [45], [46]. Although sometimes effective, the loss of restriction function is always associated with loss of modification function, which means the phenotype will be reversed when the cells recovered from abnormal conditions; Inactivation of the RM system [38], which is a clean and preferable method, but often limited by the availability of the genetic tools. Thanks to the effective gene inactivation system ClosTron recently developed for Clostridium strains [19], we were able to disrupt the CAC1502 efficiently. This makes it easy to genetically modify the clostridial species using unmethylated DNA. REBASE has predicted 118 restriction enzymes encoding RM systems (including putative and function confirmed genes) in 54 Clostridium strains belonging to 24 clostridial species. The encoding genes for these restriction enzymes can be used as engineering targets with the aim to make Clostridium strains no longer to be a “genetically-tough” species to work with. This will help to advance the understanding of the clostridial physiology from the molecular level, and to expand the application of Clostridium strains for medical and biotechnological purposes.

Materials and Methods

Bacterial Strains, Plasmids, and Primers

Bacterial strains and plasmids used in this work are listed in Table 1, and the primers are listed in Table 2. E. coli JM109 was routinely used for vectors construction, E. coli TOP10 bearing pAN2 for methylation of pMTL007 deprived plasmids, and E. coli ER2275 bearing pAN1 for methylation of pIMP1. All primers were synthesized by Invitrogen (Beijing, China) followed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis purification.
Table 1

Bacterial strains and plasmids.

Strains or plasmidsRelevant characteristicsReference or source
Strains
E. coli TOP10 mcrA Δ(mrr-hsdRMS-mcrBC) recA1 Invitrogen
E. coli JM109 recA1 mcrB+ hsdR17 Lab storage
E. coli ER2275 recA mcrBC hsdR NEB
C. acetobutylicum DSM1731Contains CAC1502, wild typeDSMZ
C. acetobutylicum SMB009CAC1502::intronThis work
Plasmids
pMTL007CmR, ClosTron [30]
pAN2Ф3tI, p15a ori, TetR [30]
pMTL007-CAC1502-71aDerived from pMTL007, targeting the CAC1502 in C. acetobutylicum This work
pMTL008Deprived from pMTL007-CAC1502-71a, replacement of the lacI-traJ-oriT-fac promoter fragment by PthlThis work
pMTL009Deprived from pMTL008, loss of ErmBtdRAM1This work
pIMP1MLSR ApR shuttle vector of E. coli-C. acetobutylicum [22]
pAN1Ф3tI, p15a ori, CmR [22]
pITF fdh expression vectorThis work
pMTL007-adc adc disrutption vectorThis work

Abbreviations: ApR, ampicillin resistance; CmR, chloramphenicol resistance; MLSR, macrolide, lincosamide, and streptogramin B resistance; TetR, tetracycline resistance; Ф3tI, Ф3TI methyltransferase gene of Bacillus subtilis phage Ф3TI. Pthl, thiolase gene promoter (Pthl) from C. acetobutylicum; DSMZ, German Collection of Microorganisms and Cell Cultures, Braunschweig, Germany; NEB, New England Biolabs Beverly, MA.

Table 2

Primers used in this study.

