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Agricultural and Environmental Chemistry
Improving Expression of Bovine Lactoferrin N-lobe by Promoter Optimization and Codon Engineering in Bacillus subtilis and its Antibacterial Activity Liang Jin, Rong-Zhen Zhang, Lixian Zhou, Lihong Li, Yan Xu, and Jiming Li J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.9b02350 • Publication Date (Web): 15 Aug 2019 Downloaded from pubs.acs.org on August 15, 2019
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
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Improving Expression of Bovine Lactoferrin N-lobe by
2
Promoter Optimization and Codon Engineering in Bacillus
3
subtilis and its Antibacterial Activity
4
Liang Jin, Lihong Li, Lixian Zhou, Rongzhen Zhang*, Yan Xu, Jiming Li
5 6
1Key
7
of Biotechnology, Jiangnan University, Wuxi 214122, P. R. China
Laboratory of Industrial Biotechnology of Ministry of Education & School
8
9
*Corresponding author: Rongzhen Zhang
10
Tel: +86-510-85197660; Fax: +86-510-85864112
11
Email address: Rongzhen Zhang,
[email protected] 12
Present address: School of Biotechnology, Jiangnan University, 1800
13
Lihu Avenue, Wuxi City, China, 214122
14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22
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ABSTRACT
24
Bovine lactoferrin N-lobe plays an important key in the nonimmunological
25
defense system. In this work, the most suitable promoter Pveg was selected
26
and the fragment coding bovine lactoferrin N-lobe was optimized according to
27
codon bias of Bacillus. The recombinant plasmid pMA0911-Pveg-mBLF-N was
28
introduced
29
subtilis/pMA0911-Pveg-mBLF-N. The bovine lactoferrin N-lobe was highly
30
expressed at 28 oC for 15 h. Its purified protein was obtained with 16.5 mg/L
31
and a purity of 93.6% using ammonium sulfate precipitation, Ni-NTA and
32
molecular exclusion. About 200 ng/mL purified bovine lactoferrin N-lobe
33
completely inhibited cell-growth of Escherichia coli JM109 (DE3), 70.3% of
34
Pseudomonas aeruginosa CGMCC 1.6740 and 41.5% of Staphylococcus
35
aureus CGMCC 1.282. To our knowledge, this is the first report about active
36
expression, purification and characterization of bovine lactoferrin N-lobe in
37
safe bacterium B. subtilis, which opens an available application way in the
38
biomedical and food industries.
into
Baicillus
subtilis
168
to
create
B.
39 40
Keywords: Bovine lactoferrin N-lobe; Bacillus subtilis; expression; codon bias;
41
promoter optimization;
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INTRODUCTION
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Lactoferrin (LF) has important functions related to its antimicrobial
47
activities which many scientists have confirmed in vivo and in vitro 1. It has
48
been named “nutraceutical protein” due to its remarkably important use as a
49
therapeutic agent in clinical settings 2. LF is capable of preventing
50
Gram-positive and -negative bacteria, and viruses such as HIV, parasites, and
51
fungi from their proliferation3. Very recently, LF was confirmed that it could
52
inhibit angiogenesis in a HT29 human colon tumor model to exert antitumor
53
effects 4. Lakshman et al. reported LF could resistant against plant pathogens
54
in transgenic plants 5.
55
LF is one of iron-binding proteins in transferrin family, which presents in
56
the whey protein fraction of milk 6, 7. It contains human lactoferrin (HLF), bovine
57
lactoferrin (BLF), camel lactoferrin and sheep lactoferrin etc. according to its
58
sources. The BLF protein backbone consists of 703 amino acids with a
59
theoretical molecular weight of about 80 kDa for its glycosylated protein. It
60
shared a high amino acid sequence identity of about 69% with HLF. However,
61
even though HLF and BLF showed the similar 3D structures, the fully folded
62
proteins are not entirely super-imposable7, 8. The BLF contains the N- and
63
C-lobes. Each lobe contains two domains, each domain has an Fe3+ binding
64
site. Lactoferricin is the antibacterial core of lactoferrin, which can be yielded
65
through pepsin-catalyzed cleavage. The N-lobe consists of the active domains
66
for exerting bactericidal function and heparin binding, while the C-lobe consists 3
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of a domain for performing hepatocyte binding and internalization functions. BLF is an important bioactive molecule in the nonimmunological defense
69
system of bovine 9. However, the concentration of BLF is very low. For
70
example, bovine colostrum has a highest production of 2–5 mg/mL BLF, while
71
normal milk only has 0.02 mg/mL 10. Among the main applications of BLF, it is
72
used as a nutritional additive for both animal and human consumption, which
73
was obtained naturally or as a recombinant additive, and other industrial
74
purpose including potentially in infant food. The development of preperation
75
strategies for recombinant BLF as a safe, effective drug and nutraceutical
76
protein attracted much interest in both research and industry. Therefore, the
77
development of strategies for the production of larger amounts of BLF was
78
required.
