AMB Express (May 2017)

Autolysis of Pichia pastoris induced by cold

  • Yaneth Bartolo-Aguilar,
  • Luc Dendooven,
  • Cipriano Chávez-Cabrera,
  • Luis B. Flores-Cotera,
  • María E. Hidalgo-Lara,
  • Lourdes Villa-Tanaca,
  • Rodolfo Marsch

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13568-017-0397-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract The production of recombinant biopharmaceutical proteins is a multi-billion dollar market. Protein recovery represents a major part of the production costs. Pichia pastoris is one of the microbial systems most used for the production of heterologous proteins. The use of a cold-induced promoter to express lytic enzymes in the yeast after the growth stage could reduce protein recovery costs. This study shows that a cold-shock can be applied to induce lysis of the yeast cells. A strain of P. pastoris was constructed in which the endogenous eng gene encoding a putative endo-β-1,3-glucanase was overexpressed using the cold-shock induced promoter of the cctα gene from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In the transgenic P. pastoris, the expression of eng increased 3.6-fold after chilling the cells from 30 to 4 °C (cold-shock stage) followed by incubation for 6 h (eng expression stage). The culture was heated to 30 °C for 6 h (ENG synthesis stage) and kept at 37 °C for 24 h (lysis stage). After this procedure the cell morphology changed, spheroplasts were obtained and cellular lysis was observed. Thus, a clone of P. pastoris was obtained, which undergoes autolysis after a cold-shock.

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