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1.
This article describes the reconstitution in Escherichia coli of a heterologous protein secretion system comprising a gene for an extracellular protein together with its cognate secretion genes. The protein concerned, pullulanase, is a secreted lipoprotein of the Gram-negative bacterium Klebsiella pneumoniae. It is initially localized to the cell surface before being specifically released into the medium. E. coli carrying the cloned pullulanase structural gene (pulA) produces pullulanase but does not expose or secrete it. Secretion genes were cloned together with pulA in an 18.8 kbp fragment of K. pneumoniae chromosomal DNA. E. coli carrying this fragment exhibited maltose-inducible production, exposition and specific secretion of pullulanase. Transposon mutagenesis showed that the secretion genes are located on both sides of pulA. Secretion genes located 5' to pulA were transcribed in the opposite orientation to pulA under the control of the previously identified, malT-regulated malX promoter. Thus these secretion genes are part of the maltose regulon and are therefore co-expressed with pulA. Transposon mutagenesis suggested that secretion genes located 3' of pulA are not co-transcribed with pulA, raising the possibility that some secretion functions are not maltose regulated.  相似文献   

2.
Export and secretion of the lipoprotein pullulanase by Klebsiella pneumoniae   总被引:18,自引:8,他引:10  
Pullulanase, a secreted lipoprotein of Klebsiella pneumoniae, is initially localized to the outer face of the outer membrane, as shown by protease and substrate accessibility and by immunofluorescence tests. Freeze-thaw disruption of these cells released both membrane-associated and apparently soluble forms of pullulanase. Membrane-associated pullulanase co-fractionated with authentic outer membrane vesicles upon isopycnic sucrose-gradient centrifugation, whereas the quasi-soluble form had the same equilibrium density as inner membrane vesicles and extracellular pullulanase aggregates. The latter also contained outer membrane maltoporin, but were largely devoid of other membrane components including LPS and lipids. K. pneumoniae carrying multiple copies of the pullulanase structural gene (pulA) produced increased amounts of cell-associated and secreted pullulanase, but a large proportion of the enzyme was neither exposed on the cell surface nor released into the medium, even after prolonged incubation. This suggests that factors necessary for pullulanase secretion were saturated by the over-produced pullulanase. When pulA was expressed under lacZ promotor control, the pullulanase which was produced was not exposed on the cell surface at any time, suggesting that pullulanase secretion genes are not expressed constitutively, and raising the possibility that they, like pulA, may be part of the maltose regulon.  相似文献   

3.
Some strains of Klebsiella pneumonia secrete pullulanase, a debranching enzyme which produces linear molecules (maltodextrins, amylose) from amylopectin and glycogen. pulA, the structural gene for pullulanase, was introduced into Escherichia coli, either on a multiple-copy-number plasmid or as a single copy in the chromosome. When in E. coli, pulA was controlled by malT, the positive regulatory gene of the maltose regulon. Indeed, pulA expression was undetectable in a malT-negative mutant and constitutive in a malTc strain. Furthermore, the plasmid carrying pulA titrated the MalT protein. When produced in E. coli, pullulanase was not localized in the same way as in K. pneumoniae. In the latter case it was first exported to the outer membrane, with which it remained loosely associated, and was then released into the growth medium. In E. coli the enzyme was distributed both in the inner and the outer membranes and was never released into the growth medium.  相似文献   

4.
5.
The fatty acid-acylated enzyme pullulanase is normally found in either of two locations in Escherichia coli, depending on whether or not the producing strains also express the genes specifically required for the second step in pullulanase secretion. When they are expressed, the enzyme is localized to the cell surface, while in their absence, it is directed to an unidentified location in the cell envelope which, upon lysis, forms vesicles whose density is intermediate between those of outer and cytoplasmic membrane vesicles. In order to test the role of the putative lipoprotein sorting signal, Asp2, in pullulanase sorting and secretion, the structural gene (pulA) was subjected to site-directed mutagenesis. Replacement of the Asp2 residue by Asn, Glu, or Ser caused the enzyme to fractionate with outer membrane-derived vesicles rather than with intermediate density vesicles from E. coli cells devoid of pullulanase secretion genes. A pronounced secretion defect was observed in a two-step secretion assay in which the first (sec gene-dependent) and second (pul gene-dependent) secretion steps were uncoupled. We propose that the Asp residue increases the efficiency of pullulanase secretion by allowing the enzyme to be initially sorted to a region of the cell envelope wherein most of the pullulase-specific secretion factors are located.  相似文献   

