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Journal of Bacteriology, March 2003, p. 1923-1934, Vol. 185, No. 6
0021-9193/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.185.6.1923-1934.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Chemical Engineering,1 Department of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, and Cell Biology, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 602082
Received 5 August 2002/ Accepted 30 December 2002
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Although not widely exploited in prokaryotic systems, antisense RNA (asRNA) is a potent and flexible tool for manipulating microbial metabolism. Desai and Papoutsakis first demonstrated the effectiveness of asRNA strategies for the metabolic engineering of C. acetobutylicum (5). They developed asRNA molecules against two genes involved in the primary metabolic network of C. acetobutylicum. One was directed toward the mRNA of the butyrate kinase (buk) gene, while the other one was directed toward the mRNA of the phosphotransbutyrylase (ptb) gene. However, no rules or patterns have been examined regarding the effectiveness of different asRNA designs and the generality of these asRNA findings in downregulating other C. acetobutylicum proteins and pathways remains to be tested. The present study was undertaken in an effort to address these two significant issues.
Most methods for designing effective asRNA molecules are based on the concept that, by increasing the association rate between asRNA and target mRNA, inhibition of target gene expression can also be increased (13, 14, 23, 26). One method that was evaluated for designing asRNAs with higher annealing rates to the target mRNA is to incorporate stem-loop structures that were designed specifically for interacting with stem-loop structures in the target mRNA (6). Experimental data, however, suggest that this approach does not necessarily work well (i.e., only 50% downregulation of the target was achieved). Another method examined for generating asRNA candidates with high annealing rates to target mRNAs is the in vitro selection of asRNA (21). This technique involves using only asRNA candidates that bind with target mRNA with the highest association rate constants as determined from nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (23, 26). However, only ca. 75% overall downregulation of the target protein was achieved by this method (21). The disadvantage of using in vitro selection is that in vitro conditions might not represent in vivo conditions accurately and thus may lead to inaccurate prediction of the ideal asRNA candidates. Finally, using theoretical analyses and computer algorithms, which can provide information on structural elements that could be important for RNA duplex formation, a technique for developing asRNAs based on structural properties has been investigated (22). By examining several different structural features (including terminal unpaired nucleotides, components, and loop degree) of many different asRNAs designed to inhibit human immunodeficiency virus type 1 replication in human cells, Patzel and Sczakiel (22) showed a correlation between asRNA effectiveness and the number of terminal unpaired nucleotides.
Since structural-feature-based asRNA design (22) has not been reported for prokaryotic systems, we decided to investigate the effect of structural properties on downregulation efficacy in C. acetobutylicum. For this study, we focused on the acetone formation pathway in order to examine the possibility of increasing the ratio of butanol/acetone formed. The acetone formation pathway consists of two enzymes, acetoacetyl-coenzyme A (CoA):acetate/butyrate:CoA-transferase (CoAT) and acetoacetate decarboxylase (AADC). The first enzyme in the pathway, CoAT, which is composed of 2 subunits (A and B) coded by ctfA and ctfB, respectively, catalyzes the formation of acetoacetate by transferring the CoA group of acetoacetyl-CoA to either acetate or butyrate to form acetyl-CoA or butyryl-CoA, respectively (32). AADC (coded by adc) then catalyzes the irreversible decarboxylation of acetoacetate, producing acetone and CO2 (9, 31). Sequence and cloning of adc (24, 25) and adc gene expression in C. acetobutylicum (10, 12) have been previously reported. Sequence and cloning of the CoAT genes ctfA and ctfB (3, 25) have also been previously reported. adc is part of a monocistronic operon (10), while the ctfA and ctfB genes are transcribed as part of a polycistronic operon (aad-ctfA-ctfB) that includes aad (or adhE1), which is the gene that encodes for the enzyme aldehyde/alcohol dehydrogenase (8, 19).
In this study, we first chose AADC as our target for asRNA downregulation because it is transcribed as a monocistronic operon, which ensures that potential effects on the other cistrons of a polycistronic operon are not an issue. Then, using computational algorithms that predict RNA secondary structures, the asRNAs directed against adc (adc-asRNAs) were examined for structural information that might explain differences in adc-asRNA effectiveness and thus provide potential rules for the design of future asRNA constructs. We found that, although dramatic AADC downregulation can be achieved with asRNA, the effects on acetone formation were not equally dramatic. Thus, we next targeted the CoAT enzyme, despite the complexity that derives from the fact that its 2 units are transcribed from a large tricistronic transcript.
