Recombinant DNA coding for a protein with endochitinase activity

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 5446138
  • Patent Number
    5,446,138
  • Date Filed
    Tuesday, September 8, 1992
    32 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, August 29, 1995
    29 years ago
Abstract
Recombinant DNA which codes for a protein with endochitinase activity or for a precursor thereof, comprising the sequence (a1) (SEQ ID NO. 1).
Description

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The invention relates to a novel recombinant DNA coding for a novel protein with endochitinase activity or for a precursor thereof, to a bacterium, a yeast or a fungus containing this recombinant DNA, to a plant cell, a plant or a part of a plant, in particular a plant seed, containing this recombinant DNA, to a method of rendering plants resistant to pathogens such as fungi and bacteria, as well as arthrepods, especially insects, and nematodes, which comprises a step involving transformation by this gene, to this novel protein and to a process for its preparation.
Cultivated plants are subject to attacks by pathogens such as fungi and bacteria, as well as arthropods, especially insects, and nematodes, which are responsible for substantial losses of harvest. At the present time, the main means of controlling these pathogens is to use chemical substances with fungicidal or bactericidal activity. It is now known that plants react naturally to these attacks by means of various defense mechanisms which unfortunately are generally triggered too late and are too weak in intensity to be sufficiently effective. One of these mechanisms includes the induction of an enzyme called chitinase EC 3.2.1.14 (A. Toppan et al., 1982, Agronomie, 2, 829-834). This induction can be stimulated artificially by substances such as ethylene, the consequence of which is to increase the resistance of the treated plant to pathogens (Boller T., 1988, Oxford Surveys of Plant Molecular and Cell Biology, 5, 145-174).
Chitin is a linear polysaccharide polymer consisting of N-acetylglucosamine units joined by .beta.-1,4 linkages. Said polymer is a structural compound present in the wall of most pathogenic fungi, in the exoskeleton of arthropods, especially insects, and in the outer envelope of the eggs and cysts of nematodes. Enzymes called chitinases are capable of degrading chitin. They are divided up into two different groups defined according to their mode of attacking chitin: exochitinases, which are capable of freeing the N- acetylglucosamine unit located at the non-reducing ends of the chains, and endochitinases, which are capable of fragmenting the chains and are the only chitinases capable of inhibiting the growth of mycelial hyphae in vitro (Roberts W. K. et al., 1988, Gen. Microbiol., 134, 169-176). The vast majority of the known plant chitinases are of the endo type, in contrast to the known bacterial chitinases, which are of the exo type (Roberts W. K. et al., 1988, Gen. Microbiol., 134, 169-176).
DNA sequences coding for bacterial exochitinases have already been isolated and cloned (Jones J. D. G. et al., 1986, EMBO J., 5, 467-473, and Sundheim L. et al., 1988, Physiol. Molec. Plant Pathol., 33, 483-491). U.S. Pat. No. 4,751,081 describes the isolation and cloning of the complete gene coding for the chitinase of Serratia marcescens and the transformation of the bacteria Pseudomonas fluorescens NZ130 and Pseudomonas putida MK280 by this gene. These transformed bacteria are capable of slightly degrading a colloidal chitin dispersed in the bacterial culture medium. The work of Harpster M. H. et al., 1989, Nucl. Ac. Res., 17, 5395, has shown that this gene codes for an exochitinase, which explains the low degradation efficacy observed (cf. Table 2, columns 13 and 14 of said document). The publication by Jones J. D. G. et al. (1988), Mol. Gen. Genet., 212, 536-542, mentions the transformation of tobacco plants by Agrobacterium tumefaciens containing a chimeric gene comprising the coding part of the exochitinase of Serratia marcescens, under the control of different plant promoters. Said document gives no indication of any increase in the pathogen resistance conferred by the expression of this exochitinase.
Genomic DNA and/or complementary DNA sequences coding for certain plant endochitinases have also been isolated and cloned (Bfoglie K. E., 1986, Proc. Ntl. Acad. Sci. USA, 83, 6820-6824, and Hedrick S. A., 1988, Plant Physiol., 86, 182-186).
International patent application 90/07001 describes the construction of a plasmid carrying a complementary DNA of the endochitinase of the bean Phaseolus vulgaris under the control of a strong promoter, transformation with the aid of Agrobacterium tumefaciens, the regeneration of the transformed tobacco, experiments showing the enhanced resistance of the regenerated plants to the fungi Rhizoctonia solani and Botrytis cinerea, the production of transgenic tomato plants expressing the bean chitinase and the production, with the aid of this gene, of transgenic colza plants having an enhanced level of chitinase activity and an enhanced resistance to Rhizoctonia solani compared with the non-transformed colza plants.
A genomic DNA and/or complementary DNA sequence coding for a chitinase of a filamentous fungus has never been isolated hitherto. The only partially isolated and characterized chitinase of a filamentous fungus is the endochitinase of Aphanocladium album (Kuntz, 1991-- Doctoral Thesis at the Universite de P. et M. Curie--Paris).
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a novel recombinant DNA which codes for a protein with endochitinase activity or for a precursor thereof, this protein with endochitinase activity comprising the following amino acid sequence (a1)(SEQ ID NO:1): ##STR1## or a sequence having a high degree of homology with the sequence (a1).
Here a high degree of homology denotes a homology (ratio of the identical amino acids to the total number of amino acids) of at least 60% and preferably of at least 80% of the amino acid sequences in the maximum homology alignment according to the optimal sequence alignment method of Needleman and Wunsch, 1970, J. Mol. Biol., 48, 443-453. This method is used especially in the UWGCG software from the University of Wisconsin: Devereux et al., 1984, Nucl. Ac. Res., 12, 8711-8721--option GAP.
