Abstract

BackgroundThermostable enzymes are commonly produced in mesophilic hosts for research and bioengineering purposes. However, these hosts do not overexpress the active forms of some biologically functional thermoenzymes. Therefore, an efficient thermophilic expression system is needed. Thermus thermophilus contains an easily manipulable genome and is therefore among the best candidate microbes for a “hot” expression system. We previously identified a strong and inducible promoter that was active in T. thermophilus under supersaturated silica conditions. Here, we report a new heterologous gene expression system based on a silica-inducible promoter in T. thermophilus.ResultsA Thermus sp. A4 gene encoding thermostable β-galactosidase was cloned as a reporter gene into the expression vector pSix1, which contains a selection marker that confers thermostable resistance to hygromycin and a 600 bp DNA region containing a putative silica-inducible promoter. β-galactosidase activity was 11-fold higher in the presence than in the absence of 10 mM silicic acid. SDS-PAGE revealed a prominent band corresponding to 73 kDa of β-galactosidase, and this enzyme was expressed as an active and soluble protein (yield: 27 mg/L) in Thermus but as an inclusion body in Escherichia coli. Truncation of the putative silica-inducible promoter region in Thermus expression vector improved the yield of the target protein, possibly by avoiding plasmid instability due to homologous recombination. Finally, we developed an expression vector containing the pSix1 backbone and a 100 bp DNA region corresponding to the silica-inducible promoter. We used this vector to successfully express the active form of glutamate dehydrogenase from Pyrobaculum islandicum (PisGDH) without additional treatment (yield: 9.5 mg/L), whereas the expression of active PisGDH in E. coli required heat treatment.ConclusionWe successfully expressed the thermostable β-galactosidase and PisGDH in T. thermophilus as active and soluble forms and achieved with our system the highest known protein expression levels in this species. These thermoenzymes were expressed in active and soluble forms. Our results validate the use of our silica-inducible expression system as a novel strategy for the intracellular overexpression of thermostable proteins.

Highlights

  • Thermostable enzymes are commonly produced in mesophilic hosts for research and bioengineering purposes

  • Construction of a silica‐inducible expression vector and reporter plasmids We previously reported that Thermus strains produced a specific silica-induced protein (Sip) in the presence of supersaturated silica [12]

  • The expression of Sip is thought to be a response to iron starvation stress, which can be induced by the addition of supersaturated negatively charged colloidal silica that captures ­Fe3+ ions

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Summary

Introduction

Thermostable enzymes are commonly produced in mesophilic hosts for research and bioengineering purposes These hosts do not overexpress the active forms of some biologically functional thermoenzymes. Fujino et al Microb Cell Fact (2020) 19:126 the ability to remove mesophilic host proteins by simple heat denaturation during the production process is advantageous, currently only a few biologically functional thermoenzymes are overexpressed in their active forms in mesophilic hosts. These target proteins often aggregate to form “inclusion bodies” that are susceptible to misfolding when expressed at relatively lower temperatures than those experienced in their native hosts [5]. The use of thermophilic hosts for enzyme production requires the development of genetic tools that can overcome these limitations

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