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TABLE 1. Bacterial strains and plasmids
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DNA manipulation. All commercial enzymes utilized in this study (restriction enzymes, T4 DNA ligase, calf intestinal alkaline phosphatase, T4 DNA polymerase, Klenow fragment of DNA polymerase, and vent DNA polymerase) were used under supplier-recommended conditions. DNA fragments were isolated from agarose gels with GFX PCR DNA and a gel band purification kit (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Piscataway, N.J.).
Cell transformation. All plasmids were constructed in E. coli and then transformed into C. acetobutylicum. Transformation with ligation mixtures was done with E. coli TOP10 OneShot competent cells from Invitrogen Corporation (Carlsbad, Calif.) according to the manufacturer's instructions. E. coli(pAN1) and C. acetobutylicum were electrotransformed according to previously published methods (17, 27).
Construction of plasmids. For adc-asRNA experiments, three plasmids (pADC38AS, pADC68AS, and pADC100AS) that contain various lengths of the DNA encoding for the adc transcript in an antisense orientation with respect to the strong, constitutive-like thiolase (thl) promoter (12, 30) of C. acetobutylicum strain ATCC 824 were developed. Using plasmid pFNK6 (18) as a template, we first PCR amplified three different-sized DNA fragments (adc38, adc68, and adc100) that were approximately 38, 68, and 100% of the length of the adc transcript, respectively. The PCR primers used for these reactions are listed in Table 2. adc38 and adc100 were modified by restriction enzyme digestion with BamHI and SalI, respectively. SalI-digested adc100 was further modified by filling in its 5' overhang with the Klenow fragment of DNA polymerase. To form pADC38AS, BamHI-digested adc38 was ligated in an antisense orientation to BamHI- and EheI-digested pSOS95 (30), which contains the thl promoter. adc68 and the blunt-ended adc100 were then ligated separately in an antisense orientation into BamHI- and EheI-digested pSOS95, which was blunt ended with the Klenow fragment of DNA polymerase, to form pADC68AS and pADC100AS, respectively. The blunt-ended, BamHI- and EheI-digested pSOS95 was recircularized to form the control plasmid pSOS95del (it contains the thl promoter). The lengths of the asRNAs that were produced from pADC38AS, pADC68AS, and pADC100AS were 548, 799, and 1,068 nucleotides, respectively. The asRNA length was determined to be the number of nucleotides from the transcription start site of the thl promoter of each plasmid to the last nucleotide of the terminator sequence for each asRNA.
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TABLE 2. Oligonucleotides used for PCR
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FIG. 1. Construction of plasmids that express asRNA directed toward the downregulation of CoAT. (A) Construction of pCTFA2AS, pCTFB1AS, and pCOAT11AS. For each plasmid, the locations and directions of transcription of the relevant genes are indicated (arrows). Relevant restriction sites are shown. Abbreviations: thl promoter, promoter region for the thiolase gene of C. acetobutylicum strain ATCC 824; ctfA, CoAT subunit A gene; ctfB, CoAT subunit B gene; adc, AADC gene; MLSr, macrolide-lincosamide-streptogramin B resistance gene; repL, pIM13 origin of replication; AMPr, ampicillin resistance gene; ColE1, ColE1 origin of replication. All genes and plasmids are not drawn to scale. (B) Genetic organization of the sol operon. Abbreviations: aad, alcohol/aldehyde dehydrogenase structural gene; sol operon, polycistronic message that includes the mRNA for aad, ctfA, and ctfB. Lines with arrows represent the location and direction of each transcript.
