Abstract
Bacterial surface display systems have been developed for various applications in biotechnology and industry. Particularly, the discovery and design of anchoring motifs is highly important for the successful display of a target protein or peptide on the surface of bacteria. In this study, an efficient display system on Escherichia coli was developed using novel anchoring motifs designed from the E. coli mipA gene. Using the C-terminal fusion system of an industrial enzyme, Pseudomonas fluorescens lipase, six possible fusion sites, V140, V176, K179, V226, V232, and K234, which were truncated from the C-terminal end of the mipA gene (MV140, MV176, MV179, MV226, MV232, and MV234) were examined. The whole-cell lipase activities showed that MV140 was the best among the six anchoring motifs. Furthermore, the lipase activity obtained using MV140 as the anchoring motif was approximately 20-fold higher than that of the previous anchoring motifs FadL and OprF but slightly higher than that of YiaTR232. Western blotting and confocal microscopy further confirmed the localization of the fusion lipase displayed on the E. coli surface using the truncated MV140. Additionally the MV140 motif could be used for successfully displaying another industrial enzyme, α-amylase from Bacillus subtilis. These results showed that the fusion proteins using the MV140 motif had notably high enzyme activities and did not exert any adverse effects on either cell growth or outer membrane integrity. Thus, this study shows that MipA can be used as a novel anchoring motif for more efficient bacterial surface display in the biotechnological and industrial fields.
Keywords: E. coli MipA, cell surface display, outer membrane protein
Introduction
Bacterial surface display is a protein engineering technique used for display of a target, such as a peptide or protein (enzyme) on the surface of bacteria. Bacterial cell surface display systems have been employed for various biotechnological and industrial applications, such as whole-cell biocatalysts, biosensors, bioabsorbents and affinity-based screening, antibody epitope mapping, and vaccine delivery [1-3]. In particular, Escherichia coli display systems have been widely used as bioabsorbents and biosensors in the bioremediation of pollutants and toxic materials [4, 5], or as biocatalysts in biofuel and chemical production by the enzymatic transformation of chemicals to produce enantiomerically pure compounds [6-9].
However, the E. coli display system encounters difficulty in displaying a large protein stably and with the correct steric conformation because the protein must pass through two membrane layers and then undergo protein targeting. Thus, the choice and design of anchoring motifs are highly important for the stability of cell envelope integrity. Various anchoring motifs, including outer membrane proteins, lipoproteins, autotransporters, subunits of surface appendages, and S-layer proteins, were examined [1, 10, 11]. Most importantly, bacterial outer membrane proteins, such as FadL, LamB, Lpp-OmpA, OmpA, OmpC, OmpF, OmpS, OmpX, OmpW, OprF, PhoE, and YiaT, have been employed for displaying various peptides and proteins, including antibodies, domains, enzymes, and receptors [12-16]. However, each anchoring motif has been found to have different capacities for protein display, making it necessary to develop appropriate anchoring motifs depending on individual proteins of various sizes and characteristics [1, 17]. The majority of the previously developed systems are only suitable for peptides or relatively small polypeptides [1, 18]. Larger proteins could be displayed as anchoring motifs, such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa OprF [9], E. coli FadL [8], OmpX [19] and YiaT [20]. Therefore, the success of a cell surface display system is highly dependent on the choice of an anchoring motif that is appropriate for the intended target protein.
In this study, we developed an efficient E. coli cell surface display using a novel anchoring motif truncated from the E. coli MltA-interacting protein (MipA; Swiss-Prot no. P0A908) at the C-terminus. To determine the best anchoring motif from MipA, several possible motifs were tested by creating truncated mipA genes to link the function of a protein, specifically a highly thermostable lipase from Pseudomonas fluorescens SIK W1 (49.9 kDa) using a C-terminus deletion strategy. Additionally, the display efficiency of lipase using the truncated MipA motif was compared with those of the previous anchoring motifs, FadL [8], OrpF [9], and YiaT [20]. Furthermore, the best truncated MipA motif was employed to display another enzyme, α-amylase from Bacillus subtilis (47.3 kDa), which hydrolyzes large α-linked polysaccharides, such as starch or glycogen, into fermentable sugars.
