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Now available worldwide* ! |
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Bacillus megaterium Expression System |
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*Vectors with TEV-site are not available in the US |
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| Vector map pN-Strep-Xa1622. Please click for a larger, more detailed version |
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Vector map pHIS1525
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Features:
- Stable, high-yield protein expression in Bacillus megaterium
- Ideal
for both small- and large-scale protein production
- Tightly regulated and efficiently
inducible xylose operon (up to 350-fold)
- No alkaline proteases activity
even up to 5 hours after induction
- No endotoxins observed
- Versatile cloning (extended polylinker, additional
BsrG I site*)
- Versatile production (intracellular or extracellular)
- Versatile
purification (native, 6xHis-tag, Strep-tag, Strep/6xHis double-tag)
- Removeable tag versions (for TEV or Xa proteases) available
- Compatible
with all B. subtilis vectors
*BsrG I site is not included in all vectors. |
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The B. megaterium expression system provides a versatile
and easy-to-handle tool for stable and high-yield protein production,
both small- and large-scale.
B. megaterium has proven to be an excellent alternative host
to E. coli for heterologous gene expression. Unlike other bacilli
strains, proteolytic degradation by alkaline proteases is avoided. In
addition, there are no endotoxins found in the cell wall.
High Protein Yield
As a result, protein yields are exceptionally high even if inexpensive
substrates are used. For example, the proteins mutarotase (Mro) and glucose
dehydrogenase (Gdh) have been accumulated up to 20% and 30% of the total
soluble protein, respectively. Using the tightly regulated xylose operon,
the genes were induced 130- to 350-fold without proteolysis.
Versatile
System with a Wide Range of Vectors
MoBiTec provides a wide range of useful vectors for the B. megaterium system
that are adaptable to most applications and protein purification methods.
These include vectors carrying a secretion signal peptide sequence, a
6xHis-tag, a Strep-tag, and a Strep/6xHis double-tag. Additionally,
all vectors contain the tightly regulated and highly
inducible xylose operon promoter.
B. megaterium protoplasts specifically
optimized for transformation
The protoplasts supplied by MoBiTec are from B. megaterium strain
WH320 developed by Prof. Dr. W. Hillen at the Institute
of Microbiology in Erlangen, Germany. These protoplasts are prepared
according to an optimized protocol resulting in the highest transformation
efficiencies.
For secretion vectors we offer protoplasts of strain MS941. Both strains are mutants of DSM319, where WH320 is a chemically mutant, while MS941 has a defined deletion in the gene of the major extracellular protease NprM.
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Examples:
Selected Proteins successfully over-produced in Bacilli strains with
our B. megaterium vectors:
- β-Galactosidase
(LacZ)1
- Catabolite control protein (CcpA)2,3
- Clostridium difficile toxin A4
- Cobaltochelatase (CbiX)5
- Dextransucrase6
- Endolevanase (LevB)7
- Glucose dehydrogenase (GdhA)1
- Heat shock protein (HPr) from PTS (phosphotransferase sugar transport
system)8
- Human single-chain urokinase-like plasminogen activator (rscuPA)1
- Levansucrase9
- Mutarotase (Mro)1
- Neopullulanase10
- Translocation ATPase of the preprotein translocase (SecA)11
- Trehalose repressor (TreR)12
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| Time dependence of induced expression
of the enzymes Gdh (glucose dehydrogenase) and Mro (mutarotase)
in B. megaterium.
Enzymatic activity given in U/mg protein. |
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Order Information
Please click on the respective order # for further details.
| ORDER INFORMATION, SHIPPING & STORAGE: |
| order# |
description |
amount |
Vector Map |
Sequence |
| BMEG02 |
Bacillus megaterium protoplasts
ready for transformation
(strain WH320;1 )
Material is sufficient for 4 transformations plus control experiment.
