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Journal of Bacteriology, January 2004, p . 253-257, Vol . 186,
No . 1
Production of Heterologous and Chimeric Scaffoldins by Clostridium
acetobutylicum ATCC 824
S . Perret,1 L . Casalot,1,
H.-P . Fierobe,1 C . Tardif,1,2 F . Sabathe,3
J.-P . Belaich,1,2 and A . Belaich1*
Laboratoire de Bioénergétique et Ingénierie des Protéines, IBSM, Centre
National de la Recherche Scientifique,1 Université de Provence,
Marseille,2 Centre de Bioingénierie Gilbert Durand, Institut National
des Sciences Appliquées, Toulouse, France3
Received 23 May 2003/ Accepted 1 October 2003
Clostridium acetobutylicum ATCC 824 converts sugars and various
polysaccharides into acids and solvents . This bacterium, however,
is unable to utilize cellulosic substrates, since it is able to
secrete very small amounts of cellulosomes . To promote the
utilization of crystalline cellulose, the strategy we chose aims at
producing heterologous minicellulosomes, containing two different
cellulases bound to a miniscaffoldin, in C . acetobutylicum . A
first step toward this goal describes the production of miniCipC1, a
truncated form of CipC from Clostridium cellulolyticum, and
the hybrid scaffoldin Scaf 3, which bears an additional cohesin
domain derived from CipA from Clostridium thermocellum . Both
proteins were correctly matured and secreted in the medium, and their
various domains were found to be functional .
Clostridium acetobutylicum ATCC 824 is one of the best-known
solventogenic bacteria that convert sugars and various polysaccharides
into acids and solvents (4, 5,
11, 13, 15,
27, 28) . Unfortunately, this
bacterium is unable to grow on crystalline cellulose, although its
genome contains a large cluster of genes involved in the cellulolysis
process (15, 23) . This cluster starts with
the cipA gene encoding the scaffoldin CipA, followed by eight
genes encoding mostly glycosylhydrolases derived from GH families
48, 9, and 5 . C . acetobutylicum secretes very small quantities
of a cellulosome of
665
kDa devoid of activity on crystalline cellulose and possessing very
low activity on carboxymethyl cellulose or phosphoric-acid-swollen
cellulose (22, 23) . Recently,
the gene encoding a truncated CipA was overexpressed in the
bacterium, leading to the formation of a minicellulosome in C .
acetobutylicum (24) . As with normal cellulosome, this
recombinant minicellulosome was found to be inactive against
crystalline cellulose . The reasons for these cellulosomes being so
poorly produced are not yet clearly established . Since C .
acetobutylicum grows very well on cellobiose, it may be possible
to engineer the bacterium to grow on cellulose by introducing
cellulases from another cellulolytic bacterium . The mesophilic
Clostridium cellulolyticum was chosen as the donor for cel
genes . This bacterium produces a cellulosome of
700
kDa which efficiently degrades crystalline cellulose (1,
6) . Almost all cel genes are clustered on a
26-kb fragment including cipC, coding for the scaffoldin CipC
(18) . Several components of the cellulosome have been
extensively studied from the biochemical and structural points of
view (1, 7, 12,
18, 19, 20,
21, 25, 26) . The
dockerin domains of the cellulases interact closely with the cohesin
domains of the scaffoldin (16), and it has been
demonstrated that the cohesins of CipC recognize all the
dockerin-containing enzymes from C . cellulolyticum (18) .
On the other hand, recognition between the cohesins and dockerins of
the two clostridial species C . cellulolyticum and the
thermophilic Clostridium thermocellum was shown to be species
specific (17) . Based on these observations,
chimeric miniscaffoldins containing a cohesin from each species have
been built by Fierobe et al . (2, 3) . These
chimeric proteins allowed the in vitro reconstitution of
minicellulosomes containing two different cellulases, one possessing
a C . cellulolyticum dockerin (cellulasec) and the
other harboring a C . thermocellum dockerin (cellulaset) .
It was shown that the binding of various enzyme pairs on the hybrid
scaffoldins induced a significant increase in activity toward
crystalline cellulose, especially when the hybrid scaffoldin
contained a cellular binding module (CBM) . Our goal is thus to
produce in C . acetobutylicum the most efficient
minicellulosomes containing a chimeric scaffoldin and two selected
enzymes .