79
In recent years, genetic engineering technology has been rapidly
80
developed. Most commercia proteins are produced using the bioreactors
81
including the recombinant bacteria, yeast fungi, or animal cells. BLF is
82
considered as one of the most recombinantly produced proteins 11. BLF has
83
been expressed in several microscopic models. Kim et al. expressed the BLF
84
C-lobe in Rhodococcus erythropolis, purified and characterized the
85
recombinant BLF 12. Koo et al. expressed BLF N-lobe in a green alga of
86
Chlorella vulgaris 13. Rascón-Cruz’ group highly expressed BLF in Pichia
87
pastoris with antibacterial activity against Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus
88
aureus, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa in a small percentage 14.
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García-Montoya et al. used an Escherichia coli system for the expression of
90
BLF, and they obtained of BLF fractions with functional antibacterial activity 15.
91
However, for the application in food systems, it will be of more interest to
92
construct cell factories of heterologous genes in a safe strain, such as Bacillus
93
subtilis.
94
B. subtilis is the best studied GRAS (generally recognized as safe) strain,
95
which has been widely used for preparation of many enzymes of clinical or
96
industrial interest 16,17. It has prominent characteristics, such as
97
high-cell-density growth, well-established genetic manipulation, and available
98
large-scale preparation 18,19. Currently, many new expression toolboxs to tune
99
genetic expression have been broadened the applications of B. subtilis 20.
100
To realize high protein expression in B. subtilis, one of the major
101
strategies is the construction of expression systems under strong promoters.
102
Some promoters have proven to be highly successful for the over-expression
103
of proteins in B. subtilis 20. For example, Bongers et al. performed the high
104
expression under strictly control by subtilin 21. Bonnet’s group optimized a
105
genetic toolbox containing promoter libraries, including Pveg, PserA and PymdA
106
etc. to tune gene expression in B. subtilis 20. However, there is no any report
107
about the accommodation of BLF N-lobe to be highly expressed in B. subtilis
108
through promoter optimization. The other major strategy for high protein
109
expression is to select the preferred codons for microbials. Each
110
microorganism has its own favorable codons 22. Synonymous substitution of
5
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rare codons with those favorable ones can enhance target protein expression
112
in hosts 23 or increase the specific activity of enzyme 24. However, the BLF
113
N-lobe coding gene contains rare codons such as TTC, TCC, CCC etc 25. Thus,
114
both promoter and codon optimization could benefit BLF N-lobe expression in
115
B. subtilis.
116
In this study, five promoters on the plasmid pMA0911 were compared for
117
the expression of BLF N-lobe in B. subtilis system. And the coding fragment of
118
BLF N-lobe was optimized basing on the preferred codon of B. subtilis. The
119
high heterologous expression of BLF N-lobe was performed in B. subtilis. The
120
recombinant BLF N-lobe showed antimicrobial activity for the selected E. coli
121
JM109, Pseudomonas aeruginosa CGMCC 1.6740 and Staphylococcus
122
aureus CGMCC 1.282. To the best of our knowledge, this work reports the first
123
successful functional expression of BLF N-lobe in B. subtilis via
124
electrotransformation and shows antimicrobial activity for Gram-negative and
125
–positive bacteria.
126 127
128
METERIALS AND METHODS
129
Strains, Plasmids and Primers
130
Escherichia coli JM 109 (Invitrogen Co., Shanghai, China) was used as a
131
host for plasmid propagation. Bacillus subtilis 168 in our laboratory was used 6
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as the host for protein expression. Pseudomonas aeruginosa CGMCC 1.6740
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and Staphylococcus aureus CGMCC 1.282 were purchased from China
134
General Microbiological Culture Collection Center (CGMCC, Beijing, China).
135
The two strains and E. coli JM109 (DE3) were used for the antimicrobial assay.
136
The plasmid pMA0911 with kanamycin resistance was used for expression
137
vector. All restriction enzymes were purchased from Takara Co. Ltd (Shanghai,
138
China). The recombinant strains, plasmids and primers used in this work were
139
summarized in Table 1.
140
Media and Growth Conditions
141
E. coli JM 109 was cultured at 37 °C in Luria–Bertani (LB) broth (10 g/L
142
tryptone, 5 g/L yeast extract, 10 g/L NaCl) and LB plates (20 mg/mL agar)
143
supplemented with kanamycin (50 μg/mL) as the selective marker. B. subtilis
144
168 was cultured at 37 °C and 180 rpm on LB broth and LB plates (20 mg/mL
145
agar) supplemented with 50 μg/mL kanamycin. E. coli BL21 (DE3) were
146
cultured at 37°C in LB broth. P. aeruginosa CGMCC 1.6740 and S. aureus
147
CGMCC 1.282 were cultured at 37°C using the following medium: 10 g/L
148
tryptone, 5 g/L yeast extract, 10 g/L NaCl, and 5 g/L glucose.
149
Transformation of B. subtilis 168
150
Expression vector pMA0911 was propagated in E. coli JM109. The
151
plasmid was isolated from the positive clones. Linearized plasmid DNA of 1 μg
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was used to transform B. subtilis 168. The transformation was obtained by
153
electroporation using a MicroPulser BioRad® (BioRad, Hercules, CA, USA)
154
according to the manufacturer’s instructions. After 1 days of incubation in LB
155
broth with kanamycin, the positive clones were isolated for further
156
experiments.
