Part:BBa_K4721008
PV10 vanillate inducible system
This composite part functions as an vanillate inducible promoter. PV10 is a synthetic promoter system, designed by Kaczmarczyk et al. (2014) [1]. The vanR gene encodes a vanillate-responsive repressor from Caulobacter crescentus regulating the vanAB operon. The repressor binds to the corresponding vanO operator region. In the presence of vanillate, the repressor releases and the reporter gene is expressed by the Psyn2 promoter.
Figure 1: Schematic overview of the mCherry reporter under the control of the composite PV10 promoter system
- 10INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[10]Illegal SpeI site found at 862
- 12INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[12]Illegal NheI site found at 752
Illegal SpeI site found at 862 - 21INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[21]Illegal BamHI site found at 814
Illegal BamHI site found at 853 - 23INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[23]Illegal SpeI site found at 862
- 25INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[25]Illegal SpeI site found at 862
Illegal NgoMIV site found at 41
Illegal NgoMIV site found at 198 - 1000INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[1000]Illegal BsaI site found at 422
Illegal BsaI site found at 741
Illegal BsaI.rc site found at 138
Illegal SapI.rc site found at 688
Parts Collection 'Promoters for M. extorquens'
The iGEM Leiden 2023 team categorized and characterized promoters for controlled gene expression, suitable for genetic engineering of Methylobacterium extorquens AM1. This part belongs to a part collection of promoters.
Our parts collection contains multiple inducible and constitutively active promoters. We tested four constitutive promoters: PmxaF, PfumC, PcoxB and Ptuf, and two inducible promoters: IPTG inducible promoter PL/O4/A1 and vanillate inducible promoter PV10. The promoters are characterized on their respective pages.
Table 1: Overview of the constitutive promoters in the parts collection
Name | Part | Promoter strength |
PfumC | BBa_K4721000 | Low |
PcoxB | BBa_K4721001 | Low |
PmxaF | BBa_K4721002 | High |
Ptuf | BBa_K4721003 | Medium |
Table 2: Overview of the composite inducible promoters in the parts collection
Name Composite Part | Composite Part | Name Basic Parts | Basic Parts | Basic Part Features |
PL/O4/A1 IPTG inducible system | BBa_K4721006 | PL/O4/A1 | BBa_K4721004 | Promoter, Operator |
lacIq promoter | BBa_K4721005 | Promoter | ||
lacIq gene | BBa_K1222003 | Coding | ||
lacIq terminator | BBa_K4721007 | Terminator | ||
PV10 vanillate inducible system | BBa_K4721008 | VanR repressor gene | BBa_K4721009 | Coding |
RBS to combine with Pbla-mut1T promoter | BBa_K4721013 | RBS | ||
Pbla-mut1T | BBa_K4721012 | Promoter | ||
PV10 | BBa_K4721011 | RBS, Operator | ||
RBS to combine with PV10 | BBa_K4721010 | RBS |
Results
Overview Promoter strengh Parts Collection
In order to characterize each promoter, each promoter was cloned in the pTE100 empty vector (Addgene 59395) (Schada von Borzyskowski et al., 2015)[2] containing an oriV-traJ’ origin with TcR. An mCherry testing cassette containing an RBS was placed under the control of the respective promoter. Each plasmid was transformed into M. extorquens AM1.
Promoter activity was tracked by measuring the mCherry fluorescence. Please read below for the detailed experimental set-up. Figure 2 shows an overview of the promoter activity for the different parts in this collection. Of the constitutive promoters, PmxaF shows the highest, followed by Ptuf. PfumC and PcoxB showed similar relatively low expressions. The IPTG inducible promoter PL/O4/A1 and the vanillate inducible promoter PV10 show significantly increased fluorescence when induced, where the induction of the IPTG inducible promoter PL/O4/A1 is the strongest.
Figure 2: Normalized expression of four constitutive promoters, and of two inducible promoters both in uninduced (-) and induced conditions (+). The bar shows the mean of the biological and technical duplicates. The error bars represent the standard deviation. The dotted line serves as a visual aid and represents the fluorescence signal of 250 nM of the Sulforhomadine from the iGEM calibration kit, as part of the Interlab study. For PL/O4/A1, a 190% increase in expression was seen when induced compared to non induced condition (Student t-test, p<0.0001). A 30% increased expression was seen for PV10 when grown under induced conditions (Student t-test, p<0.05).
