| Literature DB >> 35348690 |
Diana G Calvopina-Chavez1, Mikaela A Gardner1, Joel S Griffitts1.
Abstract
The bacteriophage T7 expression system is one of the most prominent transcription systems used in biotechnology and molecular-level research. However, T7 RNA polymerase is prone to read-through transcription due to its high processivity. As a consequence, enforcing efficient transcriptional termination is difficult. The termination hairpin found natively in the T7 genome is adapted to be inefficient, exhibiting 62% termination efficiency in vivo and even lower efficiency in vitro. In this study, we engineered a series of sequences that outperform the efficiency of the native terminator hairpin. By embedding a previously discovered 8-nucleotide T7 polymerase pause sequence within a synthetic hairpin sequence, we observed in vivo termination efficiency of 91%; by joining 2 short sequences into a tandem 2-hairpin structure, termination efficiency was increased to 98% in vivo and 91% in vitro. This study also tests the ability of these engineered sequences to terminate transcription of the Escherichia coli RNA polymerase. Two out of 3 of the most successful T7 polymerase terminators also facilitated termination of the bacterial polymerase with around 99% efficiency.Entities:
Keywords: T7 polymerase; T7 terminator; synthetic terminators; transcription termination; transcriptional pausing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35348690 PMCID: PMC9157156 DOI: 10.1093/g3journal/jkac070
Source DB: PubMed Journal: G3 (Bethesda) ISSN: 2160-1836 Impact factor: 3.542
DNA sequence of engineered terminators.
| Name | Purpose | DNA sequence |
|---|---|---|
| T7nat | Wild-type sequence |
|
| T7mod | Stronger stem, shorter loop |
|
| T7pause | Dual pause sites, no hairpin |
|
| T7hyb1 | T7mod with single pause |
|
| T7hyb2 | Short variant of T7hyb1 |
|
| T7hyb3 | T7hyb2, higher GC% |
|
| T7hyb4 | T7hyb3 altered GC sequence |
|
| T7hyb5 | Short variant of T7hyb3 |
|
| T7hyb6 | Dual-pause hairpin |
|
| T7hyb7 | T7hyb6, pause sites scrambled—variant 1 |
|
| T7hyb8 | T7hyb6, pause sites scrambled—variant 2 |
|
| T7hyb9 | Fusion: T7hyb4-T7hyb6 |
|
| T7hyb10 | Fusion: T7hyb6-T7hyb4 |
|
Underlined sequence indicates designed stem structures
Lower case indicates UUCG loop structures and TATCTGTT single- or double-pause sites
Fig. 1.In vivo termination efficiency of designed T7 transcriptional terminators. a) A 2-plasmid system allows T7RNAP expression from an arabinose-inducible promoter and monitoring of T7RNAP-dependent transcription from a T7 promoter driving green (msfGFP) and red (mScarlet-I) fluorescent proteins. b) Error bars represent standard deviation from the mean. Different letters denote statistically significant differences (P < 0.05) according to a Tukey multiple comparison test.
Fig. 2.Performance of selected terminators in vitro. a) Diagram of transcription templates for in vitro testing using recombinant T7RNAP. The 3 numbers underneath each diagram show the transcription initiation site, the predicted site of termination, and the length of the run-off product. Hairpin symbols represent the cloned T7 terminators. b) In vitro termination efficiency of selected terminators. The error bars represent standard deviation from the mean. Different letters denote statistically significant differences (P < 0.05) according to a Tukey multiple comparison test.
Fig. 3.In vivo performance of selected terminators with the bacterial polymerase EcRNAP. a) Terminator sequences were placed between fluorescent protein-encoding genes located downstream of the lac promoter, using BamHI and KpnI restriction sites. Plasmids were transformed into E. coli MG1655 and reporter gene expression was used to assess terminator efficiency. b) Bar chart of the mean termination efficiency of engineered terminators for EcRNAP. Error bars represent standard deviation from the mean. Different letters denote statistically significant differences (P < 0.05) according to a Tukey multiple comparison test.