PrimersSequence (5′—3′)Source
10-EBS Universal CGAAATTAGAAACTTGCGTTCAGTAAAC [30]
11-5402F-F1 TTAAGGAGGTGTATTTCATATGACCATGATTACG [30]
14-007-R1 AGGGTATCCCCAGTTAGTGTTAAGTCTTGG [30]
86-CAC1502-1 AATGCAGTATCAGTACCAATTATAAG This work
87-CAC1502-2 AACTTATTAAATTCAGCCACCTTTTG This work
92-CAC150271/72a-IBS AAAAAAGCTTATAATTATCCTTACTTAATGATCCAGTGCGCCCAGATAGGGTG This work
93-CAC1502-71/72a-EBS1d CAGATTGTACAAATGTGGTGATAACAGATAAGTCGATCCAAATAACTTACCTTTCTTTGT This work
94-CAC1502-71/72a-EBS2 TGAACGCAAGTTTCTAATTTCGGTTTTAAGTCGATAGAGGAAAGTGTCT This work
95-IBS(CAC1502) TACTTAATGATCCAG This work
151-Pthl-1(007) AGTCGGCGCCTATATTGATAAAAATAATAATAGTGGG This work
152-Pthl-2(007) ATGCAAGCTTTCTAACTAACCTCCTAAATTTTG This work
153-Intron-Probe1 GTTATCACCACATTTGTACAA This work
154-Intron-Probe2 ACGCGTCGCCACGTAATAAATATC This work
163-CAC1502-probe1 TGGATCATTAAGCGGTCTATTTAAAG This work
164-CAC1502-probe1 CTAAAGTTGTTCCGGAATCTTAATC This work
Pthl1 AGTGTCGACTATATTGATAAAAATAATAATAGTGGG This work
Pthl2 CGTGGATCCTTCTTTCATTCTAACTAACCTCC This work
fdh1 CGTGGATCCATGAAGATCGTTTTAGTC This work
fdh2 GCGGAATTCTTATTTCTTATCGTGTTTAC This work
1-adc180/181s-IBS AAAAAAGCTTATAATTATCCTTATTAGTCAGGTTTGTGCGCCCAGATAGGGTG This work
2-adc180/181s-EBS1d CAGATTGTACAAATGTGGTGATAACAGATAAGTCAGGTTTGATAACTTACCTTTCTTTGT This work
3-adc180/181s-EBS2 TGAACGCAAGTTTCTAATTTCGGTTACTAATCGATAGAGGAAAGTGTCT This work
12-adc1 TAACTTCGCCTGCATTTC This work
13-adc2 TATTCTAGGGCTTCCATC This work
Abbreviations: ApR, ampicillin resistance; CmR, chloramphenicol resistance; MLSR, macrolide, lincosamide, and streptogramin B resistance; TetR, tetracycline resistance; Ф3tI, Ф3TI methyltransferase gene of Bacillus subtilis phage Ф3TI. Pthl, thiolase gene promoter (Pthl) from C. acetobutylicum; DSMZ, German Collection of Microorganisms and Cell Cultures, Braunschweig, Germany; NEB, New England Biolabs Beverly, MA.

Growth and Maintenance Conditions

Escherichia coli strains were grown aerobically at 37°C in Luria-Bertani medium supplemented, when necessary, with ampicillin (100 µg/ml), chloramphenicol (30 µg/ml), or tetracycline (40 µg/ml). All C. acetobutylicum strains were grown anaerobically at 37°C in different media supplemented, when necessary, with chloramphenicol (30 µg/ml) or erythromycin (25 µg/ml). C. acetobutylicum strains were grown in RCM medium [47] for routine growth, and mRCM medium (RCM containing 20 g/L glucose as the sole carbohydrate) for making competent cells. All C. acetobutylicum and E. coli strains were maintained frozen in 15% glycerol at −80°C.

DNA Isolation and Manipulation

Total genomic DNA of C. acetobutylicum and the plasmid DNA of E. coli were prepared using an E.Z.N.A Bacterial DNA Isolation Kit and E.Z.N.A Plasmid Extraction Kit (Omega Biotek Inc., Guangzhou, China), respectively. DNA restriction and cloning were performed according to standard procedures [48]. Restriction enzymes and T4 DNA ligase were obtained from New England BioLabs (Beijing, China), and used according to the manufacturer's instructions.