Materials and Methods
Bacterial Strains and Culture Conditions
Table 1 shows all bacterial strains and plasmids employed in this study. E. coli XL-1 Blue was used as the host strain for general cloning, while E. coli XL10-Gold was used as the host strain for the cell surface display studies. E. coli cells were cultivated at 37°C and 250 rpm in a 250-ml flask containing 100 ml of Luria-Bertani (LB) medium composed of 10 g/l bacto-tryptone, 5 g/l bacto-yeast extract, and 5 g/l NaCl. For cultivation of recombinant E. coli cells harboring a plasmid, the medium was supplemented with ampicillin (50 μg/ml). Cell growth was monitored by measuring the optical density at 600 nm (OD600) using a spectrophotometer (Beckman DU 650, USA). At an OD600 of 0.4, the cells were induced to display lipase as a target protein by the addition of 1 mM isopropyl-β-D- thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG). After induction, the cells were cultured for an additional 4 h at 30°C and then used for further analyses.
Table 1.
The bacterial strains and plasmids used in this study.
Strain or Plasmid | Relevant Characteristics | Reference or Source |
---|---|---|
E. coli strains | ||
XL1-Blue | recA1 endA1 gyrA96 thi-1 hsdR17 supE44 relA1 lac [F´ proAB lacI q ZΔM15 Tn10 (Tetr)] | Stratagenea |
XL10-Gold | Tetr ∆(mcrA)183 ∆(mcrCB-hsdSMR-mrr)173 endA1 supE44 thi-1 recA1 gyrA96 relA1 lac Hte [F´ proAB lacI q Z∆M15 Tn10 (Tetr) Amy Camr] | Stratagenea |
Plasmids | ||
pTrc99A | 4.2 kb; Apr, trc promoter | Pharmaciab |
pTrcM | 4.9 kb; pTrc99A derivative containing full-length 747 bp fragment of E. coli mipA | This study |
pTrcMV140 | 4.6 kb; pTrc99A derivative containing 420 bp fragment of E. coli mipA | This study |
pTrcMV176 | 4.7 kb; pTrc99A derivative containing 528 bp fragment of E. coli mipA | This study |
pTrcMK179 | 4.7 kb; pTrc99A derivative containing 537 bp fragment of E. coli mipA | This study |
pTrcMV226 | 4.9 kb; pTrc99A derivative containing 678 bp fragment of E. coli mipA | This study |
pTrcMV232 | 4.9 kb; pTrc99A derivative containing 696 bp fragment of E. coli mipA | This study |
pTrcMK234 | 4.9 kb; pTrc99A derivative containing 702 bp fragment of E. coli mipA | This study |
pTrcMV140PL | 6.0 kb; pTrcMV140 derivative containing P. fluorescens SIK W1 lipase gene fused with FLAG-tag | This study |
pTrcMV176PL | 6.1 kb; pTrcMV176 derivative containing P. fluorescens SIK W1 lipase gene fused with FLAG-tag | This study |
pTrcMK179PL | 6.1 kb; pTrcMV179 derivative containing P. fluorescens SIK W1 lipase gene fused with FLAG-tag | This study |
pTrcMV226PL | 6.3 kb; pTrcMV226 derivative containing P. fluorescens SIK W1 lipase gene fused with FLAG-tag | This study |
pTrcMV232PL | 6.3 kb; pTrcMV232 derivative containing P. fluorescens SIK W1 lipase gene fused with FLAG-tag | This study |
pTrcMK234PL | 6.3 kb; pTrcMK234 derivative containing P. fluorescens SIK W1 lipase gene fused with FLAG-tag | This study |
pTrcMV140BA | 5.9 kb; pTrcMV140 derivative containing B. subtilis α-amylase gene fused with FLAG-tag | This study |
Stratagene Cloning System, USA.
Pharmacia Biotech, Uppsala, Sweden.
DNA Manipulation
Table 2 shows the primers used in this study. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to amplify target genes described in Table 2 was performed with a PCR Thermal Cycler MP (Takara Shuzo Co., Ltd., Japan) using the Expand High Fidelity PCR System (Roche Molecular Biochemicals, Germany). DNA sequencing was carried out using the BigDye Terminator Cycle Sequencing Kit (Perkin-Elmer Co., USA) with Taq polymerase and an ABI Prism 377 DNA sequencer (Perkin-Elmer Co.). All DNA manipulations, including digestion of restriction enzymes, ligation, and agarose gel electrophoresis, were performed according to standard procedures [21].
Table 2.
The list of primers used in the PCR experiments.