The already known peptide sequence of a chitinase which is closest to the sequence (a1) is that of the chitinase of Serratia marcescens (Jones J. D. G. et al., 1986, EMBO J., 5, 467-473) with a homology of about 33% (Kuntz, 1991, Doctoral Thesis--Universite de P. et M. Curie, Paris); the latter chitinase is an exochitinase.
This recombinant DNA can be used for the expression of this protein with endochitinase activity, either for the purpose of conferring an enhanced pathogen resistance on a plant or a part of a plant which expresses said protein, or for the purpose of producing this protein with the aid of eucaryotic cells, especially Ascomycetes such as yeast, for example Saccharomyces cerevisiae, or filamentous fungi, for example Cryphonectria parasitica, or plant cells, or procaryotic microorganisms such as, for example, Escherichia coli.
This recombinant DNA preferably comprises a signal sequence upstream of the sequence coding for the sequence (a1) or of the sequence having a high degree of homology with the sequence (a1); the function of this signal sequence, which is chosen according to the host cell, is to make it possible for the protein to be exported out of the cytoplasm.
For expression in procaryotic microorganisms such as, for example, Escherichia coli, this signal sequence can be either a sequence derived from a natural precursor of a protein exported by a procaryotic microorganism (for example the signal peptide OmpA (Ghrayeb et al., EMBO Journal, 3, 2437-2442) or that of alkaline phosphatase (J. Bact., 1983, 154, 366-374)), or a non-endogenous sequence originating from a eucaryotic precursor (for example the signal peptide of one of the natural precursors of human growth hormone), or a synthetic signal peptide (for example the one described in French patent application no. 2 636 643).
For expression in eucaryotic cells such as Ascomycetes, for example the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae or the filamentous fungus Cryphonectria parasitica, this signal sequence is preferably a sequence derived from a natural precursor of a protein secreted by these cells, for example, for the yeast, the natural precursor of invertase (European patent application 0 123 289) or that of the prepro-sequence of pheromone alpha (Danish patent application 2484/84), or, for Cryphonectria parasitica, that of the prepro-sequence of endothiapepsin, described in European patent application 475 842, of the sequence (SEQ ID NO:2): ##STR2##
For expression in plant cells, the signal sequence used is either a sequence coding for the signal peptide of a plant cell protein which is known to be exported, for example that of tomato endochitinase (Doctoral Thesis in Sciences--specialty: plant molecular biology, 1986, by M. Durant--Universite de Paris Sud), of the sequence (SEQ ID NO: 3): ##STR3## or that of bean endochitinase (Broglie K. E. et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA (1986), 83,6820-6824), of the following sequence (a5) (SEQ ID NO.28): ##STR4## or a signal sequence coding for the signal peptide of the following sequence (a2)(SEQ ID NO:4): ##STR5## it being possible, if appropriate, for the signal peptide coded by the signal sequence to be separated from the sequence (a1) in the coded protein by one or more amino acids, in particular by the peptide of the following sequence (a3)(SEQ ID NO:5): ##STR6##
The amino acid sequences (a1), (a2) and (a3) can be coded for example by the following nucleotide sequences (Na1), (Na2) and (Na3): ##STR7##
The amino acid sequence (a5) can be coded for example by the following nucleotide sequence (Na5) (SEQ ID NO:29): ##STR8##
The invention further relates to a unit for expressing the recombinant DNA defined above, said unit advantageously being carried by a vector called an expression vector.
For expression in procaryotic microorganisms, in particular in Escherichia coli, the recombinant DNA must be inserted into an expression unit containing especially an effective promoter, followed by a ribosome binding site upstream of the gene to be expressed, and an effective transcription termination sequence downstream of the gene to be expressed. This unit must also contain a selection marker or be introduced into the host cell at the same time as a unit for expressing a selection marker (for example with the aid of an expression vector which carries these two units). All these sequences must be chosen according to the host cell.
For expression in eucaryotic cells such as Ascomycetes, the expression unit according to the invention comprises the above-defined recombinant DNA together with the means necessary for its expression.
For expression in Ascomycetes cells such as yeast, for example Saccharomyces cerevisiae, it is necessary to insert the recombinant DNA between sequences recognized as an effective promoter, on the one hand, and a transcription terminator, on the other. The expression unit carries a selection marker or is introduced into the host cell at the same time as a selection marker. This selection marker is preferably an auxotrophic marker (which complements a mutation of the recipient cells), making it possible to select those cells which have integrated the recombinant DNA in a large number of copies, either into their genome or into a multicopy vector.
For expression in Ascomycetes cells such as those of filamentous fungi, for example of the genera Aspergillus, Neurospora, Podospora, Trichoderma or Cryphonectria, the expression unit according to the invention carries the above-defined recombinant DNA together with the means necessary for its expression, and, if appropriate, a selection marker and/or telomeric sequences. It is in fact possible to select those transformants which have integrated a DNA of interest with the aid of a selection marker located either on the same unit as the DNA of interest or on another unit, these two units then being introduced by cotransformation. The recombinant DNA of the invention can be either integrated into the genome of the filamentous fungi or conserved in extrachromosomal form by means of sequences permitting the replication and partition of this DNA.
For expression in plant cells, it is necessary to insert the above-defined recombinant DNA between an effective promoter and an effective terminator in the plants.
