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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, October 2002, p. 5051-5056, Vol. 68, No. 10
0099-2240/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.68.10.5051-5056.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Lactic Acid Bacteria, Biotechnological Institute, DK-2970 Hørsholm,1 Department of Virology, Statens Serum Institut, DK-2300 Copenhagen, Denmark2
Received 17 April 2002/ Accepted 16 July 2002
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thr strain which carries deletions in two genes encoding threonine biosynthetic enzymes. To achieve plasmid-borne complementation, we then constructed the minimal cloning vector, pJAG5, based on the genes encoding homoserine dehydrogenase-homoserine kinase (the hom-thrB operon) as a selective marker. Using strain MG1363
thr, selection and maintenance of cells carrying pJAG5 were obtained in threonine-free defined media. Compared to the commonly used selection system based on erythromycin resistance, the designed complementation system offers a competitive and stable plasmid selection system for the production of heterologous proteins in L. lactis. The potential of pJAG5 to deliver genes for expression in eukaryotes was evaluated by insertion of a mammalian expression unit encoding a modified green fluorescent protein. The successful delivery and expression of genes in human kidney fibroblasts indicated the potential of the designed nonantibiotic host-plasmid system for use in genetic immunization. |
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Due to its food-grade status, L. lactis is attractive for both production and live delivery of vaccines and therapeutics. Recently, several examples of nondairy applications of this bacterium have been reported, and the development of plasmid-borne gene expression systems has made it possible to use L. lactis for the production of heterologous proteins (1, 5, 7, 11, 20, 21). Furthermore, L. lactis has been placed in a new class of live bacterial vaccine carriers derived from gram-positive, nonpathogenic, and noninvasive bacteria (reviewed in reference 33). Recently, live delivery was accomplished by feeding mice immunogen-synthesizing L. lactis organisms, thus obtaining mucosal delivery of the Helicobacter pylori urease subunit B antigen (22) and of the pneumococcal type 3 capsular polysaccharide antigen (12). The delivery of therapeutics using live recombinant L. lactis has been demonstrated by in situ secretion of interleukin-10 for treatment of colitis in mice (37).
Although L. lactis is generally regarded as safe, this status can be compromised by the introduction of foreign DNA necessary for the synthesis of recombinant proteins. Usually, high-copy-number plasmids are used for high-level expression of recombinant proteins (1, 5, 7, 11, 20, 21). A simple way to prevent plasmid loss is to use plasmid-encoded antibiotic resistance markers and grow the bacteria in the presence of antibiotics. The chief drawbacks of this approach are the potential loss of selective pressure as a result of antibiotic degradation (as in the case of ß-lactamase) and contamination of the biomass or purified protein by antibiotics and resistance genes, which is unacceptable from a medical point of view.
Alternative genetic markers for L. lactis have been developed. Depending on the type of selection, they can be placed in two groups: resistance and complementation markers. Examples of resistance markers that confer immunity to an added agent, such as nisin (8) or the metal ions cadmium (Cd2+) (24) and copper (Cu2+) (23), have been designed for plasmid maintenance. Although some strains of L. lactis are naturally resistant to nisin and metal ions, the dominant nature of resistance markers makes them versatile, as they can be used in different lactococcal strains.
The use of auxotrophic markers is based on complementation of a mutation or deletion in the host chromosome and is therefore strain specific. In L. lactis, the first example was based on complementation of a lacF mutant strain deficient in lactose utilization (26). In two other systems, auxotrophic markers complement purine- and pyrimidine-auxotrophic strains using genes encoding nonsense tRNA suppressors (6, 36). In these systems, expression of the plasmid-borne suppressor tRNA gene allows read-through of a nonsense mutation(s) in the genes encoding purine or pyrimidine biosynthetic enzymes. Both systems permit selection in milk or other media that contain no, or small amounts of, purines or pyrimidines.
We previously constructed a threonine-auxotrophic derivative of the L. lactis MG1614 strain containing an internal deletion in the hom-thrB operon (27). The bicistronic hom-thrB operon encodes the homoserine dehydrogenase and homoserine kinase catalyzing two of the five steps converting aspartate to threonine. Thus, a hom-thrB strain cannot synthesize threonine and therefore needs an external source of threonine.
