Previous Article | Next Article 
Applied and Environmental Microbiology, August 2005, p. 4359-4363, Vol. 71, No. 8
0099-2240/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.71.8.4359-4363.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Secretion of Human Serum Albumin by Kluyveromyces lactis Overexpressing KlPDI1 and KlERO1
Tiziana Lodi,
Barbara Neglia, and
Claudia Donnini*
Department of Genetics, Anthropology, and Evolution, University of Parma, Parma, Italy
Received 20 October 2004/
Accepted 4 March 2005

ABSTRACT
The control of protein conformation during translocation through
the endoplasmic reticulum is often a bottleneck for heterologous
protein production. The core pathway of the oxidative folding
machinery includes two conserved proteins: Pdi1p and Ero1p.
We increased the dosage of the genes encoding these proteins
in the yeast
Kluyveromyces lactis and evaluated the secretion
of heterologous proteins.
KlERO1, an orthologue of
Saccharomyces cerevisiae ERO1, was cloned by functional complementation of
the
ts phenotype of an
Scero1 mutant. The expression of
KlERO1 was induced by treatment of the cells with dithiothreitol and
by overexpression of human serum albumin (HSA), a disulfide
bond-rich protein. Duplication of either
PDI1 or
ERO1 led to
a similar increase in HSA yield. Duplication of both genes accelerated
the secretion of HSA and improved cell growth rate and yield.
Increasing the dosage of
KlERO1 did not affect the production
of human interleukin 1ß, a protein that has no disulfide
bridges. The results confirm that the
ERO1 genes of
S. cerevisiae and
K. lactis are functionally similar even though portions
of their coding sequence are quite different and the phenotypes
of mutants overexpressing the genes differ. The marked effects
of
KlERO1 copy number on the expression of heterologous proteins
with a high number of disulfide bridges suggests that control
of
KlERO1 and
KlPDI1 is important for the production of high
levels of heterologous proteins of this type.

INTRODUCTION
In eukaryotes, the specific folding of proteins targeted to
the secretory pathway or to extracellular space occurs in the
endoplasmic reticulum (ER). For many secretory proteins, the
proper folding requires the formation of intra- and intermolecular
disulfide bonds (for reviews, see references
15,
21, and
39).
The pathway of oxidative protein folding has been extensively
studied in
Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Genes have been identified
that are involved in redox homeostasis within the ER. The protein
folding process requires numerous chaperones and enzymes. The
core pathway contains two conserved proteins: Pdi1p and Ero1p.
Protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) catalyzes formation, isomerization,
and reduction of disulfide bonds of substrate proteins (
18,
22,
23,
33). The ER membrane-associated protein Ero1p (ER oxidoreduction)
introduces oxidizing equivalents through a flavin-dependent
mechanism, engaging thiol-disulfide exchange with Pdi1p (
17,
38). Mutations in
ERO1 and
PDI1 result in cells that are sensitive
to the reducing agent dithiothreitol (DTT) and that accumulate
proteins that normally contain disulfide bonds in reduced form
in the ER. The accumulation of reduced proteins induces the
unfolded protein response (
16,
19,
29,
30). Overexpression of
ERO1 results in cells resistant to DTT (
16). A few other proteins
functionally related to Pdi1p or to Ero1p have also been identified
in
S. cerevisiae. Overproduction of Mpd1, Mpd2, Eug1, and Eps1
can partially complement the loss of Pdi1p, and overproduction
of Erv2 partially complements the loss of Ero1. Unlike
ERO1 and
PDI1, however, the five related proteins are not essential
genes (for a review, see reference
39).
Increasing Pdi1p activity in bacterial, yeast, insect, and mammalian expression systems can result in increased secretion of heterologous proteins containing disulfide bonds (9, 12, 20, 28, 31, 35, 41). In particular, in Kluyveromyces lactis, a yeast used as a host for secreted production of mammalian proteins (11, 13, 14, 40), duplication of KlPDI1 increases the amount of human serum albumin (HSA), a protein rich in disulfide bonds (4), that is secreted.
