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Biosensor that Detects Stress Caused by Periplasmic Proteins.

Alister J CummingDiana KhananishoMateusz BalkaNicklas LiljestrandDaniel O Daley
Published in: ACS synthetic biology (2024)
Escherichia coli is often used as a factory to produce recombinant proteins. In many cases, the recombinant protein needs disulfide bonds to fold and function correctly. These proteins are genetically fused to a signal peptide so that they are secreted to the oxidizing environment of the periplasm (where the enzymes required for disulfide bond formation exist). Currently, it is difficult to determine in vivo whether a recombinant protein is efficiently secreted from the cytoplasm and folded in the periplasm or if there is a bottleneck in one of these steps because cellular capacity has been exceeded. To address this problem, we have developed a biosensor that detects cellular stress caused by (1) inefficient secretion of proteins from the cytoplasm and (2) aggregation of proteins in the periplasm. We demonstrate how the fluorescence fingerprint obtained from the biosensor can be used to identify induction conditions that do not exceed the capacity of the cell and therefore do not cause cellular stress. These induction conditions result in more effective biomass and in some cases higher titers of soluble recombinant proteins.
Keyphrases
  • escherichia coli
  • gold nanoparticles
  • quantum dots
  • cell free
  • single cell
  • staphylococcus aureus
  • small molecule
  • protein protein
  • pseudomonas aeruginosa