• Title/Summary/Keyword: multicopy

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Cloning and Expression of a Collagenase Gene from the Marine Bacterium Vibrio vulnificus CYK279H

  • Kim, Bong-Jo;Kim, Hak-Ju;Hwang, Sun-Hee;Bae, Seoung-Kwon;Ha, Soon-Duck;Kim, Jong-Deog;Kong, Jai-Yul
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.8 no.3
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    • pp.245-250
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    • 1998
  • A gene encoding an extracellular collagenase from the marine bacterium Vibrio vulnificus CYK279H was cloned into E. coli JM83 using the multicopy plasmid vector pUC19. The cloned strain of recombinant E. coli showing collagenase activity had an insert fragment of 3.5 kb and was named E. coli JM83/pKCL 279H. The cloned strain produced two different collagenase during cultivation. These enzymes, named collagenase-I and -II, were purified from the culture supernatant. SDS-PAGE indicated that collagenase-I had a molecular weight of 41 kDa and collagenase-II had a weight of 37 kDa. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of collagenase-I from the cloned strain, E. coli JM83/pKCL279H was determined and was not found to be similar to any other known collagenases. The optimum pH and temperature of the purified collagenase-I were 7.8 and $37^{\circ}C$, respectively.

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Characterization of Plasmid Encoding a Heat-labile Enterotoxin Originated from an Human Escherichia coli Strain O15: H11. (사람에서 유래한 장독성 대장균의 이열성장독소와 관련된 Plasmid 특성)

  • Rhyu, Mun-Gan;Kim, Gum-Ryong;Chang, Woo-Hyun
    • The Journal of the Korean Society for Microbiology
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    • v.21 no.1
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    • pp.47-52
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    • 1986
  • A heat-labile enterotoxin and no heat-stable enterotoxin producing($LT^+ST^-$) plasmid (110 kilobases in size) was isolated from an enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli of human strain O15:H11 and used for analysis of the $LT^+$ deoxyrionucleic acid region using recombinant DNA technology. A DNA segment containing the $LT^+$ DNA region which was one restriction endonuclease BamHl fragment(6.2 kb in size) was joind to a small multicopy plasmid, pUC9. E. coli K-12 strain, JM103 harboring the chimeric plasmid produced greater amounts of LT than did the enterotoxigenic E. coli O15:H11 strain. The BamHl fragment was further digested with various restriction endonucleases and contained no HindIll restriction site which is an essential in $LT^+ST^+$ plasmid. The detailed DNA sequencing of this $LT^+ST^-$ plasmid is required.

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Cloning and Characterization of a Glyoxalase I Gene from the Osmotolerant Yeast Candida magnoliae

  • Park, Eun-Hee;Lee, Dae-Hee;Seo, Jin-Ho;Kim, Myoung-Dong
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.21 no.3
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    • pp.277-283
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    • 2011
  • Glyoxalase I catalyzes the conversion of methylglyoxal to S-D-lactoylglutathione in the presence of glutathione. The structural gene of glyoxalase I (GLO1) was cloned from an osmotolerant yeast, Candida magnoliae, which produces a functional sweetener, erythritol, from sucrose. DNA sequence analysis revealed that the uninterrupted open reading frame (ORF) of C. magnoliae GLO1 (CmGLO1) spans 945 bp, corresponding to 315 amino acid residues, and shares 45.2% amino acid sequence identity to Saccharomyces cerevisiae Glo1. The cloned ORF in a multicopy constitutive expression plasmid complemented the glo1 mutation of S. cerevisiae, confirming that it encodes Glo1 in C. magnoliae. The responses of CmGLO1 to environmental stresses were different from those of S. cerevisiae, which only responds to osmotic stress. An enzyme activity assay and reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction revealed that the expression of CmGLO1 is induced by stress inducers such as methylglyoxal, $H_2O_2$, KCl, and NaCl. The GenBank Accession No. for CmGLO1 is HM000001.

Expression Analysis of the csp-like Genes from Corynebacterium glutamicum Encoding Homologs of the Escherichia coli Major Cold-Shock Protein CspA

  • Kim, Wan-Soo;Park, Soo-Dong;Lee, Seok-Myung;Kim, Youn-Hee;Kim, Pil;Lee, Heung-Shick
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.17 no.8
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    • pp.1353-1360
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    • 2007
  • Three csp-like genes were identified in the Corynebacterium glutamicum genome and designated cspA, cspB, and cspA2. The genes cspA and cspA2 encode proteins, comprising of 67 amino acid residues, respectively. They share 83% identity with each other. Identity of those proteins with Escherichia coli Csp proteins was near 50%. The cspB gene encodes a protein composed of 127 amino acids, which has 40% and 35% sequence identity with CspA and CspA2, respectively, especially at its N-terminal region. Analysis of the gene expression profiles was done using transcriptional cat fusion, which identified not only active expression of the three genes at the physiological growth temperature of $30^{\circ}C$ but also growth phase-dependent expression with the highest activity at late log phase. The promoters of cspA and cspA2 were more active than that of cspB. The expression of the two genes increased by 30% after a temperature downshift to $15^{\circ}C$, and such stimulation was more evident in the late growth phase. In addition, the cspA gene appeared to show DNA-binding activity in vivo, and the activity increased at lower temperatures. Interestingly, the presence of cspA in multicopy hindered the growth of the host C. glutamicum cells at $20^{\circ}C$, but not at $30^{\circ}C$. Altogether, these data suggest that cspA, cspB, and cspA2 perform functions related to cold shock as well as normal cellular physiology. Moreover, CspA and its ortholog CspA2 may perform additional functions as a transcriptional regulator.

