Engineering the Salmonella type III secretion system to export spider silk monomers

Daniel M Widmaier(University of California, San Francisco), Danielle Tullman‐Ercek(University of California, San Francisco), Ethan A. Mirsky(University of California, San Francisco), Rena M. Hill(University of California, San Francisco), Sridhar Govindarajan(Menlo School), Jeremy Minshull(Menlo School), Christopher A. Voigt(University of California, San Francisco)
Molecular Systems Biology
September 15, 2009
Cited by 162Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

The type III secretion system (T3SS) exports proteins from the cytoplasm, through both the inner and outer membranes, to the external environment. Here, a system is constructed to harness the T3SS encoded within Salmonella Pathogeneity Island 1 to export proteins of biotechnological interest. The system is composed of an operon containing the target protein fused to an N-terminal secretion tag and its cognate chaperone. Transcription is controlled by a genetic circuit that only turns on when the cell is actively secreting protein. The system is refined using a small human protein (DH domain) and demonstrated by exporting three silk monomers (ADF-1, -2, and -3), representative of different types of spider silk. Synthetic genes encoding silk monomers were designed to enhance genetic stability and codon usage, constructed by automated DNA synthesis, and cloned into the secretion control system. Secretion rates up to 1.8 mg l(-1) h(-1) are demonstrated with up to 14% of expressed protein secreted. This work introduces new parts to control protein secretion in Gram-negative bacteria, which will be broadly applicable to problems in biotechnology.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis