Composite

Part:BBa_K4380014

Designed by: Brigita Duchovska   Group: iGEM22_Vilnius-Lithuania   (2022-09-30)
Revision as of 12:15, 12 October 2022 by Brigita (Talk | contribs) (Directed evolution)

EstA cell surface display system


Assembly Compatibility:
  • 10
    COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[10]
  • 12
    COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[12]
  • 21
    INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[21]
    Illegal BglII site found at 444
    Illegal BglII site found at 591
    Illegal BamHI site found at 205
  • 23
    COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[23]
  • 25
    INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[25]
    Illegal NgoMIV site found at 374
    Illegal NgoMIV site found at 830
    Illegal NgoMIV site found at 968
    Illegal NgoMIV site found at 1508
    Illegal NgoMIV site found at 1877
  • 1000
    COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[1000]

Introduction

NanoFind

Vilnius-Lithuania Igem 2022 project NanoFind was working to create an easily accessible nanoplastic detection tool, using peptides, whose interaction with nanoplastic particles would lead to an easily interpretable response. The system itself focused on smaller protein molecules, peptides, which are modified to acquire the ability to connect to the surface of synthetic polymers – plastics. The detection system works when peptides and nanoplastic particles combine and form a sandwich complex - one nanoplastic particle is surrounded by two peptides, attached to their respective protein. The sandwich complex consisted of two main parts – one is a peptide bound to a fluorescent protein, and the other peptide is immobilized on a cellulose membrane by a cellulose binding domain.


A bacterial cell surface display system, based on the protein EstA was used as a novel way to expose the same peptides onto the bacterial membrane, allowing to amplify the signal of nanoplastic presence in a solution and finding novel peptides by using a peptide evolution protocol (PePevo). The team has generated several experimental characterizations, proving that the domain is successfully exposed on a bacterial surface, and created several new composite parts using this system.

Profile

Name: Bacterial cell surface display system, based on EstA protein from Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Origin: Synthetic, built from parts: BBa_K4380001 -> BBa_K4380006 -> BBa_K4380007 -> BBa_K4380005 -> BBa_K4380002 -> BBa_K2694001
Properties : Cell surface display protein system, which can be used as a immobilization unit on bacterial cellular membrane
Safety: Biosafety level 1 laboratory

Usage

Bacterial display systems are routinely used for the improvement of antibodies, peptides, or enzymes. One frequently used bacterial cell surface display system is based on the EstA protein. Although there are different approaches on using this protein for cell surface display exposure, one of the most frequent uses involves a mutation at active residue S38A. This mutation eliminates enzymes esterase activity but the enzyme still able to be expressed on bacterial surfaces, therefore, can be used as an anchoring motif. The catalytically inactivated extracellular domain and the passenger domain are subsequently translocated to the cell surface [1][3] and E. coli cells can heterologously present approximately 36,000 copies of EstA on the cell surface[1][6].

Directed evolution

E. coli cells present approximately 36,000 copies of EstA on the cell surface [1]. Therefore, high presence on bacterial surfaces (especially, when recombinant proteins can be expressed in high levels), is suitable for Direct evolution approaches . Direct Evolution (DE) is a method used in protein engineering that mimics the process of natural selection to steer proteins or nucleic acids toward a user-defined goal[4]. This method has successfully transformed the way we view protein engineering. During in vivo evolution, each cell is transformed with a plasmid containing a different member of the variant library. Protein EstA allows to expression library variants on its surface, where its function can be tested. Therefore, enzymes that are presented on the cell surface or are secreted to the periplasm can successfully be engineered by directed evolution[2]. With this in mind, these systems are routinely used for the improvement of antibodies, peptides, enzymes, or nanobodies.[3][4][5]

Experimental characterisation

Antibody assay

Figure 3: Relative fluorescence comparing induced, uninduced cell and negative control

Quantitative data

The experiment was performed using a FITC antibody, specifically designed for our system (NB600-525). The goal of this experiment was to evaluate if our proteins are expressed onto the membrane. We tested E. coli BL21(DE3) strain for our protein exposure onto the bacterial membrane. Several controls were used, including uninduced cells and untransformed BL21(DE3) strain cells. First, we tested the cell surface display system using a microplate reader to determine if our induced cells give out the highest fluorescence signal.
The first trials of proving our cell surface display system working principle showed unexpected results - our uninduced cells, after several attempts, produced higher fluorescence than induced cells. (Figure 3)

Qualitative data
Figure 4: Fluorescence microscopy pictures comparing induced, uninduced cell and negative control
.