Our objectives in this study were (i) to isolate the KlERO1 gene of K. lactis and (ii) to evaluate the secretion of heterologous proteins with or without disulfide bridges by manipulating the key components of the oxidative folding machinery Ero1 and Pdi1. Our working hypothesis was that increasing Pdi-Ero activity would further increase the secretion of highly S-S bonded proteins. Our results provide additional support for the hypothesis that the expression of some classes of heterologous proteins may require significant manipulation of genes involved in protein secretion and processing in addition to increasing the copy number of the gene encoding the expressed protein.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Strains and growth conditions.
S. cerevisiae strains were CKY8, MAT
leu2-
3,
112 ura3-
52 (
ERO1),
and CKY559, MAT
leu2-
3,
112 ura3-
52 ero1-
1 (
16). The
K. lactis strain was JA6, MAT
ade1-
600 adeT-
600 trp1-
11 uraA1-
1 (
7). YPD
medium contained 5 g Difco (Detroit, Mich.) yeast extract, 10
g Difco Bacto peptone, and 20 g glucose per liter. Minimal medium
(YNBD) contained 6.7 g liter
1 yeast nitrogen base without
amino acids (Difco) supplemented with amino acids and bases
as required to a final concentration of 40 µg ml
1 each and 20 g liter
1 glucose. For human serum albumin
production, the antibiotic G418 was added to a final concentration
of 200 µg ml
1 to provide stable maintenance of
the replicative plasmid. The medium with low phosphate, for
PHO5 promoter induction, was described previously by Morlino
et al. (
27). Media were solidified with 2% Bacto agar (Difco).
The
Escherichia coli strain JM83 [
araD (
lac-
proAB)
rpsL (=
strA)
80 lacZ DM15] was used for plasmid propagation and maintenance.
This strain was grown in LB medium (
32), and ampicillin was
added to a final concentration of 100 µg ml
1 for
plasmid maintenance.
Plasmids and DNA manipulation.
The plasmids used in this study are listed in Table 1. The KlERO1 gene was isolated as plasmid pE2, a clone of the K. lactis genomic library carried by the centromeric plasmid KCp491. The KlPDI1 gene was subcloned from the pCRS/P1 plasmid. The expression/secretion cassettes were carried in the multicopy plasmids pYG108 and pYGK44. In pYG108, human serum albumin expression/secretion was driven by the human pre-pro signal sequence under the control of the ScPGK promoter and terminator (14). In pYGK44, interleukin-1ß expression/secretion was driven by the K. lactis killer toxin signal sequence under the control of the PHO5 promoter (13). Isolation and purification of plasmids from E. coli and agarose gel electrophoresis were performed according to the method of Sambrook and Russell (32). Yeast transformation was carried out by electroporation, according to the method of Wésolowsky-Louvel et al. (40), and E. coli transformation was done according to the method of Mandel and Higa (24).
DNA sequencing and sequence analysis.
The sequence of
KlERO1 was obtained by primer extension with
pH48 plasmid as the template. Sequence analysis was performed
with the BLASTP program (
1), and sequence alignment was performed
with Clustal W (
37).
Northern analysis.
Total RNA was prepared by extraction with hot acidic phenol (3). Northern analysis was carried out as described by Sherman et al. (34). The KLERO1 probe was produced by PCR amplification with primers EROA (5'-CCAGAGTATTGGCAGCCTG-3') and EROC (5'-GTCTTGCCACATCGTCATCG-3') and genomic DNA from strain JA6 as the template. The KlACT1 probe corresponded to the HindIII 1.4-kb region derived from the KlACT1-containing pUC19 plasmid (10). The probes were labeled with [
-32P]dCTP using the ReadyPrime DNA labeling system (Amersham Biosciences, Little Chalfont, England) according to the manufacturer's instructions.
Analysis of secreted HSA and IL-1ß.