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Bioreactor experiments. Large-scale, pH-controlled batch fermentations were performed in a 2.0-liter Biostat M (B. Braun, Allentown, Pa.) or a 5.0-liter BioFlo II (New Brunswick Scientific, Edison, N.J.) bioreactor with a working volume of 1.8 or 3.6 liters, respectively. All fermentations were performed as described by Desai and Papoutsakis (5) with two modifications. The initial sparge rate of N2 for the 2-liter reactor was 55 ml/min, but once the A600 of the culture reached 0.1 to 0.4, the sparge rate was reduced to 11 ml/min. Secondly, the agitation rate for the 2-liter reactor was set at 400 rpm. Culture supernatants and cell pellets for protein extracts were also collected as described above.
Product analysis. Culture supernatants were analyzed for product concentrations as described previously (2) by using a Waters (Milford, Mass.) high-performance liquid chromatography system (model no. 717 plus autosampler, no. 1515 high-performance liquid chromatography pump, no. 2410 refractive index detector, and in-line vacuum degasser) and Waters' Breeze software. The standard error of the mean for product concentrations was determined from replicate analyses.
Western blots. Cell extracts were prepared as described previously (27) except that sodium dodecyl sulfate gel-loading buffer without bromophenol blue was used for the resuspension of the pellet. This was done to avoid interference of the bromophenol blue in subsequent protein assays of crude extracts. Protein concentrations of crude extracts were determined by the RC DC protein assay (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, Calif.) and had a standard error of the mean of less than 10%. For electrophoresis of the proteins, 5 µg (for AADC immunoblots) or 10 µg (for CoAT immunoblots) of total protein for each sample was separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with Ready Gels (12% Tris-HCl polyacrylamide, 4% resolving) from Bio-Rad Laboratories. After electrophoresis, proteins were transferred to 0.45-µm-pore-size Hybond-P polyvinylidene difluoride membranes (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech). The membranes were then blocked with Tris-buffered saline-Tween 20 (TBST) plus 4% enhanced chemiluminescence (ECL) blocking agent (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) and hybridized to either rabbit anti-AADC antiserum (1:3,000 dilution in TBST) (24) (for AADC immunoblots) or sheep anti-CoAT antiserum (1:10,000 dilution in TBST plus 4% ECL blocking reagent) (3) (for CoAT immunoblots). Goat anti-rabbit immunoglobulin G conjugated with horseradish peroxidase (1:10,000 dilution in TBST) (Sigma, St. Louis, Mo.) (for AADC immunoblots) or donkey anti-sheep immunoglobulin G (Sigma) conjugated with horseradish peroxidase (1:10,000 dilution in TBST plus 4% ECL blocking reagent) (for CoAT immunoblots) was then used as a secondary antibody. Fluorescence on each membrane was generated according to the instructions of the ECL+ kit (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) and detected with a Storm 860 imager (Molecular Dynamics, Sunnyvale, Calif.).
In Western blot experiments in which the nonspecific hybridization and background intensity in AADC blots were reduced, we modified the AADC Western blot protocol described above by adding antibodies in TBST plus ECL blocking reagent (4%) instead of in TBST buffer only. In a separate protocol, we also added 0.5 mg of protein from crude extracts of M5 strain exponential-phase samples to the same amount of primary antibody used in other blots. After bringing the final volume up to 1 ml with TBST buffer, we incubated the antibody and crude extract mixture for an hour at room temperature with gentle shaking. Then, the mixture was added to 25 ml of TBST plus 4% ECL blocking reagent (for a final dilution of 1:3,000 for the primary antibody) and incubated with the membrane as described above.
Quantitative analysis of Western blots. ImageQuant version 5.0 (Molecular Dynamics) was used to view and quantify Western blots. Quantification of gel band intensities was initiated by drawing rectangles around desired gel bands from all Western blots in ImageQuant version 5.0. By using the method of local averages for background correction, the software reports band intensities for each rectangle. For AADC blots, the range of band intensities was ca. 0 to 93,000, while for CoAT blots, the range was ca. 25 to 47,000. The lower threshold value of detection was determined by visual inspection of Western blots. Gel bands with intensities below 500 (after background intensity was subtracted) were considered to not contain quantifiable amounts of AADC. For CoAT immunoblots, the threshold value was 100. Intensity values for gel bands that were below the threshold value were set equal to zero in all subsequent manipulations of band intensity data. The standard error of the mean for gel band intensities was determined from replicate (two to four) Western blots and represents the cumulative error for the total Western analysis assay.
asRNA structure analysis. DNA sequences were manipulated and visualized using the Gene Construction Kit 2 (Textco, Inc., West Lebanon, N.H.). Analysis of the secondary structures of RNA molecules was carried out with the Mfold and Plotfold algorithms of the Wisconsin Package, version 9.1 (Genetics Computer Group, Madison, Wis.). For visualization of the secondary structures, GCGFigure 1.1 (Genetics Computer Group) was used as a metafile viewer and PICT file converter. For quantitation of structural features, only the most energetically favorable structure as predicted by Mfold was used.
