• Title/Summary/Keyword: expression in E. coli

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Molecular Cloning and Characterization of a Flower-specific Thionin in Chinese Cabbage

  • Jung, Bae-Gyo;Choi, Yeon-Ok;Lee, Kyun-Oh;Chi, Yong-Hun;Kang, Soon-Suk;Lee, Seung-Sik;Park, Soo-Kwon;Lee, Jung-Ro;Lim, Chae-Oh;Lee, Sang-Yeol
    • BMB Reports
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    • v.34 no.3
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    • pp.201-205
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    • 2001
  • Thionins are a family of low molecular weight cysteine-rich antimicrobial peptides. We isolated a cDNA encoding thionin gene from a flower bud cDNA library of Chinese cabbage (CFT). The gene contains 611 by nucleotides with 60 bp, and 150 by untranslated regions at its N- and C-terminal, respectively. The deduced amino acid sequence encoded 133 amino acids containing precursor polypeptide. The protein reveals that the precursor has a tripartite structure: a putative signal sequence at the N-terminus, followed by a mature thionin peptide, and a C-terminal acidic domain, which facilitates transport of the mature thionin through membrane. Genomic Southern blot analysis suggests that the CFT gene may be present as a single or two copy gene in the Chinese cabbage genome. Northern blot analysis shows that the gene is specifically expressed in flowers, but not in leaves, stems, or roots. When we analyzed the antifungal activity of the recombinant CFT protein, which was expressed in E. coli using the truncated cDNA region corresponding to the mature protein part, it was not active on fungal growth inhibition.

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Germ-line Transmission of Pseudotyped Retroviral Vector in Chicken

  • Heo, Y.T.;Kim, T.;Lee, Y.M.;Lee, C.K.;Kwon, M.S.;Koo, B.C.;Roh, K.S.;Whang, K.;Han, D.W.;Chung, K.S.;Lee, H.T.
    • Asian-Australasian Journal of Animal Sciences
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    • v.17 no.1
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    • pp.27-32
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    • 2004
  • Using MLV (murine leukemia virus)-based retrovirus vectors encapsidated with VSV-G (vesicular stomatitis virus G glycoprotein), we tried to make transgenic chickens carrying the transferred genes in their chromosomes. Twenty one days after virus injection beneath the blastoderms of unincubated chicken embryos (stage Ⅹ, at laying), DNA isolated from the hatched chicks were analyzed by PCR with two sets of primers specific for EGFP (enhanced green fluorescence protein) gene or $Neo^R$ (E. coli neomycin resistant) gene. Among sixty-seven embryos injected with retrovirus, four of them were identified to carry the EGFP genes in their genomes. Remarkably, one transgenic chick showed presence of the retrovirus vector sequences in all organs differentiated from one of endoderm, mesoderm, and ectoderm. Expression of EGFP gene was not detected, however, the stable germ line transmission of transgene was verified in spermatozoa from the founder chicken and 50% of $F_1$ progenies.

Thermostable Sites and Catalytic Characterization of Xylanase XYNB of Aspergillus niger SCTCC 400264

  • Li, Xin Ran;Xu, Hui;Xie, Jie;Yi, Qiao Fu;Li, Wei;Qiao, Dai Rong;Cao, Yi;Cao, Yu
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.24 no.4
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    • pp.483-488
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    • 2014
  • In order to improve the expression of heat-resistant xylanase XYNB from Aspergillus niger SCTCC 400264, XynB has been cloned into Pichia pastoris secretary vector pPIC9K. The XynB production of recombinant P. pastoris was four times that of E. coli, and the $V_{max}$ and specific activity of XynB reached $2,547.7{\mu}mol/mg$ and 4,757 U/mg, respectively. XynB still had 74% residual enzyme activity after 30 min of heat treatment at $80^{\circ}C$. From the van der Waals force analysis of XYNB (ACN89393 and AAS67299), there is one more oxygen radical in AAS67299 in their catalytic site, indicating that the local cavity is much more free, and it is more optimal for substrate binding, affinity reaction, and proton transfer, etc, and eventually increasing enzyme activity. The H-bonds analysis of XYNB indicated that there are two more H-bonds in the 33rd Ser of XYNB (AAS67299) than in the 33rd Ala(ACN89393 ), and two H-bonds between Ser70 and Asp67.

