5 research outputs found
Enhancement in production of recombinant two-chain Insulin Glargine by over-expression of Kex2 protease in Pichia pastoris
Glargine is an analog of Insulin currently being
produced by recombinant DNA technology using two
different hosts namely Escherichia coli and Pichia
pastoris. Production from E. coli involves the steps of
extraction of inclusion bodies by cell lysis, refolding,
proteolytic cleavage and purification. In P. pastoris, a
single-chain precursor with appropriate disulfide bonding
is secreted to the medium. Downstream processing currently
involves use of trypsin which converts the precursor
into two-chain final product. The use of trypsin in the
process generates additional impurities due to presence of
Lys and Arg residues in the Glargine molecule. In this
study, we describe an alternate approach involving overexpression
of endogenous Kex2 proprotein convertase,
taking advantage of dibasic amino acid sequence (ArgArg)
at the end of B-chain of Glargine. KEX2 gene overexpression
in Pichia was accomplished by using promoters
of varying strengths to ensure production of greater
levels of fully functional two-chain Glargine product,
confirmed by HPLC and mass analysis. In conclusion,
this new production process involving Kex2 protease
over-expression improves the downstream process efficiency,
reduces the levels of impurities generated and
decreases the use of raw material
A tandem liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry (LC–MS) method for profiling small molecules in complex samples
Liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry (LC–MS) methods using either aqueous normal phase (ANP) or reversed phase (RP) columns are routinely used in small molecule or metabolomic analyses. These stationary phases enable chromatographic fractionation of polar and non-polar compounds, respectively. The application of a single chromatographic stationary phase to a complex biological extract results in a significant proportion of compounds which elute in the non-retained fraction, where they are poorly detected because of a combination of ion suppression and the co-elution of isomeric compounds. Thus coverage of both polar and non-polar components of the metabolome generally involves multiple analyses of the same sample, increasing the analysis time and complexity. In this study we describe a novel tandem in-line LC–MS method, in which compounds from one injection are sequentially separated in a single run on both ANP and RP LC-columns. This method is simple, robust, and enables the use of independent gradients customized for both RP and ANP columns. The MS signal is acquired in a single chromatogram which reduces instrument time and operator and data analysis errors. This method has been used to analyze a range of biological extracts, from plant and animal tissues, human serum and urine, microbial cell and culture supernatants. Optimized sample preparation protocols are described for this method as well as a library containing the retention times and accurate masses of 127 compounds
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Microbe-Metabolite Associations Linked to the Rebounding Murine Gut Microbiome Postcolonization with Vancomycin-Resistant Enterococcus faecium.
Vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium (VREfm) is an emerging antibiotic-resistant pathogen. Strain-level investigations are beginning to reveal the molecular mechanisms used by VREfm to colonize regions of the human bowel. However, the role of commensal bacteria during VREfm colonization, in particular following antibiotic treatment, remains largely unknown. We employed amplicon 16S rRNA gene sequencing and metabolomics in a murine model system to try and investigate functional roles of the gut microbiome during VREfm colonization. First-order taxonomic shifts between Bacteroidetes and Tenericutes within the gut microbial community composition were detected both in response to pretreatment using ceftriaxone and to subsequent VREfm challenge. Using neural networking approaches to find cooccurrence profiles of bacteria and metabolites, we detected key metabolome features associated with butyric acid during and after VREfm colonization. These metabolite features were associated with Bacteroides, indicative of a transition toward a preantibiotic naive microbiome. This study shows the impacts of antibiotics on the gut ecosystem and the progression of the microbiome in response to colonization with VREfm. Our results offer insights toward identifying potential nonantibiotic alternatives to eliminate VREfm through metabolic reengineering to preferentially select for BacteroidesIMPORTANCE This study demonstrates the importance and power of linking bacterial composition profiling with metabolomics to find the interactions between commensal gut bacteria and a specific pathogen. Knowledge from this research will inform gut microbiome engineering strategies, with the aim of translating observations from animal models to human-relevant therapeutic applications