| Literature DB >> 26608167 |
Ruopeng Cai1,2, Yanlong Jiang1, Wei Yang1, Wentao Yang1, Shaohua Shi1, Chunwei Shi1, Jingtao Hu1, Wei Gu1,3, Liping Ye1, Fangyu Zhou1, Qinglong Gong1, Wenyu Han2, Guilian Yang1, Chunfeng Wang1.
Abstract
Recently, poly-γ-glutamic acid synthetase A (pgsA) has been applied to display exogenous proteins on the surface of Lactobacillus casei or Lactococcus lactis, which results in a surfacedisplayed component of bacteria. However, the ability of carrying genes encoded by plasmids and the expression efficiency of recombinant bacteria can be somewhat affected by the longer gene length of pgsA (1,143 bp); therefore, a truncated gene, pgsA, was generated based on the characteristics of pgsA by computational analysis. Using murine IL-10 as an exogenous gene, recombinant Lactobacillus plantarum was constructed and the capacity of the surface-displayed protein and functional differences between exogenous proteins expressed by these strains were evaluated. Surface expression of IL-10 on both recombinant bacteria with anchorins and the higher expression levels in L. plantarum-pgsA'-IL-10 were confirmed by western blot assay. Most importantly, up-regulation of IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α, IFN-γ, and the nuclear transcription factor NF-κB p65 in RAW264.7 cells after stimulation with Poly(I:C) or LPS was exacerbated after co-culture with L. plantarum-pgsA. By contrast, IL-10 expressed by these recombinant strains could reduce these factors, and the expression of these factors was associated with recombinant strains that expressed anchorin (especially in L. plantarum-pgsA'-IL-10) and was significantly lower compared with the anchorin-free strains. These findings indicated that exogenous proteins could be successfully displayed on the surface of L. plantarum by pgsA or pgsA', and the expression of recombinant bacteria with pgsA' was superior compared with bacteria with pgsA.Entities:
Keywords: IL-10; Lactobacillus plantarum; RAW264.7; pgsA; surface display component
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26608167 DOI: 10.4014/jmb.1509.09030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Microbiol Biotechnol ISSN: 1017-7825 Impact factor: 2.351