In this paper, we report the construction of a plasmid selection system in L. lactis based on complementation of a threonine-auxotrophic strain using the hom-thrB operon. The plasmid is based only on a lactococcal replicon and the hom-thrB operon. We demonstrate its use for heterologous gene expression in L. lactis and for delivery of genes for in vitro expression in mammalian cells.
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thr prototrophs were selected on 1.5% agarose plates containing LM3-30 without threonine using cells that had been washed in 0.9% NaCl to remove threonine. |
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TABLE 1. Strains and plasmids
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Plasmid DNA was sequenced with a Thermo Sequenase fluorescently labeled primer cycle-sequencing kit (Amersham Pharmacia, Uppsala, Sweden), Cy5-labeled primers, and an ALFexpress DNA sequencer (Amersham Pharmacia).
Construction of the threonine-auxotrophic L. lactis MG1363
thr strain.
The threonine-auxotrophic MG1363
thr strain was constructed as described previously(27) using the integration vector pSMA507 (Table 1). This plasmid contains an Ery resistance marker, a plasmid origin of replication from E. coli, the lacLM genes, and the L. lactis hom-thrB genes from MG1614 lacking the distal 310-bp end of hom and the proximal 57 bp of thrB (27). Plasmid pSMA507 was electroporated into L. lactis MG1363, and Ery-resistant transformants were isolated and cultured in GM17 without Ery for 75 generations. Cells were plated onto GM17 plates with X-Gal and screened for loss of the plasmid and concomitant loss of ß-galactosidase activity. Chromosomal DNAs from white colonies and from an MG1363 wild-type colony were amplified to screen for deletions in the hom-thrB operon by PCR using the primers pThr-frw1 and pThr-rev1 (Table 2). PCR of strain MG1363 DNA gave rise to a 2,083-bp fragment, while DNA from the deletion mutant gave a 1,716-bp fragment.
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TABLE 2. Nucleotide sequences of PCR primers
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Construction of the pJAG4 E. coli-L. lactis shuttle vector containing the hom-thrB marker.
Plasmid pG3E is derived from pGEM-3Zf(-) and confers Ery resistance in E. coli (32). A 1,757-bp EcoRI fragment from pAK80 containing the lactococcal minimal replicon from the citrate plasmid (31) was inserted into the EcoRI site of pG3E. The resulting pJAG3 conferred Ery resistance on transformed MG1363
thr cells. pJAG2 was digested with XbaI and HindIII, and the complete hom-thrB operon was isolated on a 2,401-bp fragment and inserted into similarly digested pJAG3 to give pJAG4.
Construction of the pJAG5 L. lactis cloning vector.
HaeII digestion of pJAG4 produced a 4,636-bp fragment containing the citrate replicon, the hom-thrB operon, and the polylinker. To favor self-religation, the isolated fragments were ligated in a large volume. The resulting vector, pJAG5 (Fig. 1), showed complementation of the MG1363
thr strain on LM3-30 plates without threonine.
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FIG. 1. Minimal cloning vector pJAG5. The arrows indicate the direction of transcription. repB encodes the replication protein of the citrate replicon, and hom and thrB encode homoserine dehydrogenase and homoserine kinase, respectively. Only unique restriction sites are indicated.
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Construction of pJAG8 for eukaryotic expression of the green fluorescent protein.
The gene encoding the red-shifted variant of the green fluorescent protein (EGFP) was isolated from pEGFP-N1 using PCR and the primers pCMV-frw and pBGH-rev. Both primers contained terminal SpeI sequences. The resulting
1,650-bp fragment included the cytomegalovirus (CMV) promoter and enhancer regions and the simian virus 40 (SV40) polyadenylation signal sequence (SVpA). This fragment was cloned into pCR2.1, producing pJAG7. The EGFP expression cassette was isolated as an SpeI fragment from pJAG7 and ligated into XbaI-digested pJAG5 to produce pJAG8.
Plasmid stability.
To test the segregational stability of pJAG5 during exponential growth, transformed MG1363
thr cells were grown for 100 generations under nonselective conditions. Every 10 generations, diluted samples were cultured on plates with and without threonine. During fermentation, segregational stability was tested at the transition to stationary phase and again 15 h after the onset of stationary phase. Strains with pJAG6 were tested on LM3-30 medium with and without threonine, and strains with pSMBI109 were tested on GM17 medium with and without Ery.
