染料木黄酮检测的高选择性细胞荧光生物传感器

Lucy Fang-I Chao , Dany Liu , Verena Siewers
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引用次数: 1

摘要

染料木黄酮是一种主要存在于豆类中的异黄酮,已被证明对人类有许多健康益处。因此,利用微生物细胞工厂生产它有很大的兴趣。为了帮助筛选高染料木素产量的微生物菌株,利用酿酒酵母Gal4DBD-ERα-VP16 (GEV)转录激活因子,开发了一种基于细胞的染料木素生物传感器。在染料木素存在的情况下,GEV传感器蛋白与GAL1启动子结合并激活下游GFP报告基因的转录。通过对传感器蛋白及其启动子和报告启动子进行工程改造,生物传感器的性能得到了改善,通过外源染料木黄酮诱导后GFP信号强度的倍差来测量。利用弱启动子REV1p驱动GEV传感器基因表达,并将GEV上的VP16反激活域替换为去除NLS的三方VPR反激活子,提高了生物传感器的性能。当去除Mig1抑制剂的结合位点,并在报告启动子中添加另外两个Gal4p结合位点时,生物传感器的性能进一步提高。染料木素诱导后,我们改进的生物传感器输出的GFP信号比未诱导状态高20倍。在测试的8种黄酮类化合物中,改进的生物传感器只对染料木黄酮有反应,并且在某种程度上呈线性。改进后的生物传感器对体内产生的染料木素也有反应,GFP报告强度与细胞内染料木素浓度成正比。当与基于荧光的细胞分选技术相结合时,这种生物传感器可以促进高通量筛选生产染料木素的酵母细胞工厂。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A highly selective cell-based fluorescent biosensor for genistein detection

Genistein, an isoflavone found mainly in legumes, has been shown to have numerous health benefits for humans. Therefore, there is substantial interest in producing it using microbial cell factories. To aid in screening for high genistein producing microbial strains, a cell-based biosensor for genistein was developed by repurposing the Gal4DBD-ERα-VP16 (GEV) transcriptional activator in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In the presence of genistein, the GEV sensor protein binds to the GAL1 promoter and activates transcription of a downstream GFP reporter. The performance of the biosensor, as measured by fold difference in GFP signal intensity after external genistein induction, was improved by engineering the sensor protein, its promoter and the reporter promoter. Biosensor performance increased when the weak promoter REV1p was used to drive GEV sensor gene expression and the VP16 transactivating domain on GEV was replaced with the tripartite VPR transactivator that had its NLS removed. The biosensor performance further improved when the binding sites for the inhibitor Mig1 were removed from and two additional Gal4p binding sites were added to the reporter promoter. After genistein induction, our improved biosensor output a GFP signal that was 20 times higher compared to the uninduced state. Out of the 8 flavonoids tested, the improved biosensor responded only to genistein and in a somewhat linear manner. The improved biosensor also responded to genistein produced in vivo, with the GFP reporter intensity directly proportional to intracellular genistein concentration. When combined with fluorescence-based cell sorting technology, this biosensor could facilitate high-throughput screening of a genistein-producing yeast cell factory.

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