Ten milliliters of culture supernatant, corresponding to 2 x 109 cells, was mixed with an equal volume of 10% trichloroacetic acid. The precipitated proteins were collected by centrifugation (10 min, 4°C, 14,000 x g). The pellets were washed with 10% acetone, air dried for 20 min, resuspended in 10 µl H2O, and mixed with 2 µl of sample buffer (0.2 M Tris-HCl [pH 6.8], 30% glycerol, 1.2% sodium dodecyl sulfate [SDS], 30% ß-mercaptoethanol, and 0.05% bromophenol blue). After 3 min at 95°C, the solution was resolved by 12% SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE). For evaluation of interleukin-1ß (IL-1ß) secretion, a 1:10 dilution was used. After gel electrophoresis, the amounts of secreted HSA and IL-1ß were evaluated by densitometry after silver staining or Coomassie blue R-250 staining, respectively. For Western analysis, 2.5 µl of culture media was loaded directly onto 12% SDS-PAGE gels and, after electrophoresis, electroblotted onto a polyvinylidene difluoride membrane (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA) in Towbin buffer at 200 V for 40 min. Primary polyclonal antibodies were used at a dilution of 1:50,000 (Sigma-Aldrich Corporation, St. Louis, MO). The secondary antibody was anti-rabbit immunoglobulin G conjugated with peroxidase (Bio-Rad). An ECL detection kit (Amersham) was used according to the manufacturer's instructions. The densitometric analysis was performed with an image analyzer (Phoretix 1D; Non Linear Dynamics Ltd., New Castle upon Tyne, United Kingdom) and normalized against HSA (Sigma) standard.
Statistical analysis.
Cell growth rates and yield means of strains overexpressing HSA in the presence or absence of different Ero-Pdi activities were compared by using univariate analysis (GLM, SPSS, version 12.0; SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL).

RESULTS
Isolation and sequence analysis of the KlERO1 gene of K. lactis.
We searched for the
K. lactis ortholog of the
S. cerevisiae ERO1 gene by functional complementation of the
ts phenotype
of a
Scero1 mutant (
16). After transformation of the mutant
with a
K. lactis genomic library constructed in a single-copy
vector, a positive clone that could grow at 37°C was selected.
The complementing plasmid, pE2, contained an insert of 6.5 kb.
The minimal DNA region able to complement the
ts phenotype of
the mutant, a 4.8-kb HindIII-HindIII fragment, was subcloned
in the single-copy vector pFL38 to yield pH48. Both the pE2
and pH48 plasmids also could relieve the hypersensitivity of
the reducing agent DTT of the
Scero1 mutant (Fig.
1). The insert
in the pH48 plasmid was sequenced. It contained a gene (
KlERO1,
EMBL accession number
AJ489319) that codes for a protein of
562 amino acids that is 67% similar and 59% identical to
ScEro1p.
The protein is cysteine rich and contains the conserved CXXCXXC
motif, which resembles the CXXC thioredoxin-like motif of eukaryotic
and prokaryotic disulfide exchange proteins (
2,
25). No homology
was detected between
ScERO1 and
KlERO1 in the N-terminal region,
probably corresponding to the leader sequence for import into
the ER.
Effect of KlERO1 on the growth of K. lactis.
High gene dosage of
KlPDI1 is toxic to
K. lactis (
5), but the
dose effect of
KlERO1 is not known. The
KlERO1 gene was cloned
in the multicopy vector pCXJ11 (to produce pCX48), which was
introduced into
K. lactis strain JA6. The transformed strains
with either the single-copy or multicopy plasmid had doubling
times (5.3 h) and final cell yields (

2.2
x 10
8 cells ml
1)
similar to those of the wild-type strain in YNBD medium. This
similarity indicates that the presence of additional copies
of the gene was not toxic to
K. lactis cells. Unlike in
S. cerevisiae (
16), overexpression of
KlERO1 does not confer resistance to
dithiothreitol on
K. lactis cells (data not shown).
KlERO1 expression
was strongly induced by DTT and induced to a lesser extent when
the HSA gene was expressed (Fig.
2).
Effect of KlERO1 duplication on secretion of HSA.
The stability of single-copy (pE2) and multicopy (pCx48) plasmids
carrying
KlERO1 was tested in YPD plus 200 µg/ml G418.
pE2 was highly stable; after 72 h of shake culture at 28°C
(in stationary phase), 95 to 97% of cells maintained the plasmid.
pCX48 was not as stable, with only 20 to 40% of the transformed
cells retaining the plasmid under similar conditions.