Construction of pMTL009

E. coli JM109 was used for construction of pMTL009. Firstly, target site for disruption of CAC1502 was selected and the intron re-targeting PCR primers (i.e., 92-CAC1502-71/72a-IBS, 93-CAC1502-71/72a-EBS1d, and 94-CAC1502-71/72a-EBS2) were designed according to a computer algorithm [39]. One-tube SOEing PCRs were used to amplify and assemble the 353 bp PCR product which contains the modified IBS, EBS1d and EBS2 sequences that are responsible for intron targeting. PCR was performed according to the Targetron Gene Knockout System kit Protocol (http://www.sigmaaldrich.com). The targeting region was cloned into pMTL007 [30] to replace the original intron fragment for generation of pMTL007-CAC1502-71a, using 95-IBS (CAC1502) and 14-007-R1 to screen for positive clones containing pMTL007-CAC1502-71a. The structure of the plasmid was confirmed by DNA sequencing using primer 11-5402F-F1. Secondly, the CAC1502 target plasmid pMTL007-CAC1502-71a was digested by HindIII and NarI, to remove the 2507 bp fragment containing the fac promoter [30] and the two MluI sites. The thiolase gene promoter (141 bp, Pthl) was amplified from the genomic DNA of C. acetobutylicum using primers 151-Pthl-1(007) and 152-Pthl-2(007). The resulted PCR product containing the HindIII and NarI sites was digested and ligated to the HindIII and NarI digested pMTL007-CAC1502-71a to generate pMTL008. Finally, pMTL008 was digested by MluI to remove the ErmBtdRAM1 [30] fragment, and self-ligated to generate pMTL009 (Figure 5).
Figure 5

Schematic representation of the construction of the pMTL009 for CAC1502 disruption.

Electrotransformation and Screening for Mutants

Prior to transformation into C. acetobutylicum, plasmids were methylated in the corresponding E. coli host (see Table 1 and Table 2) when necessary. Electrotransformation of C. acetobutylicum was carried out according to the protocol developed by Mermelstein [22]. C. acetobutylicum SMB009 was screened according to the protocol reported by Heap [30]. Because SMB009 has no antibiotic marker, the DSM1731 bearing the ClosTron vector pSMB009 was firstly plated on the RCM plate without antibiotic to form colonies. The colonies were then streaked on new RCM plates without antibiotics (30 colonies/plate). The clones grown on one plate were pooled into one 1.5 ml EP tube, and the genomic DNA was isolated and used as template for PCR using primers 10-EBS Universal (located on intron) and 87-Cac824I-2 (located on chromosome). If the PCR result is positive, each clone on that plate will be tested by PCR until the positive clone was obtained.

Construction of fdh Overexpression Strain SMB009(pITF) and adc-Disrupted Strain SMB009(adc::CTermB)

To construct the fdh gene (encoding formate dehydrogenase, GenBank: DQ458777) expression vector pITF, pIMP1 was used as parent vector. fdh was amplified from the genomic DNA of Candida boidinii using the fdh1 primer and fdh2 primer containing BamHI and EcoRI restriction sites respectively. The promoter region of thiolase gene (Pthl) was amplified from the genomic DNA of C. acetobutylicum DSM1731 using Pthl1 primer and Pthl2 primer containing SalI and BamHI restriction sites respectively. The mixture of pIMP1, PCR products of fdh and Pthl were digested by EcoRI, BamHI and SalI in NEB Buffer 3. The digested products were purified by an E.Z.N.A Cycle-Pure Kit (Omega Biotek Inc., Guangzhou, China), and then ligated together by T4 DNA ligase to generated pITF. The pITF construct was confirmed by sequencing. For disruption of adc gene (encoding acetoacetate decarboxylase, NCBI-GeneID: 1116170) in SMB009, the vector pMTL007-adc was constructed. In the ORF of adc gene, the site of 180/181 (A from the initial code ATG was marked as 1) was selected as the insertion site of intron (i.e. CTermB from pMTL007) according to a computer algorithm [39]. The corresponding primers, i.e. 1-adc180/181s-IBS, 2-adc180/181s-EBS1d, 3-adc180/181s-EBS2 were designed to construct pMTL007-adc as construction of pMTL007-CAC1502-71a. After electrotransformation of pMTL007-adc into strain SMB009, the transformants (chloramphenicol resistant colonies) were restreaked on the RCM plate containing 50 µg/ml of erythromycin to screen for integrants. The genomic DNA of erythromycin resistant colonies was extracted for PCR confirmation, using the primers of 12-adc1 and 13-adc2 (corresponding to adc ORF positions 41-58 and 523-540 respectively), to screening for adc-disrupted mutants (designated as SMB009(adc::CTermB)). The vector pMTL007-adc in SMB009(adc::CTermB) was cured by subculturing in RCM without antibiotics.

