Extracellular secretion of polypeptides using a modified Escherichia coli flagellar secretion apparatus

K Majander, L Anton, J Antikainen, H Lång… - Nature …, 2005 - nature.com
K Majander, L Anton, J Antikainen, H Lång, M Brummer, TK Korhonen…
Nature biotechnology, 2005nature.com
We developed a modified flagellar type III secretion apparatus to secrete heterologous
polypeptides into the growth medium of Escherichia coli. The secretion was facilitated by
fusing the 173-bp untranslated DNA fragment upstream of the gene fliC (encoding flagellin)
as well as a transcriptional terminator from fliC, into the gene encoding the polypeptide of
interest. The polypeptides secreted into the growth medium at concentrations ranging from 1
to 15 mg/l were from Campylobacter jejuni (262 residues in length), Streptococcus …
Abstract
We developed a modified flagellar type III secretion apparatus to secrete heterologous polypeptides into the growth medium of Escherichia coli. The secretion was facilitated by fusing the 173-bp untranslated DNA fragment upstream of the gene fliC (encoding flagellin) as well as a transcriptional terminator from fliC, into the gene encoding the polypeptide of interest. The polypeptides secreted into the growth medium at concentrations ranging from 1 to 15 mg/l were from Campylobacter jejuni (262 residues in length), Streptococcus pneumoniae (434 residues), Staphylococcus aureus (115 residues), and N-terminal FliC hybrid proteins, for example, the eukaryotic green fluorescent protein (238 residues). The expressed proteins represented >50% of total secreted protein. Previously reported protein yields from extracellular secretion of foreign proteins in E. coli have been low, approximately 100 μg/l. The strengths of our method are the concentration and purity of the secreted proteins and its versatility with regard to the proteins' length and origin.
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