Calculation of percent overall protein downregulation by asRNA constructs. To compare the effectiveness of the various asRNA constructs of this study as well as of the asRNA molecules discovered or designed previously, we used the percentage of overall protein downregulation. For studies in which enzyme activities were used to evaluate asRNA effectiveness (5, 7), the percent overall protein downregulation was determined by averaging the target protein's enzyme activity for both control and asRNA-expressing strains throughout their respective cultures and then calculating the percent decrease in average enzyme activity for the asRNA-expressing strain. For the asRNA-producing strains used in this study, the percent overall protein downregulation was determined by averaging the ratio of the target protein's gel band intensities in the asRNA-expressing strains over those of the control strain for all phases of culture in which Western blot analysis was performed.
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FIG. 2. Downregulation of AADC in C. acetobutylicum adc-asRNA-expressing strains. (A) AADC Western blots from the transitional and stationary phases of fermentation. AADC bands as well as the closest marker bands are indicated for both blots. The culture phase from which the samples on each blot were taken is indicated below each blot. Lanes: 1, kaleidoscope-prestained marker from Bio-Rad Laboratories; 2, ATCC 824; 3, ATCC 824(pSOS95del); 4, ATCC 824(pADC38AS); 5, 824(pADC68AS); 6, 824(pADC100AS); 7, biotinylated protein marker from the horseradish peroxidase protein marker detection pack from New England Biolabs; 8, ATCC 824; 9, ATCC 824(pSOS95del); 10, ATCC 824(pADC38AS); 11, ATCC 824(pADC68AS); 12, ATCC 824(pADC100AS). (B) Percent downregulation of AADC in C. acetobutylicum adc-asRNA-expressing strains. The percent downregulation was calculated as the percent decrease of AADC gel band intensity in ATCC 824(pSOS95del) ( ), ATCC 824(pADC38AS) ( ), ATCC 824(pADC68AS) (igwidth>), and ATCC 824(pADC100AS) (igwidth>) compared to that of the parental strain at the same culture phase in Western blots. The standard error of measurement was calculated from two to four different blots.
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FIG. 5. Relationship between the component/nucleotide ratio and the percentage overall protein downregulation for asRNA in solventogenic clostridia. The different asRNA are represented by the following symbols: , glna-asRNA; , ptb-asRNA; , buk-asRNA; , adc38-asRNA; , adc68-asRNA; , adc100-asRNA; , ctfb1-asRNA; ( ), coat11-asRNA-b.
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FIG. 3. Verification of the AADC band in Western blots. (A) Western blot with negative and positive controls for AADC expression. AADC and several of the closest marker bands (20.5, 28, and 37.5 kDa) are indicated. Lanes: 1 and 8, biotinylated protein marker from the horseradish peroxidase protein marker detection pack (New England Biolabs); 2, ATCC 824 at early exponential phase (2-liter bioreactor); 3, strain M5 at stationary phase (static-flask culture); 4, ATCC 824 at stationary phase (5-liter bioreactor); 5, ATCC 824 at transitional phase (5-liter bioreactor); 6, ATCC 824 at stationary phase (2-liter bioreactor); 7, ATCC 824 at transitional phase (2-liter bioreactor). (B) Improved detection of AADC in Western blots. (B.1) Western blot in which antibodies were added in the presence of blocking reagent. (B.2) Western blot in which the primary antibody was pretreated with crude extracts of strain M5 prior to incubation with the membrane. AADC and several of the closest marker bands (20, 30, and 40 kDa) are indicated. Lanes: 1 and 8, MagicMark Western protein standard Invitrogen; 2, ATCC 824(pADC100AS) at transitional phase; 3, ATCC 824(pADC68AS) at transitional phase; 4, ATCC 824(pADC38AS) at transitional phase; 5, ATCC 824(pSOS95del) at transitional phase; 6, strain M5 at stationary phase; 7, strain M5 at exponential phase.