157
Construction of BLF N-lobe Expression Vector with
158
Different Promoters
159
The fragment encoding BLF N-lobe and 5’-terminal promoters (Pcat, PsacB,
160
P43, Pveg and PserA) were chemically synthesized by the Takara Co., Ltd
161
(Shanghai, China). The promoter sequence was added at the 5’-terminal of
162
CAP binding site using overlap PCR technique. The synthesized DNA
163
fragment of BLF N-lobe was digested with BamH I and Mlu I and cloned into
164
the corresponding sites of an expression vector pMA0911. So the different
165
expression
166
pMA0911-P43-BLF-N, pMA0911-Pveg-BLF-N and pMA0911-PserA-BLF-N were
167
constructed. The five plasmids were transformed into the competent cells of B.
168
subtilis
169
subtilis/pMA0911-Pcat-BLF-N,
170
subtilis/pMA0911-P43-BLF-N, B. subtilis /pMA0911-Pveg-BLF-N and B. subtilis
171
/pMA0911-PserA-BLF-N.
plasmids
168
to
pMA0911-Pcat-BLF-N,
obtaining B.
the
pMA0911-PsacB-BLF-N,
recombinant
strains
B.
subtilis/pMA0911-PsacB-BLF-N,
B.
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173
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Codon Optimization of BLF in B. subtilis Based
on
codon
usage 25,
bias
in
Bacillus
sp.
OY1-2
174
(http://www.kazusa.or.jp/codon)
the variant mBLF N-lobe was designed to
175
improve the protein production. In mBLF N-lobe, 16 types of rare codons (TTC,
176
TCC, TCA, TGC, TGG, CCC, CCG, CAG, ATC, ATA, ACC, AAG, GTC, GCC,
177
GAC and GGC) were substituted with the synonymous ones used at the
178
highest frequency which was referenced from the international DNA sequence
179
databases. The optimized codon sequence of mBLF N-lobe was chemically
180
synthesized. The expression plasmid pMA0911-Pveg-mBLF-N was constructed
181
and the recombinant strains B. subtilis /pMA0911-Pveg-mBLF-N were obtained
182
after nucleotide sequencing.
183
RNA Isolation and Real-Time Quantitative PCR
184
Cellular RNA was extracted and purified using a GeneMark kit (TaKaRa
185
Co., Ltd., Shanghai, China), and cDNA was synthesized with a GeneCopoeia
186
kit. Independent reaction mixtures were performed using the same cDNA for
187
both the target gene and internal control. After an initial denaturation (95°C for
188
10 min), 40 amplification cycles were performed, with each cycle including
189
denaturation at 95°C for 10 s, annealing at 60°C for 20 s, and extension at
190
72°C for 45 s using a 7300 Real Time PCR System (Applied Biosystems,
191
Hercules,
192
5'-TCCAGACTCTGTGCCTTGTG-3'; R: 5'-TGTTCTCCCAGACTGTGTCG-3')
CA).
Oligonucleotide
primers
(F:
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193
were used for Real-Time Quantitative PCR to produce the sequence of 160 bp.
194
Relative gene expression levels were calculated by the 2−ΔΔCT method (where
195
CT = cycle threshold).
196
Batch Fermentation
197
To enhance the mBLF N-lobe production, batch fermentation was carried
198
out as follows: 200 mL of LB bloth supplemented with kanamycin (50 mg/L)
199
were inoculated with cells from a single transformant clone and incubated
200
overnight with shaking at 180 rpm. Then, the culture was added to a 5-L
201
fermentor, which contained 3000 mL of LB media supplemented with 50 mg/L
202
kanamycin. The culture was incubated at 37 °C on shaking for 3 h. Then it was
203
cultured for 15 h at 28 °C for the induction of BLF N-lobe expression.
204
Preparation of Crude Enzyme
205
The recombinant B. subtilis/pMA0911-BLF-N was cultured in LB medium
206
for 3 h at 37°C on a rotary shaker at 180 rpm, and was then cultured at 28 °C
207
on a rotary shaker at 180 rpm for 15 h. The cutures were collected by
208
centrifugation at 8000 ×g for 5 min at 4 °C. The cell pellets were suspended
209
and washed with 0.1 M potassium phosphate buffer (pH 7.0) for three times.
210
For crude enzyme preparation, the recombinant B. subtilis cells were
211
resuspended in 0.1 M potassium phosphate buffer containing 0.1 mM
212
β-mercaptoethanol and 2 μg/ml PMSF (pH 6.5). The collected cells were
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treated with 1 mg/mL lysozyme for 60 min at 4 °C , and was used for
214
sonication at 0 °C. The homogenate was centrifuged at 10,000×g for 40 min at
215
4 °C to obtain cell-free extracts. The obtained soluble extracts were stored at
216
-70 °C for further use.
217
Purification of Recombinant BLF-N and mBLF-N
218
The purification of the recombinant proteins were performed using the
219
following processes. The cell-free extracts were precipitated with 27% of
220
ammoniu sulfate resuspended and dialyzed against 10 vol of phosphate buffer.