Cloning, Expression, and Characterization of UDP-glucose Pyrophosphorylase from Sphingomonas chungbukensis DJ77

  • Yoon, Moon-Young;Lee, Kyoung-Jin;Park, Hea-Chul;Park, Sung-Ha;Kim, Sang-Gon;Kim, Sung-Kun;Choi, Jung-Do
    • Bulletin of the Korean Chemical Society
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    • v.30 no.6
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    • pp.1360-1364
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    • 2009
  • The bacterium Sphingomonas chungbukensis DJ77 produces the extracellular polysaccharide gellan in high yield. Gellan produced by this bacterium is widely used as a gelling agent, and the enzyme UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (UGP) is thought to play a key role in the gellan biosynthetic pathway. The UGP gene has been successfully cloned and over-expressed in E. coli. The expressed enzyme was purified with a molecular weight of approximately 32 kDa, as determined by a SDS-polyacrylamide gel, but the enzyme appears as ca. 63 kDa on a native gel, suggesting that the enzyme is present in a homodimer. Kinetic analysis of UDP-glucose for UGP indicates $K_m$ = 1.14 mM and $V_{max}$ = 10.09 mM/min/mg at pH 8.0, which was determined to be the optimal pH for UGP catalytic activity. Amino acid sequence alignment against other bacteria suggests that the UGP contains two conserved domains: An activator binding site and a glucose-1-phosphate binding site. Site-directed mutagenesis of Lys194, located within the glucose-1-phosphate binding site, indicates that substitution of the charge-reversible residue Asp for Lys194 dramatically impairs the UGP activity, supporting the hypothesis that Lys194 plays a critical role in the catalysis.

Heteroexpression and Functional Characterization of Glucose 6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase from Industrial Aspergillus oryzae

  • Guo, Hongwei;Han, Jinyao;Wu, Jingjing;Chen, Hongwen
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.29 no.4
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    • pp.577-586
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    • 2019
  • The engineered Aspergillus oryzae has a high NADPH demand for xylose utilization and overproduction of target metabolites. Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH, E.C. 1.1.1.49) is one of two key enzymes in the oxidative part of the pentose phosphate pathway, and is also the main enzyme involved in NADPH regeneration. The open reading frame and cDNA of the putative A. oryzae G6PDH (AoG6PDH) were obtained, followed by heterogeneous expression in Escherichia coli and purification as a his6-tagged protein. The purified protein was characterized to be in possession of G6PDH activity with a molecular mass of 118.0 kDa. The enzyme displayed maximal activity at pH 7.5 and the optimal temperature was $50^{\circ}C$. This enzyme also had a half-life of 33.3 min at $40^{\circ}C$. Kinetics assay showed that AoG6PDH was strictly dependent on $NADP^+$ ($K_m=6.3{\mu}M$, $k_{cat}=1000.0s^{-1}$, $k_{cat}/K_m=158.7s^{-1}{\cdot}{\mu}M^{-1}$) as cofactor. The $K_m$ and $k_{cat}/K_m$ values of glucose-6-phosphate were $109.7s^{-1}{\cdot}{\mu}M^{-1}$ and $9.1s^{-1}{\cdot}{\mu}M^{-1}$ respectively. Initial velocity and product inhibition analyses indicated the catalytic reaction followed a two-substrate, steady-state, ordered BiBi mechanism, where $NADP^+$ was the first substrate bound to the enzyme and NADPH was the second product released from the catalytic complex. The established kinetic model could be applied in further regulation of the pentose phosphate pathway and NADPH regeneration of A. oryzae to improve its xylose utilization and yields of valued metabolites.

Enzymatic Characterization of Bacillus cereus Lactate Dehydrogenase Isozymes Expressed in Escherichia coli (Bacillus cereus에서 유래한 Lactate Dehydrogenase 동질효소 유전자의 대장균 내 발현 및 효소특성 규명)

  • Jang, Myoung-Uoon;Park, Jung-Mi;Lee, Hong-Gyun;Lee, So-Ra;Kim, Tae-Jip
    • Korean Journal of Microbiology
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    • v.46 no.2
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    • pp.213-218
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    • 2010
  • Lactate dehydrogenases (LDHs) have been highly focused for long time, due to their important roles in biochemical and metabolic pathways of cells. On the basis of genome-wide searching results, three putative LDH genes from Bacillus cereus ATCC 14579 genome have been PCR-amplified, cloned, and well-expressed in E. coli. All three BcLDH isozymes are supposed to share highly conserved catalytic amino acid residues in common $NAD^+$-dependent LDHs. Meanwhile, BcLDH1 consisting of 314 amino acids shares 86 and 49% of identities with BcLDH2 and 3, respectively. Interestingly, only BcLDH1 showed the converting activities between L-lactate and pyruvate in the presence of $NAD^+$ coenzyme, while the other isozymes are likely to have almost no activity. As a result, it was revealed that BcLDH1 can be a typical $NAD^+$-dependent L-lactate-specific dehydrogenase.

Expression Patterns of Bacillus subtilis Diacylglycerol Kinase Gene Induced by Physiological Stimuli (Bacillus subtilis dgk (diacylglycerol kinase) 유전자의 생리적 자극에 의한 유도발현)

  • Lee, Mi-Young;Suh, Seok-Jong;Lee, Jin-Hyung;Song, Bang-Ho;Kim, Jong-Cuk
    • Microbiology and Biotechnology Letters
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    • v.30 no.1
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    • pp.15-20
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    • 2002
  • Diacylglycerol kinase (DGK) phosphorylates the second messenger diacylglycerol (DAG) to phosphatidic acid and it may play a role in signal transduction in Escherichia coli as well as in eukaryotic cells. In addition, DGK is important for microorganisms to adapt to several physiological stimuli. In Bacillus subtilis, the effect of stress on dgk transcription was examined by northern hybridization. The high level of dgk transcription was induced against high osmolarity, low pH value and low temperature. Transcriptional analysis revealed that the dgk gene and dgk upstream locus (ORF2, ORF3 and ORF4) were transcribed as a polycistronic mRNA to form an approximately 2.5 kb transcript.