The promoter is preferably a strong constitutive promoter, for example the 35S promoter of cauliflower mosaic virus, or a promoter which controls specific tissue or organ expression, such as the promoter of the small subunit of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase, which is expressed preferentially in the leaves and very particularly in the tissues of the mesophyll (Kuhlemeier et al., 1987, Ann. Rev. Plant Physiol., 38: 221-257). It is also possible to use a specific promoter which controls expression for example in the seeds or during a precise stage of the development of the plant, or a promoter which can be induced following a heat shock, a wound or interaction between the plant and parasites (Kuhlemeier et alo, 1987, op. cit.) if expression of the recombinant DNA is sought in these situations.
The terminator sequence, containing polyadenylation sites, is used, which can be isolated from plant genes or from genes which are expressed in plants, such as, for example, the terminator of the nopaline synthase of Agrobacterium tumefaciens.
The invention further relates to a bacterium, for example of the species Escherichia coli, a yeast, for example Saccharomyces cerevisiae, or a filamentous fungus, for example Cryphonectria parasitica or Fusarium oxysporum, which contains the above-defined recombinant DNA together with the means necessary for its replication and its expression. This bacterium, this yeast or this filamentous fungus can be used in the preparation of a protein with endochitinase activity.
The invention further relates to a bacterium, for example of the species Escherichia coli, which contains the above-defined recombinant DNA together with the means permitting its replication, and which can therefore be used for cloning this recombinant DNA, and to a bacterium which is capable of infecting a plant with the transfer of genetic material, for example from one of the species Agrobacterium rhizogenes and Agrobacterium tumefaciens, which contains this DNA in a context permitting its replication and which can therefore be used for 5 transforming plant cells. The transformation of plant cells by the above recombinant DNA can also be effected by another biological method such as the pollen tube method (Zhong-xun Luo et al., Plant Molec. Biol. Rep., 1988, 6, 165-176) and the direct transformation of germinating seeds (Toepfer R. et al., 1989, The Plant Cell, 1, 133-139), or by a physical method such as the use of polyethylene glycol, electroporation (Chistou P. et al., 1987, Proc. Ntl. Acad. Sci. USA, 84, 3662-3699) and bombardment with microprojectiles (Klein T. M. et al., 1988, Proc. Ntl. Acad. Sci. USA, 85, 8502-8505).
The invention further relates to a plant cell which is transformed by the above-defined recombinant DNA together with the means necessary for its expression. This plant cell can originate from a major crop species such as, for example, maize, soya, beet, wheat, barley, poppy, colza, sunflower, alfalfa and sorghum, a flower species such as rose, carnation and gerbera, or a vegetable species such as carrot, tomato, lettuce, chicory, pimento, melon and cabbage. Species of particular value are the colza Brassica napus, the sunflower Helianthus annuus and the tobacco Nicotiana tabacum.
The transformation step, which involves one cell or a few cells, is followed by a step for multiplication of these transformed cells to give calluses, which can produce transformed plants by processes of organogenesis or embryogenesis.
The invention therefore further relates to a plant or a part of a plant which contains the above-defined recombinant DNA together with the means necessary for its expression. A particularly valuable part of a plant is the part which is capable of forming a complete new plant, especially after sowing, burying or pricking out, or of producing seeds. Such a part is for example a grain, a seed, a cutting, a runner, etc. These plants can be any one of the above species and more particularly the species Nicotiana tabacum, Helianthus annuus and Brassica napus.
The invention further relates to a method of obtaining plants resistant to parasites such as phytopathogenic fungi and bacteria, as well as arthropods, especially insects, and nematodes, which comprises a step for the transformation of plant cells by this recombinant DNA, followed by a step for multiplication of the transformed cells and a step for regeneration of the plants.
The step for transformation of the plant cells is preferably carried out in vitro with the aid of an agrobacterium (i.e. a bacterium of the genus Agrobacterium) which has integrated the recombinant DNA of interest.
The invention further relates to the pathogen-resistant plants which can be obtained by means of the above-defined method.
The invention further relates to the use of a plant containing the above-defined recombinant DNA together with the means necessary for its expression, as the genetrix in a selection program for creating new plant varieties.
The invention further relates to a novel protein with endochitinase activity which can be obtained with the aid of the above-defined recombinant DNA. This protein preferably comprises the sequence (a1) or a sequence having a high degree of homology with the sequence (a1). It advantageously has an apparent molecular weight of 39.+-.3 or 41.+-.3 kDa. It can be N-glycosylated if it is expressed in a cell which permits glycosylation.
This protein is of interest as the active principle of a novel drug for the treatment of complaints such as, for example, mycoses.
The invention further relates to a process for the preparation of this protein, which comprises culturing plant cells, plant calluses, plants or parts of plants containing the above-defined recombinant DNA, lyzing them and isolating and purifying this protein.
The invention will be understood more clearly with the aid of the following description, divided up into sections, which comprises experimental results and a discussion thereof. Some of these sections concern experiments performed with the aim of putting the invention into effect, and others concern practical Examples of the invention, which of course are given purely by way of illustration.
The techniques below, which are well known to those skilled in the art, are all largely explained in detail in the work by Sambrook et al.: "Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual" published in 1989 by Cold Spring Harbor Press in New York (2nd edition).





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The following description will be understood more clearly with reference to FIGS. 1 to 5.
FIGS. 1(A), 1(B) and 1(C) (SEQ ID NO:9) show the nucleotide sequence of the full length complementary DNA coding for the chitinase of Aphanocladium album and the peptide sequence of the translated protein, the cleavage site between the pre-peptide sequence and the pro-peptide sequence, and the cleavage site between the pro-peptide sequence and the mature protein, being represented by arrows underneath the peptide sequence, the different restriction sites used in the subsequent constructions being indicated by a broken vertical line above the nucleotide sequence, and the potential N-glycosylation sites being underlined.
