Abstract

The bicistronic expression system that utilizes fluorescent reporters has been demonstrated to be a straightforward method for detecting recombinant protein expression levels, particularly when compared to polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and immunoblot analysis, which are tedious and labor-intensive. However, existing bicistronic reporter systems are less capable of quantitative measurement due to the lag in reporter expression and its negative impact on target protein. In this work, a plug and play bicistronic construct using mCherry as reporter was applied in the screening of optimal replicon and promoter for Sortase expression in Escherichia coli (E. coli). The bicistronic construct allowed the reporter gene and target open reading frame (ORF) to be co-transcribed under the same promoter, resulting in a highly positive quantitative correlation between the expression titer of Sortase and the fluorescent intensity (R2 > 0.97). With the correlation model, the titer of target protein can be quantified by noninvasively measuring the fluorescent intensity. On top of this, the expression of reporter has no significant effect on the yield of target protein, thus favoring a plug and play design for removing reporter gene to generate a plain plasmid for industrial use.

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