Abstract

BackgroundThe genus Bacillus includes a great variety of species with potential applications in biotechnology. While species such as B. subtilis or B. licheniformis are well-known and used to provide various products at industrial scale, other Bacillus species are less characterized and are not yet used in commercial processes. One reason for this is the fact that genetic manipulation of new isolates is usually complicated with conventional techniques which have to be adapted to each new strain. Even in well-established strains, the available transformation protocols often suffer from low efficiencies.ResultsIn this paper, we provide a new broad host range E. coli/Bacillus shuttle vector, named pBACOV (Bacillusconjugation vector), that can be efficiently transferred to various Bacillus species using a single protocol. A variant of pBACOV carrying the sfGFP gene was successfully transferred to eight different species from the genus Bacillus and to one Paenibacillus species using triparental conjugation (“transmating”). This was achieved using a single protocol and worked for nine out of eleven tested acceptor species. The transmating procedure was used to test expression of the heterologous reporter gene sfGFP under control of the PaprE-promoter from B. subtilis in several Bacillus species in parallel. Expression of sfGFP was found in eight out of nine transmates. For several of the tested species, this is the first report of a method for genetic modification and heterologous gene expression. The expression level, analyzed by measuring the relative sfGFP-fluorescence normalized to the cell density of the cultures, was highest in B. mojavensis.ConclusionsThe new shuttle vector pBACOV can be transferred to many different Bacillus and Paenibacillus species using a simple and efficient transmating protocol. It is a versatile tool facilitating the application of recombinant DNA technology in new as well as established strains, or selection of an ideal host for heterologous gene expression from a multitude of strains. This paves the way for the genetic modification and biotechnological exploitation of the broad diversity of species of Bacillus and related genera as well as different strains from these species.

Highlights

  • The genus Bacillus includes a great variety of species with potential applications in biotechnology

  • We demonstrate that PaprE is functional in seven additional Bacillus species using Super-folder green fluorescent protein (sfGFP) as a reporter gene and report for the first time heterologous gene expression in four new Bacillus species (B. mojavensis, B. mycoides, B. pseudomycoides and B. vallismortis)

  • The use of pBACOV enabled for the first time the demonstration of heterologous gene expression in B. mojavensis, B. mycoides, B. pseudomycoides, and B. vallismortis

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Summary

Introduction

The genus Bacillus includes a great variety of species with potential applications in biotechnology. While species such as B. subtilis or B. licheniformis are well-known and used to provide various products at industrial scale, other Bacillus species are less characterized and are not yet used in commercial processes. B. subtilis and other members of the genus are major workhorses in industrial microbiology, mainly due to their ability to secrete large quantities of extracellular enzymes [2] While species such as B. subtilis and B. licheniformis have already been isolated in the nineteenth century and are well-known and widely applied, new species and strains continue to be isolated.

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