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5 x 500 µl |
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| BMEG50 |
Bacillus megaterium protoplasts, strain MS941 |
5 x 500 µl |
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| BMEG03 |
pWH1520 shuttle vector, original; lyophilized DNA |
5 µg |
map |
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| BMEG10 |
pMM1522 shuttle
vector, improved; lyophilized DNA |
10 µg |
map |
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| BMEG11 |
pMM1525 shuttle
vector with signal sequence;
lyophilized DNA |
10 µg |
see pMM1522 |
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| BMEG12 |
pHIS1522 shuttle vector, 6xHis-tagged; lyophilized DNA precursor of BMEG20 |
10 µg |
map |
txt |
| BMEG13 |
pHIS1525 shuttle vector with
signal sequence; 6xHis-tagged;
lyophilized DNA |
10 µg |
see pHIS1522 |
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| BMEG14 |
pSTREP1525 shuttle vector
with signal sequence; Strep-tagged;
lyophilized DNA |
10 µg |
see pHIS1522 |
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| BMEG15 |
pSTREPHIS1525 shuttle vector
with signal sequence; Strep/6xHis double-tagged;
lyophilized DNA |
10 µg |
map |
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| BMEG20 |
pC-His1622 shuttle vector, C-term. 6xHis-tag; lyophilized DNA |
10 µg |
map |
txt |
| BMEG21 |
pC-Strep1622 shuttle vector, C-term. Strep-tag; lyophilized DNA  |
10 µg |
map |
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| BMEG22 |
pN-His-TEV1622 shuttle vector, N-term. His-tag,TEV-site  |
10 µg |
map |
txt |
| BMEG23 |
pN-Strep-TEV1622 shuttle vector, N-term. Strep-tag,TEV-site  |
10 µg |
map |
txt |
| BMEG24 |
pN-StrepXa1622 shuttle vector, N-term. Strep-tag; Xa site; lyophilized DNA  |
10 µg |
map |
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| BMEG25 |
pSTOP1622, shuttle vector, lyophilized DNA  |
10 µg |
map |
txt |
shipped at RT, protoplasts
shipped on dry ice
store lyophilized vectors at 4°C, reconstituted vectors at -20°C,
protoplasts at -70°C
All vectors are E. coli / B. megaterium shuttle
vectors
*Vectors with TEV-site are not available in the US
Please note that protoplasts of Bacillus megaterium have a limited shelf life of some months only, depending on the date of production. Therefore purchase and use of protoplasts must be thoroughly planned.
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Control Vectors
| For your convenience and in order to provide a positive control, the following vectors validated for recombinant production and one-step affinity purification of L. reuteri levansucrase from growth medium using a B. megaterium expression system are available: |
| Order # |
Basic secretion vector |
Final secretion vector |
Encoded protein |
| BMEG13C |
pHIS1525 |
pRBBm15 |
LevΔ773His |
| BMEG14C |
pSTREP1525 |
pRBBm13 |
StrepLevΔ773 |
| BMEG15C |
pSTREPHIS1525 |
pRBBm16 |
StrepLevΔ773His |
| Please note that these vectors are available only in combination with a regular B. megaterium expression vector! For background information regarding the controls please see reference # 9. |
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Electron microscope image of Bacillus megaterium and Escherichia coli,
Dr. Manfred Rohde, Helmholtz-Center for Infection Research (HZI),
Braunschweig, Germany |
Downloads
See also chapter 4 of our online
catalog.
Get our new B. megaterium Flyer as a short summary of our B. megaterium expression system.
(pdf 234 kb)
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For further Vector System products please download the Vector Systems brochure (PDF, 3,9 MB)
Commentary – A short story about a big magic bug
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Literature
- Rygus T, Hillen W. : Inducible high-level expression of heterologous
genes in
Bacillus megaterium using the regulatory elements of the xylose-utilization
operon,
Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol. (1991), 35, 594-599. Pubmed
- Rygus T, Scheler A, Allmansberger R,Hillen W.: Molecular cloning,
structure, promoters and regulatory elements for transcription of
the Bacillus megaterium encoded regulon for xylose utilization.
Arch Microbiol, Jan 1991; 155(6): 535-42. Pubmed
- Hueck CJ, Kraus A, Schmiedel D, Hillen W.: Cloning, expression and
functional analyses of the catabolite control protein CcpA from Bacillus
megaterium.
Mol Microbiol, Jun 1995; 16(5): 855-64. Pubmed
- Vary PS.: Prime time for Bacillus megaterium
Microbiology, May 1994; 140: 1001. Pubmed
- Saxena A, Zhang RW, Bollag JM.: Microorganisms capable of metabolizing
the herbicide metolachlor.
Appl. Environ. Microbiol. (1987) 53, 390-396. Pubmed
Free
- Selvanayagam, M. and Vijaya, J., Degradation of persistent insecticides
by aquatic bacteria as sole source of carbon.
J. Environ. Biol. (1989) 10, 399-407.
- Meinhardt F, Stahl U, Ebeling W. Highly efficient expression of homologous and heterologous genes in Bacillus megaterium.
Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol. (1989) 30, 343-350.PUYET A. (1) ; SANDOVAL H. ; LOPEZ P. ; AGUILAR A. ; MARTIN J. F. ; ESPINOSA M.
- Puyet A, Sandoval H, Lopez P, Aguilar A, Martin JF, Espinosa M.: A simple medium for rapid regeneration of Bacillus subtilis protoplasts transformed with plasmid DNA.
FEMS Microbiol. Lett. (1987) 40, 1-5.
- Laemmli, U. K.: Cleavage of structural proteins during the assembly of the head of bacteriophage T4.
Nature (1970) 227, 680-685 Pubmed
- Antelmann, H., Tjalsma, H., Voigt, B., Ohlmeier, S., Bron, S., van Dijl, J.M. and Hecker, M. : A proteomic view on genome-based
signal peptide predictions.
