Recombinant protein production associated growth inhibition results mainly from transcription and not from translation

Abstract Background Recombinant protein production can be stressful to the host organism. The extent of stress is determined by the specific properties of the recombinant transcript and protein, by the rates of transcription and translation, and by the environmental conditions encountered during the...

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Main Authors: Zhaopeng Li, Ursula Rinas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-04-01
Series:Microbial Cell Factories
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12934-020-01343-y
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spelling doaj-b162bdb5f3d349f38fb3537cd17f64f42020-11-25T02:20:03ZengBMCMicrobial Cell Factories1475-28592020-04-0119111110.1186/s12934-020-01343-yRecombinant protein production associated growth inhibition results mainly from transcription and not from translationZhaopeng Li0Ursula Rinas1Leibniz University of Hannover, Technical Chemistry-Life ScienceLeibniz University of Hannover, Technical Chemistry-Life ScienceAbstract Background Recombinant protein production can be stressful to the host organism. The extent of stress is determined by the specific properties of the recombinant transcript and protein, by the rates of transcription and translation, and by the environmental conditions encountered during the production process. Results The impact of the transcription of the T7-promoter controlled genes encoding human basic fibroblast growth factor (hFGF-2) and green fluorescent protein (GFP) as well as the translation into the recombinant protein on the growth properties of the production host E. coli BL21(DE3) were investigated. This was done by using expression vectors where the promoter region or the ribosome binding site(s) or both were removed. It is shown that already transcription without protein translation imposes a metabolic burden on the host cell. Translation of the transcript into large amounts of a properly folded protein does not show any effect on cell growth in the best case, e.g. high-level production of GFP in Luria–Bertani medium. However, translation appears to contribute to the metabolic burden if it is connected to protein folding associated problems, e.g. inclusion body formation. Conclusion The so-called metabolic burden of recombinant protein production is mainly attributed to transcription but can be enhanced through translation and those processes following translation (e.g. protein folding and degradation, heat-shock responses).http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12934-020-01343-yEscherichia coliRecombinant protein productionMetabolic burdenTranscriptional burden
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zhaopeng Li
Ursula Rinas
spellingShingle Zhaopeng Li
Ursula Rinas
Recombinant protein production associated growth inhibition results mainly from transcription and not from translation
Microbial Cell Factories
Escherichia coli
Recombinant protein production
Metabolic burden
Transcriptional burden
author_facet Zhaopeng Li
Ursula Rinas
author_sort Zhaopeng Li
title Recombinant protein production associated growth inhibition results mainly from transcription and not from translation
title_short Recombinant protein production associated growth inhibition results mainly from transcription and not from translation
title_full Recombinant protein production associated growth inhibition results mainly from transcription and not from translation
title_fullStr Recombinant protein production associated growth inhibition results mainly from transcription and not from translation
title_full_unstemmed Recombinant protein production associated growth inhibition results mainly from transcription and not from translation
title_sort recombinant protein production associated growth inhibition results mainly from transcription and not from translation
publisher BMC
series Microbial Cell Factories
issn 1475-2859
publishDate 2020-04-01
description Abstract Background Recombinant protein production can be stressful to the host organism. The extent of stress is determined by the specific properties of the recombinant transcript and protein, by the rates of transcription and translation, and by the environmental conditions encountered during the production process. Results The impact of the transcription of the T7-promoter controlled genes encoding human basic fibroblast growth factor (hFGF-2) and green fluorescent protein (GFP) as well as the translation into the recombinant protein on the growth properties of the production host E. coli BL21(DE3) were investigated. This was done by using expression vectors where the promoter region or the ribosome binding site(s) or both were removed. It is shown that already transcription without protein translation imposes a metabolic burden on the host cell. Translation of the transcript into large amounts of a properly folded protein does not show any effect on cell growth in the best case, e.g. high-level production of GFP in Luria–Bertani medium. However, translation appears to contribute to the metabolic burden if it is connected to protein folding associated problems, e.g. inclusion body formation. Conclusion The so-called metabolic burden of recombinant protein production is mainly attributed to transcription but can be enhanced through translation and those processes following translation (e.g. protein folding and degradation, heat-shock responses).
topic Escherichia coli
Recombinant protein production
Metabolic burden
Transcriptional burden
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12934-020-01343-y
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