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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, February 2006, p. 1677-1679, Vol. 72, No. 2
0099-2240/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.72.2.1677-1679.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
A Bacillus megaterium Plasmid System for the Production, Export, and One-Step Purification of Affinity-Tagged Heterologous Levansucrase from Growth Medium
Marco Malten,1,
Rebekka Biedendieck,1,
Martin Gamer,1
Ann-Christin Drews,1
Simon Stammen,1
Klaus Buchholz,2
Lubbert Dijkhuizen,3 and
Dieter Jahn1*
Institute of Microbiology, Technical University Braunschweig, Spielmannstrasse 7, D-38106 Braunschweig, Germany,1
Institute for Technical Chemistry, Technology of Carbohydrates, Hans-Sommer-Strasse 10, D-38106 Braunschweig, Germany,2
Microbial Physiology and Centre for Carbohydrate Bioprocessing (CCB, TNO Quality of Life-University of Groningen), Groningen Biomolecular Sciences and Biotechnology Institute (GBB), University of Groningen, Kerklaan 30, NL-9751 NN Haren, The Netherlands3
Received 30 September 2005/
Accepted 4 November 2005

ABSTRACT
A multiple vector system for the production and export of recombinant
affinity-tagged proteins in
Bacillus megaterium was developed.
Up to 1 mg/liter of a His
6-tagged or Strep-tagged
Lactobacillus reuteri levansucrase was directed into the growth medium, using
the
B. megaterium esterase LipA signal peptide, and recovered
by one-step affinity chromatography.

INTRODUCTION
The gram-positive bacterium
Bacillus megaterium has several
advantages over other recombinant protein production hosts.
In contrast to
Bacillus subtilis,
B. megaterium does not possess
alkaline proteases and is known for the stable replication and
maintenance of plasmids (
7). The bacterium readily secretes
proteins into the growth medium. For this study, the commercially
interesting levansucrase Lev from
Lactobacillus reuteri 121
(
3,
6) was chosen as a model protein to further improve the
efficiency and use of a novel
B. megaterium-based secretion
system for heterologous proteins.

Construction of vector pMM1525 for high-level production and secretion of recombinant proteins via the LipA signal peptide in B. megaterium.
For the secretion of heterologous proteins of interest from
a
B. megaterium host, a vector encoding a functional signal
peptide was constructed. The vector allows translational fusion
of a gene of interest to a signal peptide-encoding sequence.
The resulting fusion protein with the signal peptide is transported
via the SEC pathway into the growth medium. The 28-amino-acid
signal peptide of the recently discovered
B. megaterium extracellular
esterase LipA was chosen (
4). Its signal peptidase cleavage
site consists of an AKA motif (Fig.
1A). Because the second
amino acid of the signal peptidase recognition site is variable
(
5), it was possible to incorporate an SfoI restriction site
into its coding sequence, replacing the lysine (K) with a glycine
residue (G). The introduced SfoI restriction site allows for
the cloning of genes directly downstream of the signal peptide
coding sequence (Fig.
1B). As a consequence, the resulting fusion
protein possesses the original N-terminal amino acid sequence
after processing by the signal peptidase and its secretion into
the growth medium. However, this first N-terminal amino acid,
which is the one next to the signal peptidase cleavage site,
is not completely variable. Secreted proteins in
B. subtilis have most abundantly an alanine at this position. This alanine
residue is encoded in pMM1525 but can be exchanged for most
other amino acids, except proline and cysteine (
5).
For insertion of the signal peptide-encoding sequence into the
B. megaterium expression plasmid pMM1520 (
1), an additional
unique restriction site (BsrGI) had to be generated downstream
of the xylose-inducible promoter (P
xylA) by site-directed mutagenesis,
creating pMM1522. This new restriction site provided the basis
for the insertion of the signal peptide coding sequence into
the BsrGI and BstBI restriction sites of pMM1522. The resulting
vector, pMM1525 (Fig.
1), allows the xylose-inducible production
and secretion of proteins of interest in
B. megaterium. Due
to the identity of this region between pMM1522 and pMM1525,
parallel cloning of genes as translational fusions for intracellular
production (pMM1522) and secretion into the growth medium (pMM1525)
is possible.

