| Literature DB >> 27551676 |
Rachel E Diner1, Vincent A Bielinski2, Christopher L Dupont3, Andrew E Allen1, Philip D Weyman2.
Abstract
Conjugation of episomal plasmids from bacteria to diatoms advances diatom genetic manipulation by simplifying transgene delivery and providing a stable and consistent gene expression platform. To reach its full potential, this nascent technology requires new optimized expression vectors and a deeper understanding of episome maintenance. Here, we present the development of an additional diatom vector (pPtPBR1), based on the parent plasmid pBR322, to add a plasmid maintained at medium copy number in Escherichia coli to the diatom genetic toolkit. Using this new vector, we evaluated the contribution of individual yeast DNA elements comprising the 1.4-kb tripartite CEN6-ARSH4-HIS3 sequence that enables episome maintenance in Phaeodactylum tricornutum. While various combinations of these individual elements enable efficient conjugation and high exconjugant yield in P. tricornutum, individual elements alone do not. Conjugation of episomes containing CEN6-ARSH4 and a small sequence from the low GC content 3' end of HIS3 produced the highest number of diatom exconjugant colonies, resulting in a smaller and more efficient vector design. Our findings suggest that the CEN6 and ARSH4 sequences function differently in yeast and diatoms, and that low GC content regions of greater than ~500 bp are a potential indicator of a functional diatom episome maintenance sequence. Additionally, we have developed improvements to the conjugation protocol including a high-throughput option utilizing 12-well plates and plating methods that improve exconjugant yield and reduce time and materials required for the conjugation protocol. The data presented offer additional information regarding the mechanism by which the yeast-derived sequence enables diatom episome maintenance and demonstrate options for flexible vector design.Entities:
Keywords: DNA delivery; DNA replication; Phaeodactylum; bacteria; conjugation; diatom; episome; genetic tools
Year: 2016 PMID: 27551676 PMCID: PMC4976089 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2016.00065
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
Figure 1Plasmid maps of (A) pPtPBR1 and (B) pPtPBR2, which both contain Ampicillin (AmpR) and Tetracyline (TetR) resistance cassettes for . The plasmid pPtPBR1 (A) contains the CEN6-ARSH4-HIS3 episome maintenance sequence. Percent GC content for each region of the plasmid is graphically displayed as a red line on a graph inside the plasmid and was constructed using a 100-bp window advancing every 50-bp. Regions with a GC content of less than 30% fall within the gray central circle of the graphic. The pPtPBR2 plasmid (B) contains no CAH region. The pPtPBR3-12 plasmids share a common backbone with pPtPBR2 with additional modifications indicated in the (B).
Figure 2(A) Diatom colony yields, presented as fold difference from the negative control plasmid pPtPBR2 (no maintenance elements), for plasmids containing various potential maintenance sequences. N = 3, error bars = SD, (B) relative size and GC content analysis of possible maintenance sequences contained in plasmids pPtPBR1-12.
Figure 3Comparison of the protocol established in Karas et al. (.