| Literature DB >> 24743983 |
Mudassar Ahmad1, Melanie Hirz, Harald Pichler, Helmut Schwab.
Abstract
Pichia pastoris is an established protein expression host mainly applied for the production of biopharmaceuticals and industrial enzymes. This methylotrophic yeast is a distinguished production system for its growth to very high cell densities, for the available strong and tightly regulated promoters, and for the options to produce gram amounts of recombinant protein per litre of culture both intracellularly and in secretory fashion. However, not every protein of interest is produced in or secreted by P. pastoris to such high titres. Frequently, protein yields are clearly lower, particularly if complex proteins are expressed that are hetero-oligomers, membrane-attached or prone to proteolytic degradation. The last few years have been particularly fruitful because of numerous activities in improving the expression of such complex proteins with a focus on either protein engineering or on engineering the protein expression host P. pastoris. This review refers to established tools in protein expression in P. pastoris and highlights novel developments in the areas of expression vector design, host strain engineering and screening for high-level expression strains. Breakthroughs in membrane protein expression are discussed alongside numerous commercial applications of P. pastoris derived proteins.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24743983 PMCID: PMC4047484 DOI: 10.1007/s00253-014-5732-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Appl Microbiol Biotechnol ISSN: 0175-7598 Impact factor: 4.813
Fig. 1General considerations for heterologous gene expression in P. pastoris. Expression plasmids harbouring the gene(s) of interest (GOI) are linearized prior to transformation. Selectable markers (e.g., AmpR) and origin of replication (Ori) are required for plasmid propagation in E. coli. The expression level of the protein of interest may depend on (i) the chromosomal integration locus, which is targeted by the 5′ and 3′ homologous regions (5′HR and 3′HR), and (ii) on the gene copy number. A representative promoter (P) and transcription terminator (TT) pair are shown. Proper signal sequences will guide recombinant protein for intracellular or secretory expression, and will govern membrane integration or membrane anchoring
The most prominently used and very recently established promoters for heterologous expression in P. pastoris
| Inducible | Corresponding gene | Regulation | Reference |
|
| Alcohol oxidase 1 | Inducible with MeOH | (Tschopp et al. |
|
| Dihydroxyacetone synthase | Inducible with MeOH | (Ellis et al. |
|
| Formaldehyde dehydrogenase 1 | Inducible with MeOH or methylamine | (Shen et al. |
|
| Isocitrate lyase | Repressed by glucose, induction in absence of glucose/by addition of ethanol | (Menendez et al. |
|
| Putative Na+/phosphate symporter | Induction upon phosphate starvation | (Ahn et al. |
|
| Thiamine biosynthesis gene | Repressed by thiamin | (Stadlmayr et al. |
|
| Alcohol dehydrogenase | Repressed on glucose and methanol, induced on glycerol and ethanol | (Cregg and Tolstorukov |
|
| Enolase | Repressed on glucose, methanol and ethanol, induced on glycerol | (Cregg and Tolstorukov |
|
| Glycerol kinase | Repressed on methanol, induced on glucose, glycerol and ethanol | (Cregg and Tolstorukov |
| Constitutive | Corresponding gene | Regulation | Reference |
|
| Glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase | Constitutive expression on glucose, to a lesser extent on glycerol and methanol | (Waterham et al. |
|
| Translation elongation factor 1 | Constitutive expression on glycerol and glucose | (Ahn et al. |
|
| 3-Phosphoglycerate kinase | Constitutive expression on glucose, to a lesser extent on glycerol and methanol | (de Almeida et al. |
|
| Potential glycosyl phosphatidyl inositol (GPI)-anchored protein | Constitutive expression on glycerol, glucose and methanol | (Liang et al. |
|
| High affinity glucose transporter | Repressed on glycerol, induced upon glucose limitation | (Prielhofer et al. |
|
| Putative aldehyde dehydrogenase | Repressed on glycerol, induced upon glucose limitation | (Prielhofer et al. |
Commercial vector systems
| Supplier | Promoter | Signal sequences | Selection in yeast | Selection in bacteria | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Life Technologies™ |
|
| Blasticidin, G418, Zeocin™, | Zeocin™, Ampicillin, Blasticidin | c-myc epitope, V5 epitope, C-terminal 6× His-tag available for detection/purification |
| Life Technologies –PichiaPink™ |
| α-MF; set of eight different signal sequences – not ready to usea |
| Ampicillin | Low- and high-copy vectors available, |
| BioGrammatics |
| α-MF | Zeocin™, G418, Nourseothricin | Ampicillin | Intracellular or secreted expression |
| BioGrammatics – GlycoSwitch® |
| – | Zeocin™, G418, Hygromycin, | Zeocin™, Ampicillin, Kanamycin, Nurseothricin | Human GlcNAc transferase I, rat Mannosidase II, human Gal transferase I |
| DNA2.0 |
| Ten different signal sequences – ready to useb | Zeocin™, G418 | Zeocin™, Ampicillin | Intracellular or secreted |