B. megaterium gene expression plasmids for extracellular production of fusion proteins with small affinity tags.
The vectors pHIS1525 and pSTREP1525 allow the insertion of target
genes for the production and secretion of a C-terminally His
6-tagged
and an N-terminally Strep II-tagged fusion protein, respectively
(see the supplemental material). Features of these two secretion
vectors were combined in pSTREPHIS1525, an expression plasmid
for the extracellular production of Strep-His
6-tagged proteins
(Fig.
1B). Convenient parallel cloning into all described vectors
is possible when genes of interest are inserted into the identical
restriction endonuclease sites of the multiple cloning site
(BglII to NgoMIV).

Construction of L. reuteri levansucrase gene-carrying B. megaterium expression vectors.
The extracellular levansucrase Lev from
L. reuteri strain 121
was chosen as a model protein for protein export studies using
B. megaterium. The soluble and stable Lev variant Lev

773MycHis
was previously generated via deletion of the DNA encoding the
N-terminal Lev-specific signal peptide and the C-terminal cell
wall anchor. Furthermore, a C-terminal Myc epitope and a His
6 tag were added (
6). For secretion of the levansucrase Lev

773MycHis
by
B. megaterium, the coding sequence was inserted directly
downstream of the signal peptide coding sequence of pMM1525,
resulting in pMMBm7 (see the supplemental material). Furthermore,
the plasmid pMGBm4, carrying solely the
lev
773 gene, was constructed
after introduction of a stop codon via site-directed mutagenesis
upstream of the Myc epitope and His
6 tag. Finally, the
lev
773 gene was cloned into the plasmids pHIS1525, pSTREP1525, and
pSTREPHIS1525 for the export of affinity-tagged levansucrase
(see the supplemental material).

Evaluation of production and export of affinity-tagged levansucrase.
Using 500 ml LB broth in 1-liter shake flask cultivations, up
to 4 mg/liter of untagged levansucrase was secreted as the predominant
protein into the culture medium. His
6- and Strep-tagged levansucrase
was produced and exported at up to 2 mg per liter culture medium
(Table
1). Clearly, the stepwise introduction of affinity tags
decreased the amount of exported recombinant protein. Formed
secondary and tertiary protein structure elements of the fused
tags in the cytoplasm might be responsible for this observation.
A batch incubation of the cell-free extracellular growth medium
with the corresponding affinity chromatographic material allowed
one-step purification of Lev

733His (Table
1). Previously, 186.5
mg
L. reuteri levansucrase per liter culture medium was produced
intracellularly in
Escherichia coli. However, after cell disruption,
only 7.3% (4.6 mg) was recovered by chromatographic purification
(
6). Its specific activity of 177 U/mg compares well with the
197 U/mg reported here for purified Lev

773His. Hence, a competitive
B. megaterium-based system for the production, export, and further
affinity chromatographic recovery of recombinant proteins in
the milligram range per liter growth medium was established.
View this table:
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TABLE 1. Recombinant production and one-step affinity purification of L. reuteri levansucrase from growth medium, using a B. megaterium expression system
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We gratefully acknowledge financial support granted by the Deutsche
Forschungsgemeinschaft (SFB 578) and "Fonds der Chemischen Industrie."
Furthermore, we thank Mobitec GmbH and IBA GmbH, Göttingen,
Germany, for commercialization of the expression system described
here.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institute of Microbiology, Technical University Braunschweig, Spielmannstrasse 7, D-38106 Braunschweig, Germany. Phone: 49 (0) 531-391-5801. Fax: 49 (0) 531-391-5854. E-mail:
d.jahn{at}tu-bs.de.

Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://aem.asm.org/. 
M. Malten and R. Biedendieck contributed equally to this work. 

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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, February 2006, p. 1677-1679, Vol. 72, No. 2
0099-2240/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.72.2.1677-1679.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.