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Chapter 5: Microbial Biotechnology

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Title: Chapter 5: Microbial Biotechnology


1
Chapter 5 Microbial Biotechnology
  • Genetic engineering of microbes
  • Human pharmaceutical products
  • Antibiotics
  • Biopolymers
  • Bioconversions
  • Microbial Cell-Surface Display
  • Agriculture
  • Bioremediation
  • Oil Mineral Recovery

2
Producing a foreign protein in a microbe
  • Identify the gene you wish to express in the
    microbe (is it prokaryotic or eukaryotic?)
  • Make sure no introns are present (cDNA?)
  • Attach the gene (or cDNA) to an appropriate
    microbial promoter and add a Shine-Delgarno
    sequence (ribosome binding sequence)
  • Add an appropriate transcriptional termination
    sequence at the 3 end of the gene
  • Introduce the engineered gene in an appropriate
    vector into the microbe

3
Expressing a foreign protein in a microbe
Bacterial Gene Promoter/Switch
or cDNA
4
Some recombinant proteins approved for human use
(50 billion-2008)
5
Production of antibiotics
  • Antibiotics, novel antibiotics and polyketide
    antibiotics
  • Antibiotics are small metabolites with
    antimicrobial activity that are produced by
    Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria as well
    as by fungi
  • Antibiotics act by 1) disrupting the plasma
    membranes of microbes, 2) by inhibiting cell wall
    synthesis or 3) by inhibiting the synthesis of of
    metabolites such as proteins, nucleic acid and
    folic acid
  • See Biosynthesis of Complex Polyketides in a
    Metabolically Engineered Strain of E. coliBlaine
    A. Pfeifer, Suzanne J. Admiraal, Hugo Gramajo,
    David E. Cane, and Chaitan KhoslaScience Mar 2
    2001 1790-1792.

6
Production of biopolymers
  • Production of biodegradable plastics (PHAs),
    spider silk and adhesives from barnacles
  • See Biochemistry 1995,34, 10879-10885 10879
    Construction, Cloning, and Expression of
    Synthetic Genes Encoding Spider Dragline Silk by
    John T. Prince, Kevin P. McGrath, J Carla M.
    DiGirolamo, and David L. Kaplana

7
Biopolymers are great products for recombinant
microbes
  • Animal adhesive proteins (from the blue mussel)
  • Rubber (from the rubber plant Hevea brasiliensis)
  • Biodegradable plastics (polyhydroxyalkanoates or
    PHAs)
  • Note that in all of these cases, one needs to
    clone the genes encoding enzymes in order to
    create or alter a biochemical pathway

8
Microbial Cell-Surface Display
Bioadsorbent
Passenger protein (red) Carrier protein (black)
Oral vaccines
Screening peptide libraries
Antibody production
Mutation detection
Bioconversions
Biosensors
9
Microorganisms and Agriculture
  • Ice-nucleating bacteria story
  • Plant frost damage is caused by the presence of
    ice-nucleating bacteria (Pseudomonas, Erwinia,
    Xanthomonas) on plants
  • The ice gene on the bacterial chromosome encodes
    an ice-nucleating protein which allows for ice
    crystal formation at 0 to 2C
  • When the ice gene is deleted from the bacteria,
    ice crystal formation (frost damage) does not
    occur until -6 to -8C

10
Microbes and Agriculture
  • The Bt toxin story
  • B. thuringiensis is a soil bacterium that
    produces a toxin (Bt toxin or Cry) that kills
    certain insects
  • The Bt toxin or Cry is produced when the bacteria
    sporulates and is present in the parasporal
    crystal
  • Several different strains and subspecies of B.
    thuringiensis exist and produce different toxins
    that kill specific insects

11
The Cry protein mode of action
  • The Cry protein is made as an inactive protoxin
  • Conversion of the protoxin (e.g., 130 kDa) into
    the active toxin (e.g., 68 kDa) requires the
    combination of a slightly alkaline pH (7.5-8) and
    the action of a specific protease(s) found in the
    insect gut
  • The active toxin binds to protein receptors on
    the insect gut epithelial cell membrane
  • The toxin forms an ion channel between the cell
    cytoplasm and the external environment, leading
    to loss of cellular ATP and insect death

12
Isolation genetic engineering of Cry genes
  • The Cry (or protoxin) genes are encoded by
    plasmid DNA, not by chromosomal DNA in B.
    thuringiensis
  • Cry genes were expressed in B. thuringiensis
    under the control of the ptet promoter (rather
    than its sporulation-specific promoter) and
    provided increase yield
  • Constructs have also been produced to enhance
    toxin action and/or expand its specificity

13
Bioremediation
  • The process of cleaning up contaminated sites
    using microorganisms to remove or degrade toxic
    wastes or pollutants
  • Can encourage natural microbe populations or add
    genetically engineered microbes
  • Oil spills, toxic chemicals, heavy metals e.g.,
    mercury- see S. Chen and D. B. Wilson (1997)
    Construction and characterization of Escherichia
    coli genetically engineered for bioremediation of
    Hg2-contaminated environments. APPLIED AND
    ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY 63 24422445.

14
Oil and Mineral Recovery
  • Oil recovery (MEOR-microbial enhanced oil
    recovery)-secreted polysaccharides loosen oil
    from rocks
  • Metal extraction (biomining)-nickel, cooper,
    zinc, colbalt, lead, cadmium,gold can stick to
    the negatively charged or anionic bacterial cell
    surfaces loaded with polysaccharides
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