Southern Blot Analysis

The genomic DNA of the wild type strain C. acetobutylicum DSM1731 and CAC1502 disrupted mutant SMB009 were prepared using the E.Z.N.A Bacterial DNA Isolation Kit (Omega Biotek Inc., Guangzhou, China). For Southern hybridization, DNAs were digested with restriction enzymes, run in 1.0% agarose gel, blotted to a positively charged nylon transfer membrane (Amersham HybondTM-N+, GE Healthcare, Little Chalfont, Buckinghamshire, UK), and hybridized with a DIG-labeled probe corresponding to CTermB positions 294-696 [49]. The intron specific probe for DIG-DNA labeling was generated by PCR using pMTL007 as a template and primers 153-Intron-Probe1 and 154-Intron-Probe2. The CAC1502 specific probe for DIG-DNA labeling was obtained by PCR using the genomic DNA of the wild type strain DSM1731 as a template and primers 163-CAC1502-probe1 &164-CAC1502-probe1. The process of Southern analysis was carried out using the DIG High Prime DNA Labeling and Detection Starter Kit I (Roche Diagnosis GmbH, Roche Applied Science, 68298 Mannhein Germany) according to the instruction manual.

Preparation of Crude Proteins for the Detection of Cac824I

The proteins of whole cell were extracted from the cells (OD600 = 0.6, cultured in 100 ml mRCM medium) lysed by sonication for 30 min at a power level of 200 W, in 15 ml distilled water. The protoplast extract (15 ml) were extracted from the cells (OD600 = 0.6, cultured in 100 mRCM containing 0.4% glycine), following a protocol developed by Mermelstein [22]. The crude proteins were used to detect the activity of Cac824I employing pMTL007 [30] (methylated or unmethylated) as DNA substrate. The general reaction system contains 1 µg DNA, 5 µl crude proteins and 1×NEB Buffer 4 (NEB) in volume of 20 µl. The reaction conditions are 37°C for 8 hours.

SDS-PAGE

Transformant of C. acetobutylicum SMB009(pITF) and plasmid control strain SMB009(pIMP1) were inoculated into 10 ml mRCM medium (see Growth and maintenance conditions) plus erythromycin (50 µg/ml) and grown to OD600 2–3 at 37°C. 1.5 ml of the culture was centrifuged to harvest the cells, which was then resuspended in 0.1 ml of SDS-PAGE loading buffer. After boiling for 5 min, samples (20 µl) were applied to a SDS-PAGE (sodium dodecyl sulfatepolyacrylamide gel, 12%) and visualized by Coomassie blue staining. The gel was scanned by ImageScanner 3 (GE Healthcare).
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Authors:  Latonia M Harris; Neil E Welker; Eleftherios T Papoutsakis
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  2002-07       Impact factor: 3.490

2.  Improved genetic transformation of the thermophilic cyanobacterium, Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1.

Authors:  Masako Iwai; Hiroshi Katoh; Mitsunori Katayama; Masahiko Ikeuchi
Journal:  Plant Cell Physiol       Date:  2004-02       Impact factor: 4.927

3.  Molecular organization of intrinsic restriction and modification genes BsuM of Bacillus subtilis Marburg.

Authors:  Hideyuki Ohshima; Satoshi Matsuoka; Kei Asai; Yoshito Sadaie
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  2002-01       Impact factor: 3.490

4.  DNA methyltransferase genes of Bacillus subtilis phages: comparison of their nucleotide sequences.

Authors:  A Tran-Betcke; B Behrens; M Noyer-Weidner; T A Trautner
Journal:  Gene       Date:  1986       Impact factor: 3.688

5.  DNA restriction is a barrier to natural transformation in Pseudomonas stutzeri JM300.

Authors:  Cecilia Berndt; Petra Meier; Wilfried Wackernagel
Journal:  Microbiology (Reading)       Date:  2003-04       Impact factor: 2.777

6.  A heat shock following electroporation induces highly efficient transformation of Corynebacterium glutamicum with xenogeneic plasmid DNA.

