Engineering and validation of a vector for concomitant expression of rare transfer RNA (tRNA) and HIV-1 nef genes in Escherichia coli

6Citations
Citations of this article
26Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Relative ease in handling and manipulation of Escherichia coli strains make them primary candidate to express proteins heterologously. Overexpression of heterologous genes that contain codons infrequently used by E. coli is related with difficulties such as mRNA instability, early termination of transcription and/or translation, deletions and/or misincorporation, and cell growth inhibition. These codon bias-associated problems are addressed by coexpressing ColE1-compatible, rare tRNA expressing helper plasmids. However, this approach has inadequacies, which we have addressed by engineering an expression vector that concomitantly expresses the heterologous protein of interest, and rare tRNA genes in E. coli. The expression vector contains three (argU, ileY, leuW) rare tRNA genes and a useful multiple cloning site for easy in-frame cloning. To maintain the overall size of the parental plasmid vector, the rare tRNA genes replaced the non-essential DNA segments in the vector. The cloned gene is expressed under the control of T7 promoter and resulting recombinant protein has a C-terminal 6His tag for IMAC-mediated purification. We have evaluated the usefulness of this expression vector by expressing three HIV-1 genes namely HIV-1 p27 (nef), HIV-1 p24 (ca), and HIV-1 vif in NiCo21(DE3) E.coli and demonstrated the advantages of using expression vector that concomitantly expresses rare tRNA and heterologous genes. Copyright:

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Mualif, S. A., Teow, S. Y., Omar, T. C., Chew, Y. W., Yusoff, N. M., & Ali, S. A. (2015). Engineering and validation of a vector for concomitant expression of rare transfer RNA (tRNA) and HIV-1 nef genes in Escherichia coli. PLoS ONE, 10(7). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0130446

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free