Genome Res. 2001 Sep;11(9):1484-502. Pubmed
Free
- Malten, M., Biedendieck, R., Gamer, M., Drews, A.-C., Stammen, S.,
Buchholz, K., Dijkhuizen, L. and Jahn, D.: A Bacillus megaterium
plasmid system for the production, export and one-step purification
of affinity tagged heterologous levansucrase from the growth medium.
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2006 Feb;72(2):1677-9. Pubmed
Free
- Wang W, Hollmann R, Deckwer WD.: Comparative proteomic analysis of high cell density cultivations with two recombinant Bacillus megaterium strains for the production of a heterologous dextransucrase.
Proteome Sci. 2006 Oct 5;4:19. Pubmed
Free
Potential industrial and diagnostical applications:
- Vary, P. S. (1992) Development of genetic engineering in Bacillus
megaterium : an example of the versatility and potential of industrially important bacilli
Biotechnology, Jan 1992; 22: 251-310. Pubmed
- Ginsburgh, C., Spaulding, D., Robey, G., Shivakumar, A.M.O., Vanags,
R., Katz, L., Fox, J.L. (1989): Sporulation promoter spoVG controlled
expression of PP42 gene of HIV-1 in Bacillus megaterium. Abstract from
an International Conference on AIDS, Montreal.
successfully expressed proteins with our B. megaterium vectors:
- Rygus T, Hillen W. : Inducible
high-level expression of heterologous genes in
Bacillus megaterium using the regulatory elements of the xylose-utilization
operon,
Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol. (1991), 35, 594-599. Pubmed
- Seidel G, Diel M, Fuchsbauer N, Hillen W.:
Quantitative interdependence of coeffectors, CcpA and cre in carbon
catabolite regulation of Bacillus subtilis
FEBS J., May 2005; 272: 2566 - 2577. Pubmed
Free
- Hueck CJ, Kraus A, Schmiedel D, Hillen W.: Cloning
expression and functional analyses of the catabolite control protein
ccpA from Bacillus megaterium,
Mol. Microbiol. (1995) 16(5), 855-864. Pubmed
- Burger S, Tatge H, Hofmann F, Genth H, Just I, Gerhard
R.: Expression of recombinant Clostridium difficile toxin A using the
Bacillus megaterium system.
Biochem Biophys Res Commun. 2003 Aug 1;307(3):584-8. Pubmed
Free
- Leech HK, Raux E, McLean KJ, Munro AW, Robinson NJ,
Borrelly GP, Malten M, Jahn D, Rigby SE, Heathcote P, Warren MJ.: Characterization
of the cobaltochelatase CbiXL: evidence for a 4Fe-4S center housed
within an MXCXXC motif.
J. Biol. Chem., Oct 2003; 278: 41900 - 41907. Pubmed
Free
- Wang W, Hollmann R, Furch T, Nimtz M, Malten M,
Jahn D, Deckwer WD.: Proteome analysis of a recombinant Bacillus megaterium
strain during heterologous production of a glucosyltransferase
Proteome Sci. 2005; 3: 4. Pubmed
Free
- Daguer JP, Geissmann T, Petit-Glatron
MF, Chambert R.: Autogenous modulation of the Bacillus subtilis sacB–levB–yveA
levansucrase operon by the levB transcript
Microbiology, Nov 2004; 150: 3669 - 3679. Pubmed
Free
- Kraus A, Kuster E, Wagner A, Hoffmann K, Hillen W.:
Identification of a co-repressor binding site in catabolite control
protein CcpA.
Mol Microbiol, Dec 1998; 30(5): 955-63. Pubmed
Free
- Malten, M., Biedendieck, R., Gamer, M., Drews, A.-C.,
Stammen, S., Buchholz, K., Dijkhuizen, L. and Jahn, D.: A Bacillus
megaterium plasmid system for the production, export and one-step purification
of affinity tagged heterologous levansucrase from the growth medium.
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2006 Feb;72(2):1677-9. Pubmed
Free
- Kamasaka H, Sugimoto K, Takata H, Nishimura T, Kuriki
T.: Bacillus stearothermophilus Neopullulanase Selective Hydrolysis
of Amylose to Maltose in the Presence of Amylopectin
Appl. Envir. Microbiol., Apr 2002; 68: 1658 - 1664. Pubmed
Free
- Leloup L, Driessen AJ, Freudl R, Chambert R, Petit-Glatron
MF.: Differential Dependence of Levansucrase and -Amylase Secretion
on SecA (Div) during the Exponential Phase of Growth of Bacillus subtilis
J. Bacteriol., Mar 1999; 181: 1820 - 1826. Pubmed
Free
- Burklen L, Schock F, Dahl MK.: Molecular analysis of the interaction
between the Bacillus subtilis trehalose repressor TreR and the tre
operator.
Mol Gen Genet, Oct 1998; 260(1): 48-55. Pubmed
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| ©2009 MoBiTec GmbH • All rights reserved • www.mobitec.com |
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