| Literature DB >> 26337099 |
Fang Sun1,2, Xiaoyun Pang3, Tian Xie4,5, Yujia Zhai6, Ganggang Wang7, Fei Sun8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bacterial surface dispn>lay technique enables the exogenous proteins or polypeptides displayed on the bacterial surface, while maintaining their relatively independent spatial structures and biological activities. The technique makes recombinant bacteria possess the expectant functions, subsequently, directly used for many applications. Many proteins could be used to achieve bacterial surface display, among them, autotransporter, a member of the type V secretion system of gram-negative bacteria, has been extensively studied because of its modular structure and apparent simplicity. However, autotransporter has not been widely used at present due to lack of a convenient genetic vector system. With our recently characterized autotransporter BrkA (Bordetella serum-resistance killing protein A) from Bordetella pertussis, we are aiming to develop a new autotransporter-based surface display system for potential wide application.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26337099 PMCID: PMC4558763 DOI: 10.1186/s12934-015-0316-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Cell Fact ISSN: 1475-2859 Impact factor: 5.328
Fig. 1The construction of the vector BrkAutoDisplay. a BrkA domain organization and the design of BrkAutoDisplay. SP, the signal peptide. The signal peptide-processing site and the passenger domain cleavage site are indicated with black arrows. All other labels are self-explanatory. b The vector map of BrkAutoDisplay. c The multi-clone region of the vector BrkAutoDisplay
Fig. 2Surface display of GFP by BrkAutoDisplay. a Cells transformed with empty pBAD, pBAD-GFP and pET22b(+)-GFP were observed using fluorescence microscope. b Trypsin accessibility assay of the displayed GFP
Fig. 3Surface display of enzymes. a Trypsin accessibility assay of the displayed enzymes. b Surface display efficiency quantification by flow cytometry. c Enzymatic activity assays of the cells with displayed enzymes (CotA, EstPc and PalA) and the control group with empty pBAD. The enzymatic activities were calculated and calibrated (see “Methods”)
Fig. 4Surface display of ATscFv and comparison with Ag43-based surface display system. a Trypsin accessibility assay of the displayed ATscFv. b Surface display efficiency quantification by flow cytometry. c Antigen binding ability of displayed ATscFv quantified via flow cytometry
Fig. 5A western blot showing the failure of surface display by BrkAutoDisplay for the strains E.coli BL21 (DE3) and Rosetta (DE3)
Primers for the target proteins cloning
| Primer name | Sequence | Target protein to be displayed | Restriction sites |
|---|---|---|---|
| F1 | 5′-CGGGATCCATGGTGAGCAAGGGCGAG-3′ | GFP | BamHI and XhoI |
| R1 | 5′-CCGCTCGAGCCCTTGTACAGCTCGTCCA-3′ | ||
| F2 | 5′-CGGGATCCATGACACTTGAAAAATTTGTGG-′ | CotA | BamHI and XhoI |
| R2 | 5′-CCGCTCGAGCCTTTATGGGGATCAGTTA-3′ | ||
| F3 | 5′-CGGGATCCATGGGCAAAGTTCCAGAAGAAG-3′ | ECH-9 | BamHI and KpnI |
| R3 | 5′-GGGGTACCTAGTTTTGATGACATCAGTTTG-3′ | ||
| F4 | 5′-CGGGATCCCGGCCCTGGCAGATCCTGA-3′ | AtaPT | BamHI and KpnI |
| R4 | 5′-GGGGTACCCACACGTGCGACATTTCCCGCAA-3′ | ||
| F5 | 5′-CGGGATCCATGTCTGGAAAAGTGGTTAG-3′ | ECH | BamHI and KpnI |
| R5 | 5′-GGGGTACCTTTCTTGACGACCGCTTCGAG-3′ | ||
| F6 | 5′-CGGAATTCATAAATACCACCCA AAAGATTATTC-3′ | EstPc | EcoRI and KpnI |
| R6 | 5′-GGGGTACCGTTCTTTAACCCTTCACGAAACGC-3′ | ||
| F7 | 5′-CGGAATTCATGATCAAAC AGACGTTGTTTGTACC-3′ | PalA | EcoRI and KpnI |
| R7 | 5′-GGGGTACCTTCGTCCTGA TGAGCGCGCA ACGT-3′ | ||
| F8 | 5′-CGGAATTCATGGATATCGGAATTAATTCGGATCC-3′ | ATscFv | EcoRI and XhoI |
| R8 | 5′-CCGCTCGAGCCCCGTTTTATTTCCAACTTTG-3′ |