6.
The determined nucleotide sequence of the Klebsiella pneumoniae UNF5023 gene pulA comprises a single open reading frame coding for a 1090-residue precursor of the secreted protein pullulanase. The predicted sequence of this protein is highly homologous to that of pullulanase of Klebsiella aerogenes strain W70. However, the UNF5023 pullulanase lacks a collagen-like sequence present at the N-terminus of the mature W70 enzyme and differs further from the W70 pullulanase around residue 300 and at the C-terminus. Pullulanases with or without the collagen-like sequence could not be separated by gel electrophoresis under denaturing or non-denaturing conditions, and were unaffected by collagenase. A large central domain which is highly conserved in both UNF5023 and W70 polypeptides contains eight short sequences that are also found in amylases and iso-amylases. Linker mutations in the region of the UNF5023 pulA gene coding for this domain abolished catalytic activity without affecting transport of the polypeptide across the outer membrane. Hybrid proteins comprising at least the amino-terminal 656 residues of prepullulanase fused to alkaline phosphatase were partially localized to the cell surface, as judged by their accessibility to anti-pullulanase serum in immuno-fluorescence tests. On the basis of these results, we tentatively propose that secretion signals required for recognition and translocation across the outer membrane via the pullulanase-specific extension of the secretion pathway are located near the N-terminus of the pullulanase polypeptide.  相似文献   

7.
The secretion of the Klebsiella oxytoca cell surface lipoprotein pullulanase involves translocation across the cytoplasmic and outer membranes of the Gram-negative bacterial cell envelope. A variant of pullulanase was created by fusing the signal peptide-encoding 5' region of the Escherichia coli gene for periplasmic MalE protein to the 3' end of the pulA gene encoding almost the entire mature part of pullulanase. When produced in E. coli carrying the malE-pulA gene fusion on a high copy number plasmid and the complete set of genes specifically required for pullulanase secretion on a second plasmid, the hybrid protein differed from wild-type pullulanase as follows: (i) it was not fatty-acylated; (ii) it was apparently processed by LepB signal peptidase rather than by LspA lipoprotein signal peptidase; (iii) it was released into the periplasm and was only slowly transported across the outer membrane, and (iv) it was released directly into the medium rather than via the usual surface-anchored intermediate. The hybrid protein was secreted more rapidly when malE-pulA was expressed from a low copy number plasmid. The two steps in the secretion pathway could be totally uncoupled by expressing first the malE-pulA gene fusion and then the cognate secretion genes. These results show that fatty-acylation of wild-type PulA is not essential for secretion but may improve its efficiency when large amounts of the protein are produced, that the two steps in secretion can occur quite independently and that the periplasmic intermediate can persist for long periods under certain circumstances.  相似文献   

