Affiliation:
1. New England Biolabs, 240 County Road, Ipswich, Massachusetts 01938-2723
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The strong
LAC4
promoter (P
LAC4
) from
Kluyveromyces lactis
has been extensively used to drive expression of heterologous proteins in this industrially important yeast. A drawback of this expression method is the serendipitous ability of P
LAC4
to promote gene expression in
Escherichia coli
. This can interfere with the process of assembling expression constructs in
E. coli
cells prior to their introduction into yeast cells, especially if the cloned gene encodes a protein that is detrimental to bacteria. In this study, we created a series of P
LAC4
variants by targeted mutagenesis of three DNA sequences (PBI, PBII, and PBIII) that resemble the
E. coli
Pribnow box element of bacterial promoters and that reside immediately upstream of two
E. coli
transcription initiation sites associated with P
LAC4
. Mutation of PBI reduced the bacterial expression of a reporter protein (green fluorescent protein [GFP]) by ∼87%, whereas mutation of PBII and PBIII had little effect on GFP expression. Deletion of all three sequences completely eliminated GFP expression. Additionally, each promoter variant expressed human serum albumin in
K. lactis
cells to levels comparable to wild-type P
LAC4
. We created a novel integrative expression vector (pKLAC1) containing the P
LAC4
variant lacking PBI and used it to successfully clone and express the catalytic subunit of bovine enterokinase, a protease that has historically been problematic in
E. coli
cells. The pKLAC1 vector should aid in the cloning of other potentially toxic genes in
E. coli
prior to their expression in
K. lactis
.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
54 articles.
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