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FIG. 4. Predicted secondary structures of adc-asRNA. (A) adc38-asRNA; (B) adc68-asRNA; (C) adc100-asRNA. Examples of free nucleotides and components are shown for the asRNA of panel A. The first and last nucleotides of each asRNA molecule are designated F and L, respectively.
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TABLE 3. Fermentation characteristicsa of strains for the asRNA downregulation of AADC in pH-controlled bioreactor experimentsb
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AADC is necessary for acetone formation. Despite the significant downregulation of AADC, acetone levels of ATCC 824(pADC38AS) and 824(pADC68AS) did not differ from the plasmid control as significantly as would be expected from the drastic downregulation of AADC. These unexpected results suggest that AADC is not rate limiting and perhaps is not even necessary for acetone production. To test the hypothesis that AADC is not necessary for acetone formation, we complemented a C. acetobutylicum mutant, M5, which does not produce acetone (it lacks all the solvent formation genes discussed above), with plasmid pFNK7, which contains the genes ctfA and ctfB, and also with plasmid pFNK6, which contains the genes encoding for the complete acetone formation pathway (adc, ctfA, and ctfB). Both of these plasmids were shown to produce functional proteins in C. acetobutylicum (18). Acetone (ca. 23 mM) was detected only in cultures of M5(pFNK6). We concluded that AADC is necessary for acetone formation, although AADC is not apparently limiting the rate of acetone formation, i.e., very low levels (e.g., 10% of those normally expressed [Fig. 4]) of AADC are sufficient for high rates of acetone formation.
CoA-transferase limits acetone formation. For each CoAT subunit gene, three potential asRNA constructs were examined by using DNA representation software. All three included the DNA sequence of the ribosome binding site and a portion of the subunit's structural gene in an antisense orientation. Potential asRNA candidates were further selected by calculating a (number of components)/(number of nucleotides) ratio based on each asRNA's secondary structure. The DNA sequence for the asRNA candidate that produced the lowest component/nucleotide ratio was then cloned in the antisense orientation into BamHI- and EheI-digested pSOS95. The asRNAs, which were separately designed against each CoAT subunit, were then combined in several different combinations to create constructs that could potentially downregulate both subunits of CoAT simultaneously. The selection process for choosing the best asRNA candidate discussed above was also used in the screening process for these combined asRNA molecules.
These three asRNA constructs (Fig. 1) were introduced into C. acetobutylicum to generate strains [ATCC 824(pCTFA2AS), 824(pCTFB1AS), and 824(pCOAT11AS)] that were then testedin static-flask culture experiments (Table 4). All three of these strains had significantly lower maximum A600 values (22, 26, and 21%, respectively) than the plasmid control strain ATCC 824(pSOS95del). The most notable difference between the CoAT-asRNA-expressing strains and the plasmid control strain can be seen in the normalized (based on the maximum A600) acetone concentrations. ATCC 824(pCTFA2AS) and 824(pCOAT11AS) had normalized acetone concentrations approximately eightfold lower than the plasmid control levels, with 824(pCTFB1AS) showing no acetone production at all [although in pH-controlled fermentations of 824(pCTFB1AS), 6 mM acetone was produced (data not shown)]. Normalized butanol levels for ATCC 824(pCTFA2AS), 824(pCTFB1AS), and 824(pCOAT11AS) were also lower than the normalized butanol levels seen in the plasmid control (69, 82, and 70% lower, respectively). Normalized peak and final acetate levels were slightly higher in the asRNA-producing strains than the ATCC 824(pSOS95del) normalized peak and final acetate levels. Normalized peak butyrate levels were 86, 113, and 54% higher in ATCC 824(pCTFA2AS), 824(pCTFB1AS), and 824(pCOAT11AS), respectively, than in the plasmid control strain. More importantly, for the three asRNA-expressing strains, peak and final butyrate levels did not change (no butyrate uptake), whereas for ATCC 824(pSOS95del), final butyrate levels were 66% lower than its peak value (strong butyrate uptake).
