| Literature DB >> 25356086 |
Camilla Lambertz1, Megan Garvey2, Johannes Klinger1, Dirk Heesel1, Holger Klose3, Rainer Fischer4, Ulrich Commandeur1.
Abstract
Second generation biofuel development is increasingly reliant on the recombinant expression of cellulases. Designing or identifying successful expression systems is thus of preeminent importance to industrial progress in the field. Recombinant production of cellulases has been performed using a wide range of expression systems in bacteria, yeasts and plants. In a number of these systems, particularly when using bacteria and plants, significant challenges have been experienced in expressing full-length proteins or proteins at high yield. Further difficulties have been encountered in designing recombinant systems for surface-display of cellulases and for use in consolidated bioprocessing in bacteria and yeast. For establishing cellulase expression in plants, various strategies are utilized to overcome problems, such as the auto-hydrolysis of developing plant cell walls. In this review, we investigate the major challenges, as well as the major advances made to date in the recombinant expression of cellulases across the commonly used bacterial, plant and yeast systems. We review some of the critical aspects to be considered for industrial-scale cellulase production.Entities:
Keywords: Cellulase; Cellulosome; Consolidated bioprocessing; Heterologous expression; Industrial processing
Year: 2014 PMID: 25356086 PMCID: PMC4212100 DOI: 10.1186/s13068-014-0135-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biotechnol Biofuels ISSN: 1754-6834 Impact factor: 6.040
Figure 1Schematic drawing of a bacterial cell showing the localization of recombinantly expressed cellulases and cellulosomes. Recombinant cellulases are expressed and stored in the cytoplasm or targeted to the periplasm through specific protein transporters (such as Tat- and Sec-pathways). Gram-negative bacteria (right) possess a thick outer membrane that restricts extracellular protein transport, thus protein secretion occurs via a specific protein transporter or membrane permeabilization (occurring, for example, due to damage of the cell envelope). Gram-positive bacteria (left) lack the outer membrane leading to a more efficient secretion. Secreted cellulases are either free in solution, either as single cellulases or as cellulosomes, or are displayed on the cell surface via an anchor protein such as Blc or PgsA as single cellulases or as mini-cellulosomes. GH: glycosyl hydrolase; Sec: secretion protein; Tat: twin-arginine-transporter.
Figure 2Illustration of a single yeast cell showing the main cell compartments involved in recombinant protein expression. Arrows indicate the secretory pathway, whereby cellulases are expressed on the ER (1) and transferred via the Golgi apparatus (2) to the medium (3) in secretory vesicles. Cellulases are either free in solution or surface-displayed via an anchor protein (such as α-agglutinin) as single cellulases or as mini-cellulosomes. ER: endoplasmic reticulum; GH: glycosyl hydrolase.
Figure 3Plant cell drawing with the main cell compartments for recombinant protein expression and targeting. Right: Nuclear encoded genes are expressed and targeted to different subcellular compartments using one of two different pathways, indicated by black or grey arrows. On one hand, translation occurs directly into the ER lumen by ribosomes associated with the ER. From here, proteins are transferred into vesicles via the Golgi apparatus (black arrow (1)) to the apoplast (black arrow (2a)) or vacuole (black arrow (2b)) and secreted. Other gene transcripts are translated by free ribosomes (grey arrow (1)) and targeted to the chloroplast (grey arrow (2a)) or mitochondrion (grey arrow (2b)) via specific transit peptides and protein import mechanisms (grey arrows). Left: Enlarged section of the plant cell wall which is primarily composed of cellulose, lignin and hemicellulose. ER: endoplasmic reticulum; TOC/TIC: translocon at the outer envelope of chloroplasts/translocon at the inner envelope of chloroplasts; TOM/TIM: translocase of the outer mitochondrial membrane/translocase of the inner membrane.
Advantages and disadvantages of homologous and heterologous protein expression in different host organisms in regard to technical, ethical and economic aspects
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| Homologous cellulase production systems | |||||
| Fungi |
| 14 000 to 19 000 mg/l crude enzyme solution [ | Native system | Enzyme mix cannot be tailored for different biomass substrates | Special culturing conditions required |
| Protein secretor | Comparably high production costs | ||||
| High protein yield | |||||
| Bacteria |
| Inducible and auto-inducible expression possible | Rich growth medium required as a carbon source, leading to increased costs | Inducible systems more efficient but significantly more expensive | |
| Easy to modify genetically | |||||
| Protein secretor | |||||
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| Native system | Low protein yield | Special culturing conditions required | ||
| Cellulosome producing | High production costs | ||||
| Transient and stable transformation | Unwanted byproducts | ||||
| Heterologous cellulase production systems | |||||
| Bacteria |
| 11.2 to 90 mg/l purified enzyme solution [ | Industrially used, common system | Thick outer membrane restricts protein secretion (poor secretion) | Degradation of linker sequences in multi-domain cellulases |
| Well-characterized genetics | Formation of inclusion bodies | ||||
| Many commercially available strains and vectors | Frequently incorrect transportation across the outer membrane | ||||
| Easily to modify for example for protein engineering | Decreased specific activity of the cellulase can occur | ||||
| Yeast |
| Approximately 1 000 mg/l crude enzyme solution [ | Protein secretor | Hyperglycosylation | Inducible systems are highly efficient but can be expensive |
| Surface display possible | Expression rates lower than native systems | Increased episomal gene copy numbers leads to higher protein yields but a constant selection is necessary | |||
| Industrially used, common system | |||||
| Plants |
| Up to 40% of total soluble protein, depending on the subcellular targeting inside the plant cell [ | Cheap protein production | Transport of genetic information via pollen (if not transplastomic) | Possible glycosylation effects |
| Easy transformation | Long transformation procedure | Subcellular targeting inside the plant cell very important for expression efficiency | |||
| Well-characterized genetics | Possible effects on plant growth behaviour | ||||
| Protein and biomass | |||||
| Production in one system | |||||
| Non-food | |||||
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| Approximately 0.45% of dry weight [ | Cheap protein production | Transport of genetic information via pollen (if not transplastomic) | Possible glycosylation effects | |
| Simultaneous biomass and enzyme production | Long transformation procedure | Subcellular targeting inside the plant cell very important for expression efficiency | |||
| System already used for biofuel production | Food | ||||