221
The pooled extracts with a His6-tag at C-terminal were subjected to Ni-NTA
222
affinity chromatography (Pharmacia, Uppsala, Sweden) according to the
223
manufacture’s instructions. The pooled fractions were loaded on a SuperdexTM
224
200 (10/300 GL), which was equilibrated with the buffer (20 mM Tris-HCl, 150
225
mM NaCl, pH 7.5) using an ÄKTA Protein Purifier system (Pharmacia, Uppsala,
226
Sweden).
227
sulfate-polyacrylamide
228
concentration was measured by Bradford method
229
protein.
230
Measurement of the Antibacterial Activity
231 232
The
enzyme gel
was
assayed
electrophoresis
by
sodium
(SDS-PAGE). 26
The
dodecyl protein
using BSA as standard
The antibacterial activity of mBLF N-lobe was tested by the filter-disc plate assay method using three bacterial strains (E. coli JM109, P. aeruginosa
11
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CGMCC 1.6740 and S. aureus CGMCC 1.282) as the target cells. LB agar of 5
234
mL was cooled to 45 °C, mixed with 1 mL precultured cells, and then overlaid
235
on an LB plate. The total volume of plate was recorded as 6 mL. Sterile filter
236
discs were placed on the plate. The mBLF N-lobe in final concentrations of 100
237
ng/mL and 200 ng/mL were spotted on the filter disc. All plates were inverted
238
and incubated at an optimum temperature for 15 h. Antibacterial activity was
239
monitored by the size of growth inhibition zones. The antibacterial activity assay of mBLF N-lobe was carried out according
240 241
to the method described by Flores-Villaseñor et al 27 with minor modification.
242
Approximately 1×108 UFC per ml of each strain (E. coli JM109, P. aeruginosa
243
CGMCC 1.6740 and S. aureus CGMCC 1.282) was mixed with mBLF N-lobe
244
in a 96-well microplate containing LB broth. The mixture was incubated at 37
245
oC
246
concentration of mBLF-N in Tris-HCl buffer (pH 8.0) was 100 ng/ml and 200
247
ng/ml. The culture of E. coli JM109 without addition of mBLF N-lobe was used
248
as a control. Kanamycin was used at 60 ng/mL as a control of growth inhibition.
249
Cultures were incubated at 37 oC with a shaking of 200 rpm for 1 h and their
250
CFU was evaluated by serial 10-fold dilutions prepared in LB agar and
251
counting their clone number.
252
Statistical Analysis
253
for 2 h. And its OD600 value was recorded every 30 min. The final
Experimental data in triplicates or sextuplicates were analyzed using the
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Statistical Package for the Social Sciences v. 20.0 (SPSS/IBM Corp., Chicago,
255
IL). A one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used to compare mean
256
values using a significance level of P < 0.05. The differences among the mean
257
values within groups were achieved using Tukey’s post hoc test.
258
259
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
260
Choice of Five Constitutive Promoters for BLF N-lobe
261
Expression in B. subtilis
262
BLF has been called “nutraceutical protein” due to its remarkable
263
importance to have multiple properties and the potential use of therapeutic
264
protein 2, 3. With the increased need for larger amounts of BLF, it is urgent to
265
the develop strategies to improve BLF production through the heterologous
266
expression method. One of the major strategies is the construction of
267
expression systems with strong promoters 20, 21. The expression level of the
268
different enzymes can be tuned by promoter optimization 28. The BLF
269
(GenBank accession No. EU812318) molecule is proposed to contain N-lobe
270
and C-lobe. And the N-lobe contains the active domains with bactericidal
271
action and heparin binding function.
272
In this work, to improve the production of BLF N-lobe, we expressed BLF
273
N-lobe on vector pMA0911 with five different promoters in B. subtilis 168. The
274
coding gene of BLF N-lobe and the respective sequence of five promoters: Pcat, 13
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PsacB, P43, Pveg and PserA at its upstream were chemically synthesized. Then
276
the sequence was inserted into the vector pMA0911 with five constitutive
277
promoters Pcat, PsacB, P43, Pveg and PserA, resulting in five corresponding
278
plasmids. Then the recombinant plasmids were transformed into the
279
competent
280
subtilis/pMA0911-Pcat-BLF-N,
281
subtilis/pMA0911-P43-BLF-N, B. subtilis /pMA0911-Pveg-BLF-N and B. subtilis
282
/pMA0911-PserA-BLF-N were obtained after confirmed by DNA sequencing.
283
The changes in mRNA and protein expression of BLF N-lobe were
cells
of
B.
subtilis B.
168.
