| Literature DB >> 29258515 |
Esther Giesselmann1, Björn Becker1, Manfred J Schmitt2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Virus infected killer strains of the baker's yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae secrete protein toxins such as K28, K1, K2 and Klus which are lethal to sensitive yeast strains of the same or related species. K28 is somewhat unique as it represents an α/β heterodimeric protein of the A/B toxin family which, after having bound to the surface of sensitive target cells, is taken up by receptor-mediated endocytosis and transported through the secretory pathway in a retrograde manner. While the current knowledge on yeast killer toxins is largely based on genetic screens for yeast mutants with altered toxin sensitivity, in vivo imaging of cell surface binding and intracellular toxin transport is still largely hampered by a lack of fluorescently labelled and biologically active killer toxin variants.Entities:
Keywords: A/B toxins; Fluorescence labelling; Heterologous protein expression; High cell density fermentation; Killer toxin; Pichia pastoris; Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29258515 PMCID: PMC5735513 DOI: 10.1186/s12934-017-0844-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Cell Fact ISSN: 1475-2859 Impact factor: 5.328
Fig. 1a Schematic structure of K28-mCherryHDEL. The K28 chimera contains an N-terminal signal peptide derived from the α-mating factor which is removed by signal peptidase (SP) cleavage after ER import. In the cis-Golgi, endopeptidase Kex2p cleavage removes the pro- and γ-sequence which leads to the separation of α and β. Both subunits remain connected by a single disulphide which was previously formed in the ER. Carboxypeptidase Kex1p removes the C-terminal arginine residue in a trans-Golgi compartment and, thereby, unmasks the HDEL motif. b Western blot analysis of secreted K28-mCherryHDEL from P. pastoris. Cell-free culture supernatants of the recombinant strain GS115 [pPIC9 K28-mCherryHDEL] and the negative control strain GS115 [pPIC9] grown for 120 h in BMM and ×125 concentrated by centrifugal concentrators were separated under non-reducing (left) and reducing (right) conditions by SDS-PAGE and probed with an anti-DsRed antibody. Position and size of the correctly processed toxin is indicated. c Detection of fluorescent K28-mCherryHDEL. GS115 [pPIC9 K28-mCherryHDEL] was grown for 120 h in BMM medium (pH 7) in the presence of protease inhibitors. SDS-PAGE of the ×125 concentrated cell-free culture supernatant under non-reducing conditions shows the pink fluorescent protein and its fluorescence under UV illumination
Fig. 2a Growth curve of the recombinant P. pastoris strain GS115 [pPIC9 K28-mCherryHDEL] during fermentation. The starting point of methanol feeding (K28 expression induction) is marked by an arrow. b Fluorescence development of mCherry-tagged K28. Cell-free culture supernatant samples from different fermentation time points were separated by SDS-PAGE under non-reducing conditions. Fusion proteins were detected by UV illumination. Position and size of the fusion proteins are indicated. c Killer activity of the fermentation product K28-mCherryHDEL. Cell-free culture supernatants were tested against the sensitive S. cerevisiae strain 192.2d in an agar diffusion assay (t0 = starting point of methanol feeding; tend = 120 h post methanol induction). Cell-free zones of growth inhibition were determined and killer activity was compared to a ×200 concentrated culture supernatant of the K28 killer strain S. cerevisiae MS300b
Killer activity of K28 variants produced by P. pastoris fermentation
| Toxin variant/control | Toxicity |
|---|---|
| K28wt | + |
| K28-mCherryHDEL | + |
| K28-mCherryΔ | − |
| K28-mTFPHDEL | + |
| mCherryHDEL | − |
| mCherryΔ | − |
| mTFPHDEL | − |
K28 variants which show killing activity in an agar diffusion assay on methylene blue agar plates in form of a zone of growth inhibition (mm) are marked with “+”, whereas the absence of a killing zone is displayed by “−”
Fig. 3a Fluorescence distribution of S. cerevisiae cells after incubation with K28-mCherryHDEL. S. cerevisiae BY4742 was washed twice after 2 h incubation with K28-mCherryHDEL and analyzed by confocal laser scanning microscopy. b Same cells analysed by structured illumination microscopy (SIM). The hypersensitive yeast strain 192.2d was treated with K28-mCherryHDEL as described in a and subjected to SIM. (c) Fluorescence quenching was performed on cells of S. cerevisiae BY4742 after incubation with K28-mTFPHDEL as described in a, however extracellular mTFP fluorescence was subsequently quenched by the addition of 2 mM bromophenol blue (BPB)
Cell wall binding properties of various fluorescent K28 variants
| K28 derivates and control proteins | Cell binding/periphery fluorescence |
|---|---|
| α/β-FPHDEL | + |
| α/β-FPΔ | + |
| β-FPHDEL | + |
| FPHDEL | − |
| FP | − |
FP fluorescent protein, mCherry or mTFP
PCR primers used in this study
| Primer | Sequence (5′–3′) |
|---|---|
| 3′ mCherry | agatctgtcgacgcggccgcTTACTTGTACAGCTCGTCCATGCCG |
| 3′ mCherryHDELR | agatctgtcgacgcggccgcTTAGCGTAGCTCATCGTGCTTGTACAGCTCGTCCATGCCGC |
| 3′ mTFPHDELR | agatctgtcgacgcggccgcTTAGCGTAGCTCATCGTGCTTGTACAGCTCGTCCATGCCGTC |
| 3′ SOE β-mCherry | CCTCCTCGCCCTTGCTCACCATGCACCTTGCCTCGTCGTCACC |
| 3′ SOE β-mTFP | GTCTCCTCGCCCTTCGTCACCATGCACCTTGCCTCGTCGTCACC |
| 5′ K28 wo SP | agatctctcgagAAAAGAATGCCGACATCTGAGAGACAGCAGGG |
| 5′ mCherry | agatctctcgcgAAAAGAATGCCGACATCTGAGAGACAGCAGGG |
| 5′ mTFP | agatctctcgagAAAAGAATGGTGAGCAAGGGCGAGGAGAC |
| 5′ SOE β-mCherry | GGTGACGACGAGGCAAGGTGCATGGTGAGCAAGGGCGAGGAGG |
| 5′ SOE β-mTFP | GGTGACGACGAGGCAAGGTGCATGGTGAGCAAGGGCGAGGAGAC |
Restriction endonuclease cleavage sites used for cloning are shown in small form letters