4.6 Article

Modulation of Thiol-Disulfide Oxidoreductases for Increased Production of Disulfide-Bond-Containing Proteins in Bacillus subtilis

Journal

APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 74, Issue 24, Pages 7536-7545

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/AEM.00894-08

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Union [LSHG-CT-2004-503468, LSHG-CT2004-005257, LSHM-CT-2006-019064, LSHG-CT-2006-037469]
  2. Research Council for Earth and Life Sciences (ALW) [04-EScope 01-011]
  3. The Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO)

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Disulfide bonds are important for the correct folding, structural integrity, and activity of many biotechnologically relevant proteins. For synthesis and subsequent secretion of these proteins in bacteria, such as the well-known cell factory Bacillus subtilis, it is often the correct formation of disulfide bonds that is the greatest bottleneck. Degradation of inefficiently or incorrectly oxidized proteins and the requirement for costly and time-consuming reduction and oxidation steps in the downstream processing of the proteins still are major limitations for full exploitation of B. subtilis for biopharmaceutical production. Therefore, the present study was aimed at developing a novel in vivo strategy for improved production of secreted disulfide-bond-containing proteins. Three approaches were tested: depletion of the major cytoplasmic reductase TrxA; introduction of the heterologous oxidase DsbA from Staphylococcus carnosus; and addition of redox-active compounds to the growth medium. As shown using the disulfide-bond-containing molecule Escherichia coli PhoA as a model protein, combined use of these three approaches resulted in secretion of amounts of active PhoA that were similar to 3.5-fold larger than the amounts secreted by the parental strain B. subtilis 168. Our findings indicate that Bacillus strains with improved oxidizing properties can be engineered for biotechnological production of heterologous high-value proteins containing disulfide bonds.

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