The
recombinant
strains
subtilis/pMA0911-PsacB-BLF-N,
B. B.
284
determined by RT-PCR technique. The mRNA and protein expression of BLF
285
N-lobe are shown in Figure 1. The promoters Pveg, P43 and PserA resulted in the
286
increases in mRNA of 240.2, 10.4, and 161.5%, and protein expression of 80.3,
287
3.5, and 55.4%, respectively, compared with Pcat as the control (P < 0.05). But
288
under the promoter PsacB, there were 48.2 and 25.4% decreases in mRNA and
289
protein expression compared with the control (P < 0.05). The protein
290
production of BLF N-lobe under the promoters P43, Pveg, PserA, Pcat and PsacB
291
were about 8.9, 15.5, 13.4, 8.6 and 6.4 mg per liter culture. It is important to
292
note that the promoter Pveg gave the highest increases in mRNA and protein
293
expression of BLF N-lobe. So the BLF N-lobe was expressed at the higher
294
level in B. subtilis /pMA0911-Pveg-BLF-N, B. subtilis /pMA0911-P43-BLF-N, B.
295
subtilis /pMA0911-PserA-BLF-N and B. subtilis /pMA0911-BLF-N than B. subtilis
296
/pMA0911-PsacB-BLF-N. And among the five types, the BLF N-lobe was
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expressed at the highest level in B. subtilis /pMA0911-Pveg-BLF-N (Figure 1).
298
Therefore, the recombinant B. subtilis /pMA0911-Pveg-BLF-N was used for
299
further codon optimization experiments.
300
Insert Figure 1
301
302
303
Codon Optimization of BLF-N in B. subtilis In some typical microorganisms, such as E. coli and Saccharomyces
304
cerevisiae, both synonymous and nonsynonymous substitution frequencies
305
correlate with expression levels 29, 30. The codon usage difference between the
306
target protein source and expression host has an affection on the protein
307
translation rate, frequently resulting in a low level of protein expression 30. So
308
codon engineering could change the protein expression components, modify
309
the translation frequency, and enhance the protein production.
310
To
further
improve
BLF
N-lobe
expression
through
the
gene
311
recombination method in B. subtilis, the other major strategy is to select the
312
preferred codons for the replacement of rare codons for microbials
313
analysis of the gene sequence of BLF N-lobe (the signal peptide was not
314
excluded in the sequence of BLF N-lobe) (Figure 2), it contains many rare
315
codons such as TTC, TCC, CCC etc for B. subitilis
316
optimization could benefit BLF N-lobe expression in B. subtilis. Based on
317
codon usage bias in Bacillus sp. OY1-2 (http://www.kazusa.or.jp/codon) 25, the
25.
31.
By
Thus, the codon
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318
variant mBLF N-lobe was designed to improve the protein production. The
319
mutations were designed in its coding genes as follows: in mBLF N-lobe, 16
320
types of rare codons were substituted with the synonymous ones used at the
321
highest frequency according to the international DNA sequence databases
322
In details (as shown in Figure 2), TTC in BLF-N were substituted by TTA, TCC
323
and TCA by TCG, TGC and TGG by TGT, CCC and CCG by CCA, CAG by
324
CAA, ATC and ATA by ATT, ACC by ACA, AAG by AAA, GTC by GTT, GCC
325
by GCA, GAC by GAT, GGC by GGT respectively. The mutated genes were
326
chemically synthesized by Takara Co. (Shanghai, China) then constructed on
327
pMA0911 with the promoter Pveg in B. subtilis 168.
328
25.
Insert Figure 2
329
330
Improving BLF N-lobe Expression by Promoter and
331
Codon Optimization
332
The construction of expression plasmid pMA0911-Pveg-mBLF-N was
333
shown in Figure 3. The recombinant pMA0911-Pveg-mBLF-N was transformed
334
into the competent cells of B. subtilis 168. Then, the positive clone B. subtilis
335
/pMA0911-Pveg-mBLF-N was achieved after verified by DNA sequencing. The
336
changes in mRNA and protein expression of BLF N-lobe were determined by
337
RT-PCR technique under the promoter Pveg after codon optimization. The
338
mRNA and protein expression of BLF N-lobe are shown in Figure 4. The codon
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339
optimization resulted in the increases in mRNA of 164.3%, and protein
340
expression of 52.7%, respectively, compared with the sample before
341
optimization as the control (P < 0.05). The protein BLF N-lobe was produced at
342
29.6 mg per liter culture after the optimization of promoter and codon.
343
Therefore, the codon optimization improved the BLF N-lobe production in B.
344
subtilis, which facilitate the further its large-scale culture, protein purification
345
and antibacterial activity measurement. As shown in Figure 5, the sequence of
346
this BLF N-lobe protein was identical to those of lactoferrin from four different
347
species: 96.52% with buffalo lactoferrin (PDB ID:1CE2 and 1BIY) 32, 32 92.45%
348
with goat lactoferrin (PDB ID: 1JW1) 34, and 74.46% with camel lactoferrin
349
(PDB ID: 1DTZ) 35. The protein BLF N-lobe is a monomeric one, with the ability
350
to bind two Fe3+ irons, together with two CO32-; the synergistic relationship
351
between metal ion and anion binding is a unique feature of transferin chemistry.
352
The 3-D structure demonstrated the presence of lactoferricin, the antibacterial
353
core, within Phe18 to Phe42 and the existence of 21 α-helices and 26
354
β-strands (Figure 6). Our experimental data is probably the first documentation
355
of expression of BLF N-lobe, in viral promoter pMA0911 in a B. subtilis system
356
using electotransformation.