Cells carrying pE2 have two copies of KlERO1 (one on the plasmid and one in the genome) and have a different protein expression pattern (Fig. 3), including a strong stimulation of HSA secretion. After 48 h, an intense band corresponding to HSA is visible in the culture medium of the strain carrying pE2 that is not evident in the culture medium of the nontransformed strain. After 72 h, differences in band intensity were also evident. A second copy of KlERO1 in the presence and absence of the HSA expression/secretion cassette also increased the secretion of endogenous proteins (Fig. 3, compare lanes 2 and 4 with lanes 3 and 5).
Effect of simultaneous duplication of KlERO1 and KlPDI1.
The centromeric vectors pLCE, pLCI, and pLCEI (Table
1), which
contain
KlERO1,
KlPDI1, and
KlERO1 plus
KlPDI1, respectively,
are retained by 93 to 95% of the cells in cultures grown on
YPD plus G418 for 72 h (Fig.
4). The simultaneous duplication
of both genes led to a significantly (
P < 0.001) higher growth
rate and yield than those observed if only a single gene was
duplicated (Fig.
4). The level of the secreted HSA was similar
after 48 and 72 h of growth in strains with two copies of either
ERO1 or
PDI1 (Fig.
5). In both cases, secretion was strongly
stimulated (about 15-fold) relative to the parental strain.
After 48 h of culture, the signal corresponding to HSA was strongly
enhanced in the supernatant of the strain with two copies of
both genes, indicating that the highest amount of total protein
was produced in this condition. If normalized to cell density,
however, the secretion level was similar to that of strains
carrying a duplication of either
ERO1 or
PDI1 (data not shown).
After 72 h, the amount of HSA secreted was similar if
ERO1 alone,
PDI1 alone, or
ERO1 and
PDI1 were duplicated. The final amount
of secreted HSA was estimated to be

50 mg/liter.
Secretion of IL-1ß.
Strain JA6 (with and without
KlERO1 duplication) was transformed
with plasmid pYGK44 containing an expression cassette corresponding
to IL-1ß cDNA fused to the secretion signal of the
K. lactis killer toxin (
13) and placed under the control of
the phosphate-repressible
PHO5 promoter. After 3 days of culture
growth on phosphate-less YPD to allow induction of IL-1ß
transcription, IL-1ß in the supernatant was analyzed
by SDS-PAGE. Densitometric measurements of the IL-ß
bands (Fig.
6) indicated that the amount of secreted IL-1ß,
a protein that has no disulfide bridges (
26), was not significantly
different in the presence or in the absence of the
KlERO1 duplication.

DISCUSSION
Secreted production of proteins from heterologous hosts, often
a yeast or
Aspergillus strain, is still largely dependent on
empirically developed protocols. Although the construction of
heterologous gene expression cassettes may follow rational schemes,
the control of protein secretion pathways remains uncertain.
When a large amount of foreign protein enters a secretory pathway,
the cell's chaperone activities may be insufficient, triggering
stress responses with unpredictable consequences. By manipulating
a few key components of the secretory system, the stress response
may not be triggered. The present study focused on
KlERO1, whose
product directly interacts with the Pdi1 protein.
The expression of KlERO1 was strongly induced by DTT, which is consistent with a role for this gene in oxidative protein folding. KlERO1 overexpression, i.e., from multiple copies of the gene, did not increase the DTT resistance of the K. lactis wild-type strain. This lack of response may be due to the very high level of induction of KlERO1 transcription by DTT, which would make it more difficult to observe the gene dosage effect. Overexpression of HSA also increased ERO1 transcription 1.5-fold.
Duplication of either KlERO1 or KlPDI1 resulted in a striking increase (
15-fold) in the amount of HSA secreted by K. lactis. Since oxidizing equivalents flow directly from Ero1p to secretory proteins via Pdi1p, the observed increase in protein production suggests that neither Ero1p nor Pdi1p is a limiting factor when either PDI1 or ERO1 is duplicated. The simultaneous duplication of both genes accelerated the secretion of HSA and increased both growth rate and cell yield. The stimulatory effects of the duplication of PDI1 (or its orthologs) confirm several earlier reports (9, 12, 20, 28, 31, 35, 41), but the similarly marked effects of the KlERO1 copy number is a new finding.