Authors:  M E van der Rest; C Lange; D Molenaar
Journal:  Appl Microbiol Biotechnol       Date:  1999-10       Impact factor: 4.813

7.  Increasing DNA transfer efficiency by temporary inactivation of host restriction.

Authors:  R A Edwards; R A Helm; S R Maloy
Journal:  Biotechniques       Date:  1999-05       Impact factor: 1.993

8.  Products of Anaerobic 2,4,6-Trinitrotoluene (TNT) Transformation by Clostridium bifermentans.

Authors:  T A Lewis; S Goszczynski; R L Crawford; R A Korus; W Admassu
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  1996-12       Impact factor: 4.792

9.  Antisense RNA downregulation of coenzyme A transferase combined with alcohol-aldehyde dehydrogenase overexpression leads to predominantly alcohologenic Clostridium acetobutylicum fermentations.

Authors:  Seshu B Tummala; Stefan G Junne; Eleftherios T Papoutsakis
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  2003-06       Impact factor: 3.490

10.  Use of computer-designed group II introns to disrupt Escherichia coli DExH/D-box protein and DNA helicase genes.

Authors:  Jiri Perutka; Wenjun Wang; David Goerlitz; Alan M Lambowitz
Journal:  J Mol Biol       Date:  2004-02-13       Impact factor: 5.469

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1.  Reexamination of the Physiological Role of PykA in Escherichia coli Revealed that It Negatively Regulates the Intracellular ATP Levels under Anaerobic Conditions.

Authors:  Chunhua Zhao; Zhao Lin; Hongjun Dong; Yanping Zhang; Yin Li
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2017-05-17       Impact factor: 4.792

2.  Developing controllable hypermutable Clostridium cells through manipulating its methyl-directed mismatch repair system.

Authors:  Guodong Luan; Zhen Cai; Fuyu Gong; Hongjun Dong; Zhao Lin; Yanping Zhang; Yin Li
Journal:  Protein Cell       Date:  2013-11-10       Impact factor: 14.870

3.  Extending CRISPR-Cas9 Technology from Genome Editing to Transcriptional Engineering in the Genus Clostridium.

Authors:  Mark R Bruder; Michael E Pyne; Murray Moo-Young; Duane A Chung; C Perry Chou
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2016-09-30       Impact factor: 4.792

4.  Discovery of a novel gene involved in autolysis of Clostridium cells.

Authors:  Liejian Yang; Guanhui Bao; Yan Zhu; Hongjun Dong; Yanping Zhang; Yin Li
Journal:  Protein Cell       Date:  2013-05-23       Impact factor: 14.870

5.  Identification of Cj1051c as a major determinant for the restriction barrier of Campylobacter jejuni strain NCTC11168.

Authors:  Jeffrey P Holt; Andrew J Grant; Christopher Coward; Duncan J Maskell; Jennifer J Quinlan
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2012-08-24       Impact factor: 4.792

6.  Premethylation of foreign DNA improves integrative transformation efficiency in Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803.

Authors:  Bo Wang; Jianping Yu; Weiwen Zhang; Deirdre R Meldrum
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2015-10-09       Impact factor: 4.792

7.  A mimicking-of-DNA-methylation-patterns pipeline for overcoming the restriction barrier of bacteria.

Authors:  Guoqiang Zhang; Wenzhao Wang; Aihua Deng; Zhaopeng Sun; Yun Zhang; Yong Liang; Yongsheng Che; Tingyi Wen
Journal:  PLoS Genet       Date:  2012-09-27       Impact factor: 5.917

8.  Introducing a single secondary alcohol dehydrogenase into butanol-tolerant Clostridium acetobutylicum Rh8 switches ABE fermentation to high level IBE fermentation.

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Journal:  Biotechnol Biofuels       Date:  2012-06-28       Impact factor: 6.040

9.  Overcoming restriction as a barrier to DNA transformation in Caldicellulosiruptor species results in efficient marker replacement.

Authors:  Daehwan Chung; Joel Farkas; Janet Westpheling
Journal:  Biotechnol Biofuels       Date:  2013-05-29       Impact factor: 6.040

10.  The methylomes of six bacteria.

Authors:  Iain A Murray; Tyson A Clark; Richard D Morgan; Matthew Boitano; Brian P Anton; Khai Luong; Alexey Fomenkov; Stephen W Turner; Jonas Korlach; Richard J Roberts
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2012-10-02       Impact factor: 16.971

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