Putative Negative Regulation of Novel MarB along with MarA upon the Function of AcrAB/TolC Efflux Pump of Escherichia coli K-12 (대장균 K-12의 AcrAB/TolC Efflux Pump의 기능에 대한 MarB와 MarA의 추정적 억제조절)

  • Byung-Tae Park
    • Biomedical Science Letters
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    • v.5 no.1
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    • pp.27-40
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    • 1999
  • This study was focused on the evaluation of MarB alongside with MarA for its regulatory effects upon the efflux function of AcrAB pump, which were induced or not, perhaps as a target. Transductions of marR and/or acrAB mutation which were derived from Mar and/or AcrAB mutants of wild type E. coli K-12, respectively, into the multicopy plasmid in wild type E. coli backgrounds or into the chromosome of isogenic parents were done. Minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) of transduced mutants was compared with their original mutants. This study reports the indirect evidences that suggests a model in which MarB along with MarA have a putative negative regulatory effect upon the efflux function of AcrAB/TolC pump while MarA alone have a positive regulatory effect to the expression of acrRAB operon at transcription level. The target of MarB with MarA for its putative negative regulator might be the AcrAB efflux pump. Another efflux system (s) might be negatively regulated by MarB with MarA, and be involved in the efflux of antibiotics which were otherwise extruded preferentially by AcrAB efflux pump.

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Genomic Sequence Analysis and Organization of BmKαTx11 and BmKαTx15 from Buthus martensii Karsch: Molecular Evolution of α-toxin genes

  • Xu, Xiuling;Cao, Zhijian;Sheng, Jiqun;Wu, Wenlan;Luo, Feng;Sha, Yonggang;Mao, Xin;Liu, Hui;Jiang, Dahe;Li, Wenxin
    • BMB Reports
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    • v.38 no.4
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    • pp.386-390
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    • 2005
  • Based on the reported cDNA sequences of $BmK{\alpha}Txs$, the genes encoding toxin $BmK{\alpha}Tx11$ and $BmK{\alpha}Tx15$ were amplified by PCR from the Chinese scorpion Buthus martensii Karsch genomic DNA employing synthetic oligonucleotides. Sequences analysis of nucleotide showed that an intron about 500 bp length interrupts signal peptide coding regions of $BmK{\alpha}Tx11$ and $BmK{\alpha}Tx15$. Using cDNA sequence of $BmK{\alpha}Tx11$ as probe, southern hybridization of BmK genome total DNA was performed. The result indicates that $BmK{\alpha}Tx11$ is multicopy genes or belongs to multiple gene family with high homology genes. The similarity of $BmK{\alpha}$-toxin gene sequences and southern hybridization revealed the evolution trace of $BmK{\alpha}$-toxins: $BmK{\alpha}$-toxin genes evolve from a common progenitor, and the genes diversity is associated with a process of locus duplication and gene divergence.

Heterologous Expression of Streptomyces albus Genes Linked to an Integrating Element and Activation of Antibiotic Production

  • Kwon, Hyung-Jin;Lee, Soon-Youl;Hong, Soon-Kwang;Park, Uhn-Mee;Suh, Joo-Won
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.9 no.4
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    • pp.488-497
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    • 1999
  • Probing Streptomyces albus ATCC 21838 chromosomal DNA with a proline tRNA sequence resulted in an isolation of a putative integrating element in the 6.4-kb EcoRI fragment. It was found that Streptomyces lividans TK-24 transformed with a cloned DNA fragment on a multicopy plasmid, produced a higher level of spore pigment and mycelial red pigment on a regeneration agar. Furthermore, the transformant S. lividans TK-24 produced a markedly increased level of undecylprodigiosin in a broth culture. A nucleotide sequence analysis of the cloned region revealed several open reading frames homologous to the integrases of integrating plasmids or temperate bacteriophages, signal-transducing regulatory proteins with a conserved ATP-binding domain, oxidoreductases ($\beta$-ketoacyl reductase), and an AraC-like transcriptional regulator. To examine the effect on antibiotic production, each coding region was overexpressed separately from the other genes in the region in S. lividans TK-24 with; pJHS3044 for the expression of the signal-transducing regulatory protein homologue, pJHS3045 for the homologue of oxidoreductase, and pJHS3051 for the homologue of the AraC-like transcriptional regulator. Phenotypic studies of S. lividans TK-24 strains harboring plasmids for the overexpression of individual genes suggested the following effects of the genes on antibiotic production: The oxidoreductase homologue stimulated the production of actinorhodin and undecylprodigiosin, which was influenced by the culture conditions; the homologue of the AraC-like transcriptional regulator was the most effective factor in antibiotic production within all the culture conditions tested; the signal-transducing regulatory protein homologue repressed the effect due to the homologue of the AraC-like transcriptional regulator, however, the antibiotic production was derepressed upon entering the stationary phase.

