The Bacillus BioBrick Box: generation and evaluation of essential genetic building blocks for standardized work with Bacillus subtilis

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Jara Marina Radeck - , Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (Author)
  • Korinna Kraft - , Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (Author)
  • Julia Bartels - , Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (Author)
  • Tamara Cikovic - , Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (Author)
  • Franziska Duerr - , Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (Author)
  • Jeniffer Emenegger - , Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (Author)
  • Simon Kelterborn - , Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (Author)
  • Christopher Sauer - , Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (Author)
  • Georg Fritz - , Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (Author)
  • Susanne Gebhard - , Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (Author)
  • Thorsten Mascher - , Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (Author)

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Standardized and well-characterized genetic building blocks are a prerequisite for the convenient and reproducible assembly of novel genetic modules and devices. While numerous standardized parts exist for Escherichia coli, such tools are still missing for the Gram-positive model organism Bacillus subtilis. The goal of this study was to develop and thoroughly evaluate such a genetic toolbox.

RESULTS: We developed five BioBrick-compatible integrative B. subtilis vectors by deleting unnecessary parts and removing forbidden restriction sites to allow cloning in BioBrick (RFC10) standard. Three empty backbone vectors with compatible resistance markers and integration sites were generated, allowing the stable chromosomal integration and combination of up to three different devices in one strain. In addition, two integrative reporter vectors, based on the lacZ and luxABCDE cassettes, were BioBrick-adjusted, to enable β-galactosidase and luciferase reporter assays, respectively. Four constitutive and two inducible promoters were thoroughly characterized by quantitative, time-resolved measurements. Together, these promoters cover a range of more than three orders of magnitude in promoter strength, thereby allowing a fine-tuned adjustment of cellular protein amounts. Finally, the Bacillus BioBrick Box also provides five widely used epitope tags (FLAG, His10, cMyc, HA, StrepII), which can be translationally fused N- or C-terminally to any protein of choice.

CONCLUSION: Our genetic toolbox contains three compatible empty integration vectors, two reporter vectors and a set of six promoters, two of them inducible. Furthermore, five different epitope tags offer convenient protein handling and detection. All parts adhere to the BioBrick standard and hence enable standardized work with B. subtilis. We believe that our well-documented and carefully evaluated Bacillus BioBrick Box represents a very useful genetic tool kit, not only for the iGEM competition but any other BioBrick-based project in B. subtilis.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Article number29
Number of pages16
JournalJournal of biological engineering
Volume7
Issue number1
Publication statusPublished - 2 Dec 2013
Peer-reviewedYes
Externally publishedYes

External IDs

PubMed 24295448
PubMedCentral PMC4177231
Scopus 84888599866

Keywords

Keywords

  • Bacillus subtilis