357
Insert Figure 3
358
Insert Figure 4
359
Insert Figure 5
360
Insert Figure 6
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361
362
Large-scale Production of BLF-N and mBLF-N and
363
their Purification
364
After promoter optimization and codon engineering, the recombinant
365
strain B. subtilis /pMA0911-Pveg-mBLF-N was cultured on a larger scale of 5-L
366
fermentor with B. subtilis /pMA0911-Pveg-BLF-N as a control. Because the
367
recombinant proteins were fused with N-terminal His6-tag, they were purified to
368
homogeneity in three steps including the precipitation with 27% of ammonia
369
sulfate, then Ni-NTA affinity chromatography and a SuperdexTM 200 (10/300
370
GL) chromatography. The proteins were purified to apparent homogeneity by
371
SDS-PAGE. SDS-PAGE analysis showed that the purified BLF and mBLF was
372
around 80 kDa with a purity of over 93.6%. Lipopolysaccharide (LPS)
373
contamination, checked by Limulus Amebocyte assay (LAL Pyrochrome kit,
374
PBI International), was found to be 0.5 ± 0.05 ng/mL. Calculations of the
375
corresponding A280 value and SDS-PAGE analysis revealed that the
376
recombinant B. subtilis /pMA0911-Pveg-mBLF-N increased protein production
377
with 16.5 mg per liter of culture, while B. subtilis /pMA0911-Pveg-mBLF-N
378
produced about 10 mg per liter of culture. The production of recombinant BLF
379
in B. subtilis was much higher than that of E. coli 15.and C. vulgaris13, but lower
380
than that of P. pastoris14.
381
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Antibacterial Activity
383
Antimicrobial activity was envaluated by the filter-disc plate assay way
384
using three bacterial strains (E. coli JM109, P. aeruginosa and S. aureus)
385
according to the methods described by Kim et al. 12. The purified mBLF N-lobe
386
exhibited significant antibacterial activity against the three bacterial strains.
387
The mBLF N-lobe at a concentration of 100 ng/mL exhibited antibacterial
388
activity towards E. coli growth inhibition (Figure 7A). And 200 ng/ml mBLF-N
389
inhibited all the above strains with a large inhibition halo (Figure 7B and
390
7C).The inhibition halo size of E. coli was obviously larger than those of P.
391
aeruginosa and S. aureus under the same treated condition . And the inhibition
392
size of S. aureus was the smallest among the three ones, which might be S.
393
aureus was negative-bacterium with its stronger cell walls. In a control
394
experiment of E. coli JM109 without the mBLF-N, no zones of antibacterial
395
activity were observed. The results suggested that mBLF-N presented the
396
bactericidal effects against E. coli JM109, P. aeruginosa and S. aureus. But
397
the detailed data of antibacterial activity was required to be determined.
398
The antibacterial activity of mBLF N-lobe was measured according to the 27.
399
method described by Flores-Villaseñor et al
After incubation in a 96-well
400
microplate, the capacity of mBLF N-lobe and BLF N-lobe to inhibit the
401
cell-growth of E. coli JM109, P. aeruginosa and S. aureus was tested in
402
medium. The results suggested that the same strains showed the same
403
susceptibility to mBLF N-lobe and BLF N-lobe (Figure 8), suggesting the 19
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404
promoter and codon optimization did not alter antibacterial activity. However,
405
the three strains showed different susceptibility to mBLF N-lobe (Figure 8). E.
406
coli JM109 (DE3) was the most susceptible to mBLF N-lobe with a growth
407
inhibition of 69.8 %, compared with 66.7% and 32.2% for P. aeruginosas and S.
408
aureus under the treatment of 100 ng/ml mBLF N-lobe. mBLF N-lobe of 200
409
ng/mL completely inhibited the cell-growth of E. coli. And it showed increased
410
inhibition rates of bacterial growth, which were 70.3% and 41.5% for P.
411
aeruginosas and S. aureus respectively. Kanamycin of 60 ng/mL showed
412
complete inhibition of bacterial growth of E. coli and P. aeruginosas, while
413
inhibited 53.7% S. aureus cell-growth. Antimicrobial activity is one of the various biological functions of BLF, and
414 415
its mechanism of action and immunomodulatory interactions are of particular
416
interest. BLF can inhibit bacterial growth by its iron binding activity and
417
restriction of iron metabolism 27. It was reported that lactoferricin B derived
418
from the N-lobe of bovine lactoferrin had bactericidal activity 36, since it is
419
attributed to disruption of cell membranes of Gram-negative or -positive bateria
420
by the basic residues arrayed along the outside of the lactoferricin B molecule
421
37.
422
bacteria.
423
So mBLF N-lobe showed the inhibition for the Gram-negative and –positive
The mBLF N-lobe expressed in B. subtilis showed the lower antibacterial
424
activity than that in P. pastoris, which might result from the lower degree of
425
glycosylation of mBLF N-lobe in B. subtilis than that in P. pastoris 14. However,
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426
it exhibited significantly higher than BLF C-lobe in E. coli, which might be due
427
to the very important role of BLF N-lobe in B. subtilis than its C-lobe in E. coli15.
