Cargando…

Application of a wide-range yeast vector (CoMed™) system to recombinant protein production in dimorphic Arxula adeninivorans, methylotrophic Hansenula polymorpha and other yeasts

BACKGROUND: Yeasts provide attractive expression platforms in combining ease of genetic manipulation and fermentation of a microbial organism with the capability to secrete and to modify proteins according to a general eukaryotic scheme. However, early restriction to a single yeast platform can resu...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Steinborn, Gerhard, Böer, Erik, Scholz, Anja, Tag, Kristina, Kunze, Gotthard, Gellissen, Gerd
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1654170/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17105649
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2859-5-33
_version_ 1782131010229501952
author Steinborn, Gerhard
Böer, Erik
Scholz, Anja
Tag, Kristina
Kunze, Gotthard
Gellissen, Gerd
author_facet Steinborn, Gerhard
Böer, Erik
Scholz, Anja
Tag, Kristina
Kunze, Gotthard
Gellissen, Gerd
author_sort Steinborn, Gerhard
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Yeasts provide attractive expression platforms in combining ease of genetic manipulation and fermentation of a microbial organism with the capability to secrete and to modify proteins according to a general eukaryotic scheme. However, early restriction to a single yeast platform can result in costly and time-consuming failures. It is therefore advisable to assess several selected systems in parallel for the capability to produce a particular protein in desired amounts and quality. A suitable vector must contain a targeting sequence, a promoter element and a selection marker that function in all selected organisms. These criteria are fulfilled by a wide-range integrative yeast expression vector (CoMed™) system based on A. adeninivorans- and H. polymorpha-derived elements that can be introduced in a modular way. RESULTS: The vector system and a selection of modular elements for vector design are presented. Individual single vector constructs were used to transform a range of yeast species. Various successful examples are described. A vector with a combination of an rDNA sequence for genomic targeting, the E. coli-derived hph gene for selection and the A. adeninivorans-derived TEF1 promoter for expression control of a GFP (green fluorescent protein) gene was employed in a first example to transform eight different species including Hansenula polymorpha, Arxula adeninivorans and others. In a second example, a vector for the secretion of IL-6 was constructed, now using an A. adeninivorans-derived LEU2 gene for selection of recombinants in a range of auxotrophic hosts. In this example, differences in precursor processing were observed: only in A. adeninivorans processing of a MFα1/IL-6 fusion was performed in a faithful way. CONCLUSION: rDNA targeting provides a tool to co-integrate up to 3 different expression plasmids by a single transformation step. Thus, a versatile system is at hand that allows a comparative assessment of newly introduced metabolic pathways in several organisms or a comparative co-expression of bottleneck genes in cases where production or secretion of a certain product is impaired.
format Text
id pubmed-1654170
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2006
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-16541702006-11-21 Application of a wide-range yeast vector (CoMed™) system to recombinant protein production in dimorphic Arxula adeninivorans, methylotrophic Hansenula polymorpha and other yeasts Steinborn, Gerhard Böer, Erik Scholz, Anja Tag, Kristina Kunze, Gotthard Gellissen, Gerd Microb Cell Fact Research BACKGROUND: Yeasts provide attractive expression platforms in combining ease of genetic manipulation and fermentation of a microbial organism with the capability to secrete and to modify proteins according to a general eukaryotic scheme. However, early restriction to a single yeast platform can result in costly and time-consuming failures. It is therefore advisable to assess several selected systems in parallel for the capability to produce a particular protein in desired amounts and quality. A suitable vector must contain a targeting sequence, a promoter element and a selection marker that function in all selected organisms. These criteria are fulfilled by a wide-range integrative yeast expression vector (CoMed™) system based on A. adeninivorans- and H. polymorpha-derived elements that can be introduced in a modular way. RESULTS: The vector system and a selection of modular elements for vector design are presented. Individual single vector constructs were used to transform a range of yeast species. Various successful examples are described. A vector with a combination of an rDNA sequence for genomic targeting, the E. coli-derived hph gene for selection and the A. adeninivorans-derived TEF1 promoter for expression control of a GFP (green fluorescent protein) gene was employed in a first example to transform eight different species including Hansenula polymorpha, Arxula adeninivorans and others. In a second example, a vector for the secretion of IL-6 was constructed, now using an A. adeninivorans-derived LEU2 gene for selection of recombinants in a range of auxotrophic hosts. In this example, differences in precursor processing were observed: only in A. adeninivorans processing of a MFα1/IL-6 fusion was performed in a faithful way. CONCLUSION: rDNA targeting provides a tool to co-integrate up to 3 different expression plasmids by a single transformation step. Thus, a versatile system is at hand that allows a comparative assessment of newly introduced metabolic pathways in several organisms or a comparative co-expression of bottleneck genes in cases where production or secretion of a certain product is impaired. BioMed Central 2006-11-14 /pmc/articles/PMC1654170/ /pubmed/17105649 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2859-5-33 Text en Copyright © 2006 Steinborn et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Steinborn, Gerhard
Böer, Erik
Scholz, Anja
Tag, Kristina
Kunze, Gotthard
Gellissen, Gerd
Application of a wide-range yeast vector (CoMed™) system to recombinant protein production in dimorphic Arxula adeninivorans, methylotrophic Hansenula polymorpha and other yeasts
title Application of a wide-range yeast vector (CoMed™) system to recombinant protein production in dimorphic Arxula adeninivorans, methylotrophic Hansenula polymorpha and other yeasts
title_full Application of a wide-range yeast vector (CoMed™) system to recombinant protein production in dimorphic Arxula adeninivorans, methylotrophic Hansenula polymorpha and other yeasts
title_fullStr Application of a wide-range yeast vector (CoMed™) system to recombinant protein production in dimorphic Arxula adeninivorans, methylotrophic Hansenula polymorpha and other yeasts
title_full_unstemmed Application of a wide-range yeast vector (CoMed™) system to recombinant protein production in dimorphic Arxula adeninivorans, methylotrophic Hansenula polymorpha and other yeasts
title_short Application of a wide-range yeast vector (CoMed™) system to recombinant protein production in dimorphic Arxula adeninivorans, methylotrophic Hansenula polymorpha and other yeasts
title_sort application of a wide-range yeast vector (comed™) system to recombinant protein production in dimorphic arxula adeninivorans, methylotrophic hansenula polymorpha and other yeasts
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1654170/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17105649
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2859-5-33
work_keys_str_mv AT steinborngerhard applicationofawiderangeyeastvectorcomedsystemtorecombinantproteinproductionindimorphicarxulaadeninivoransmethylotrophichansenulapolymorphaandotheryeasts
AT boererik applicationofawiderangeyeastvectorcomedsystemtorecombinantproteinproductionindimorphicarxulaadeninivoransmethylotrophichansenulapolymorphaandotheryeasts
AT scholzanja applicationofawiderangeyeastvectorcomedsystemtorecombinantproteinproductionindimorphicarxulaadeninivoransmethylotrophichansenulapolymorphaandotheryeasts
AT tagkristina applicationofawiderangeyeastvectorcomedsystemtorecombinantproteinproductionindimorphicarxulaadeninivoransmethylotrophichansenulapolymorphaandotheryeasts
AT kunzegotthard applicationofawiderangeyeastvectorcomedsystemtorecombinantproteinproductionindimorphicarxulaadeninivoransmethylotrophichansenulapolymorphaandotheryeasts
AT gellissengerd applicationofawiderangeyeastvectorcomedsystemtorecombinantproteinproductionindimorphicarxulaadeninivoransmethylotrophichansenulapolymorphaandotheryeasts