| Literature DB >> 21827702 |
François P Douillard1, Mary O'Connell-Motherway, Christian Cambillau, Douwe van Sinderen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The development of the Nisin Inducible Controlled Expression (NICE) system in the food-grade bacterium Lactococcus lactis subsp. cremoris represents a cornerstone in the use of Gram-positive bacterial expression systems for biotechnological purposes. However, proteins that are subjected to such over-expression in L. lactis may suffer from improper folding, inclusion body formation and/or protein degradation, thereby significantly reducing the yield of soluble target protein. Although such drawbacks are not specific to L. lactis, no molecular tools have been developed to prevent or circumvent these recurrent problems of protein expression in L. lactis.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21827702 PMCID: PMC3162883 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2859-10-66
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Cell Fact ISSN: 1475-2859 Impact factor: 5.328
Bacterial strains and plasmids used in this study
| Strains or plasmids | Relevant characteristics | Reference or source |
|---|---|---|
| NZ9000 | MG1363 containing | [ |
| NZ9700 | expression host of the NICE system | [ |
| pNZ8048 | Standard | [ |
| pTX8048 | pNZ8048 derivative harbouring the TrxA system, contains a His-tag cloned in frame | This study |
| pTX8049 | pNZ8048 derivative harbouring the TrxA system | This study |
| pNZ8048-UAL | pNZ8048 encoding Tuc2009 | This study |
| pTX8048-UAL | pTX8048 encoding Tuc2009 | This study |
| pNZ8048-40 | pNZ8048 encoding Tuc2009 | This study |
| pTX8048-40 | pTX8048 encoding Tuc2009 | This study |
| pNZ8048-0140N | pNZ8048 encoding N-terminal His-tagged Bbr_0140 | This study |
| pNZ8048-0140C | pNZ8048 encoding C-terminal His-tagged Bbr_0140 | This study |
| pTX8048-0140 | pTX8048 encoding Bbr_0140 | This study |
Cm, chloramphenicol.
Oligonucleotide primers used in this study
| Primer | Sequence (5'-3') | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| pTX48-F | AGC | Forward primer of |
| pTX48-R | AGC | Reverse primer of |
| pTX49-R | AGC | Reverse primer of |
| UAL-F | AGCAG | Forward primer of |
| UAL-R | AGCAGC | Reverse primer of |
| UALX-F | AGCAGC | Forward primer of |
| UALX-R | AGCAGC | Reverse primer of |
| orf40-F | AGCAGC | Forward primer of |
| orf40-R | AGCAGC | Reverse primer of |
| orf40X-F | AGCAGC | Forward primer of |
| orf40X-R | AGCAGC | Reverse primer of |
| 0140N-F | TGCATC | Forward primer of |
| 0140N-R | TGCGCA | Reverse primer of |
| 0140C-F | AATTAA | Forward primer of |
| 0140C-R | TGCCGT | Reverse primer of |
| 0140X- | GACAAG | Forward primer of |
| 0140X-R | AGCTC | Reverse primer of |
In italic font, are indicated the sequencer encoding enterokinase cleavage site. In bold font, are indicated the polyhistidine tag-encoding sequence. The restriction sites are underlined.
Figure 1Maps and sequence overview of pTX8048 and pTX8049. (A) Vector maps of pTX8048 and pTX8049, which were constructed by insertion of the E. coli thioredoxin gene trxA, an enterokinase-specific cleavage site and a hexahistidine-tag as illustrated; (B) DNA sequence overview of the multiple cloning sites of pTX8048 and pTX8049. PnisA, nisin-inducible promoter; RBS, ribosome binding site; trxA, E. coli thioredoxin A-encoding gene; MCS, multiple cloning site; term, transcriptional terminator; Cm, chloramphenicol cassette. All restriction sites shown here are unique and can be used as cloning sites. The restriction site BamHI in pTX8048 and pTX8049 allows the in-frame cloning of the gene of interest.
Figure 2Production of a small phage protein encoded by Tuc2009 ORF40. (A) Protein gel analysis of soluble fractions of NZ9000 + pTX8048-40 without nisin induction (lane 1), and after induction with 0.2% (v/v) nisin (lane 2), soluble fraction of NZ9000 + pNZ8048-40 after 0.2% nisin induction (lane 3). (B) Protein gel of purified Tuc2009 ORF40 from NZ9000 + pTX8048-40. Lanes: L, prestained marker; 1-3, elution fractions. (C) Immunoblotting analysis showing Tuc2009 ORF40 using mouse anti-polyhistidine antibody as primary antibody. The Tuc2009 ORF40 protein product is indicated by an arrow.
Figure 3Co-production of the Tuc2009 baseplate components BppU, BppA and BppL. (A) Protein gel analysis of soluble fractions of NZ9000 + pTX8048-UAL without nisin induction (lane1), NZ9000 + pNZ8048-UAL following induction with 0.2% (v/v) nisin (lane 2) and NZ9000 + pTX8048-UAL following induction with 0.2% (v/v) nisin (lane 3). (B) Protein gel of Ni-affinity purified baseplate complex from NZ9000 + pTX8048-UAL soluble fraction. Lanes: L, prestained marker; 1, flow-through; 2-3, elution fractions.
Figure 4Immunoblotting analysis of Tuc2009 baseplate components BppU, BppA and BppL. Lanes: L, prestained marker. Immunoblotting analysis showing BppU, BppA and BppL using, respectively, anti-BppU, anti-BppA and anti-BppL rabbit polyclonal antibody as primary antibody. BppU, BppA and BppL are indicated by arrows.
Figure 5Production of . (A) SDS-PAGE analysis of soluble fractions of NZ9000 + pTX8048-0140 without nisin induction (lane1), and following induction with 0.2% (v/v) nisin (lane 2), soluble fraction of NZ9000 + pNZ8048-0140C following 0.2% nisin induction (lane 3) and soluble fraction of NZ9000 + pNZ8048-0140N following 0.2% nisin induction (lane 4). (B) SDS-PAGE analysis of purified Bb_0140 from cell extracts of NZ9000 + pTX8048-0140 following 0.2% nisin induction. Lanes: L, prestained marker; 1-3, elution fractions. (C) Immunoblotting analysis showing Bbr_0140 using mouse anti-polyhistidine antibody as primary antibody. Bbr_0140 is indicated by an arrow.
Figure 6Cleavage of the thioredoxin-Bbr_0140 fusion protein by enterokinase. (A) Protein gel analysis of purified TrxA-Bbr_0140 incubated for 16 h at 20°C without enterokinase (lane 1), incubated for 16 h at 37°C with enterokinase (lane 2), incubated for 16 h at 37°C with enterokinase and 1% (v/v) SDS (lane 3), incubated for 16 h at 20°C with enterokinase and 1% (v/v) SDS (lane 4). (B) Protein gel analysis of purified Bbr_0140 after cleavage (lane1) and after cleavage and subsequent purification (lane 2).