Primer no. | Sequencea | Gene to be amplified | Template |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 5-ggaattcATGACCAAACTCAAACTTCTGGCA | Full-length mipA gene | E. coli W3110 chromosome |
2 | 5-gctctagaTCAGAATTTGTAGGTGATCCCGGT | ||
3 | 5-ggaattcATGACCAAACTCAAACTTCTGGCA | Truncated mipA at Val140 position | E. coli W3110 chromosome |
4 | 5-gctctagaGACGATGCCGTTGCTGTTATCC | ||
5 | 5-ggaattcATGACCAAACTCAAACTTCTGGCA | Truncated mipA at Val176 position | E. coli W3110 chromosome |
6 | 5-gctctagaTACGCCATAATAGTATTCGTTCTG | ||
7 | 5-ggaattcATGACCAAACTCAAACTTCTGGCA | Truncated mipA at Lys179 position | E. coli W3110 chromosome |
8 | 5-gctctagaTTTGCGCGATACGCCATAATAGTA | ||
9 | 5-ggaattcATGACCAAACTCAAACTTCTGGCA | Truncated mipA at Val226 position | E. coli W3110 chromosome |
10 | 5-gctctagaAACTTCATCAGACAGACGGGTGTA | ||
11 | 5-ggaattcATGACCAAACTCAAACTTCTGGCA | Truncated mipA at Val232 position | E. coli W3110 chromosome |
12 | 5-gctctagaCACCATCGGGCTGTCAGTAACTTC | ||
13 | 5-ggaattcATGACCAAACTCAAACTTCTGGCA | Truncated mipA at Lys234 position | E. coli W3110 chromosome |
14 | 5-gctctagaTTTATCCACCATCGGGCTGTCAGT | ||
15 | 5-gctctagaATGGGTGTATTTGACTACAAGAAC | P. fluorescens SIK W1 lipase gene fused with FLAG tag | P. fluorescens SIK W1 chromosome [28,29] |
16 | 5-cccaagcttttacttgtcgtcatcgtccttgtagtcACTGATCAGCACACC |
Restriction enzyme sites are show
tliA, which encodes a thermostable lipase (476 aa; 49.9 kDa).
SDS-PAGE and Immunoblotting
To confirm an enzyme display on the E. coli surface, the outer membrane proteins were prepared by sodium lauryl sarcosinate (sarcosine) enrichment, as previously described by Lee et al. [8, 9]. The outer membrane fractions were analyzed by 10% sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). An immunoblotting experiment was performed in our previous study [22]. The proteins were transferred to Immobilon-P PVDF membranes (Millipore); the membranes were stained with MemCode reversible protein stain (Pierce Biotechnology) and imaged to verify that the protein loads were uniform and to ensure that efficient electrotransfer occurred, and the membranes were destained with Milli-Q water and blocked with nonfat dry milk prior to incubation with each primary antibody. For the immunodetection of the fusion protein, a monoclonal ANTI-FLAG M2 antibody (Sigma-Aldrich Co., USA) and a goat anti-mouse immunoglobulin G (IgG)- horseradish peroxidase (HRP) conjugate (Sigma-Aldrich) were used. An enhanced chemiluminescence (ECL) kit (Amersham ECL Prime Western Blotting Detection Reagent; GE Healthcare Bio-Sciences AB, Sweden) was used for signal detection.
Immunofluorescence Microscopy
For fluorescence imaging, cells induced with 1 mM IPTG for 4 h were harvested by centrifugation for 5 min at 3,500 ×g and 4°C and then washed with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). The cells were incubated with the ANTI-FLAG M2 antibody conjugated with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) (Sigma-Aldrich) diluted 1:500 in PBS containing 3% (wt/vol) BSA at 25°C for 2 h. Prior to microscopic observation, the cells were washed three times with PBS to remove unbound antibody probes. The cells were mounted on poly-L-lysine–coated microscopic slide glasses and examined by confocal microscopy (Carl Zeiss, Germany). Photographs were taken with a Carl Zeiss LSM 410. The samples were excited at 488 nm, and the images were filtered by a longpass 505-nm filter.
