A protein in bacteria acts as a kind of "immune
system" to protect the microbes from foreign DNA, new research shows.
The discovery suggests a way to improve yields from bacteria
engineered to contain human genes for useful substances like growth hormone or
insulin. It has become common to use engineered bacteria, such as E. coli, to mass produce useful
proteins. Muting the activity of this protective protein, called Rho, could boost the
activity of these foreign genes, some scientists suggest.
"If you can compromise Rho function without negatively impacting
bacteria growth, you could improve gene expression" of inserted genes,
says researcher Evgeny Nudler of the New York University School of Medicine.
When Nudler and his colleagues used an antibiotic to block Rho in bacteria that had naturally acquired
some foreign genes, the production of proteins by those genes increased by more
than a dozen-fold.
But other scientists are skeptical that
inhibiting Rho
would make a difference for inserted genes, or transgenes. "It's possible
that there could be an indirect effect, but it's unlikely that loss of Rho would have any direct effect on expression of transgenes,”
says research team member Max Gottesman of Columbia
University Medical
Center in New York. Gottesman points out that scientists
usually tailor human genes for expression in bacteria before inserting those
genes into the microbes, so Rho
might not recognize those genes as foreign in the first place.
Whether or not the discovery proves useful for
biotechnology, it helps explain how bacteria can tolerate having so much
outside DNA.
Unlike plants and animals, bacteria are promiscuous
with their genes, frequently swapping bits of DNA between individuals in a
process called horizontal transfer. Sometimes this swapping allows a microbe to
acquire a trait quickly, but often the foreign DNA is damaging or deadly to the
microbe. Antibiotics that block Rho
typically cause microbes to die.
Nudler's team used a strain of the bacterium
E. coli that has had most of its outside
DNA removed, which enables the microbes to survive Rho-blocking antibiotics
such as bicyclomycin. When the researchers exposed the microbes to the antibiotic,
activity of the remaining foreign genes jumped up dramatically — in some cases
as much as 100 times, the team reports in the May 16
Science.
"People were aware of Rho activity for a long time, but nobody knew
until now to what extent it influences expression and what genes are
affected," Nudler says. "The genes that are affected the most are the
foreign genes, the recently acquired ones."
"That's a new idea, definitely," comments
Jeffrey Roberts, who discovered
Rho
in 1969. The research "actually makes it clear what the global role of
Rho is," says Roberts, a molecular biologist at
Cornell University
in
Ithaca, N.Y.
Found in: Life