aThe different secretion signals have to be cloned into the vector by a three-way ligation step
bThe α-MF secretion signal is provided once with Kex2p (KR) and Ste13p cleavage sites (EAEA), once lacking EA repeats, and once as truncated version (pre-region only)
Fig. 2Novel ‘Pichia Pool’ plasmid sets for intracellular and secretory expression. a General features of pXYZ vector for intracellular expression. Letters refer to the choice of promoters (X), selection markers (Y), and restriction enzymes (Z) for linearization. Available elements are shown in boxes. The vector backbone harbours an ampicillin resistance marker and origin of replication for maintenance of the plasmid in E. coli. The GOI is EcoRI–NotI cloned directly after the promoter of choice. The Kozak consensus sequence for yeast (i.e., CGAAACG), should be restored between the EcoRI cloning site and the start codon of the GOI in order to achieve optimal translation. In addition, sequence variation within this region will allow fine-tuning translation initiation efficiency. Expression in P. pastoris is driven either by the methanol inducible AOX1 or the constitutive GAP promoter. Positive clones can be selected for by antibiotic resistance (i.e., to Zeocin™ or geneticin sulphate) or by selection for His or Arg prototrophy. Selection marker expression is uniformly driven by the ARG4 promoter–terminator pair. b Plasmid pAaZBgl from ‘Pichia Pool’ is shown as an example of a vector made for secretory expression encoding S. cerevisiae α-MF signal sequence in front of the GOI cloning site. The Kex2 processing site AAAAGA should be restored between the XhoI cloning site and the fusion point of the GOI
Signal sequences used to secrete the protein into the extracellular space
| Secretion signal | Source | Target protein(s) | Length | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| α-MF |
| Most commonly used secretion signal in | 85 aa, with or without EA repeats | (Brake et al. |
| PHO1 |
| Mouse 5-HT5A, porcine pepsinogen, | 15 aa | (Payne et al. |
| SUC2 |
| Human interferon, α-amylase, α-1-antitrypsin | 19 aa | (Moir and Dumais |
| PHA-E | Phytohemagglutinin | GNA, GFP and native protein | 21 aa | (Raemaekers et al. |
| KILM1 | Kl toxin | CM cellulase | 44 aa | (Skipper et al. |
| pGKL | pGKL killer protein | Mouse α-amylase | 20 aa | (Kato et al. |
| CLY and CLY-L8 | C-lysozyme and syn. leucin-rich peptide | Human lysozyme | 18 and 16 aa | (Oka et al. |
| K28 pre-pro-toxin | K28 virus toxin | Green fluorescent protein | 36 aa | (Eiden-Plach et al. |
| Scw, Dse and Exg |
| CALB and EGFP | 19, 20 and 23 aa | (Liang et al. |
|
|
| EGFP and Human α1-antitrypsin | 61 aa | (Khasa et al. |
| HBFI and HBFII | Hydrophobins of | EGFP | 16 and 15 aa | (Kottmeier et al. |
P. pastoris host strains
| Strain | Genotype | Phenotype | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wild-type strains | |||
| CBS7435 (NRRL Y-11430) | WT | WT | Centraalbureau voor Schimmelcultures, the Netherlands |
| CBS704 (DSMZ 70382) | WT | WT | Centraalbureau voor Schimmelcultures, the Netherlands |
| X-33 | WT | WT | Life Technologies™ |
| Auxotrophic strains | |||
| GS115 |
| His− | Life Technologies™ |
| PichiaPink™ 1 |
| Ade− | Life Technologies™ |
| KM71 |
| His−, MutS | Life Technologies™ |
| KM71H |
| MutS | Life Technologies™ |
| BG09 |
| Lys−, Arg−, NourseothricinR, HygromycinR | BioGrammatics |
| GS190 |
| Arg− | (Cregg et al. |
| GS200 |
| His−, Arg− | (Waterham et al. |
| JC220 |
| Ade− | (Cregg et al. |
| JC254 |
| Ura− | (Cregg et al. |
| JC227 |
| Ade− Arg− | (Lin-Cereghino et al. |
| JC300-JC308 | Combinations of | Combinations of Ade−, Arg−, His−, Ura− | (Lin-Cereghino et al. |
| YJN165 |
| Ura− | (Nett and Gerngross |
| CBS7435 |
| His− | (Näätsaari et al. |
| CBS7435 MutS
|
| MutS, His− | (Näätsaari et al. |
| CBS7435 MutS
|
| MutS, Arg− | (Näätsaari et al. |
| CBS7435 |
| Met− | ( |
| CBS7435 |
| Met− Arg− | ( |
| CBS7435 |
| Met− His− | ( |
| CBS7435 |
| Lys− | ( |
| CBS7435 |
| Lys− Arg− | ( |
| CBS7435 |
| Lys− His− | ( |
| CBS7435 |
| Pro− | ( |
| CBS7435 |
| Tyr− | ( |
| Protease-deficient strains | |||
| SMD1163 |
| His− | (Gleeson et al. |
| SMD1165 |
| His− | (Gleeson et al. |
| SMD1168 |
| His− | Life Technologies™ |
| SMD1168H |
| Life Technologies™ | |
| SMD1168 kex1::SUC2 |
| His− | (Boehm et al. |
| PichiaPink 2-4 | Combinations of | Ade− | Life Technologies™ |
| BG21 |
| BioGrammatics | |
| CBS7435 |
| ( | |
| CBS7435 |
| ( | |
| CBS7435 |
| His− | ( |
| CBS7435 |
| ( | |
| CBS7435 |
| His− | ( |
| Glyco-engineered strains | |||
| SuperMan5 |
| His−, BlasticidinR | BioGrammatics |
|
| BlasticidinR | BioGrammatics | |
|
| BlasticidinR | BioGrammatics | |
| Other strains | |||
| GS241 |
| Growth defect on methanol as sole C-source or methylamine as sole N-source | (Shen et al. |
| MS105 |
| See GS241; His− | (Shen et al. |
| MC100-3 |
| Mut− | (Cregg et al. |
| CBS7435 |
| WT | (Näätsaari et al. |
| CBS7435 |
| His− | (Näätsaari et al. |
| CBS7435 |
| Growth defect on glycerol; ZeocinR | (Näätsaari et al. |
| CBS7435 |
| Ade−, ZeocinR | (Näätsaari et al. |
aThese P. pastoris CBS7435 derived strains are marker-free knockouts
bStrains from ‘Pichia Pool’ of TU Graz (M. Ahmad, unpublished results)