Abstract

Summary Pseudomonas putida can be used as a host for the autotransporter‐mediated surface display of enzymes (autodisplay), resulting in whole‐cell biocatalysts with recombinant functionalities on their cell envelope. The efficiency of autotransporter‐mediated secretion depends on the N‐terminal signal peptide as well as on the C‐terminal translocator domain of autotransporter fusion proteins. We set out to optimize autodisplay for P. putida as the host bacterium by comparing different signal peptides and translocator domains for the surface display of an esterase. The translocator domain did not have a considerable effect on the activity of the whole‐cell catalysts. In contrast, by using the signal peptide of the P. putida outer membrane protein OprF, the activity was more than 12‐fold enhanced to 638 mU ml−1 OD −1 compared with the signal peptide of V. cholerae CtxB (52 mU ml−1 OD −1). This positive effect was confirmed with a β‐glucosidase as a second example enzyme. Here, cells expressing the protein with N‐terminal OprF signal peptide showed more than fourfold higher β‐glucosidase activity (181 mU ml−1 OD −1) than with the CtxB signal peptide (42 mU ml−1 OD −1). SDS‐PAGE and flow cytometry analyses indicated that the increased activities correlated with an increased amount of recombinant protein in the outer membrane and a higher number of enzymes detectable on the cell surface.

Highlights

  • In the last years, Pseudomonas putida has been intensively studied with regard to its biotechnological application

  • To investigate the influence of different translocator domains on autodisplay of enzymes in P. putida, plasmids were constructed that encode for autotransporter fusion proteins consisting of the V. cholerae CtxB signal peptide (SP), the esterase EstA from B. gladioli as an example passenger (Schultheiss et al, 2002) with a 6xHis epitope at its N-terminus and three different translocator domains (Fig. 1A): (i) the translocator domain of the EhaA autotransporter from E. coli as described previously (Sichwart et al, 2015) and utilized so far for surface display in P. putida (Tozakidis et al, 2016; Schulte et al, 2017). This protein was named maximized autotransporter expression (MATE)-EstA according to the previous terminology. (ii) A translocator in which the a-helix and b-barrel of EhaA were replaced by the corresponding domains from the EstP autotransporter from P. putida KT2440 (Asler et al, 2010)

  • The strains as obtained after transformation, P. putida pMATE-EstA, pMATE2-EstA and pMATE3EstA, were cultivated and the encoded fusion proteins were expressed under the control of the araBAD promotor

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Summary

Summary

Pseudomonas putida can be used as a host for the autotransporter-mediated surface display of enzymes (autodisplay), resulting in whole-cell biocatalysts with recombinant functionalities on their cell envelope. We set out to optimize autodisplay for P. putida as the host bacterium by comparing different signal peptides and translocator domains for the surface display of an esterase. By using the signal peptide of the P. putida outer membrane protein OprF, the activity was more than 12-fold enhanced to 638 mU mlÀ1 ODÀ1 compared with the signal peptide of V. cholerae CtxB (52 mU mlÀ1 ODÀ1). This positive effect was confirmed with a b-glucosidase as a second example enzyme. Cells expressing the protein with N-terminal OprF signal peptide showed more than fourfold higher b-glucosidase activity (181 mU mlÀ1 ODÀ1) than with the CtxB signal peptide (42 mU mlÀ1 ODÀ1). SDS-PAGE and flow cytometry analyses indicated that the increased activities correlated with an increased amount of recombinant protein in the outer membrane and a higher number of enzymes detectable on the cell surface

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