FIGS. 2(A), 2(B), 2(C) and 2(D) (SEQ ID NO:11) show the nucleotide sequence of the genomic DNA coding for the chitinase of Aphanocladium album, the nucleotides of the introns being shown in lower case, and the peptide sequence of the translated protein.
FIG. 3 (SEQ ID NO:1) shows the peptide sequence of the mature protein.
FIGS. 4(A) and 4(B), 5(A) and 5(B) (SEQ ID NOS:13-14) respectively show the sequences coding for the chitinase of A. album in plasmids pBR61 and pBR62 respectively (vectors for expression in plant cells), bordered by the BamHI and SacI restriction sites.





DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Section 1 : Preparation of antibodies against the chitinase of Aphanocladium album
a) Purification of the chitinase of Aphanocladium album
A chitinase of the filamentous fungus Aphanocladium album was purified to homogeneity from A. album culture medium as described below:
The Aphanocladium album strain used is the overproductive mutant of chitinase E.sub.3 obtained by UV mutagenesis of the wild-type strain ETHM 483 according to the protocol described by Vasseur et al., 1990, J. Gen. Microbiol., 136, 12, 2561-2568. This strain was cultivated on a malt-agar medium under the conditions described by Forrer H. R., Phytopath. Z., 88, (1977), 306. Fragments taken from this culture are used to inoculate a liquid culture medium containing 1% of chitin (Srivastava A. K. et al., Experientia, 41, (1985), 1612-1613). The protein is purified from the culture medium by liquid chromatography according to Pharmacia's FPLC technique on a cation exchange column based on synthetic polymer (Mono S from Pharmacia), and exclusion chromatography (molecular sieve chromatography) on a crosslinked agarose according to the protocol described below:
Step 1
The culture medium is concentrated 40-fold against polyethylene glycol (Carbowax 20M--Touzart et Matignon) and then dialyzed overnight at 4.degree. C. against a 100 mM sodium acetate buffer solution of pH 5.0. The total amount of proteins is determined by Bradford's method (Bradford M. M., 1976, Anal. Biochem., 72, 248-254).
Step 2
The concentrated culture medium is then fractionated by chromatography on an ion exchange column based on synthetic polymer (Mono S column from Pharmacia) according to Pharmacia's FPLC technique. The extract, diluted beforehand in a 10 mM sodium acetate buffer solution of pH 5.2, is deposited on the MONO S column (HR 5/5) equilibrated with a 10 mM sodium acetate buffer of pH 5.2. The proteins retained on the column are eluted by a linear gradient of 10 to 500 mM sodium acetate of pH 5.2.
Step 3
The fractions containing the chitinase of Aphanocladium album are concentrated by ultrafiltration on a Centricon 10 membrane (Amicon). Purification of the protein is continued by exclusion chromatography on a crosslinked agarose (Superose 12 column from Pharmacia), elution being carried out with a 500 mM sodium acetate buffer solution of pH 5.2.
At each step the chitinase is identified by its molecular weight (electrophoresis on a 12.5% polyacrylamide gel in the presence of SDS--developing with silver) and its enzymatic activity is measured by theradiochemical method described below using tritium-labeled chitin as the substrate (Molano et al., (1977), Anal. Biochem., 83, 648-656).
When purification is complete, a protein with an apparent molecular weight of 41.+-.3 kDa is isolated which has endochitinase activity (thesis by C. Kuntz, Universite de Pierre et Marie Curie, 1991). This protein possesses chitinolytic activity, which is measured by the radiochemical method described below using tritium.
b) Characterization of the chitinase of Aphanocladium album
b1. Measurement of the enzymatic activity of the chitinase of Aphanocladiumalbum
The endochitinase activity of the chitinase is measured by a radiochemical method which makes it possible to estimate the amount of monomers or oligomers freed by the enzyme from a substrate (tritiated chitin). This method, which is described by Molano et al. (1977, Anal. Biochem., 83, 648-656), is summarized below.
50 .mu.l of tritiated chitin of specific activity 0.58 MBq/ml are added to a volume of 10 .mu.l of protein extract. The final volume is adjusted to 300 .mu.l with 0.2M sodium acetate buffer of pH 5.0. After incubation for 90 min at 30.degree. C., the chitin hydrolysis reaction is stopped with 100 .mu.l of 20% trichloroacetic acid. The test tubes are then centrifugedfor 10 min at 12,000 g. A 100 .mu.l aliquot of the supernatant, containing the soluble oligomers of chitin, is removed and the corresponding radioactivity is measured by liquid scintillation in the presence of 5 ml of scintillating mixture. The specific chitinolytic activity is expressed in dpm/.mu.g of protein.
b2. Determination of the amino-terminal sequence of the chitinase of Aphanocladium album
The amino-terminal end of the isolated protein was sequenced as described below. The samples to be treated are placed on the surface of a PVDF (polyvinylidene difluoride) filter, which is introduced into a protein sequencer (model 470 A, marketed by Applied Biosystems USA) equipped with a chromatograph (model 430 from Applied Biosystems), which continuously analyzes the phenylthiohydantoic derivatives formed after each degradationcycle.
The amino-terminal sequence determined is as follows (amino acids 1-23 of SEQ ID NO:1): ##STR9##
c) Preparation of polyclonal antibodies
To prepare an immune serum, rabbits were injected with 25 .mu.g of purifiedchitinase in 500 .mu.l of Freund's complete adjuvant. Three booster injections of 25 .mu.g in Freund's incomplete adjuvant (500 .mu.l) were given at 3-week intervals. The immune serum was taken 3 weeks after the last injection.
This immune serum specifically recognizes the chitinase of Aphanocladium album. It enables the latter protein to be developed especially by the Western blot technique (described in section 8) from a total protein extract of an Aphanocladium album strain cultivated under the conditions described above.
