Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology

, Volume 45, Issue 6, pp 755–763 | Cite as

The effect of pre- and pro-sequences and multicopy integration on heterologous expression of the Fusarium solani pisi cutinase gene in Aspergillus awamori

  • I. A. van Gemeren
  • A. Beijersbergen
  • W. Musters
  • R. J. Gouka
  • C. A. M. J. J. van den Hondel
  • C. T. Verrips
  • I. A. van Gemeren
ORIGINAL PAPER

Abstract

 A synthetic derivative of the cutinase cDNA of Fusarium solani pisi was expressed in Aspergillus awamori using the A. awamori endoxylanase II (exlA) promoter and terminator. The influence of the origin of the pre-sequence and the presence of a pro-sequence on the efficiency of extracellular cutinase production was analysed in single-copy transformants containing an expression cassette integrated at the pyrG locus. Transformants containing a construct encoding a direct, in-frame fusion of the xylanase pre-peptide to the mature cutinase showed a 2-fold higher cutinase production level compared to strains containing constructs with an additional cutinase pro-peptide. The effect of multicopy integration of the expression cassette on cutinase production was analysed in strains with different numbers of a cutinase construct containing its own pre-prosequence. The multicopy strains showed a 6- to 12-fold increased production of extracellular cutinase relative to the single-copy strains. No linear dose response relation to the number of expression cassettes present in the strains was observed. The amount of active enzyme produced by the strains correlated with the amount of cutinase-specific mRNA, suggesting that cutinase overproduction is not limited at the level of translation or secretion.

Keywords

Aspergillus Fusarium Production Level Heterologous Expression Expression Cassette 
These keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.

Preview

Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.

Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.

Copyright information

© Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 1996

Authors and Affiliations

  • I. A. van Gemeren
    • 1
  • A. Beijersbergen
    • 2
  • W. Musters
    • 2
  • R. J. Gouka
    • 3
  • C. A. M. J. J. van den Hondel
    • 3
  • C. T. Verrips
    • 1
  • I. A. van Gemeren
    • 4
  1. 1.Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of Utrecht, 3508 TB Utrecht, The NetherlandsNL
  2. 2.Department of Gene Technology and Fermentation, Unilever Research Laboratory, Olivier van Noortlaan 120, 3133 AT Vlaardingen, The NetherlandsNL
  3. 3.Department of Molecular Genetics and Gene Technology, TNO Nutrition and Food Research, PO Box 5815, 2280 HV Rijswijk, The NetherlandsNL
  4. 4.c/o URL, Olivier van Noortlaan 120, 3133 AT Vlaardingen, The NetherlandsNL

Personalised recommendations