Measurement of Enzymatic Activities
The activity of the P. fluorescens lipase was determined by a spectrophotometric method using p-nitrophenyl decanoate (MW 293.36) as the substrate, as previously described by Lee et al. [8,9]. After cultivation, cells were harvested by centrifugation at 3,500 ×g and 4°C and then washed twice with PBS. Lyophilized cells were added to 3 ml of a substrate solution with a volumetric ratio of 1 part 10 mM p-nitrophenyl decanoate in acetonitrile, 4 parts ethanol and 95 parts 50 mM Tris-HCl. The reaction mixture was incubated at 37°C for 10 min, and the reaction was terminated by the addition of 2 μl of 0.5 M EDTA. The activity was determined by measuring the absorbance at 405 nm using a spectrophotometer. One unit of lipase activity was defined as the amount of enzyme releasing 1 μmol of p-nitrophenol per minute.
The activity of B. subtilis α-amylase was measured using an EnzyChrom α-Amylase Assay Kit (ECAM-100; BioAssay Systems, USA). Cells induced with 1 mM IPTG for 4 h were harvested by centrifugation for 5 min at 3,500 ×g and 4°C and then washed with MilliQ water, and transferred to a clear, flat-bottomed 96-well plate. The first reaction was carried out using starch as a substrate at room temperature (RT) for 15 min, followed by adding the detection reagent to each 96-well plate and incubation for 20 min at RT. Sample background readings were measured with an assay buffer (pH 7.0) at 585 nm, and 400 μM glucose was used as a standard. The α-amylase activity is calculated as:
In this formula, ODSample, ODSTD, and ODBuffer are the optical density values of the sample, the 400 μM glucose standard and assay buffer, respectively, t is the incubation time, and n is the dilution factor. One unit (U) was defined as the amount of enzyme required to produce 1 μmol of glucose per minute under the assay conditions.
All activity assays were independently performed in triplicate, and the standard deviations were determined.
Results and Discussion
Design of the E. coli Surface Display System Using an mipA Gene
The function of E. coli MipA has not been well characterized to date, except that MipA may be implicated in antibiotic resistance in the E. coli outer membrane [23]. By BLAST analysis, MipA and OmpV were determined to be highly homologous and to belong to the MipA/OmpV family. However, our previous study of the outer membrane proteome showed that MipA was continually expressed in both E. coli K-12 and B strains [24]. Additionally, other researchers identified MipA by proteome analysis of the E. coli outer membrane [25,26]. Thus, MipA has been considered to engineer an outer membrane anchoring element for bacterial cell surface display due to its continuous expression independent of E. coli strains.
The outer membrane topology of MipA was first predicted using PRED-TMBB (http://bioinformatics.biol.uoa.gr/PRED-TMBB/ ) [27]. As shown in Fig. 1A, the MipA protein contains five extracellular loops that form a β- sheet protruding from the cell surface. Among these loops, the third, fourth and fifth loops were primarily considered, since they likely have stronger and more stable anchoring locations in the β-barrel structure of E. coli. In this study, a C-terminal truncation strategy was used to display the protein of interest, and six cleavage sites (V140, V176, K179, V226, V232, and K234) of the mipA gene were tested as possible fusion sites from loops 3, 4 and 5 exposed on the exterior of the outer membrane. P. fluorescens SIK W1 lipase (49.9 kDa) was examined as a model protein for display on bacterial surfaces due to its various applications in biocatalysis and bioremediation [5, 9, 13, 14].
Fig. 1. Construction of the MipA-fused display system.
(A) The structure of MipA in the E. coli outer membrane. This topology was an arbitrary redrawing of the image predicted by PRED-TMBB [27]. Each gray circle indicates the fusion position of MipA with lipase: V140 in the third extracellular loop; V176 and K179 in the fourth extracellular loop; and V226, V232, and K234 in the fifth extracellular loop. (B) A schematic diagram of the expression system for MipA-fused target genes.
Construction of the Lipase Display System on the E. coli Surface
For construction of expression systems composed of truncated MipA fused to a target protein (Fig. 1B), the full- length mipA gene, as well as the C-terminal truncated mipA (mipAt) genes encoding the first 140, 176, 179, 226, 232 and 234 amino acids from the N-terminus, were amplified by PCR using the primers shown in Table 2. The genes were cloned into the EcoRI and XbaI sites of pTrc99A to make pTrcM, pTrcMV140, pTrcMV176, pTrcMK179, pTrcMV226, pTrcMV232, and pTrcMK234, respectively. To create a restriction enzyme site (XbaI) at the 3’ end of the mipAt gene, two amino acids (Ser and Arg) were added at the C-terminus. The full-length mipA gene without fusion (pTrcM) was used as a control.
To display a lipase on the E. coli cell surface, the P. fluorescens lipase gene containing the FLAG sequence (DYKDDDDK) was amplified using primers 15 and 16; it was then cloned into the XbaI and HindIII sites of the pTrcMV140, pTrcMV176, pTrcMK179, pTrcMV226, pTrcMV232, and pTrcMK234 vectors to create pTrcMV140PL, pTrcMV176PL, pTrcMK179PL, pTrcMV226PL, pTrcMV232PL, and pTrcMK234PL, respectively. E. coli XL10-Gold was used as a host strain for display because XL10-Gold was the best E. coli host strain, as reported by several previous display studies [8, 9, 20].
Lipase Activity on the E. coli Surface
To test which anchoring motif of the mipA-truncated derivatives developed in this study is the most efficient display system for displaying a large protein on E. coli cells, we first examined the enzymatic activities of the lipase displayed on several recombinant E. coli cells. The specific whole-cell lipase activities of recombinant cells are shown in Fig. 2. The results showed that lipase activity could be measured from all recombinant E. coli display strains to varying degrees, except for a control. Among the six mipA derivatives, MV140 was the best display motif. These results suggest that lipase was successfully and efficiently displayed in an active form with high stability using the mipAt gene as an anchoring motif. In addition, lipase activity obtained using MV140 was approximately 20-fold higher than those obtained with the previous anchoring motifs OprF or FadL display systems, which were applied as enantioselective biocatalysts for organic synthesis [8,9]. Furthermore, the display efficiency of the MV140-fused lipase on the membrane of E. coli had a slightly better efficiency than that of the YiaTR232-fused lipase [20], which was one of the more efficient E. coli display systems. These results suggest that the anchoring motif created using truncated MipA provides another efficient way to display functional lipase on the surface of E. coli.
Fig. 2. Comparison of lipase activity between the MipA anchoring motifs developed in this study and the previously reported motifs FadL [8], OprF [9], and YiaT [20]. E. coli XL10-Gold (pTrcM) is indicated as a control.
All activity assays were independently performed in triplicate, and the standard deviations were determined. One unit (U) of lipase activity was defined as the amount of enzyme that releases 1 μmol of p-nitrophenol per minute.
Confirmation of Lipase Display on the E. coli Surface
To confirm that localization of lipase was displayed on the surface using MV140 as an anchoring motif, the total lysate, outer membrane proteins, and soluble protein fractions of the E. coli XL 10-Gold cells harboring pTrcMV140PL were analyzed by SDS-PAGE and western blotting (Fig. 3). No signal was detected in the E. coli cells harboring the control pTrcM. In contrast, the bands for the approximately 65-kDa fusion lipase proteins were clearly detected in the total lysate and outer membrane fractions of the recombinant E. coli cells harboring pTrcMV140PL on the Coomassie Blue-stained SDS-PAGE gel (Fig. 3A). Additionally, the amount and localization of MV140-fused lipase on membrane fractions were clearly confirmed by western blotting (Fig. 3B). These results show that the fusion lipase tagged with FLAG was successfully displayed on the E. coli surface. However, the localization of excess proteins on the outer membrane might cause problems in cell wall integrity and could consequently result in cell lysis and the possible release of anchored proteins into the culture medium. Thus, the culture supernatant of E. coli harboring pTrcMV140PL was analyzed by western blotting analysis, but no signal was detected. These results indicate that MV140-fused lipases were displayed on the surface with a minimum of cell lysis.
Fig. 3. SDS-PAGE and western blotting analyses for total, outer membrane, and soluble fractions from E. coli XL10-Gold harboring pTrcM (control) (A) and pTrcMV140PL (B).
First lane in each gel indicates the molecular weight size markers (kDa). T, whole cell lysate; M, outer membrane protein fractions; and S, soluble proteins. Arrows indicate the MV140-fused lipase.
Confocal Microscopic Analysis of Lipase Display on the E. coli Surface
Additionally, the localization of lipase was confirmed by confocal microscopy. After cultivation, the cells were labeled with FITC-conjugated anti-FLAG antibody probe, which can recognize the FLAG tag linked to the C- terminus of lipase. E. coli harboring pTrcMV140PL showed strong fluorescence, while E. coli harboring pTrcM did not show any fluorescence signal (Fig. 4). This finding means that the MV140 anchoring motif successfully mediated the localization of lipase on the surface of E. coli. This result is almost consistent with the results of enzyme activity and western blotting of the MV140-fused lipase on the outer membrane of E. coli (Figs. 2 and 3).
