Escherichia coli K4 is one of the bacteria expressing a surface polysaccharide, indicated as capsular polysaccharide (K-antigen), showing a chemical structure that resembles that of metabolites commonly used in pharmaceutical applications. In this study we provide evidence that homologous overexpression of the chondroitin polymerase, encoded by the kfoC gene, acts on a potential bottleneck for production of capsular polysaccharide, and increases productivity by 100%. However, we also demonstrate that genetic engineering and scale-up of the production process with E. coli K4 is not straight forward due to genetic instability of recombinant strains, partly overcome by multiple additions of antibiotic throughout fermentation that prove to increase plasmid maintenance inside the cells. A lower resistance to the antibiotic was nevertheless highlighted in the stationary phase suggesting other concomitant causes for plasmid instability. The latter might partly be related to a newly discovered endogenous mobile element that we indicate as pK4EC05. Sequencing and analysis of a 1900 bp fragment of pK4EC05 shows a high percentage of sequence similarity to large conjugative plasmids isolated from Shigella, Salmonella and E. coli strains.
Improved fructosylated chondroitin production by kfoC overexpression in E. coli K4 / Cimini, Donatella; DE ROSA, Mario; Viggiani, A.; Restaino, Odile Francesca; Carlino, E.; Schiraldi, Chiara. - In: JOURNAL OF BIOTECHNOLOGY. - ISSN 0168-1656. - 150(3):3(2010), pp. 324-331. [doi:10.1016/j.jbiotec.2010.09.954]
Improved fructosylated chondroitin production by kfoC overexpression in E. coli K4
DE ROSA, Mario;RESTAINO, Odile Francesca;SCHIRALDI, Chiara
2010
Abstract
Escherichia coli K4 is one of the bacteria expressing a surface polysaccharide, indicated as capsular polysaccharide (K-antigen), showing a chemical structure that resembles that of metabolites commonly used in pharmaceutical applications. In this study we provide evidence that homologous overexpression of the chondroitin polymerase, encoded by the kfoC gene, acts on a potential bottleneck for production of capsular polysaccharide, and increases productivity by 100%. However, we also demonstrate that genetic engineering and scale-up of the production process with E. coli K4 is not straight forward due to genetic instability of recombinant strains, partly overcome by multiple additions of antibiotic throughout fermentation that prove to increase plasmid maintenance inside the cells. A lower resistance to the antibiotic was nevertheless highlighted in the stationary phase suggesting other concomitant causes for plasmid instability. The latter might partly be related to a newly discovered endogenous mobile element that we indicate as pK4EC05. Sequencing and analysis of a 1900 bp fragment of pK4EC05 shows a high percentage of sequence similarity to large conjugative plasmids isolated from Shigella, Salmonella and E. coli strains.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.