One hypothesis is that only the secretion of highly S-S bonded proteins is improved by increasing Pdi-Ero activities. However, there are examples in which secretion of non-disulfide-bonded proteins also can be stimulated by PDI1 duplication (for an example, see reference 36). Duplication of KlERO1 did not influence the production of Il-1ß, which suggests that Ero1p does not have a chaperone-like function such as that suggested for Pdi1p in S. cerevisiae. Information on the effects of PDI1/ERO1 duplication and the expression of other secreted proteins is needed to predict the impact of these proteins on the secretion of heterologous proteins in this system.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank A. Cabibbo (DIBIT-HSR, Milan, Italy) for the
S. cerevisiae mutant
ero1-
1 CKY559 and its isogenic wild type, CKY8, M. Wésolowsky-Louvel
for the
K. lactis genomic library constructed in the single-copy
vector KCp491, H. Fukuhara (Institut Curie, Orsay, France) for
plasmids pRCS, pYG108, and pYGK44, and Roberto Silva for skillful
technical assistance.
This work was supported by Cofin 2002 grant 2002052349_003 from the Ministero Università e Ricerca Scientifica e Tecnologica.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Genetics, Anthropology, and Evolution, University of Parma, Parco Area delle Scienze 11/A, I-43100, Parma, Italy. Phone: 39 0521 905602. Fax: 39 0521 905604. E-mail:
claudia.donnini{at}unipr.it.


REFERENCES
1 - Altshul, S. F., W. Gish, W. Miller, E. W. Myers, and D. J. Lipman. 1990. Basic local alignment search tool. J. Mol. Biol. 215:403-410.[CrossRef][Medline]
2 - Aslund, F., and J. Beckwith. 1999. The thioredoxin superfamily: redundancy, specificity, and gray-area genomics. J. Bacteriol. 181:1375-1379.[Free Full Text]
3 - Ausubel, F. M., R. Brent, R. E. Kingston, D. D. Moore, J. G. Seidman, J. A. Smith, and K. Struhl. 1994. Current protocols in molecular biology. Wiley, New York, N.Y.
4 - Bao, W.-G., and H. Fukuhara. 2001. Secretion of human proteins from yeast: stimulation by duplication of polyubiquitin and protein disulfide isomerase genes in Kluyveromyces lactis. Gene 272:103-110.[CrossRef][Medline]
5 - Bao, W.-G., K. K. Huo, Y. Y. Li, and H. Fukuhara. 2000. Protein disulfide isomerase genes of Kluyveromyces lactis. Yeast 16:329-341.[CrossRef][Medline]
6 - Bonneaud, N., O. Ozier-Kalogeropoulos, G. Li, M. Labouesse, L. Minvielle-Sebastia, and F. Lacroute. 1991. A family of low and high copy replicative, integrative and single-stranded S. cerevisiae/E. coli shuttle vectors. Yeast 7:609-615.[CrossRef][Medline]
7 - Breunig, K. D. 1989. Glucose repression of LAC gene expression in yeast is mediated by the transcriptional activator LAC9. Mol. Gen. Genet. 216:422-427.[CrossRef][Medline]
8 - Chen, X. J. 1996. Low- and high-copy-number shuttle vectors for replication in the budding yeast Kluyveromyces lactis. Gene 172:131-136.[CrossRef][Medline]
9 - Davis, R., K. Schooley, B. Rasmussen, J. Thomas, and P. Reddy. 2000. Effect of PDI overexpression on heterologous protein secretion in CHO cells. Biotechnol. Prog. 16:736-743.[CrossRef][Medline]
10 - Deshler, J. O., G. P. Larson, and J. J. Rossi. 1989. Kluyveromyces lactis maintains Saccharomyces cerevisiae intron-encoded splicing signals. Mol. Cell. Biol. 9:2208-2213.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
11 - Donnini, C., F. Farina, B. Neglia, M. C. Compagno, D. Uccelletti, P. Goffrini, and C. Palleschi. 2004. Improved production of heterologous proteins by a glucose repression defective mutant of Kluyveromyces lactis. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 70:2632-2638.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
12 - Dunn, A., J. M. Luz, D. Natalia, J. A. Gamble, R. B. Freedman, and M. F. Tuite. 1995. Protein disulphide isomerase (PDI) is required for the secretion of a native disulfide-bonded protein from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Biochem. Soc. Trans. 23:78S.[Medline]
13 - Fleer, R., X. J. Chen, N. Amellal, P. Yeh, A. Fournier, F. Guinet, N. Gault, D. Faucher, F. Folliard, H. Fukuhara, and J. F. Mayaux. 1991. High-level secretion of correctly processed recombinant human interleukin-1ß in Kluyveromyces lactis. Gene 107:285-295.[CrossRef][Medline]