Proteomic Analysis of Serum Samples from Natural Herb and Immunoglobulin Yolksac (Ig Y) treated Porcine

  • Park, Hyeon-Soo;Nagappan, Arulkumar;Hong, Gyeong-Eun;Yumnam, Silvia;Lee, Ho-Jung;Kim, Gon-Sup
    • Journal of Korean Clinical Health Science
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    • v.1 no.1
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    • pp.83-89
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    • 2013
  • Purpose. Natural herb has been used for traditional medicine for thousands of years. For this reason, alternative medicine methods affect to domestic animal field. The main purpose of this study was to confirm the regulated proteins after feed additive treatment. Methods. We used total thirty male pigs were used for this experiment. E. coli and Salmonella typhimurium, were used for promote enteritis. Animals were divided into a negative control group, positive control group and test group to determine the effect of an additive mixture on the changes in protein expression in serum. The pigs were given a food supplemented with a natural herbal additive containing immunoglobulin yolksac (IgY) at concentrations 1%. On the 1st week and after eight weeks of feeding, the serums were collected from each group. The changes in the serum proteome as a response to the herbal additive were examined using two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Results. A total of 14 differentially expressed protein spots were identified by comparing the protein profiles of the control and additive treated porcine serums. Finally, 7 proteins were detected by MALDI-TOF/MS. Moreover, the proteins detected are involved in a cholesterol control factor, inflammation regulator, Conclusion. These results support of the hypothesis that a natural herbal additive containing IgY can affect the immune regulation system and reduce the pathological process by microbial infections.

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Simple Purification of BA-RGD Protein Based on CaCl2/EDTA Treatment and Inclusion Body Washing (CaCl2/EDTA 및 비이온성 계면활성제 활용 Inclusion Body 정제법을 이용한 BA-RGD 단백질의 생산)

  • Song, Wooho;Byun, Chang Woo;Yoon, Minho;Eom, Ji Hoon;Choi, Yoo Seong
    • KSBB Journal
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    • v.30 no.6
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    • pp.291-295
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    • 2015
  • The limited productivity of natural shell matrix proteins has hampered the investigation of their biochemical properties and practical applications, although biominerals in nature obtained by organic-inorganic assemblies have attractive mechanical and biological properties. Here, we prepared a vector for the expression of a fusion protein of a shell matrix protein from Pinctada fucata (named as GRP_BA) with the GRGDSP residue. The fusion protein of BA-RGD was simply produced in E. coli and purified through sequential steps including the treatment with $CaCl_2$ and EDTA solution for cell membrane washing, mechanical cell disruption and the application of non-ionic surfactant of Triton X-100 for BA-RGD inclusion body washing. The production yield was approximately 60 mg/L, any other protein band was not observed in SDS-PAGE and it was estimated that above 97% endotoxin was removed compared to the endotoxin level of whole cell. This study showed this simple and easy purification approach could be applied to the purification of BA-RGD fusion protein. It is expected that the protein could be utilized for the preparation of biominerals in practical aspects.

Cloning, Expression, and Characterization of Bacillus sp. snu-7 Inulin Fructotransferase

  • Kim, Chung-Sei;Hong, Chang-Ki;Kim, Kyoung-Yun;Wang, Xiu-Ling;Kang, Su-Il;Kim, Su-Il
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.17 no.1
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    • pp.37-43
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    • 2007
  • A gene encoding inulin fructotransferase (di-D-fructofuranose 1,2': 2,3' dianhydride [DFA III]-producing IFTase, EC 4.2.2.18) from Bacillus sp. snu-7 was cloned. This gene was composed of a single, 1,353-bp open reading frame encoding a protein composed of a 40-amino acid signal peptide and a 410-amino acid mature protein. The deduced amino acid sequence was 98% identical to Arthrobacter globiformis C11-1 IFTase (DFA III-producing). The enzyme was successfully expressed in E. coli as a functionally active, His-tagged protein, and it was purified in a single step using immobilized metal affinity chromatography. The purified enzyme showed much higher specific activity (1,276 units/mg protein) than other DFA III-producing IFTases. The recombinant and native enzymes were optimally active in very similar pH and temperature conditions. With a 103-min half-life at $60^{\circ}C$, the recombinant enzyme was as stable as the native enzyme. Acidic residues and cysteines potentially involved in the catalytic mechanism are proposed based on an alignment with other IFTases and a DFA IIIase.