3.8 Article

Glucoamylase::green fluorescent protein fusions to monitor protein secretion in Aspergillus niger

Journal

MICROBIOLOGY-UK
Volume 146, Issue -, Pages 415-426

Publisher

SOC GENERAL MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1099/00221287-146-2-415

Keywords

Aspergillus niger; protein secretion; glucoamylase; green fluorescent protein (GFP); heterologous protein production

Categories

Ask authors/readers for more resources

A glucoamylase::green fluorescent protein fusion (GLA::sGFP) was constructed which allows the green fluorescent protein to be used as an in vivo reporter of protein secretion in Aspergillus niger. Two secretory fusions were designed for secretion of GLA::sGFP which employed slightly different lengths of the glucoamylase protein (GLA499 and CLA514). Expression of GLA::sGFP revealed that fluorescence was localized in the hyphal cell walls and septa, and that fluorescence was most intense at hyphal apices, Extracellular GLA::sGFP was detectable by Western blotting only in the supernatant of young cultures grown in soya milk medium. In older cultures, acidification of the medium and induction of proteases were probably responsible for the loss of extracellular and cell wall fluorescence and the inability to detect CLA::sGFP by Western analysis, A strain containing the CLA::sGFP construct was subjected to UV mutagenesis and survivors screened for mutations in the general secretory pathway. Three mutants were isolated that were unable to form a halo on either starch or gelatin medium, All three mutants grew poorly compared to the parental strain. Fluorescence microscopy revealed that for two of the mutants, CLA::sGFP accumulated intracellularly with no evidence of wall fluorescence, whereas for the third mutant, wall fluorescence was observed with no evidence of intracellular accumulation, These results indicate that the CLA::sGFP fusion constructs can be used as convenient fluorescent markers to study the dynamics of protein secretion in vivo and as a tool in the isolation of mutants in the general secretory pathway,

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

3.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available