428
So the B. subtilis expression system realized high-level expression of the BLF
429
N-lobe, and it demonstrated significant antibacterial activity against selected
430
strains of E. coli, P. aeruginosas and S. aureus. The successful expression
431
and charaterization of functional mBLF N-lobe expressed in B. subtilis opens a
432
prospect for the production of natural antimicrobial agents and facilitates its
433
structure–function relationship research. Food-grade production of the
434
iron-containing BLF would be favorable to the practical applications in food and
435
pharmaceutical industries.
436
Insert Figure 7
437
Insert Figure 8
438
439
440 441
ABBREVIATIONS AND NOMENCLATURE BLF, bovine lactoferrin; GRAS, generally recognized as safe; HLF, human lactoferrin; LF, Lactoferrin; Kan, Kanamycin
442 443
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Page 22 of 41
Figure Captions:
446
Figure 1. Relative mRNA expression and BLF N-lobe production under
447
the different promoters. Relative mRNA expression level of BLF N-lobe under
448
Pcat promoter was used as the control normalized to a value of 1. Different
449
treatments within relative mRNA expression or protein production represent
450
significant differences (P < 0.05). Error bars indicate SD.
451 452
Figure 2. Codon usage analysis of BLF N-lobe gene sequence. Signal
453
peptide sequence was excluded. Coding sequences are shown for each of the
454
three codon variants that were expressed. The rare codons underlined with red
455
lines are replaced the preferred codons in blue based on the codon bias
456
according to the B. subtilis database (http://www.kazusa.or.jp/codon).
457 458
Figure 3. The construciton of the recombinant plasmid
459
pMA0911-Pveg-mBLF-N. The vector contains a synthetic mBLF N-lobe gene
460
for expression in B. subtilis 168. The Pveg was included as a promoter.
461 462
Figure 4. Relative mRNA expression and BLF N-lobe production by
463
codon optimization under the Pveg promoter. The relative mRNA expression
464
before optimization was used as the control normalized to a value of 1.
465
Different treatments within relative mRNA expression or protein production
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466
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
represent significant differences (P < 0.05). Error bars indicate SD.
467 468
Figure 5. The structure and sequence alignment of BLF N-lobe with
469
several selected members of transferring family. Left columns contain the
470
Protein Data Bank accession codes of the structures. 1CE2, buffalo lactoferrin;
471
1BIY, buffalo lactoferrin 2; 1JW1, goat lactoferrin; 1DTZ, camel lactoferrin.
472
Conserved residues are boxed with blue lines. Selected residue numbers of
473
the lactoferrin are labeled above the sequence. Secondary structure elements
474
of BLF are marked on the top of the alignment. This figure was prepared with
475
the program Espript (http://espript.ibcp.fr/ESPript/cgi-bin/ESPript.cgi/).
476 477 478
Figure 6. The 3-D structure of recombinant BLF N-lobe protein. The existence of 21 α-helices and 26 β-sheets structure was confirmed.
479 480
Figure 7. Filter-Disc plate assay for detection of antibanterial activity
481
against E. coli JM109 (A), P. aeruginosa CGMCC 1.6740 (B) and S. aureus
482
CGMCC 1.282 (C).
483
The solid medium was cooled to about 45 oC and mixed with 1 mL of the
484
precultured target cells, and then overlaid on a plate. Sterile filter discs were
485
placed on the plate and the mBLF N-lobe, BLF N-lobe and kanamycin were
486
prepared in different concentrations, and then 20 μL of these solutions were
487
spotted on the filter disc. All plates were incubated at 37 oC for 18 h.
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488
Antibacterial activity was evaluated by the size of the zones of cell-growth
489
inhibition. A, C, 200 ng/mL and 100 ng/mL mBLF N-lobe; B, D, 200 ng/mL and
490
100 ng/mL BLF N-lobe; E, 60 ng/mL kanamycin.
491 492
Figure 8. Antibacterial activity of BLF N-lobe. Bacteria were incubated in
493
LB medium treated with 100 ng/mL and 200 ng/mL BLF N-lobe, or 60 ng/mL
494
kanamycin. Percentage of growth was calculated relative to commercial BLF.
495
Experiments were performed in triplicate. The viable cells were calculated
496
relative to untreated bacteria in medium. Different treatments represent
497
significant differences (P < 0.05). Error bars indicate SD.
498 499 500
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502
Tables:
503
Table 1. Bacterial strains and plasmids used in this work. Strains/plasmids/primers
Characteristics
Sources
E. coli JM109
recA1, endA1, gyrA96, thi-1, hsd R17(rk- mk+)supE44
Invitrogen
E. coli / pMA0911-Pcat-BLF-N
E. coli JM109 containing pMA0911-Pcat-BLF-N (KmR)
This study
E. coli / pMA0911-PsacB-BLF-N
E. coli JM109 containing pMA0911-PsacB-BLF-N (KmR)
This study
E. coli / pMA0911-P43-BLF-N
E. coli JM109 containing pMA0911-P43-BLF-N (KmR)
This study
E. coli / pMA0911-Pveg-BLF-N
E. coli JM109 containing pMA0911-Pveg-BLF-N (KmR)
This study
E. coli / pMA0911-PserA-BLF-N
E. coli JM109 containing pMA0911-PserA-BLF-N (KmR)
This study
E. coli / pMA0911-Pveg-mBLF-N
E. coli JM109 containing pMA0911-Pveg-mBLF-N (KmR)
This study
B. subtilis 168
trpC2
Lab stock
B. subtilis/ pMA0911-Pcat-BLF-N
B. subtilis 168 containing pMA0911-Pcat-BLF-N (KmR)
This study
B.