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Development of Recombinant Pseudomonas putida Containing Homologous Styrene Monooxygenase Genes for the Production of (S)-Styrene Oxide

  • Bae, Jong-Wan;Han, Ju-Hee;Park, Mi-So;Lee, Sun-Gu;Lee, Eun-Yeol;Jeong, Yong-Joo;Park, Sung-Hoon
    • Biotechnology and Bioprocess Engineering:BBE
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    • v.11 no.6
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    • pp.530-537
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    • 2006
  • Recently isolated, Pseudomonas putida SN1 grows on styrene as its sole carbon and energy source through successive oxidation of styrene by styrene monooxygenase (SMO), styrene oxide isomerase (SOI), and phenylacetaldehyde dehydrogenase. For the production of (S)-styrene oxide, two knockout mutants of SN1 were constructed, one lacking SOI and another lacking both SMO and SOI. These mutants were developed into whole-cell biocatalysts by transformation with a multicopy plasmid vector containing SMO genes (styAB) of the SN1. Neither of these self-cloned recombinants could grow on styrene, but both converted styrene into an enantiopure (S)-styrene oxide (e.e. > 99%). Whole-cell SMO activity was higher in the recombinant constructed from the SOI-deleted mutant (130 U/g cdw) than in the other one (35 U/g cdw). However, the SMO activity of the former was about the same as that of the SOI-deleted SN1 possessing a single copy of the styAB gene that was used as host. This indicates that the copy number of styAB genes is not rate-limiting on SMO catalysis by whole-cell SN1.

Progeny Analysis and Selection of Tomato Transformants with patII Gene linked to Inherent Disease Resistance Gene (제초제 저항성 유전자와 기존 병 저항성 유전자가 연관된 형질전환 토마토 개체 선발 및 후대분석)

  • Ahn, Soon-Young;Kang, Kwon-Kyoo;Yun, Hae-Keun;Park, Hyo-Guen
    • Horticultural Science & Technology
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    • v.29 no.4
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    • pp.345-351
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    • 2011
  • This study was carried out to develop a model system using selection method for disease resistant plant breeding programs using a herbicide bialaphos-resistant patII gene as a gene-based marker. Spraying bialaphos could eliminate the susceptible plants from the segregating populations such as ${F_2}^{\prime}s$ and thereafter. Tomato cv. Momotaro-yoke was transformed with patII gene 60 independent transformants were acquired. Total 42 transformants were analyzed in transgene copy numbers by Southern blotting and the segregation ratios for the bialaphos resistance. Statistical analysis revealed that the transgene copy numbers and the segregation ratios were not always coincided, especially having the tendency of underestimating the real numbers of the transgenes in the multicopy lines. A two-stepwise screening method was applied to select $T_1$ tomato plants which linked the transgenic patII to a disease resistance gene (I2 and Ve). Based on the resistant to susceptible ratios, T-20 plant was finally selected due to the estimated linkage 12-13 cM between the patII gene to the I2 gene on chromosome 11. This newly developed system could be applied to any economical crop in breeding programs.

Gene Silencing Induced by Cytosine Methylation in Transgenic Tomato (형질전환 토마토에서 Cytosine Methylation에 의한 유전자발현 억제)

  • Jung, Seo-Hee;Min, Sung-Ran;Lee, Soo-Young;Park, Ji-Young;Davarpanah, S Javad;Chung, Hwa-Jee;Jeon, Jae-Heung;Liu, Jang-Ryol;Jeong, Won-Joong
    • Journal of Plant Biotechnology
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    • v.34 no.4
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    • pp.323-329
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    • 2007
  • Transgene expression was analyzed in tomato plants. Four lines of neomycin phosphotransferase II gene (NPTII) and the trehalose biosynthetic fusion gene (TPSP) transformed $T_0$ plants showed kanamycin resistance on selection medium. However, the analysis of phenotype (kanamycin resistance) and mRNA expression in $T_1$ plants indicated that the expression of the NPTII and TPSP transgenes was down-regulated to an undetectable level in two independent lines 1 and 11. Southern analysis demonstrated that the lines 1 and 11 had multicopies of the transgenes, whereas the typical transgenic lines 2 and 10 had 1 or 2 copies. DNA methylation analysis using methylation sensitive enzyme detected accumulated CpG DNA methylation on TPSP coding region and CaMV35S promoter region in the line 11, but not the typical transgenic line 2. These results suggest that multicopy transgene in plants is attributed to down-regulation of the transgene expression via transcriptional gene silencing.