8.
The gene encoding a type I pullulanase from the hyperthermophilic anaerobic bacterium Thermotoga neapolitana (pulA) was cloned in Escherichia coli and sequenced. The pulA gene from T. neapolitana showed 91.5% pairwise amino acid identity with pulA from Thermotoga maritima and contained the four regions conserved in all amylolytic enzymes. pulA encodes a protein of 843 amino acids with a 19-residue signal peptide. The pulA gene was subcloned and overexpressed in E. coli under the control of the T7 promoter. The purified recombinant enzyme (rPulA) produced a 93-kDa protein with pullulanase activity. rPulA was optimally active at pH 5-7 and 80°C and had a half-life of 88 min at 80°C. rPulA hydrolyzed pullulan, producing maltotriose, and hydrolytic activities were also detected with amylopectin, starch, and glycogen, but not with amylose. This substrate specificity is typical of a type I pullulanase. Thin layer chromatography of the reaction products in the reaction with pullulan and aesculin showed that the enzyme had transglycosylation activity. Analysis of the transfer product using NMR and isoamylase treatment revealed it to be α-maltotriosyl-(1,6)-aesculin, suggesting that the enzyme transferred the maltotriosyl residue of pullulan to aesculin by forming α-1,6-glucosidic linkages. Our findings suggest that the pullulanase from T. neapolitana is the first thermostable type I pullulanase which has α-1,6-transferring activity.  相似文献   

9.
The gene encoding the type I pullulanase from the extremely thermophilic anaerobic bacterium Fervidobacterium pennavorans Ven5 was cloned and sequenced in Escherichia coli. The pulA gene from F. pennavorans Ven5 had 50.1% pairwise amino acid identity with pulA from the anaerobic hyperthermophile Thermotoga maritima and contained the four regions conserved among all amylolytic enzymes. The pullulanase gene (pulA) encodes a protein of 849 amino acids with a 28-residue signal peptide. The pulA gene was subcloned without its signal sequence and overexpressed in E. coli under the control of the trc promoter. This clone, E. coli FD748, produced two proteins (93 and 83 kDa) with pullulanase activity. A second start site, identified 118 amino acids downstream from the ATG start site, with a Shine-Dalgarno-like sequence (GGAGG) and TTG translation initiation codon was mutated to produce only the 93-kDa protein. The recombinant purified pullulanases (rPulAs) were optimally active at pH 6 and 80 degrees C and had a half-life of 2 h at 80 degrees C. The rPulAs hydrolyzed alpha-1,6 glycosidic linkages of pullulan, starch, amylopectin, glycogen, alpha-beta-limited dextrin. Interestingly, amylose, which contains only alpha-1,4 glycosidic linkages, was not hydrolyzed by rPulAs. According to these results, the enzyme is classified as a debranching enzyme, pullulanase type I. The extraordinary high substrate specificity of rPulA together with its thermal stability makes this enzyme a good candidate for biotechnological applications in the starch-processing industry.  相似文献   

10.
A series of fusions between the gene for the Klebsiella pneumoniae secreted lipoprotein pullulanase (pulA) and the genes for cytoplasmic beta-galactosidase (lacZ) or periplasmic alkaline phosphatase (phoA) were created by transposon mutagenesis using mini-MudII1681 or TnphoA, respectively. The hybrid genes were expressed in Escherichia coli K-12 with or without the K. pneumoniae genes that promote pullulanase secretion in E. coli. We characterized seven different pulA-lacZ gene fusions encoding hybrid polypeptides containing from 14 to c. 1060 residues of pro-pullulanase. All but the smallest hybrid were fatty acylated and were toxic to producing cells, causing the accumulation of precursors of other exported proteins. Four different pulA-phoA gene fusions encoded hybrids with alkaline phosphatase activity. All four hybrids were fatty acylated, but were not toxic. Although the hybrids were apparently membrane-associated, they were not secreted into the medium either by E. coli carrying pullulanase secretion genes or by K. pneumoniae. Immunofluorescence tests indicated that the pullulanase secretion genes promoted the localization of one of these hybrids to the outer face of the E. coli outer membrane, which may have important implications for the design of live vaccine strains and of immobilized enzymes.  相似文献   