Nuclease activity determinations.
Nuc activities were determined by incubation of culture supernatants with sonicated salmon DNA as a substrate followed by precipitation in ice-cold perchloric acid and measurement of absorbance at 260 nm (Vrang et al., unpublished). One unit of Nuc is defined as the amount of nuclease that will produce 1 µmol of acid-soluble polynucleotide per min from native DNA.
In vitro expression of EGFP from pJAG8 in human kidney cells.
Adherent human 293 kidney fibroblast cells were incubated in RPMI medium (Gibco, New York, N.Y.) supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum for 24 h at 37°C in the presence of 5% CO2. The cells were transfected with pJAG8 using the Effectene transfection kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) as described by the manufacturer. Expression of EGFP was visualized by fluorescence microscopy at 488 nm 24 h after transfection.
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thr strain.
thr, we used the integration vector pSMA507, which harbors a truncated hom-thrB operon and lacLM and is unable to replicate in L. lactis. First, transformed cells viable on GM17 plates containing X-Gal and Ery should have pSMA507 integrated into their chromosomes due to homologous recombination into the hom-thrB genes and should form blue colonies. Second, without antibiotic pressure, cells whose chromosomes would undergo a second homologous recombination between neighboring sets of hom-thrB genes should form white Ery-sensitive colonies. Following this strategy, genomic DNAs from 10 white colonies were analyzed by PCR, which for all isolates indicated the presence of an internal hom-thrB deletion. Phenotypic tests on plates without threonine confirmed the threonine auxotrophy of these isolates, one of which was named strain MG1363
thr.
Construction and testing of a hom-thrB-complementing shuttle vector, pJAG4.
Details of plasmid construction are described in Materials and Methods and Table 1. For replication in L. lactis, the minimal replicon from the citrate plasmid of Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis biovar diacetylactis was cloned into pG3E to give pJAG3, which conferred Ery resistance on transformed MG1363
thr cells. The assembled hom-thrB operon from pJAG2 was then added to give pJAG4. MG1363
thr transformed with pJAG4 carrying hom-thrB was able to grow on medium without threonine, demonstrating complementation. To compare the transformation efficiencies of the hom-thrB and Ery resistance markers on pJAG4, transformed cells were spread on LM3-30 plates without threonine and LM3-30 plates with Ery, respectively. The experiment was done twice in triplicate and showed that the numbers of CFU were similar (hom-thrB complementation, 106 ± 9 CFU; Ery selection, 112 ± 11 CFU) on the two types of plates, indicating that hom-thrB selection was as efficient as Ery selection.
Construction and testing of the minimal lactococcal complementation vector, pJAG5.
We aimed at constructing a minimal complementation vector based solely on lactococcal DNA which contained only complementing genes, an origin of replication, and a versatile polylinker and no antibiotic resistance gene or nonlactococcal DNA, such as an E. coli origin of replication. Therefore, the citrate replicon, the polylinker, and hom-thrB were isolated from pJAG4 on a single fragment, which was religated and electroporated into strain MG1363
thr. Prototrophic colonies were isolated on LM3-30 plates without threonine, and a subsequent plasmid analysis confirmed the structure of the resulting cloning vector, pJAG5 (Fig. 1). This plasmid was stably maintained under nonselective conditions, since no plasmid loss was observed during cultivation for >100 generations in LM3-30 medium.
Secretion of S. aureus nuclease in fermentations.
