Skip to content
RDL
Network
Ekosistem
Uygulama değiştir
EN
Hakkımızda
SSS
Giriş yap
Başla
Effect of copy number and mRNA processing and stabilization on transcript and protein levels from an engineered dual‐gene operon — Christina D. Smolke (2002) | RDL Network
Back
Cite
Save
Save for later
Share
Home
Publications
Effect of copy number and mRNA processing and stabilization on transcript and protein levels from an engineered dual‐gene operon
Shared by
Jay D Keasling
University of California, Berkeley
Effect of copy number and mRNA processing and stabilization on transcript and protein levels from an engineered dual‐gene operon
Article
2002
en
Authors
CS
Christina D. Smolke
Jay D Keasling
University of California, Berkeley
Abstract
1 min read
Abstract To study the effect of mRNA stability and DNA copy number on protein production from a dual‐gene operon, a synthetic operon containing the reporter genes gfp and lacZ under the control of the araBAD promoter was placed in pMB1‐based (approximately 100 copies/cell) and F plasmid‐based (approximately 1 copy/cell) vectors. DNA cassettes encoding secondary structures were placed at the 5' and 3' ends of the genes and a putative RNase E site was placed between the two genes. Although the copy number of the pMB1‐based vectors was approximately 100‐fold greater than the copy number of the F plasmid‐based vectors, transcript and protein levels from the pMB1‐based vector were not 100‐fold greater than from the F plasmid‐based vectors. In identical plasmid backbones, different combinations of mRNA control elements were used to alter steady‐state levels of transcripts. Control elements that amplified the stability of one coding region relative to another amplified the ratio of protein produced from those transcripts. The effects of mRNA stability control elements were greater at low inducer concentrations, where mRNA levels limit protein production, than at high inducer concentrations. Although we can alter mRNA and protein levels through copy number, induction level, and mRNA stability control elements, some aspect of gene expression remains dependent on inherent characteristics of the coding region. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biotechnol Bioeng 78: 412–424, 2002.
Discussion
(0)
Sign in
to like and join the discussion.
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.
Related publications
Article
1998
mRNA stability and plasmid copy number effects on gene expression from an inducible promoter system
Trent A. Carrier
,
Kristala L. Jones
,
Jay D Keasling
Article
2002
Effect of gene location, mRNA secondary structures, and RNase sites on expression of two genes in an engineered operon
Christina D. Smolke
,
Jay D Keasling
Article
2000
Coordinated, Differential Expression of Two Genes through Directed mRNA Cleavage and Stabilization by Secondary Structures
Christina D. Smolke
,
Trent A. Carrier
,
Jay D Keasling
Article
1985
Pathway of assembly of ribulosebisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase from <i>Anabaena</i> 7120 expressed in <i>Escherichia coli</i>
Michael Gurevitz
,
Chris Somerville
,
Lee McIntosh
Article
2013
RNA-binding protein regulates plant DNA methylation by controlling mRNA processing at the intronic heterochromatin-containing gene <i>IBM1</i>
Xingang Wang
,
Cheng‐Guo Duan
,
Kai Tang
,
Bangshing Wang
,
Huiming Zhang
,
Mingguang Lei
,
Kun Lu
,
Satendra K. Mangrauthia
,
Pengcheng Wang
,
Guohui Zhu
,
Yang Zhao
,
Jian Kang Zhu
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.