Towards the development of Bacillus subtilis as a cell factory for membrane proteins and protein complexes

Abstract:

ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: The Gram-positive bacterium Bacillus subtilis is an important producer of high quality industrial enzymes and a few eukaryotic proteins. Most of these proteins are secreted into the growth medium, but successful examples of cytoplasmic protein production are also known. Therefore, one may anticipate that the high protein production potential of B. subtilis can be exploited for protein complexes and membrane proteins to facilitate their functional and structural analysis. The high quality of proteins produced with B. subtilis results from the action of cellular quality control systems that efficiently remove misfolded or incompletely synthesized proteins. Paradoxically, cellular quality control systems also represent bottlenecks for the production of various heterologous proteins at significant concentrations. CONCLUSION: While inactivation of quality control systems has the potential to improve protein production yields, this could be achieved at the expense of product quality. Mechanisms underlying degradation of secretory proteins are nowadays well understood and often controllable. It will therefore be a major challenge for future research to identify and modulate quality control systems of B. subtilis that limit the production of high quality protein complexes and membrane proteins, and to enhance those systems that facilitate assembly of these proteins.

SEEK ID: https://fairdomhub.org/publications/64

PubMed ID: 18394159

Projects: BaCell-SysMO

Publication type: Not specified

Journal: Microb. Cell Fact.

Citation:

Date Published: 2nd Dec 2007

Registered Mode: Not specified

Authors: Jessica C Zweers, Imrich Barák, Dörte Becher, Arnold Jm Driessen, , Vesa P Kontinen, Manfred J Saller, L'udmila Vavrová,

help Submitter
Activity

Views: 4025

Created: 20th Aug 2010 at 13:56

Last updated: 8th Dec 2022 at 17:25

help Tags

This item has not yet been tagged.

help Attributions

None

Powered by
(v.1.15.0-pre)
Copyright © 2008 - 2024 The University of Manchester and HITS gGmbH