14 - Fleer, R., P. Yeh, N. Amellal, I. Maury, A. Fournier, F. Bacchetta, P. Baduel, G. Jung, H. L'Hote, J. Becquart, H. Fukuhara, and J. F. Mayauax. 1991. Stable multicopy vectors for high-level secretion of recombinant human serum albumin by Kluyveromyces lactis. Biotechnology 9:968-975.[CrossRef][Medline]
15 - Frand, A. R., J. W. Cuozzo, and C. A. Kaiser. 2000. Pathways for protein disulphide bond formation. Trends Cell Biol. 10:203-210.[CrossRef][Medline]
16 - Frand, A. R., and C. A. Kaiser. 1998. The ERO1 gene of yeast is required for oxidation of protein dithiols in the endoplasmic reticulum. Mol. Cell 1:161-170.[CrossRef][Medline]
17 - Frand, A. R., and C. A. Kaiser. 1999. Ero1p oxidizes protein disulfide isomerase in a pathway for disulfide bond formation in the endoplasmic reticulum. Mol. Cell 4:469-477.[CrossRef][Medline]
18 - Freedman, R. B., T. R. Hirst, and M. F. Tuite. 1994. Protein disulphide isomerase: building bridges in protein folding. Trends Biochem. Sci. 19:331-336.[CrossRef][Medline]
19 - Holst, B., C. Tachibana, and J. R. Winther. 1997. Active site mutations in yeast protein disulfide isomerase cause dithiothreitol sensitivity and a reduced rate of protein folding in the endoplasmic reticulum. J. Cell Biol. 138:1229-1238.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
20 - Hsu, T. A., S. Watson, J. J. Eiden, and M. J. Betenbaugh. 1996. Rescue of immunoglobulins from insolubility is facilitated by PDI in the baculovirus expression system. Protein Expr. Purif. 7:281-288.[CrossRef][Medline]
21 - Huppa, J. B., and H. L. Ploegh. 1998. The eS-Sence of -SH in the ER. Cell 92:145-148.[CrossRef][Medline]
22 - Laboissiere, M. C., S. L. Sturley, and R. T. Raines. 1995. The essential function of protein-disulfide isomerase is to unscramble non-native disulfide bonds. J. Biol. Chem. 270:28006-28009.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
23 - LaMantia, M. L., and W. J. Lennarz. 1993. The essential function of yeast protein disulfide isomerase does not reside in its isomerase activity. Cell 74:899-908.[CrossRef][Medline]
24 - Mandel, J. K., and S. Higa. 1970. Calcium dependent bacteriophage DNA infection. J. Mol. Biol. 53:159-162.[CrossRef][Medline]
25 - Martin, J. L. 1995. Thioredoxina fold for all reasons. Structure 3:245-250.[Medline]
26 - Meyers, C. A., K. O. Johanson, L. M. Miles, P. J. McDevitt, P. L. Simon, R. L. Webb, M. J. Chen, B. P. Holskin, J. S. Lillquist, and P. R. Young. 1987. Purification and characterization of human recombinant interleukin-1 beta. J. Biol. Chem. 262:11176-11181.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
27 - Morlino, G. B., L. Tizzani, M. M. Bianchi, and L. Frontali. 1999. Inducible amplification of gene copy number and heterologous protein production in the yeast Kluyveromyces lactis. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 65:4808-4813.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
28 - Ostermeier, M., K. De Sutter, and G. Georgiou. 1996. Eukaryotic protein disulfide isomerase complements Escherichia coli dsbA mutants and increases the yield of a heterologous secreted protein with disulfide bonds. J. Biol. Chem. 271:10616-10622.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
29 - Pagani, M., M. Fabbri, C. Benedetti, A. Fassio, S. Pilati, N. J. Bulleid, A. Cabibbo, and R. Sitia. 2000. Endoplasmic reticulum oxidoreductin 1-lß (ERO1-Lß), a human gene induced in the course of the unfolded protein response. J. Biol. Chem. 275:23685-23692.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
30 - Pollard, M. G., K. J. Travers, and J. S. Weissman. 1998. Ero1p: a novel and ubiquitous protein with an essential role in oxidative protein folding in the endoplasmic reticulum. Mol. Cell 1:171-182.[CrossRef][Medline]
31 - Robinson, A. S., V. Hines, and K. D. Wittrup. 1994. Protein disulfide isomerase overexpression increases secretion of foreign proteins in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Biotechnology 12:381-384.[CrossRef][Medline]
32 - Sambrook, J., and D. W. Russell. 2001. Molecular cloning: a laboratory manual, 3rd ed. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y.