After our findings have shown that our bacterial cell surface display system cannot be evaluated by antibody binding fluorescent signal quantitative result, we decided to see whether qualitative data can prove that our system is working. This time, the experiment included fluorescence microscopy in order to visualize our cells live in real time. This type of experiment was used to provide qualitative data over quantitative.
Fluorescence microscopy after incubation with antibody provided positive results - after incubation with antibody and visualisation via fluorescence microscopy, we have successfully prooved, that our cell surface display system works. Although uninduced cells emitted the most fluorescence out of all the cells, we believe this was because of nonspecific antibody binding.
Thus, fluorescence due to antibody presence was evaluated as an unuseful application to evaluate bacterial presence in the sample.

Directed evolution

This part was specifically designed for directed evolution (DE) approaches. The genetic circuit,encoded by this part, has several distinct co-parts for succesfully testing and performing directed evolution of the protein of interest.
ompA signaling sequence - a novel signaling sequence, used as a signaling peptide for bacterial surface display proteins to expose on bacterial surface membrane. OmpA signal peptide is a 20-residue peptide fragment of the 23-residue OmpA signal sequence cleavable by signal peptidase I.
* epPCR forward and epPCR reverse - primers for amplification.
* 17x Helix - for protein fusion.
* E-epitope - for antibody cell surface display confirmation assay.
* EstA from Pseudomonas aeruginosa - for specific imobilization of target protein . (Figure 5)


Figure 5: 3D model of EstA protein cell surface display system. Modeled with Alphafold v2.1.0




Vilnius Lithuania iGEM 2022 team has successfully put two plastic binding peptides -LCI and TA2 into the same genetic circuit and were able to get peptide libraries for specific peptide evolution approaches. (Figure 6)

Figure 6: Peptide libraries, generated by fusing this part to two plastic-binding peptides.






















References


[1]Becker, S., Theile, S., Heppeler, N., Michalczyk, A., Wentzel, A., Wilhelm, S., Jaeger, K.-E., & Kolmar, H. (2005). A generic system for the Escherichia coli cell-surface display of lipolytic enzymes. FEBS Letters, 579(5), 1177–1182. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.febslet.2004.12.087
[2]Pitzler, C., Wirtz, G., Vojcic, L., Hiltl, S., Böker, A., Martinez, R., & Schwaneberg, U. (2014). A fluorescent hydrogel-based flow cytometry high-throughput screening platform for hydrolytic enzymes. Chemistry & Biology, 21(12), 1733–1742. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chembiol.2014.10.018
[3]Bidlingmaier, S., & Liu, B. (2015). Identification of posttranslational modification-dependent protein interactions using yeast surface-displayed human proteome libraries. Methods in Molecular Biology (Clifton, N.J.), 1319, 193–202. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-2748-7_10
[4]Jose, J., & Zangen, D. (2005). Auto display of the protease inhibitor aprotinin in Escherichia coli. Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 333(4), 1218–1226. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbrc.2005.06.028
[5]Salema, V., & Fernández, L. Á. (2017). Escherichia coli surface display for the selection of nanobodies. Microbial Biotechnology, 10(6), 1468–1484. https://doi.org/10.1111/1751-7915.12819
[10] Nicolay, T., Lemoine, L., Lievens, E., Balzarini, S., Vanderleyden, J., & Spaepen, S. (2012). Probing the applicability of autotransporter based surface display with the EstA autotransporter of Pseudomonas stutzeri A15. Microbial Cell Factories, 11, 158. https://doi.org/10.1186/1475-2859-11-158

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