Genetic or chemical protease inhibition causes significant changes in the Bacillus subtilis exoproteome
Bacillus subtilis is a prolific producer of enzymes and biopharmaceuticals. However, the susceptibility of heterologous proteins to degradation by (extracellular) proteases is a major limitation for use of B. subtilis as a protein cell factory. An increase in protein production levels has previously been achieved by using either protease-deficient strains or addition of protease inhibitors to B. subtilis cultures. Notably, the effects of genetic and chemical inhibition of proteases have thus far not been compared in a systematic way. In the present studies, we therefore compared the exoproteomes of cells in which extracellular proteases were genetically or chemically inactivated. The results show substantial differences in the relative abundance of various extracellular proteins. Furthermore, a comparison of the effects of genetic and/or chemical protease inhibition on the stress response triggered by (over) production of secreted proteins showed that chemical protease inhibition provoked a genuine secretion stress response. From a physiological point of view, this suggests that the deletion of protease genes is a better way to prevent product degradation than the use of protease inhibitors. Importantly however, studies with human interleukin-3 show that chemical protease inhibition can result in improved production of protease-sensitive secreted proteins even in mutant strains lacking eight extracellular proteases.
SEEK ID: https://fairdomhub.org/publications/63
PubMed ID: 18546160
Projects: BaCell-SysMO
Publication type: Not specified
Journal: Proteomics
Citation:
Date Published: 12th Jun 2008
Registered Mode: Not specified
Views: 4247
Created: 20th Aug 2010 at 13:55
Last updated: 8th Dec 2022 at 17:25
This item has not yet been tagged.
None