33 - Scherens, B., E. Dubois, and F. Messenguy. 1991. Determination of the sequence of the yeast YCL313 gene localized on chromosome III. Homology with the protein disulfide isomerase (PDI gene product) of other organisms. Yeast 7:185-193.[CrossRef][Medline]
34 - Sherman, F., G. R. Fink, and J. B. Hicks. 1986. Laboratory course manual for methods in yeast genetics. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y.
35 - Shusta, E. V., R. T. Raines, A. Pluckthun, and K. D. Wittrup. 1998. Increasing the secretory capacity of Saccharomyces cerevisiae for production of single-chain antibody fragments. Nat. Biotechnol. 16:773-777.[CrossRef][Medline]
36 - Smith, J. D., B. C. Tang, and A. S. Robinson. 2004. Protein disulfide isomerase, but not binding protein, overexpression enhances secretion of a non-disulfide-bonded protein in yeast. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 85:3403-3450.
37 - Thompson, J. D., D. G. Higgins, and T. J. Gibson. 1994. Clustal W: improving the sensitivity of progressive multiple sequence alignment through sequence weighting, position-specific gap penalties and weight matrix choice. Nucleic Acids Res. 22:4673-4680.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
38 - Tu, B. P., and J. S. Weissman. 2002. The FAD- and O(2)-dependent reaction cycle of Ero1-mediated oxidative protein folding in the endoplasmic reticulum. Mol. Cell 10:983-994.[CrossRef][Medline]
39 - Tu, B. P., and J. S. Weissman. 2004. Oxidative protein folding in eukaryotes: mechanisms and consequences. J. Cell Biol. 164:341-346.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
40 - Wésolowsky-Louvel, M., K. D. Breunig, and H. Fukuhara. 1996. Kluyveromyces lactis, p. 139-201. In K. Wolf (ed.), Nonconventional yeasts in biotechnology. Springer-Verlag, Berlin, Germany.
41 - Wunderlich, M., and R. Glockshuber. 1993. In vivo control of redox potential during protein folding catalyzed by bacterial protein disulfide-isomerase (DsbA). J. Biol. Chem. 268:24547-24550.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
Applied and Environmental Microbiology, August 2005, p. 4359-4363, Vol. 71, No. 8
0099-2240/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.71.8.4359-4363.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
This article has been cited by other articles:
-
Raimondi, S., Zanni, E., Talora, C., Rossi, M., Palleschi, C., Uccelletti, D.
(2008). SOD1, a New Kluyveromyces lactis Helper Gene for Heterologous Protein Secretion. Appl. Environ. Microbiol.
74: 7130-7137
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Gasser, B., Sauer, M., Maurer, M., Stadlmayr, G., Mattanovich, D.
(2007). Transcriptomics-Based Identification of Novel Factors Enhancing Heterologous Protein Secretion in Yeasts. Appl. Environ. Microbiol.
73: 6499-6507
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Read, J. D., Colussi, P. A., Ganatra, M. B., Taron, C. H.
(2007). Acetamide Selection of Kluyveromyces lactis Cells Transformed with an Integrative Vector Leads to High-Frequency Formation of Multicopy Strains. Appl. Environ. Microbiol.
73: 5088-5096
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Wentz, A. E., Shusta, E. V.
(2007). A Novel High-Throughput Screen Reveals Yeast Genes That Increase Secretion of Heterologous Proteins. Appl. Environ. Microbiol.
73: 1189-1198
[Abstract]
[Full Text]