| Literature DB >> 24874808 |
Stephanie Trauth1, Ilka B Bischofs1.
Abstract
Fluorescent protein promoter reporters are important tools that are widely used for diverse purposes in microbiology, systems biology and synthetic biology and considerable engineering efforts are still geared at improving the sensitivity of the reporter systems. Here we focus on dark noise, i.e. the signal that is generated by the empty vector control. We quantitatively characterize the dark noise of a few common bacterial reporter systems by single cell microscopy. All benchmarked reporter systems generated significant amounts of dark noise that exceed the cellular autofluorescence to different extents. We then reengineered a multicolor set of fluorescent ectopic integration vectors for Bacillus subtilis by introducing a terminator immediately upstream of the promoter insertion site, resulting in an up to 2.7-fold reduction of noise levels. The sensitivity and dynamic range of the new high-performance pXFP_Star reporter system is only limited by cellular autofluorescence. Moreover, based on studies of the rapE promoter of B. subtilis we show that the new pXFP_Star reporter system reliably reports on the weak activity of the rapE promoter whereas the original reporter system fails because of transcriptional interference. Since the pXFP_Star reporter system properly isolates the promoter from spurious transcripts, it is a particularly suitable tool for quantitative characterization of weak promoters in B. subtilis.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24874808 PMCID: PMC4038550 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0098360
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
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* two independent clones are used for this study.
Figure 1Dark noise generated by pGFPamy.
B. subtilis 168 transformed with the empty vector pGFPamy causes elevated fluorescence compared to the cellular autofluorescence (AF) of the parental strain: A) Fluorescence microscopy snapshots and B) fluorescence intensity distributions at OD600nm of 5.
Figure 2Dark noise benchmarking characteristics.
The benchmarking parameters D and S are defined as the ratio of the mean intensities (μ) and the standard deviations (σ) of the respective intensity distributions originating from the empty vector control (EV) and the autofluorescence (AF) of the parental strain. D is correlated to the accessible dynamic range and S is correlated to the sensitivity of the reporter system.
defined as the ratio of mean fluorescence (μ) and defined as the ratio of the standard deviation (σ) of the fluorescence distribution of empty vector (EV) control and autofluorescence (AF) that were obtained for common B. subtilis and E. coli promoter reporter fusion vectors.
| D | S | ||
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| 2.13±0.20 | 2.15±0.39 |
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| 1.87±0.12 | 2.69±0.18 |
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| 1.16±0.08 | 1.21±0.09 |
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| 1.47±0.07 | 1.46±0.13 |
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| 1.22 | 1.25 |
* OD600nm = 5;
OD600nm = 4.
Time-dependence in D and S characteristics for pGFPamy and pGFP_Star.
| pGFPamy | pGFP_Star | |||
| D | S | D | S | |
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| 1.25±0.11 | 1.31±0.20 | 1.01±0.05 | 1.05±0.05 |
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| 1.51±0.06 | 1.37±0.04 | 1.02±0.03 | 0.97±0.05 |
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| 2.13±0.20 | 2.15±0.39 | 1.07±0.10 | 0.97±0.14 |
Figure 3Map of the high-performance amyE integration vectors pXFP_Star.
The pXFP_Star vector set features the transcriptional terminator of the B. subtilis gyrA gene and a small cloning site (SCS) upstream of the LIC site used for ligation-independent cloning of promoter inserts. The grey cross marks the position of the deleted ldh parts. The vector variants differ only with respect to the fluorophore gfpmut3, iyfp or cfp. The other elements, annotated as amyE′ = amyE front, ′amyE = amyE back, denote homologous amyE parts enabling chromosomal integration into the amyE locus. β-lactamase gene (bla) and chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene (cat) are required for selection in E. coli and B. subtilis respectively. The grey arrow denotes the ColE1 region required for plasmid replication with the ColE1 origin of DNA replication (+1) highlighted in magenta.
Figure 4Mean fluorescence and standard deviation of pGFP_Star are reduced to autofluorescence level.
Average mean fluorescence (left) and average standard deviation (right) obtained from the fluorescence distributions of the autofluorescence (AF) of B. subtilis 168 parental strain and cells transformed with pGFPamy or pGFP_Star “empty” vectors at OD600nm of 5. Results include data of four independent experiments involving two separate clones. Error bars indicate the standard error of the mean.
D and S characteristics for pXFP_Star family at OD600nm of 5.
| D | S | |
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| 1.07±0.10 | 0.97±0.14 |
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| 1.05±0.06 | 1.10±0.07 |
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| 0.87±0.06 | 0.98±0.07 |
Figure 5Analysis of rapE promoter fusions with the pGFP_Star and pGFPamy reporter system.
Histograms of the fluorescence intensity distribution for the rapE promoter fusion (PrapE) and the “empty” vector reference strain (EV) obtained with the pGFP_Star (top panel) and the pGFPamy (bottom panel) reporter system, respectively. The left column shows the results measured at OD600nm = 2.5 when the rapE promoter is repressed and the right panel shows results obtained at OD600nm = 6 when the promoter is weakly active. For the pGFPamy reporter system PrapE cells produce less fluorescence than the EV. Hence, spurious upstream transcription and rapE promoter transcription do not contribute additively to the fluorescence signal but interfere with each other in unpredictable manners. The Star-system is capable to reliably report on rapE promoter activity.