11.
The previously uncharacterized third and fourth genes (pulE and pulF) of the pullulanase secretion gene operon of Klebsiella oxytoca strain UNF5023 are, respectively, predicted to encode a 55 kDa polypeptide with a putative nucleotide-binding site, and a highly hydrophobic 44 kDa polypeptide that probably spans the cytoplasmic membrane several times. Expression of pulE in minicells or under the control of a strong bacteriophage T7 promoter resulted in the production of a c. 58 kDa cytoplasmic protein. A representative PulE-beta-galactosidase hybrid protein created by Tnlac mutagenesis was also found mainly in the cytoplasm. These results are in line with the predicted absence from PulE of a region of sufficient hydrophobicity to function as a signal sequence. The PulF polypeptide could not be detected either in minicells or when the gene was transcribed from the T7 promoter, but the acquirement of three pulF-lacZ gene fusions that encoded hybrid proteins with relatively high levels of beta-galactosidase activity indicates that this gene can be transcribed and translated. Gene disruption experiments indicated that both pulE and pulF are required for pullulanase secretion in Escherichia coli K-12. Both proteins exhibit considerable homology throughout their entire lengths with other proteins involved in protein secretion, pilin assembly, conjugation and transformation competence in a variety of bacteria. In addition, PulE protein has consensus sequences found in a wide variety of nucleotide-binding proteins. This study completes the initial characterization of the pullulanase secretion gene operon, which comprises 13 genes that are all essential for the transport of pullulanase across the outer membrane.  相似文献   

12.
Three different techniques, protease accessibility, cell fractionation and in situ immunocytochemistry, were used to study the location of the lipoprotein pullulanase produced by Escherichia coli K12 carrying the cloned pullulanase structural gene (pulA) from Klebsiella pneumoniae, with or without the K. pneumoniae genes required to transport pullulanase to the cell surface (secretion-competent and secretion-incompetent, respectively). Pullulanase produced by secretion-competent strains could be slowly but quantitatively released into the medium by growing the cells in medium containing pronase. The released pullulanase lacked the N-terminal fatty-acylated cysteine residue (and probably also a short N-terminal segment of the pullulanase polypeptide), confirming that the N-terminus is the sole membrane anchor in the protein. Pullulanase produced by secretion-incompetent strains was not affected by proteases, confirming that it is not exposed on the cell surface. Pullulanase cofractionated with both outer and inner membrane vesicles upon isopycnic sucrose gradient centrifugation, irrespective of the secretion competence of the strain. Examination by electronmicroscopy of vesicles labelled with antipullulanase serum and protein A-gold confirmed that pullulanase was associated with both types of vesicles. When thin-sectioned cells were examined by the same technique, pullulanase was found to be located mainly on the cell surface of the secretion-competent cells and mainly in the proximity of the inner membrane in the secretion-incompetent cells. Thus, while the results from three independent techniques (substrate accessibility, protease accessibility and in situ immunocytochemistry) show that pullulanase is transported to the cell surface of secretion-competent cells, this could not be confirmed by cell-fractionation techniques. Possible explanations for this discrepancy are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Pullulanase from Klebsiella pneumoniae strain FG9 has an unusual N-terminal amino acid sequence that includes six repeats of the tripeptide Gly-X-Pro. This type of sequence is characteristic of animal collagens and collagen-like proteins which form triple helical structures. We have investigated the molecular organization of this bacterial pullulanase isolated from the cell surface of Escherichia coli cells that carry the cloned FG9 pulA (pullulanase encoding) gene. Non-denaturing polyacrylamide gel analysis shows that pullulanase exists as higher order, apparently homogeneous, structures. We have used highly purified bacterial collagenase to probe the role of the collagen-like region and we demonstrate that this feature is essential for non-covalent association of pullulanase homotrimers. In addition we show collagenase-specific release of cell-bound pullulanase.  相似文献   