The capacity of the designed complementation system for use in plasmid-borne gene expression was compared to that of the currently used selection system based on antibiotic resistance. As a reporter gene, we used nucB fused to the optimized SP3mut2 signal peptide sequence. The reporter gene was transcribed from the pH- and growth-phase-regulated P170 promoter (28). We analyzed the level of nuclease production using this reporter gene in two vectors, both containing the theta-type citrate replicon but harboring either the hom-thrB-complementing marker (pJAG6) or the Ery resistance marker (pSMBI109). These plasmids were tested in MG1363 and MG1363
thr under different growth conditions, and the levels of Nuc activity were compared after 30 h of fermentation and at an optical density at 600 nm of approximately 6 (Table 3). First, the influence of a chromosomal hom-thrB deletion was investigated by comparing the Nuc expression of pSMBI109-transformed MG1363 and MG1363
thr strains in the presence of threonine. As the fermentation showed identical levels of Nuc activity in the two strains, the use of a hom-thrB deletion mutant did not affect the level of expression under nonselective conditions. Second, we compared pJAG6(hom+-thrB+) and pSMBI109(ermL+) in MG1363
thr under the same conditions. The results showed that the Nuc activities using these plasmids in the auxotrophic strain were also identical. Third, we compared the two plasmid-host systems under selective conditions and found that the Nuc activity of the MG1363
thr/pJAG6 system was slightly higher than that of the MG1363/pSMBI109 system (13.2 ± 0.8 versus 10.5 ± 0.5 U/ml). This result indicated that endogenous synthesis of threonine did not affect heterologous gene expression. However, the growth rate of MG1363
thr/pJAG6 was slightly (<10%) impaired under these conditions. Relief of the selective pressure by the presence of threonine, however, did not lead to pJAG6-free MG1363
thr cells, as the numbers of CFU on LM3-30 plates with and without threonine were similar (data not shown).
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TABLE 3. Nuclease determinations during fermentation
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Expression of green fluorescent protein in human kidney fibroblasts.
To test whether pJAG5 was capable of transient transfection of eukaryotic cells and gene delivery for in situ expression, we cloned the reporter cassette harboring the CMV promoter, the EGFP gene, and the SVpA polyadenylation signal sequence into pJAG5, resulting in pJAG8. Introduction of pJAG8 into the nuclei of the cells was facilitated by using lipid-formulated plasmid. It should be noted that pJAG8 contains no eukaryotic selection marker or replication system for maintenance in fibroblast cells. The fibroblasts were visualized by phase-contrast microscopy, but only transfected cells expressing the cytoplasmic reporter EGFP were visible on epifluorescence micrographs (Fig. 2). The successful transfection of eukaryotic cells and the detectable expression of EGFP (Fig. 2) demonstrated the utility of the pJAG5 cloning vector for gene delivery and in situ expression in eukaryotic cells.
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FIG. 2. Adherent human 293 kidney fibroblasts transfected with pJAG8. (A) Phase-contrast micrograph illuminated at 488 nm. (B) Epifluorescence micrograph of the same region. U indicates a nonexpressor cell, while T indicates a transfected cell expressing EGFP. Magnification, x400.
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Potential drawbacks of a selection system dependent on complementation of an auxotrophic strain are growth rate reduction and decrease in heterologous protein production caused by the necessity of endogenous threonine synthesis under selective conditions. However, both the growth profiles and the Nuc expression of the hom-thrB-complemented threonine-auxotrophic strain were similar in media with and without threonine, indicating minimal pleiotropic effects. Furthermore, our designed antibiotic-free selection system is as effective as the Ery-dependent system and can be employed when antibiotic-free conditions are desired, for instance, during production of proteins or plasmid DNA for medical use or production of recombinant L. lactis for use in live delivery of vaccines or therapeutics.
The application of pJAG5 (Fig. 1) in eukaryotic gene expression was analyzed using the green fluorescent protein (2). An optimized (3) and codon-modified (13) EGFP gene controlled by the constitutive CMV promoter (29) was used for high-level expression and brighter fluorescence. The small gene size (714 bp) and the ease with which EGFP expression can be visualized (no substrate needs to be added) make it ideal for studying plasmid-mediated gene transfer. As shown in Fig. 2, we demonstrated EGFP expression in human kidney fibroblasts using pJAG8 transfection. This shows that the minimal pJAG5 vector can be used for delivery and in situ expression of eukaryotic genes, which to our knowledge is the first example of an L. lactis-derived plasmid being successfully used for gene expression in eukaryotic cells. Since genetic immunization (reviewed in references 38 and 40) involves the direct delivery of plasmid DNA into patients to elicit an immune response toward the encoded antigen, the use of a vector without an antibiotic resistance marker is obviously desirable. We are investigating the potential use of the pJAG5 vector in gene delivery for genetic immunization.
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