Section 2: Construction of the complementary DNA library of Aphanocladium album
a) Preparation of messenger RNAs extracted from Aphanocladium album
The total RNAs of the mycelium of the above Aphanocladium album strain, cultivated for 2 days on a medium in the presence of 1% of chitin, were extracted according to the method of Logeman et al., Analytical Biochemistry, 1987, 163, 16-20.
The mycelium is separated from the culture medium by filtration, washed with sterile water and then ground in a mortar in liquid nitrogen; the total RNAs are then extracted by the guanidine hydrochloride method in accordance with the recommendations of Logeman et al. (op. cit.). After anethanolic precipitation step, the total RNAs are dissolved in a buffered solution.
The poly(A).sup.+ messenger RNAs were isolated after 2 chromatography cycles on a column of oligo (dT) cellulose as described by Sambrook et alo(op. cit.). The messenger RNAs (mRNAs) are quantified by spectrophotometry at 260 nm.
b) Synthesis of the complementary DNAs
The complementary DNAs were synthesized with the aid of the "Riboclone cDNASynthesis System" kit from Promega (ref. C2100) in accordance with the supplier's recommendations. This kit uses the method described by Okayama et al., 1982, Mol. and Cell. Biol., 2, 161-170, and modified by Gubler andHoffman, 1983, Gene, 25, 263-269, which favors the synthesis and cloning ofcomplete cDNAs. The complementary DNAs were cloned at the EcoRI site into vector .lambda.gt11 by following the procedure of the cloning system from Amersham (cDNA cloning system kit, ref. RPN 1280). The number of recombinants was then estimated by counting the lysis plates obtained on atapetum of bacteria of the strain E. coli Y 1090 (Sambrook et al., op. cit.). About 10.sup.5 clones were obtained, 80% of which are recombinant clones.
Section 3: Immunoscreening of the complementary DNA library constructed from the messenger RNAs of Aphanocladium album
The construction of a library in vector .lambda.gt11 makes it possible to express the cloned cDNAs in the form of proteins coded by the mRNAs which were used to construct this library. This synthesis takes place after induction with isopropyl thio-.beta.-D-galactoside (IPTG); the synthesizedproteins can then be recognized by previously obtained antibodies against the desired protein (section 1). The clones can be identified and isolatedaccording to a protocol known to those skilled in the art and described forexample by Sambrook et al. (op. cit.).
The library is amplified by infection of the strain E. coli Y 1090 with a suspension of phages containing 10.sup.4 particles capable of forming lysis plates. This step is carried out in Petri dishes of diameter 90 mm. Incubation is carried out at 42.degree. C. for 16 h and permits a 10.sup.7-fold amplification.
The amplified library is then plated out on a taperum of bacteria of the strain E. coli Y 1090 at a density of 10.sup.5 particles capable of forming lysis plates. The bacteria are plated out in 5 Petri dishes of diameter 150 mm and incubated at 42.degree. C. for 5 h. A cellulose filter(Schleicher and Schuell, BA 85) impregnated with IPTG (10 mM) is laid on the surface of the dishes and left in contact with the gelose medium for 5h at a temperature of 37.degree. C.; it is then replaced with a second filter, which is left on the same medium for 16 h. The filters are treatedwith a so-called blocking buffer composed of 10% of powdered milk (Regilait) in TNT buffer (10 mM Tris pH 8.0, 150 mM NaCl, 0.05% Tween), for 30 min, and incubated with the antiserum described above, diluted to 1/100 in TNT medium. The protocol for incubation and developing with alkaline phosphatase is the one described by the "Protoblot immunoscreening system" from Promega, ref. S3710. The positive clones appear blue-violet in color after developing.
The positive lysis plates, i.e. those corresponding to clones which synthesize chitinase, are then identified on the Petri dish and the bacteriophages are removed for purification by means of a secondary immunoscreening, conducted in a strictly identical manner to the primary screening which has just been described. Seventeen clones were obtained, corresponding to 7 different hybridization groups. One hybridization group, comprising 9 clones of about 230 bp, produces a particularly strongsignal. One of these clones, called CH3C, was retained for the remainder ofthe study.
The DNA sequence of the CH3C clone was determined according to the deoxyribonucleotide method (Sanger et al., 1977, Proc. Ntl. Acad. Sci. USA, 14, 5463-5467). This clone does not contain the "full length" complementary DNA because its size is too small.
Section 4: Construction of the genomic DNA library of Aphanocladium album
a) Preparation and encapsidation of the total DNA of Aphanocladium album
The total DNA was prepared by the method of Daboussi et al., Curr. Genet., (1989), 15, 453-456. The DNA of A. album was then partially digested with the restriction enzyme Sau3AI and fractionated according to size on a sucrose gradient. The fragments with a size of between 12 and 20 kb were inserted into phage EMBL4 after cleavage of the latter at the BamHI site. Encapsidation in the phage particles is carried out in vitro using the "cDNA cloning system" kit from Amersham, ref. RPN.1280, and transfection is carried out on a tapetum of bacteria of the strain E. coli LE 292 (Sambrook et al., op. cit.). The library has a size of 1.2.times.10.sup.6 plates and possesses 50% of recombinant phages.
b) Screening of the genomic library of Aphanocladium album
b1. Preparation of the replicas on filters
After amplification of the library by infection of the strain E. coli NM 539 (Sambrook et al., op. cit.) according to the techniques known to thoseskilled in the art, 10.sup.5 phages are plated out at a density of 20,000 particles capable of forming lysis plates per dish on a taperum of bacteria of the strain NM 539. Incubation takes 16 h at 37.degree. C. The dishes are cooled and 2 replicas are made by successively laying 2 nylon filters (Hybond N, Amersham, ref. RPN 203N) on the dishes. The first filter is left in contact with the lysis plates for 45 s and the second for 90 s.