14.
Linker insertions in the pullulanase structural gene (pulA) were examined for their effects on pullulanase activity and cell surface localization in Escherichia coli carrying the cognate secretion genes from Klebsiella oxytoca. Of the 23 insertions, 11 abolished pullulanase activity but none were found to prevent secretion. To see whether more drastic changes affected secretion, we fused up to five reporter proteins (E. coli periplasmic alkaline phosphatase, E. coli periplasmic maltose-binding protein, periplasmic TEM beta-lactamase, Erwinia chrysanthemi extracellular endoglucanase Z, and Bacillus subtilis extracellular levansucrase) to three different positions in the pullulanase polypeptide: close to the N terminus of the mature protein, at the C terminus of the protein, or at the C terminus of a truncated pullulanase variant lacking the last 256 amino acids. Only 3 of the 13 different hybrids were efficiently secreted: 2 in which beta-lactamase was fused to the C terminus of full-length or truncated pullulanase and 1 in which maltose-binding protein was fused close to the N terminus of pullulanase. Affinity-purified endoglucanase-pullulanase and pullulanase-endoglucanase hybrids exhibited apparently normal levels of pullulanase activity, indicating that the conformation of the pullulanase segment of the hybrid had not been dramatically altered by the presence of the reporter. However, pullulanase-endoglucanase hybrids were secreted efficiently if the endoglucanase component comprised only the 60-amino-acid, C-terminal cellulose-binding domain, suggesting that at least one factor limiting hybrid protein secretion might be the size of the reporter.  相似文献   

15.
Previously, we constructed a gene disruption in the pullulanase I gene of Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron 5482A. This mutant, designated B. thetaiotaomicron 95-1, had a lower level of pullulanase specific activity than did wild-type B. thetaiotaomicron but still exhibited a substantial amount of pullulanase activity. Characterization of the remaining pullulanase activity present in B. thetaiotaomicron 95-1 has identified an alpha(1----4)-D-glucosidic bond cleaving pullulanase which has been tentatively designated a neopullulanase. The neopullulanase (pullulanase II) is a 70-kDa soluble protein which cleaves alpha(1----4)-D-glucosidic bonds in pullulan to produce panose. The neopullulanase also cleaved alpha(1----4) bonds in amylose and in oligosaccharides of maltotriose through maltoheptaose in chain length. An alpha-glucosidase from B. thetaiotaomicron 95-1 was characterized. The alpha-glucosidase was partially purified to a preparation containing three proteins of 80, 57, and 50 kDa. Pullulan and amylose were not hydrolyzed by the alpha-glucosidase. alpha(1----4)-D-Glucosidic oligosaccharides from maltose to maltoheptaose were hydrolyzed to glucose by the alpha-glucosidase. The alpha-glucosidase also hydrolyzed alpha(1----6)-linked oligosaccharides such as panose (the product of the pullulanase II action on pullulan) and isomaltotriose.  相似文献   

16.
The signal sequence of the Klebsiella oxytoca pulG gene product, which is required for extracellular secretion of the enzyme pullulanase, is similar in many respects to the corresponding segment of the precursors of type IV (me-Phe) pilins. The significance of this similarity is confirmed by the observation that the pulO gene product processes prePulG at the consensus type IV prepilin peptidase cleavage site at the amino-terminal end of the PulG signal sequence. Like most type IV pilins, processed PuiG was found to have a methylated amino-terminal phenylaianine residue. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to replace amino acids in prePulG that correspond to residues shown by others to be essential for processing, methylation and assembly of type IV pilins. The glycine residue on the amino-terminal side of the prePulG cleavage site is absolutely required for processing and for pullulanase secretion. The glutamate residue at position 11 (+5) is also required for pullulanase secretion but not for processing or methylation. This result contrasts with that reported for corresponding variants of Pseudomonas aeruginosa type IV prepilin, which were processed but only inefficiently IV-methylated. Cleavage of prePulG and pullulanase secretion were both unaffected by replacement of the phenylalanine residue on the car-boxy-terminal side of the cleavage site by leucine, isoleucine or valine, by a conservative substitution within the hydrophobic core of the prePulG signal sequence, or by a glutamine to proline substitution within the processed segment. However, replacement of the same glutamine residue by arginine abolished secretion without affecting either processing or methylation.  相似文献   