In this study, we describe the production in C . acetobutylicum
of two heterologous miniscaffoldins: miniCipC1 containing CBM3a,
one X2 module, and the cohesin 1 module of CipC of C . cellulolyticum,
and the chimeric Scaf3, in which the cohesin 3 module of the
scaffoldin CipA of C . thermocellum was fused with the C-terminal
region of miniCipC1 .
Cloning of cipC1 in C . acetobutylicum. The DNA
fragment coding for miniCipC1, including the signal peptide, was
amplified from C . cellulolyticum genomic DNA using the primers
cipC1D and cipC1R (Table 1) . The internal BamHI
site of the fragment was suppressed by PCR using the primers
MutB-D and MutB-R . This fragment was introduced between the BamHI
and NarI sites of the pSOS95 shuttle vector (kindly provided
by P . Soucaille, INSA, Toulouse, France) under the control of the
strong constitutive promoter of the C . acetobutylicum thiolase
gene (thl) . The transcriptional terminator used was that of
the acetoacetate decarboxylase gene (adc) . Unfortunately, no
Escherichia coli transformant colony was obtained . It was hypothesized
that the thl promoter was recognized by the E . coli
transcription machinery and that the production of miniCipC1 would
disrupt the secretion machinery, leading to cell death . This
hypothesis was confirmed by the cloning of the gene encoding the
mature form of miniCipC1 using the same vector . Intracellular
overproduction of the protein was observed in E . coli DH5
(data not shown) .
| TABLE 1 . Oligonucleotide primers used in this study
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The promoter region of the pSOS95 vector was therefore modified by
adding two lac operators (21 bp each) immediately upstream and
downstream of the thiolase promoter region, which thus remained
intact, in the pSOS952 plasmid (Fig . 1B) . The primers used are
listed in Table 1 . The first lac operator was
generated by three PCR steps, using pSOS95 as the matrix . The first
step generated an 86-bp fragment, using the forward primer SosA and
the reverse primer SosB . The second step generated a 111-bp PCR
fragment, using the forward primer SosD and the reverse primer SosE .
The entire fragment (178 bp) containing the lac operator was
amplified by PCR from a mixture of both overlapping fragments by
using the external primers SosA and SosE . After double digestion with
SalI and BamHI, the lac operator 1 fragment was
subsequently ligated into a similarly digested vector pSOS95,
resulting in the vector pSOS95m . The second lac operator was
inserted into the pSOS95m plasmid at the SalI restriction
site . The DNA fragment was obtained by simple hybridization of
oligonucleotides LacD2 and LacR2 .
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FIG . 1 . Schematic representation of the cloning region of pSOS95 (A) and
position of the two lac operators inserted upstream and
downstream of the thiolase of the promoter region (B) to construct the
pSOS952 derivatives.
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E . coli SG-13009, containing the pREP4 repressor plasmid, was
used as the recipient strain for the resulting pSOS952 plasmid and
its recombinant forms . The DNA fragment coding for miniCipC1 with the
signal peptide was cloned successfully using pSOS952 . The resulting
pSOS952-cipC1 plasmid was methylated in vivo in E . coli ER
2275 carrying the pAN1 methylating plasmid (10) and
was used to transform C . acetobutylicum by electrotransformation
(14) .
One clone was selected to inoculate 2YT medium (containing, per
liter, 16 g of tryptone, 10 g of yeast extract, and 5 g of NaCl)
supplemented with cellobiose (5 g/liter) and erythromycin (40 µg/ml) .