The replicas on membranes are laid, with the DNA facing upwards, on a sheetof Whatman 3MM paper saturated with a denaturing solution of the following composition: NaOH 0.5 M, NaCl 1.5 M, for 7 min, which makes it possible tofix the DNA. The replicas on membranes are then placed on a second sheet ofWhatman 3MM, saturated this time with a neutralizing solution of the following composition: NaCl 1.5M, Tris-HCl pH 7.4 0.5M, for 3 min. The replicas on membranes are subsequently immersed in a 2.times.SSC solution (NaCl 0.30M, sodium citrate 0.030M) and then dried in the open air with the side which has fixed the DNA facing upwards.
b2. Preparation of the radioactive probe used to identify the positive clones, and hybridization of the replicas
The probe used is the DNA of the CH3C clone obtained above (section 3), in which 100 ng of DNA are labeled with dCTP.alpha..sup.32 p(3000 Ci/mmol, Amersham) by random labeling (random priming) using the labeling kit from Boehringer Mannheim GmbH (ref. 1004 760) in accordance with the manufacturer's recommendations. The specific activity obtained is 1.times.10.sup.9 dpm/.mu.g of DNA.
The replicas on membranes are prehybridized for 1 h at 65.degree. C. in a buffer of the following composition: 6.times.SSC, 5.times.Denhardt's solution, 0.5% SDS and 100 .mu.g/ml of sonicated salmon sperm DNA. The replicas on membranes are hybridized with the probe prepared above for 16 h in the same buffer and are subsequently washed for 20 min at 20.degree. C. in a 2.times.SSC, 0.1% SDS buffer, then for 40 min in a 2.times.SSC, 0.1% SDS buffer at 65.degree. C. and finally for 40 min in a 0.2.times.SSC, 0.1% SDS buffer at 65.degree. C., and are then dried and autoradiographed. Briefly, 20.times.SSC buffer contains 175.3 g/l of NaCl and 88.2 g/l of sodium citrate and is adjusted to pH 7 with a few drops of10N NaOH. 10.times.Denhardt's solution contains 1 g of Ficoll 400, 1 g of polyvinylpyrrolidone and 1 g of bovine serum albumin per 500 ml of final volume. Five phages were purified in three steps. Four of them have an identical digestion profile for the restriction enzymes EcoRI, HindIII andBamHI.
b3. Cloning and sequencing of a fragment containing a gene of Aphanocladiumalbum coding for a chitinase
The DNA of one of these 4 phages was digested with the enzyme BamHI. The restriction fragments obtained were separated by electrophoresis on 1% agarose gel. The DNA was transferred to a nylon filter (Hybond N.sup.+, Amersham) according to the Southern blot method (Southern, E. M. (1975), J. Mol. Biol., 98, 503-517) and hybridized with the DNA of the CH3C clone labeled with dCTP.alpha..sup.32 P(cf- section 4 b2). The membranes are then washed and developed according to the protocol recommended by Amersham, and autoradiographed with an XAR film (Kodak).
A very strong hybridization signal on a single band is detected. The size of this DNA fragment is estimated to be about 7 kb. This fragment, called fragment fBL1, is subsequently isolated by electroelution after electrophoresis according to the method described in the work "Plant Molecular Biology Manual", Gelvin et al., Kluwer Academic Press, 1988, andthen ligated into a vector pUC13 opened at the BamHI site and dephosphorylated (Pharmacia, ref. 27-4969-01). The plasmid obtained is called plasmid pBL1. This vector is introduced into E. coli (DH5 .alpha.F') according to the protocol described by Sambrook et al., op. cit. The clone obtained is called BL1.
Sequencing
After preparation of the double-stranded DNA according to the techniques known to those skilled in the art, part of the insert of 7kb was sequencedaccording to the dideoxyribonucleotide method (Sanger et al., Proc. Ntl. Acad. Sci. USA, 14, 5463-5467, 1977) with the aid of the "T7sequencing kit" from Pharmacia, ref. 27-1 682-01.
The primer used is the oligonucleotide mixture of the formula below, calledoligonucleotide mixture N.sub.1, which corresponds to the sequences translated from the aminoterminal sequence of the purified protein (cf. section 1). This mixture was obtained by chemical synthesis with the aid of a Biosearch 4600 apparatus. ##STR10##
To be able to sequence the remainder of the strand, other primers were translated from the sequence obtained by means of these first primers. Thesequence of the complementary strand was obtained by synthesizing primers in the reverse direction. It made it possible to confirm the sequence shown in FIGS. 2(A), 2(B) and 2(C), which will be commented upon in section 7.
Section 5: Preparation of a full length complementary DNA of the chitinase of Aphanocladium album
a) Constitution of a complementary DNA library
The messenger RNAs isolated as described in section 2 were used to prepare a complementary DNA library in vector pTZ19R (marketed by Pharmacia). Thisvector is a plasmid comprising a polylinker containing unique restriction sites.
The cloning technique used is the one described by Caput et al., Proc. Ntl.Acad. Sci. (USA), (1986), 83, 1670-1674.
It consists on the one hand in digesting the vector with PstI, adding a polydC tail to the protuberant 3' end and then digesting the resulting plasmid with BamHI. The fragment corresponding to the vector is purified on a column of Sepharose CL4B (Pharmacia). It therefore comprises a polydCtail at one end, the other end being a sticky end of the BamHI type. On theother hand, the messenger RNAs are subjected to reverse transcription starting from a primer with the following sequence (SEQ ID NO:17): 5'<GATCCGGGCCCT.sub.(12) <3'. Thus, at their 5' end, the cDNAs have the sequence GATC complementary to the BamHI sticky end.