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TABLE 4. Fermentation characteristicsa of strains for the asRNA downregulation of CoAT in static-flask culturesb
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FIG. 6. Downregulation of CtfA and CtfB subunits of CoAT by CoAT-asRNA. (A) CoAT Western blots from the transitional, early stationary, and stationary phases of C. acetobutylicum static-flask fermentations. The CtfA and CtfB subunits of CoAT as well as the closest marker bands are indicated for all blots. The culture phase from which the samples on each blot were taken are indicated below each blot. Lanes 1, 5, and 10, biotinylated protein marker from the horseradish peroxidase protein marker detection pack from New England Biolabs; lanes 2, 6, and 11, ATCC 824(pSOS95del); lanes 3, 8, and 12, ATCC 824(pCTFB1AS); lane 7, degenerate ATCC 824(pSOS95del); lanes 4, 9, and 13, ATCC 824(pCOAT11AS). (B) Percent downregulation of CtfA and CtfB subunits of CoAT by CoAT-asRNA. The percent downregulation of CtfA and CtfB in ATCC 824(pCTFB1AS) ( ) and 824(pCOAT11AS) ( ) was calculated as the percent decrease of the desired gel band intensity of Western blots in the asRNA-expressing strain compared to that in the plasmid control strain [824(pSOS95del)] at the same culture phase. The standard error of measurement was calculated from two to four different blots.
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Downregulation of CtfA by coat11-asRNA (44% ± 24%) was not nearly as effective as coat11-asRNA's downregulation of CtfB. In fact, coat11-asRNA's ability to downregulate CtfA was approximately the same as ctfb1-asRNA's ability to downregulate CtfA (68% ± 9%), which does not contain a region that is complementary to ctfA mRNA. This suggests that downregulation of CtfA by coat11-asRNA might be due to the effect of the ctfB antisense region on the rest of the polycistronic message rather than the effect of the ctfA antisense region of coat11-asRNA.
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Although the downregulation of AADC was effective, acetone concentrations in the adc-asRNA-producing strains were not as drastically altered compared to those in the plasmid control as originally hypothesized. However, cultures of strains containing CoAT-asRNA plasmids showed substantially lower levels of acetone and CoAT subunit amounts than the plasmid control. These results suggest that CoAT is the rate-limiting enzyme in the acetone formation pathway of C. acetobutylicum.
Interestingly, butanol levels in CoAT-asRNA-expressing strains were also significantly decreased compared to the plasmid control, which suggests that aad expression might also be altered by CoAT-asRNA. This is not surprising in view of the fact that aad resides on the same polycistronic message as ctfA and ctfB. In fact, recent pH-controlled fermentation experiments with a C. acetobutylicum strain, which overexpresses ctfb1-asRNA and aad, exhibited butanol formation comparable to that with 824(pSOS95del) (data not shown). These results suggest that the mechanism of antisense action in these strains is the RNase degradation of the polycistronic message initiated by asRNA binding rather than the blocking of translation by the asRNA binding of target ribosome binding sites.
This is the first study to our knowledge to examine the ability of expressing a single asRNA directed against two different proteins. coat11-asRNA was able to downregulate CtfB, but its effects on CtfA appear to be relatively small. A potential reason for this is that the ctfA mRNA might be embedded in the secondary structure of the polycistronic message that is hindering the ability of coat11-asRNA to bind its target region in the ctfA mRNA. Another potential reason might derive from the fact that the portion of coat11-asRNA targeted for CtfA downregulation is transcribed after the ctfB antisense portion. Since the ctfB antisense portion is transcribed first, it may bind its target and fix coat11-asRNA's position on the polycistronic message and not allow the ctfA antisense portion either the time or the flexibility to bind the second intended target mRNA.
We thank Abbot Laboratories for the donation of clarithromycin, G. N. Bennett for the donation of AADC and CoAT primary antibodies, and Payam Roshandel for technical assistance.
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3T I methyltransferase to protect plasmids from restriction upon transformation of Clostridium acetobutylicum ATCC 824. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 59:1077-1081.
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