17.
The nucleotide sequence of a 5082bp fragment of chromosomal DNA from Klebsiella pneumoniae strain UNF5023 is reported. The sequence includes the last four genes of an operon of genes specifically required for the secretion of the enzyme pullulanase. All four genes (puIL, puIM, puIN and puIO) are shown to be required for pullulanase secretion, as is a fifth gene (puIK) which extends beyond the 5′ end of the sequenced DNA. The products of the puIL, puIM, puIN and puIO genes (44kD, 18kD, 27kD and 24kD, respectively) are all predicted to have one or more hydrophobic domains typical of signal sequences and/or membrane anchors, and were all found mainly associated with the inner membranes of subfractionated cells in which the corresponding genes had been expressed from the bacteriophage T7 gene 10 promoter. The results of this study increase the number of genes which have been identified as required for pullulanase secretion to eight, in addition to genes coding for components of the general export pathway.  相似文献   

18.
The chaperone-like protein of the main terminal branch of the general secretory pathway from Klebsiella oxytoca , the outer membrane lipoprotein PulS, protects the multimeric secretin PulD from degradation and promotes its correct localization to the outer membrane. To determine whether these are separable functions, or whether resistance to proteolysis results simply from correct localization of PulD, we replaced the lipoprotein-type signal peptide of PulS by the signal peptide of periplasmic maltose-binding protein. The resulting periplasmic PulS retained its ability to protect PulD, but not its ability to localize PulD to the outer membrane and to function in pullulanase secretion. Periplasmic PulS competed with wild-type PulS to prevent pullulanase secretion, presumably again by causing mislocalization of PulD. A hybrid protein comprising the mature part of PulS fused to the C-terminus of full-length maltose-binding protein (MalE–PulS) had similar properties to the periplasmic PulS protein. Moreover, MalE–PulS was shown to associate with PulD by amylose-affinity chromatography. The MalE–PulS hybrid was rendered completely functional (i.e. it restored pullulanase secretion in a pulS mutant) by replacing its signal peptide with a lipoprotein-type signal peptide. However, this fatty-acylated hybrid protein was only functional if it also carried a lipoprotein sorting signal that targeted it to the outer membrane. Thus, the two functions of PulS are separate and fully dissociable. Incorrect localization, rather than proteolysis, of PulD in the absence of PulS was shown to be the factor that causes high-level induction of the phage shock response. The Erwinia chrysanthemi PulS homologue, OutS, can substitute for PulS, and PulS can protect the secretin OutD from proteolysis in Escherichia coli , indicating the possible existence of a family of PulS-like chaperone proteins.  相似文献   

19.
The pullulanase gene (pul) of Klebsiella aerogenes was transferred in vivo to Escherichia coli by using RP4:: Mu cts. The pul gene was expressed in E. coli, although the level of pullulanase activity in E. coli was lower than that in K. aerogenes, and the Pul+ transconjugants were relatively unstable in an unselective medium. Production of pullulanase, which is used to make maltose from starch, was induced in E. coli by pullulan, waxy maize amylopectin, soluble starch and maltose. When the transconjugant cells of E. coli were grown with pullulan or maltose, most pullulanase was produced intracellularly, whereas K. aerogenes produced pullulanase extracellularly. Retransfer of the pulk gene from E. coli to K. aerogenes by conjugation resulted in an increase of the production of extracellular pullulanase.  相似文献   

20.
The pullulanase encoding gene from Bacillus naganoensis was successfully overexpressed in Escherichia coli both intracellularly and extracellularly using expression vector pET22b (+). The distribution of recombinant protein was significantly affected by temperature and carbon and nitrogen sources. The highest levels of extracellular and intracellular production of the target protein were observed at 25 and 20 °C, respectively. The addition of maltose, dextrin, pullulan, and soluble starch to the culture medium caused significant increases in the extracellular yield of pullulanase, while glucose strongly inhibited pullulanase production. The results show that the optimal conditions for maximum yield of extracellular pullulanase required high levels of carbon source and a limited nitrogen supply, while low concentrations of carbon and nitrogen source favored intracellular pullulanase expression. High concentrations of nitrogen source strongly inhibited the production of pullulanase.  相似文献   

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