The RNA-DNA hybrids obtained by the action of reverse transcriptase are subjected to alkaline hydrolysis, which makes it possible to remove the RNA. The single-stranded complementary DNAs are then purified by 2 cycles on a column of Sepharose CL4B and subjected to a treatment with terminal transferase so as to add polydGs at the 3' end. The complementary DNAs areinserted in single-stranded form into the vector prepared as described above. A second oligonucleotide, called the adapter, complementary to the primer, is necessary for generating a BamHI sticky end at the 5' end of the complementary DNAs. After hybridization of the vector, the complementary DNA and the adapter, the recombinant molecules are annealed by the action of the ligase of phage T4. The single-stranded regions are then made up to double-stranded regions by means of the DNA polymerase of phage T4.
The resulting pool of plasmids is used to transform the strain MC 1061 (Casabadan, Chou and Cohen, J. Bact. (1980), 143, 9971-9980) and the recombinant bacteria are selected for ampicillin resistance.
b) Screening of the library
Preparation of the labeled probes:
Three probes translated from the sequence of the CH3C complementary DNA clone and the BL1 genomic DNA clone (section 4) were synthesized with the aid of a Biosearch 4600 DNA synthesizer.
The probes are as follows:
(1) 5' CAA ATG CCG TCT ACT TCA CC 3' (SEQ ID NO:18)
(2) 5' CCT CAT GGC TTA CGA TTA CG 3' (SEQ ID NO:19)
(3) 5' TCC AAC CTC GAG CAT CAA TC 3' (SEQ ID NO:20)
They code respectively for sequences located at the start, in the middle and downstream of the coding sequence of the chitinase of Aphanocladium album. The probes are labeled by coupling with peroxidase.
Hybridization and detection of the colonies containing the complementary DNA of the chitinase of Aphanocladium album
About 100,000 colonies are screened by the in situ hybridization technique developed by Grunstein and Hogness (1975, Proc. Ntl. Acad. Sci. (USA), 72,3961). About 10,000 bacteria are plated out on 10 Petri dishes to give isolated colonies. After incubation for 24 h at 37.degree. C., each dish is replicated on 2 Hybond N.sup.+ nylon filters (Amersham), each filter being destined for treatment with the three probes.
The replicas on membranes are laid, with the colonies facing upwards, on a sheet of Whatman 3MM saturated with a solution of the following composition: NaOH 0.5M, NaCl 1.5M, for 5 min, and the membranes are then laid on a neutralizing solution of the following composition: NaCl 1.5M, Tris-HCl pH 8.0 0.5M, for 5 min. The replicas are then immersed in a 2.times.SSC solution (NaCl 0.30M, sodium citrate 0.030M).
The replicas on membranes are then treated with proteinase K (Boehringer Mannheim GmbH) at 100 .mu.g/ml in a solution of the following composition:Tris-HCl 10 mM pH 8, EDTA 10 mM, NaCl 50 mM, SDS 0.1%, at a rate of 20 ml per membrane. Incubation is carried out for 30 min at 37.degree. C., with shaking. The replicas on membranes are immersed again in a 2.times.SSC solution and the bacterial debris is partially removed by rubbing gently with a paper of trademark Kim Wipes. The membranes are then treated for 5 min in a 0.4M solution of NaOH and rinsed briefly in a 2.times.SSC solution to give two replicas on membranes for each dish.
The filters are placed in a buffer containing 0.1% SDS, 6.times.SSC, 10.times.Denhardt and 100 .mu.g/ml of denatured sonicated salmon sperm DNA(Sigma) for prehybridization. The prehybridization temperature is 42.degree. C. and the duration is 6 h.
Hybridization is carried out at 42.degree. C. for 16 h by adding 60 ng/ml of the mixture of the 3 probes labeled with peroxidase.
The membranes are washed in 2.times.SSC solution +0.1% SDS, at 22.degree. C. for 2 times 5 min and then for 30 min, followed by 2 washes of 15 min in 0.1.times.SSC solution +0.1% SDS, at 42.degree. C., and finally for 3 min in 2.times.SSC solution at 22.degree. C.
Developing is effected with the aid of the ECL kit from Amersham (ref. RPN2110) according to the manufacturer's protocol using Xomat AR films (Kodak).
35 colonies exhibited very strong hybridization with the mixture of the 3 probes.
The plasmid DNA of 15 of these 35 colonies was prepared and digested with the enzymes HindIII and BamHI. After electrophoresis on 1% agarose gel, double digestions make it possible to free a fragment with a size of about1.6 kb in 4 out of the 15 cases.
Section 6: Determination of the sequence of the full length complementary DNA of the chitinase of Aphanocladium album
One of the 1.6 kb fragments was recloned into the DNA of the replicarive form of phage M13. The DNA of the M13 clones containing the 1.6 kb fragment was digested with exonuclease so as to generate a series of overlapping M13 clones ("Cyclone I Biosystem" procedure from IBI). Said clones were sequenced by the dideoxyribonucleotide method (Sanger et al., 1977, Proc. Ntl. Acad. Sci. USA, 14, 5463-5467).
a) Analysis of the cDNA sequence of the chitinase of Aphanocladium album
The following description will be understood more clearly with the aid FIGS. 1(A) and 1(B). This sequence contains a single open reading frame (not interrupted by a stop codon) compatible with the apparent molecular weight of the protein observed by electrophoresis on 12.5% polyacrylamide gel: the sequence starting with an ATG codon in position 97 and terminating with the TAA stop codon in position 1366, coding for a proteinof 423 amino acids with a molecular weight of about 46 kDa.