Fig. 4. Differential interference microscope images (upper) and confocal immunofluorescence microscope images (lower) of E. coli XL10-Gold cells harboring pTrcM (control; left images) and pTrcMV140PL (right images).
Each scale bar represents 5 μm.
Display of α-Amylase on the E. coli Surface Using the MV140 as an Anchoring Motif
To demonstrate the general use of MV140 motif, B. subtilis α-amylase was examined as another model protein for cell surface display. First, the B. subtilis α-amylase gene containing the FLAG sequence was obtained from pTrcYiaTR232BA [20] with digestion of the XbaI and HindIII and then cloned into the same sites of the pTrcMV140 vector to make pTrcMV140BA (Table 1). Confirmation of the display of α-amylase was conducted by analyzing the western blotting of the outer membrane proteins of E. coli XL10-Gold cells harboring pTrcMV140BA. The result showed that approximately 63-kDa fusion proteins were detected in the outer membrane fractions of E. coli XL10- Gold (pTrcMV140BA) (Fig. 5A). However, no signal was detected in the E. coli cells harboring the control pTrcM.
Fig. 5. Display of B. subtilis α-amylase on the E. coli cell surface.
(A) Western blotting analyses of the outer membrane fractions of E. coli XL10-Gold cells harboring pTrcM (control) or pTrcMV140BA. M indicates the molecular weight size markers (kDa). (B) The α-amylase activity of E. coli XL10-Gold cells harboring pTrcM (control), pTrcMV140BA or pTrcYiaTR232BA [20].
Next, we examined whether the displayed α-amylase proteins were active. The specific whole-cell α-amylase activities of the recombinant E. coli cells are shown in Fig. 5B. As expected, the specific activity of α-amylase in the E. coli cells harboring the control pTrcM was not measured. Also, the α-amylase activities were negligible in the supernatants of all recombinant cells, suggesting that cell lysis was not a significant problem. The specific activity of α-amylase with whole cells was 48 U/L for E. coli XL10-Gold (pTrcMV140BA) cells (Fig. 5B). These results indicate that the MV140 motif could be used for successfully displaying another enzyme, α-amylase tagged with FLAG on the E. coli cell surface, but the previous motif, YiaTR232 (55 U/L), was a little more efficient as a display motif for α-amylase than the MV140. It demonstrates that the display efficiency could be dependent on the proteins of interest for display although it was used with the same anchoring motif. Therefore, this study shows that MipA can be used as a novel anchoring motif for efficient bacterial surface display in the biotechnological and industrial fields.
In summary, a new cell surface display system was developed using the E. coli MipA protein in this work. To select the best anchoring site from MipA, six possible sites were tested by designing and constructing the lipase fusion display systems. Among these sites, the enzyme activities showed that MV140 was the best anchoring motif for the E. coli display system. Further analyses by SDS-PAGE, western blotting, and confocal microscopy suggested that the MV140 motif could successfully display highly active forms of lipase on the E. coli surface without causing significant defects of cell lysis. In addition, α-amylase was also successfully displayed using the MV140-anchoring motif. These two model proteins (lipase and amylase) used in this study could be displayed in active form although they are quite large proteins. However, it might be possible that overexpression of anchoring motifs on the cell surface could result in physiological effects on the rigidity of cell membrane and metabolic burden and then possibly cause cell lysis [1, 30]. To minimize these deleterious effects of surface display, recombinant E. coli XL10-Gold was cultured in this study at 30oC after induction, but these mild conditions (e.g., low temperatures and lower concentrations of the inducer) result in reduced display of target proteins on the surface and consequently lead to reduced activity [9, 31]. Nevertheless, the mipA-truncated fusion display system developed in this work could be used to efficiently display targets (such as peptides, enzymes or proteins) of interest with an active form in biotechnological and industrial applications.
Acknowledgments
This study was supported by a grant from Dong Yang University in 2018. The author gratefully acknowledges the technical assistance provided by Hoon Jae Lee.
Footnotes
Conflict of Interest
The authors have no financial conflicts of interest to declare.
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