After growth overnight, the cells were harvested and the supernatant
was adjusted to pH 6.5 with 1 M phosphate buffer and loaded onto an
Avicel (Fluka PH 101) column equilibrated with 50 mM phosphate
buffer, pH 6.5 . After two washes with 50 and 20 mM phosphate buffer,
pH 6.5, respectively, the protein was eluted from Avicel with 1%
triethylamine solution, dialyzed, and concentrated in an Amicon
apparatus using a polyether-sulfone (10-kDa cutoff) membrane . When
subjected to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), this fraction was found to contain mainly
a protein, called miniCipC1cab, with a molecular mass of
43,000 Da, which is in good agreement with the theoretical mass of
miniCipC1 (43,500 Da) . Furthermore, the electrophoretic profile was
identical to that of the control protein miniCipC1eco
[recombinant miniCipC1 produced in E . coli BL21(DE3) from pETcipC1]
(16) (Fig . 2A) . These two proteins
were specifically recognized by the polyclonal antibodies raised
against CBM3a (Fig . 2B) . N-terminus microsequencing
of the protein produced in C . acetobutylicum (AGTGV) matched
perfectly with the N terminus of C . cellulolyticum
cellulosomal CipC, thus confirming that the purified protein is
miniCipC1 . Finally, it was estimated that
15
mg of pure miniCipC1 can be obtained from 1 liter of overnight
culture . These results showed that, as expected, the presence of the
two lac operators did not prevent the expression of the gene
coding for miniCipC1 in C . acetobutylicum .
|
FIG . 2 . Production of CipC1 by C . acetobutylicum . Lane 1,
molecular mass markers (LMW; Amersham) (from top to bottom: 94, 67, 43,
30, 20, and 14 kDa); lanes 2, CipC1eco (0.1 mg/ml) purified
from E . coli BL21(DE3) recombinant clone; lanes 3, sample of
CipC1cab produced in C . acetobutylicum . (A) SDS-PAGE
gel stained with Coomassie blue; (B) Western blot; detection with
antiserum raised against CBM3a.
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Production of Scaf3 by C . acetobutylicum. Since
miniCipC1 was easily synthesized by C . acetobutylicum, the
production of the chimeric protein Scaf3 was carried out . Scaf3
consists of C . cellulolyticum miniCipC1 followed by cohesin 3
from C . thermocellum CipA . To obtain this construct, the 3'
end of cipC1 in pSOS952-cipC1 was modified by introducing an
XhoI site upstream of the stop codon and AsuII and BamHI
sites downstream, using the primers CipC1D (forward) and rMC1SOS1
(reverse) . The amplified fragment, digested by BamHI, was ligated
into BamHI-linearized pSOS952 . Then, the cohesin 3 coding sequence,
obtained from XhoI digestion of pETscaf3 (2), was
ligated into the XhoI site of the recombinant pSOS952 plasmid
previously obtained, leading to the plasmid pSOS952-scaf3 . In the
Scaf3 protein produced from this construction, the two cohesin
modules are separated by a 44-amino-acid linker . The same protocol as
for miniCipC1 was used to produce Scaf3 . The fraction eluted
from cellulose mainly contained a protein with an apparent mass of 64
kDa on SDS-PAGE, which is in good agreement with the theoretical mass
(61,6467 Da) calculated from the chimeric Scaf3 (2) (Fig .
3A) . This protein was also recognized by the polyclonal
antibodies raised against CBM3a (Fig . 3B) and was
produced in its complete form, showing that the long linker located
between the two cohesin domains was not cleaved . It was estimated
that 10 mg of pure protein can be obtained from 1 liter of culture .
|
FIG . 3 . Production of Scaf3 by C . acetobutylicum . Lane 1,
molecular mass markers (LMW; Amersham) (from top to bottom: 94, 67, 43,
30, 20, and 14 kDa); lanes 2, control Scaf3eco (1.1 mg/ml)
produced in E . coli BL21(DE3); lanes 3, sample of Scaf3cab
produced in C . acetobutylicum . (A) SDS-PAGE gel stained with
Coomassie blue; (B) Western blot; detection with antiserum raised
against CBM3a.
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Interaction of miniCipC1 and Scaf3 with dockerin domains from C .
cellulolyticum and C . thermocellum. To verify the
functionality of the cohesins in miniCipC1 and Scaf3 produced by
C . acetobutylicum, specific cohesin-dockerin interactions were
performed . After SDS-PAGE, miniCipC1cab and the control
miniCipC1eco were blotted onto nitrocellulose membranes
and overlaid with either the C . cellulolyticum cellulase Cel48Fc
or Cel9Ec . The blotting membranes were subsequently incubated
with antiserum raised against Cel48F or Cel9E . In both cases, a
band corresponding to miniCipC1 (control or miniCipC1cab)
was revealed, showing that Cel48Fc or Cel9Ec was able to
interact with the cohesin domain of miniCipC1 produced by C .
acetobutylicum (Fig . 4) .
|
FIG . 4 . Interaction of miniCipC1 with Cel48Fc and Cel9Ec .
