| Literature DB >> 21569582 |
Tomohiro Makino1, Georgios Skretas, George Georgiou.
Abstract
Protein expression in Escherichia coli represents the most facile approach for the preparation of non-glycosylated proteins for analytical and preparative purposes. So far, the optimization of recombinant expression has largely remained a matter of trial and error and has relied upon varying parameters, such as expression vector, media composition, growth temperature and chaperone co-expression. Recently several new approaches for the genome-scale engineering of E. coli to enhance recombinant protein expression have been developed. These methodologies now enable the generation of optimized E. coli expression strains in a manner analogous to metabolic engineering for the synthesis of low-molecular-weight compounds. In this review, we provide an overview of strain engineering approaches useful for enhancing the expression of hard-to-produce proteins, including heterologous membrane proteins.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21569582 PMCID: PMC3120638 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2859-10-32
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Cell Fact ISSN: 1475-2859 Impact factor: 5.328
Genetic engineering strategies which have been applied to the enhancement of recombinant protein production in bacteria
| Method | Strain | Target protein | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spontaneous chromosomal mutagenesis | C(1(DE3), C43(DE3) | Bovine OGCP; bovine phosphate carrier; bovine ADP/ATP translocase; | [ |
| Chromosomal mutagenesis using chemical mutagens or mutator genes | EXP-Rv1337-1, EXP-Rv1337-2, EXP-Rv1337-3, EXP-Rv1337-4, EXP-Rv1337-5 | [ | |
| GS1, TM1, TM2, TM3, TM4, TM5, TM6 | Variants of human IgG1 | [ | |
| Transposon mutagenesis | GS101 (MC4100A | Human central cannabinoid receptor (CB1) | [ |
| Co-expression of the ASKA library | MC4100A (+ | Human bradykinin receptor 2 (BR2), CB1, human neurokinin
(substance P) receptor 1 (NKR1), | [ |
*MC 100A (+name of gene) denotes an MC 100 strain overexpressing the E. coli gene specified in parentheses.
Representative genome engineering strategies which could be applied to the enhancement of recombinant protein production in bacteria
| Method | Targeted cellular component | Target organism | Engineered phenotype | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Global transcription machinery engineering (gTME) | General sigma factor σ70, stationary phase sigma factor σS, RNA polymerase a subunit | Ethanol, butanol, isobutanol, pentanol, and 3-pentanol tolerance; lycopene, L-tyrosine, and hyaluronic acid production | [ | |
| Transcription factor Spt15p | Ethanol tolerance and production | [ | ||
| General sigma factor | lactic acid and hydrochloric acid tolerance | [ | ||
| Libraries of artificial zinc fingers | Zinc fingers | Tolerance to heat and osmotic stress; ketoconazole resistance | [ | |
| Mouse neuroblastoma cells | Neurogenesis, differentiation of neuroblasts to osteoblasts, proliferation rate | [ | ||
| Tolerance to heat, cold, and osmotic stress | [ | |||
| Trackable multiplex recombineering (TRMR) | > 95% of all individual | Tolerance to salicin, D-fucose, methylglyoxal, valine, and lignocellulosic hydrolysate | [ | |
| Genome shuffling | Chromosome | Tylosin production | [ | |
| A strain of | Tolerance to lactic acid | [ | ||
| Degradation of pentachlorophenol | [ | |||
Figure 1Periplasmic expression with cytometric sorting (PECS) for enhanced recombinant protein expression. E. coli cells expressing the protein of interest in the periplasm are incubated in a high-osmolarity buffer that renders their outer membrane permeable to a fluorescently labeled ligand. Cell fluorescence is proportional to the number of functional, ligand-binding molecules in the periplasm. Clones containing genetic lesions that increase protein expression, display higher fluorescence and can be rapidly isolated using FACS. Adapted from Makino et al. [61].