Abstract

BackgroundRecombinant protein production in the methylotrophic yeast Pichia pastoris largely relies on integrative vectors. Although the stability of integrated expression cassettes is well appreciated for most applications, the availability of reliable episomal vectors for this host would represent a useful tool to expedite cloning and high-throughput screening, ameliorating also the relatively high clonal variability reported in transformants from integrative vectors caused by off-target integration in the P. pastoris genome. Recently, heterologous and endogenous autonomously replicating sequences (ARS) were identified in P. pastoris by genome mining, opening the possibility of expanding the available toolbox to include efficient episomal plasmids. The aim of this technical report is to validate a 452-bp sequence (“panARS”) in context of P. pastoris expression vectors, and to compare their performance to classical integrative plasmids. Moreover, we aimed to test if such episomal vectors would be suitable to sustain in vivo recombination, using fragments for transformation, directly in P. pastoris cells.ResultsA panARS-based episomal vector was evaluated using blue fluorescent protein (BFP) as a reporter gene. Normalized fluorescence from colonies carrying panARS-BFP outperformed the level of signal obtained from integrative controls by several-fold, whereas endogenous sequences, identified from the P. pastoris genome, were not as efficient in terms of protein production. At the single cell level, panARS-BFP clones showed lower interclonal variability but higher intraclonal variation compared to their integrative counterparts, supporting the idea that heterologous protein production could benefit from episomal plasmids. Finally, efficiency of 2-fragment and 3-fragment in vivo recombination was tested using varying lengths of overlapping regions and molar ratios between fragments. Upon optimization, minimal background was obtained for in vivo assembled vectors, suggesting this could be a quick and efficient method to generate of episomal plasmids of interest.ConclusionsAn expression vector based on the panARS sequence was shown to outperform its integrative counterparts in terms of protein productivity and interclonal variability, facilitating recombinant protein expression and screening. Using optimized fragment lengths and ratios, it was possible to perform reliable in vivo recombination of fragments in P. pastoris. Taken together, these results support the applicability of panARS episomal vectors for synthetic biology approaches.

Highlights

  • Recombinant protein production in the methylotrophic yeast Pichia pastoris largely relies on integrative vectors

  • We aimed to functionally characterize the use of panARS, a 452-nt element originally isolated from Kluyveromyces lactis and synthetically optimized, as well as two endogenous sequences derived from P. pastoris, using blue fluorescent protein (BFP) as a reporter protein

  • Zeo/BFP ratio (EZeoCt Zeo/EBFP CtBFP). In this technical report, a 452-nt sequence was tested for its capacity to confer stable replicative maintenance to a commercial plasmid used for recombinant protein production in P. pastoris

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Summary

Introduction

Recombinant protein production in the methylotrophic yeast Pichia pastoris largely relies on integrative vectors. Recent high-throughput work has identified novel autonomously replicating sequences (ARSs) in different organisms, to bring to light novel regions conferring self-replicating properties and understand their features [16,17,18] These elements may help expedite RPP efforts through addition of stable expression plasmids to the available molecular toolkit; another intriguing possibility is represented by the possibility of self-assembly recombinant DNA fragments in its nucleus, eliminating the cloning process for plasmid assembly [19]; such strategy is theoretically facilitated by self-replication of the assembled fragment in the recipient cells, and has been successfully applied to Saccharomyces cerevisiae [20, 21]. Overlapping ends as short as 50 nucleotides were reported to be sufficient to promote assembly at a relatively high efficiency [22]

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