Affiliation:
1. Laboratory of Microbial Physiology, Research Faculty of Agriculture, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan
2. Department of Molecular Genetics, Kyoto Pharmaceutical University, Kyoto, Japan
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Functional analysis of
Bifidobacterium
genes is essential for understanding host-
Bifidobacterium
interactions with beneficial effects on human health; however, the lack of an effective targeted gene inactivation system in bifidobacteria has prevented the development of functional genomics in this bacterium. Here, we report the development of a markerless gene deletion system involving a double crossover in
Bifidobacterium longum
. Incompatible plasmid vectors were used to facilitate a second crossover step. The conditional replication vector pBS423-
ΔrepA
, which lacks the plasmid replication gene
repA
, was integrated into the target gene by a first crossover event. Subsequently, the replicative plasmid pTBR101-CM, which harbors
repA
, was introduced into this integrant to facilitate the second crossover step and subsequent elimination of the excised conditional replication vector from the cells by plasmid incompatibility. The proposed system was confirmed to work as expected in
B. longum
105-A using the chromosomal full-length β-galactosidase gene as a target. Markerless gene deletion was tested using the
aga
gene, which encodes α-galactosidase, whose substrates include raffinose. Almost all the pTBR101-CM-transformed strains became double-crossover recombinants after subculture, and 4 out of the 270 double-crossover recombinants had lost the ability to assimilate raffinose. Genotype analysis of these strains revealed markerless gene deletion of
aga
. Carbohydrate assimilation analysis and α-galactosidase activity measurement were conducted using both the representative mutant and a plasmid-based
aga
-complemented strain. These functional analyses revealed that
aga
is the only gene encoding a functional α-galactosidase enzyme in
B. longum
105-A.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
64 articles.
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