Microbial Cell (Apr 2022)

A Modular Cloning Toolkit for the production of recombinant proteins in Leishmania tarentolae

  • Katrin Hieronimus,
  • Tabea Donauer,
  • Jonas Klein,
  • Bastian Hinkel,
  • Julia Vanessa Spänle,
  • Anna Probst,
  • Justus Niemeyer,
  • Salina Kibrom,
  • Anna Maria Kiefer,
  • Luzia Schneider,
  • Britta Husemann,
  • Eileen Bischoff,
  • Sophie Möhring,
  • Nicolas Bayer,
  • Dorothée Klein,
  • Adrian Engels,
  • Benjamin Gustav Ziehmer,
  • Julian Stieß,
  • Pavlo Moroka,
  • Michael Schroda,
  • Marcel Deponte

DOI
https://doi.org/10.15698/mic2024.04.821
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11
pp. 128 – 142

Abstract

Read online

Modular Cloning (MoClo) is based on libraries of standardized genetic parts that can be directionally assembled via Golden Gate cloning in one-pot reactions into transcription units and multigene constructs. Here, a team of bachelor students established a MoClo toolkit for the protist Leishmania tarentolae in the frame of the international Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) competition. Our modular toolkit is based on a domesticated version of a commercial LEXSY expression vector and comprises 34 genetic parts encoding various affinity tags, targeting signals as well as fluorescent and luminescent proteins. We demonstrated the utility of our kit by the successful production of 16 different tagged versions of the receptor binding domain (RBD) of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein in L. tarentolae liquid cultures. While highest yields of secreted recombinant RBD were obtained for GST-tagged fusion proteins 48 h post induction, C-terminal peptide tags were often degraded and resulted in lower yields of secreted RBD. Fusing secreted RBD to a synthetic O-glycosylation SP20 module resulted in an apparent molecular mass shift around 10 kDa. No disadvantage regarding the production of RBD was detected when the three antibiotics of the LEXSY system were omitted during the 48-h induction phase. Furthermore, the successful purification of secreted RBD from the supernatant of L. tarentolae liquid cultures was demonstrated in pilot experiments. In summary, we established a MoClo toolkit and exemplified its application for the production of recombinant proteins in L. tarentolae.

Keywords