Methods
In order to characterize the promoter strength, a growth experiment was set up. As a control, a strain carrying a plasmid containing the mCherry testing cassette, without a promoter, was used. All strains were inoculated at an OD600nm of 0.05. Each well contained 200 µL of standard Minimal Methanol Medium [3] used for M. extorquens. To minimize the concentration of the inducer vehicle, a 1000x stock was added to the sample to yield a 1x final concentration. The set-up of the experiment was with biological and technical duplicates. The strains were grown for five days in the Tecan Plate reader Infinite 200 PRO with a clear flat bottom black 96-well plate. Absorbance and fluorescence were measured every ten minutes, between which the plate was shaken with an linear amplitude of 1 mm. Incubation temperature was 30 ºC. Absorbance was measured at 600 nm with 25 flashes and a bandwidth of 9 nm and a settle time of 0 ms. Fluorescence was measured using fluorescence top reading using 25 flashes with an excitation wavelength of 575 nm (bandwidth 9 nm) and emission wavelength of 610 nm (bandwidth 20 nm). For this the gain was 100. An integration time of 20 µs was used and a lag and settle time of 0 µs. Z-position was 20,000 µm. After measurement of the absorbance, the real OD600nm was calculated using the M. extorquens specific formula: OD600nm = (absorption in well - 0.0755)/0.2344. The fluorescence, OD600nm and fluorescence/OD600nm are compared for each promoter as a measure for promoter strength.
Induction of PV10
From here on, we will dive further into the results of Psub>V10</sub>. The growth experiment was setup with 10 different vanilate concentrations (Sigma, H36001), ranging from 0 - 250µM. The concentration range was based on methods by Kaczmarczyk et al. (2014) [1]
Growth curves
The bacteria carrying mCherry under the control PV10 were expected to have similar growth curves, unless the vanillate were toxic to the cells, or the metabolic burden of the plasmid would inhibit the growth. Figure 3 shows that the growth curves are similar between the conditions, however when compared to the ‘no promoter’ control, growth inhibition by the construct is evident. For the measurements of fluorescence, generally the middle of the exponential phase of growth is taken [3]. For this promoter, the 24-hour sample was used for comparison in Figure 2.
Figure 3: Growth curves of the different conditions for the strain expressing mCherry under the control of the PV10 promoter, and of the control without a promoter. Vanillate concentration in µM is mentioned above each graph. The mean of the biological and technical duplicates is shown, with the dotted lines representing the error bars. A sigmoidal 4PL curve (black) is fitted on each graph. The strains were grown over a timespan of 5 days in a plate reader. Similar growth rates are seen between the vanillate concentrations, however growth of the strain is inhibited when compared to the ‘no promoter’ control.
Fluorescence
Besides the absorbance, the fluorescence of mCherry was measured, as shown in Figure 4. As expected, the strain with no promoter before the mCherry cassette shows almost no fluorescence. For the different conditions for the strain expressing mCherry under the control of the PV10 promoter, barely an effect on fluorescence with increasing concentration of vanillate can be seen.
Figure 4: mCherry Fluorescence of the different conditions for the strain expressing mCherry under the control of the PV10 promoter, and of the control without a promoter. Vanillate concentration in µM is mentioned above each graph. The mean of the biological and technical duplicates is shown, with the dotted lines representing the error bars. A sigmoidal 4PL curve (black) is fitted on each graph.The strains were grown over a timespan of 5 days in a plate reader. The ‘no promoter’ strain hardly has a fluorescence signal, which is consistent with the expectations. Fluorescence is hardly affected by increasing concentrations of vanillate.
Fluorescence divided by OD
We plotted Fluorescence divided by OD600nm over time in Figure 5, thereby combining Figure 3 and 4. This step is taken to normalize the fluorescence signal by the amount of cells. This will compensate for the fact that a higher amount of cells will produce a higher fluorescence signal, thereby giving a clearer insight in promoter activity.
Figure 5: mCherry Fluorescence divided by OD600nm of the different conditions for the strain expressing mCherry under the control of the PV10 promoter, and of the control without a promoter. Vanillate concentration in µM is mentioned above each graph. The mean of the biological and technical duplicates is shown, with the dotted lines representing the error bars. A sigmoidal 4PL curve (black) is fitted on each graph.The strains were grown over a timespan of 5 days in a plate reader. The ‘no promoter’ strain hardly has a fluorescence signal, which is consistent with the expectations. Fluorescence is hardly affected by increasing concentrations of vanillate. Because of the normalization, this increase in signal can be attributed to accumulation of fluorescent protein in each cell, and not because of more cells.
Dose-response
Lastly, in Figure 6, the 24h sample of the fluorescence/OD is plotted against the vanillate concentrations in µM. This figure shows the dose-response curve of the separate biological duplicates. There is a base fluorescence signal with no vanillate added, this indicates expression in the uninduced condition. Nonetheless, increasing inducer concentrations resulted in higher expression when comparing no induction with 250µM vanillate added (30%, Student’s T-test, * p < 0.05 Student’s T-test)
Figure 6: Normalized expression of mCherry as function of vanillate concentration under control of the PV10 promoter to different vanillate dosages, separated over the two biological duplicates, of the 24h sample. Symbols represent the mean, and the error bars the standard deviation. The curves are fitted as Dose-response - Stimulation; [agonist] vs. response (three variables) using GraphPad Prism. Fluorescence/OD is relatively high with no vanillate added, but with increasing concentrations the fluorescence/OD increases.
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