In order to take advantage of the high thermostability of its product, beta-1,3;1,4-glucanase (lichenase), we used a modified version of the licB gene from Clostridium thermocellum as a reporter gene for the analysis of gene expression in transformed plants. The coding region of the licB gene was truncated at both ends. The truncated enzyme retained its activity and thermostability. The modified gene (m-licB), with and without a plant leader peptide-encoding sequence, was expressed in tobacco plants under control of either the Agrobacterium octopine TR-DNA 2' gene promoter or the promoter of the gene for the small subunit of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase. Expression of licB can be measured quantitatively and accurately, the assay is sensitive and simple enough to be used for analysis of various gene fusion systems or for screening of transformants. The enzyme is very stable and remains active in tissue extracts even after storage for 1 year and survives many thawing-freezing cycles. The lichenase-encoding gene was expressed at high levels in transformed tobacco plants without any apparent detrimental effects on vegetative growth or flowering.
To achieve broader range of the defensin antimicrobial activity, based on the sd2 gene sequence, the modified gene, sd2 mod, was constructed. Hybrid genes, sd2 -lic BM2, lic BM2-sd2 , lic BM2-sd2 mod, and sd2 mod-lic BM2, in which the wild-type and modified gene sequences were fused in frame with the reporter gene encoding thermostable lichenase, were constructed. Expression of the wild-type, modified, and hybrid genes was examined in the cells of pro-and eukaryotes. It was demonstrated that these genes were efficiently expressed in the cells of lower eukaryotes, the yeast. Inhibiting effect of the SD2 and SDmod proteins as the components of the hybrid proteins, SD2-LicBM2 and SD2mod-LicBM2, on the growth of the Fusarium culmorum hyphae was similar to that of the wild-type and modified proteins. It was shown that the presence of lichenase in the hybrid proteins facilitated selection and analysis of the hybrid proteins expression in transgenic organisms.
The coding region of the licB gene from Clostridium thermocellum was truncated at the 3' end. The modified lichenase encoded by the construct (LicBM2) retained the most important properties of the enzyme - its high activity and thermostability. LicBM2 consists of the catalytic domain and part of the Pro-Thr-box. We demonstrated the application of the licBM2 gene as a reporter system for prokaryotic (Escherichia coli) and eukaryotic (Saccharomyces cerevisiae and mammalian) cells by expressing it either as a transcriptional fusion with selected promoters or as a translational fusion with the E. coli uidA gene. The assays available for LicB activity are sensitive, accurate and simple, and can be used for the analysis of various gene fusion systems or for screening of transformants.
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