Abstract

A novel screening system using a microchamber array chip was developed for construction of combinatorial nano-sized protein libraries in combination with yeast cell surface engineering. It is possible to place a single yeast cell into each microchamber, to observe its behavior, and to pick up the target cell. The microchamber array chip is referred to as a “yeast cell chip.” A single EGFP-displaying yeast cell could be detected, picked up by a micro-manipulator, and cultivated on agar medium. Furthermore, a catalytic reaction, the hydrolysis of fluorescein dioctanate, by a single yeast cell displaying Rhizopus oryzae lipase (ROL) was carried out in one microchamber. The ROL-encoding gene in a single ROL-displaying cell was amplified by PCR. These results demonstrate that this yeast cell chip in combination with cell surface engineering could be used as a tool in a high-throughput screening system not only for a single living cell and a whole-cell catalyst with a nano-sized protein cluster but also for modified nano-sized and functional protein molecules from protein libraries on the cell surface.

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