B. subtilis 168 containing pMA0911-PsacB-BLF-N (KmR)
This study
B. subtilis/ pMA0911-P43-BLF-N
B. subtilis 168 containing pMA0911-P43-BLF-N (KmR)
This study
B. subtilis/ pMA0911-Pveg-BLF-N
B. subtilis 168 containing pMA0911-Pveg-BLF-N (KmR)
This study
B.
subtilis/
B. subtilis 168 containing pMA0911-PserA-BLF-N (KmR)
This study
subtilis/
B. subtilis 168 containing pMA0911-Pveg-mBLF-N (KmR)
This study
pMA0911
E. coli / B. subtilis shuttle vector
Lab stock
pMA0911-Pcat-BLF-N
pMA0911 containing BLF N-lobe with promoter Pcat
This study
pMA0911-PsacB-BLF-N
pMA0911 containing BLF N-lobe with promoter PsacB
This study
pMA0911-P43-BLF-N
pMA0911 containing BLF N-lobe with promoter P43
This study
pMA0911-Pveg-BLF-N
pMA0911 containing BLF N-lobe with promoter Pveg
This study
pMA0911-PserA-BLF-N
pMA0911 containing BLF N-lobe with promoter PserA
This study
pMA0911-Pveg-mBLF-N
pMA0911 containing mBLF N-lobe with promoter Pveg
This study
Strains
subtilis/pMA0911-PsacB-BLF-N
pMA0911-PserA-BLF-N B. pMA0911-Pveg-mBLF-N
Plasmids
504
KmR kanamycin-resistant.
505 25
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506
AUTHOR INFORMATION
507
Corresponding Authors
508
*Tel.: +86 510 85197760. Fax: +86 501 85918201.
509
E-mail:
[email protected] (R.Z.Z.).
510
ORCID
511
Rongzhen Zhang: 0000-0002-5745-1190
512
Author Contributions
513
L.J. conducted the investigation; devised the methodology; did experiments;
514
and wrote the original draft. Y.X. were involved in formal analysis, and revising
515
the manuscript. R.Z.Z. and J.M.L supervised the work; reviewed and revised
516
the manuscript. L.H.L. and L.X.Z. performed formal data analysis.
517
Notes
518
The authors declare no competing financial interest.
519
FUNDING SOURCES
520
This project was supported by the National Key research and
521
Development Program of China (2018YFA0900302), the Program for
522
Advanced Talents within Six Industries of Jiangsu Province (2015-SWYY-010),
523
the National First-class Discipline Program of Light Industry Technology and
524
Engineering (LITE2018-12), and the Program of Introducing Talents of
525
Discipline to Universities (111-2-06).
526
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Figure 1. Relative mRNA expression and BLF N-lobe production under the different promoters. Relative mRNA expression level of BLF N-lobe under Pcat promoter was used as the control normalized to a value of 1. Different treatments within relative mRNA expression or protein production represent significant differences (P < 0.05). Error bars indicate SD. 113x79mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Figure 2. Codon usage analysis of BLF N-lobe gene sequence. 160x113mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Figure 3. The construciton of the recombinant plasmid pMA0911-Pveg-mBLF-N. The vector contains a synthetic mBLF N-lobe gene for expression in B. subtilis 168. The Pveg was included as a promoter. 101x12mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Figure 4. Relative mRNA expression and BLF N-lobe production by codon optimization under the Pveg promoter. The relative mRNA expression before optimization was used as the control normalized to a value of 1. Different treatments within relative mRNA expression or protein production represent significant differences (P < 0.05). Error bars indicate SD. 106x79mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Figure 5. The structure and sequence alignment of BLF N-lobe with several selected members of transferring family. Left columns contain the Protein Data Bank accession codes of the structures. 1CE2, buffalo lactoferrin; 1BIY, buffalo lactoferrin 2; 1JW1, goat lactoferrin; 1DTZ, camel lactoferrin. Conserved residues are boxed with blue lines. Selected residue numbers of the lactoferrin are labeled above the sequence. Secondary structure elements of BLF are marked on the top of the alignment. This figure was prepared with the program Espript (http://espript.ibcp.fr/ESPript/cgi-bin/ESPript.cgi/). 186x123mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Figure 6. The 3-D structure of recombinant BLF N-lobe protein. 265x179mm (72 x 72 DPI)
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Figure 7. Filter-Disc plate assay for detection of antibanterial activity against E. coli JM109 (A), P. aeruginosa CGMCC 1.6740 (B) and S. aureus CGMCC 1.282 (C). 299x103mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Figure 8. Antibacterial activity of BLF N-lobe. 279x124mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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