Post-translational secretion stress regulation in Bacillus subtilis is controlled by intra- and extracellular proteases.

N Biotechnol

Department of Medical Microbiology, University of Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen, the Netherlands. Electronic address:

Published: March 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Bacillus subtilis is a notable bacterium known for its ability to produce industrial enzymes, but its full potential is hindered by issues like degradation of products and secretion stress.
  • Research indicates that genetically modified strains of B. subtilis, with reduced genomes, show improved production of specific proteins due to better management of secretion stress responses.
  • The study reveals that the regulation of proteases, both cytosolic and extracellular, plays a crucial role in enhancing protein production, suggesting that targeting intracellular proteases could be a new strategy for optimizing enzyme production in B. subtilis.

Article Abstract

The Gram-positive bacterium Bacillus subtilis is a prolific producer of industrial enzymes that are effectively harvested from the fermentation broth. However, the high capacity of B. subtilis for protein secretion has so far not been exploited to the full due to particular bottlenecks, including product degradation by extracellular proteases and counterproductive secretion stress responses. To unlock the Bacillus secretion pathway for difficult-to-produce proteins, various cellular interventions have been explored, including genome engineering. Our previous research has shown a superior performance of genome-reduced B. subtilis strains in the production of staphylococcal antigens compared to the parental strain 168. This was attributed, at least in part, to redirected secretion stress responses, including the presentation of elevated levels of the quality control proteases HtrA and HtrB that also catalyse protein folding. Here we show that this relates to the elimination of two homologous serine proteases, namely the cytosolic protease AprX and the extracellular protease AprE. This unprecedented posttranslational regulation of secretion stress effectors, like HtrA and HtrB, by the concerted action of cytosolic and extracellular proteases has important implications for the biotechnological application of microbial cell factories. In B. subtilis, this conclusion is underscored by extracellular degradation of the staphylococcal antigen IsaA by both AprX and AprE. Extracellular activity of the cytosolic protease AprX is remarkable since it shows that not only extracellular, but also intracellular proteases impact extracellular product levels. We therefore conclude that intracellular proteases represent new targets for improved recombinant protein production in microbial cell factories like B. subtilis.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nbt.2023.12.009DOI Listing

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