Lanes 1, control miniCipC1eco; lanes 2, sample of miniCipC1cab
produced in C . acetobutylicum. (A) Blot overlaid with Cel9Ec
and revealed with antiserum raised against Cel9E . (B) Blot overlaid with
Cel48Fc and revealed with antiserum raised against Cel48F.
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A second set of experiments was carried out to control the functionality
of the two cohesins in Scaf3 produced in C . acetobutylicum (Scaf3cab) .
MiniCipC1cab and Scaf3cab, as well as two control
proteins, Scaf3eco (2) and C2-CBMt-eco
(3) (the latter is a fragment of CipA from C .
thermocellum that contains cohesin 2 and CBM3a), were blotted
onto nitrocellulose membranes and overlaid with either Cel9Ec
or Cel9Et (harboring a C . thermocellum dockerin) .
The membranes were subsequently incubated with antiserum raised
against Cel9E . As can be seen in Fig . 5A, only miniCipC1cab,
Scaf3eco, and Scaf3cab were stained when the
membrane was overlaid with Cel9Ec . On the other hand, only
the two control proteins C2-CBMt and Scaf3ecol, as well as
Scaf3cab, were revealed when the blot was overlaid with
Cel9Et (Fig . 5B) . All these data suggest
that C . acetobutylicum is able to produce functional foreign
cohesin domains originating from mesophilic or thermophilic
clostridia .
|
FIG . 5 . Interaction of miniCipC1 and Scaf3 with Cel9Ec and
Cel9Et . Lanes 1, control miniCipC1eco; lanes 2,
control C2-CBMteco; lanes 3,: control Scaf 3eco;
lanes 4, Scaf3cab . (A) Blot overlaid with Cel9Ec .
(B) Blot overlaid with Cel9Et . The two blots were revealed
with antiserum raised against Cel9E.
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These experiments showed that it is possible to produce a hybrid
scaffoldin protein in C . acetobutylicum, which is the first
step in the production in vivo of a well-defined minicellulosome . The
challenge now is to produce, in an active form, the more suitable
enzymes selected from a C . cellulolyticum cellulase library .
Previous studies have shown that the most efficient minicellulosome
was obtained with the complex including the endoprocessive cellulase
Cel48F and the endocellulase Cel9G bound onto a single CBM-containing
scaffoldin . Such a complex is
4-fold
more active on Avicel than the mixture Cel48F plus Cel9G in the free
state (3) .
So far, only one heterologous expression of a cellulase gene (engB
from Clostridium cellulovorans) has been reported in C .
acetobutylicum ATCC 824 (8) . The secretion in the
extracellular medium was so poor that the recombinant cellulase could
be detected only by Western blotting . Two glycoside hydrolases, Cel6A
and Cel5D, from the eukaryotic organism Neocallimastix patriciarum
have been produced in Clostridium beijerinckii (9) .
The two genes were functionally expressed, and the resulting enzymes
were excreted into the extracellular medium . Nevertheless, it
seems that the production of these enzymes was also very low, not
enough to promote significant degradation of cellulose .
Attempts to produce Cel48F and Cel9G with suitable dockerins in
C . acetobutylicum are underway . If successful, it will be
possible to build a C . acetobutylicum strain able to secrete
the most efficient minicellulosome, containing two cellulases and a
hybrid scaffoldin . This would constitute a starting point for the
development of an industrial process to convert cellulose directly
into solvents .
We thank Philippe Soucaille for helpful discussions and Odile Valette
for technical assistance . We are grateful to Monique Casalot for
proofreading the manuscript
This work was financially supported by the AGRICE Program (CNRS-ADEME)
no . 9901057 .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: BIP, CNRS, 31 Chemin
Joseph Aiguier, 13402 Marseille Cedex 20, France . Phone: 33 4 91 16 40 70 . Fax:
33 4 91 71 33 21 . E-mail:
abelaich@ibsm.cnrs-mrs.fr .
Present address: Laboratoire de Biodépollution et Valorisation des
Effluents Gazeux, Institut de Recherche pour le Développement,
Marseille, France .
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