A signal peptide is expected by those skilled in the art because chitinasesare proteins which can be naturally secreted by fungus cells, requiring thepresence of a signal peptide.
The UWGCG software from the University of Wisconsin: Devereux et al., 1984,Nucl. Ac. Res., 12, 8711-8721--option: Search for a signal peptide according to the method of G. Von Heijne, 1986, Nucl. Ac. Res., 14, 483-490, predicts in this sequence a part coding for a signal peptide recognized by eucaryotic or procaryotic cells, namely the following sequence (Na2)(SEQ ID NO:7), called the pre-nucleotide sequence (starting with nucleotide 97 and terminating with nucleotide 162): ##STR11##coding for the signal peptide of 22 amino acids with the following sequence(a2) (SEQ ID NO: 4): ##STR12##
Between the sequence coding for the above signal peptide and that coding for the mature protein, there is the following nucleotide sequence (Na3)(SEQ ID NO:8), called the pro-nucleotide sequence, starting with nucleotide 163 and terminating with nucleotide 198: ##STR13##coding for the following peptide sequence (a3)(SEQ ID NO:5), called the pro-peptide sequence: ##STR14##Upstream of the sequence coding for the mature chitinase of Aphanocladium album, there is therefore the sequence coding for the following prepro-peptide sequence (a4)(SEQ ID NO:21): ##STR15##
The mature protein is the protein of 389 amino acids with a molecular weight of about 42.8 kDa which starts with the amino-terminal sequence determined in section 1. The observed apparent molecular weight of about 41.+-.3 kDa corresponds, within the limits of experimental error, to the calculated molecular weight of 42.8 kDa of the protein translated from thecomplementary DNA. This protein possesses two potential N- glycosylation sites (underlined in FIGS. 1(A) and 1(B).
Comparison of the peptide sequence (a1) with the other peptide sequences already known
The comparison was made with the class I, II and III plant chitinases defined by Shinshi et al., 1990, Plant Mol. Biol., 14, 357-368, and with the bacterial chitinases of Bacillus circulans, Serratia marcescens and Streptomyces erythraeus. The comparison was carried out with the aid of the UWGCG software from the University of Wisconsin: Devereux et al., 1984, Nucl. Ac. Res., 12, 8711-8721, option GAP. This algorithmic method considers all the possible alignments and creates an alignment in which the maximum number of identical amino acids are paired and the number of holes in the aligned sequences is minimized.
The peptide sequence closest to the sequence (a1) translated from the complementary DNA of A. album is that of the chitinase of Serratia marcescens (Jones J. D. G. et al., 1986, EMBO J., 5, 467-473) with a homology of about 33%. The latter chitinase is an exochitinase (Kuntz, 1991, Doctoral Thesis--Universite de P. et M. Curie, Paris).
Section 7: Analysis of the genomic DNA sequence of the chitinase of Aphanocladium album
The following description will be understood more clearly with the aid of FIGS. 2(A), 2(B) and 2(C). The alignment of this sequence with the cDNA sequence of FIGS. 1(A) and 1(B) shows that this gene codes for the same peptide sequence as the cloned complementary DNA and reveals three small introns. The sequence starts with an ATG codon in position 126 and terminates with a TAA stop codon in position 1552. The first intron startsin position 266 and terminates in position 320. The second intron starts inposition 420 and terminates in position 472. The third intron starts in position 523 and terminates in position 571. This sequence codes for a protein of 423 amino acids.
Section 8: Expression of the chitinase of Aphanocladium album in Fusarium oxysporum
Cotransformation, which is based on the complementation of a recipient strain of the filamentous fungus Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. melonis of nitrate reductase minus (nia-) phenotype, is effected by mixing a plasmid carrying a gene coding for a nitrate reductase of Aspergillus nidulans andthe above-defined plasmid pBL1 carrying the genomic DNA of the chitinase ofAphanocladium album. Selection of the transformants is carried out on a medium containing a source of nitrate, enabling only those transformants which have integrated the nitrate reductase gene to survive and develop. Some of these transformants also integrated the fBL1 fragment. The transformants which express chitinase activity are sought among these double transformants.
a) Transformation of Fusarium oxysporum
The recipient strain of F. oxysporum f. sp. melonis is the strain Fom150 nia9 described by Daboussi et al., 1989, Curr. Genet., 15, 453-456.
The niad gene coding for the nitrate reductase of Aspergillus nidulans, carried on a Sau3A fragment of 11 kb, is inserted into plasmid pFB39 derived from pUC19. This plasmid used for the transformation of F. oxysporum has the name pAN301. Its construction is described by Malardier et al., 1984, Gene, 78: 147-156.
Cotransformation is effected using a mixture of plasmid pAN301 and the above-described plasmid pBL1 in a ratio of 1/1. The experimental conditions used to ensure the transformation of the protoplasts of F. oxysporum and the selection of the transformants on nitrate are those described by LANGIN T. et al., (1990), Curr. Genet., 17: 313-319.
Four cotransformants, called Tr5, Tr6, Tr7 and Tr8, were obtained in this way.
b) Expression of the chitinase of Aphanocladium album by the cotransformants of Fusarium oxysporum
An analysis according to the Western blot method was performed on these 4 cotransformants in the manner described below. The proteins of the culturemedium are concentrated against polyethylene glycol (Carbowax 20M--Touzart et Matignon) and the extract is subsequently dialyzed against a 0.2M sodium acetate buffer of pH 5.0 and then diluted in a loading buffer of the following composition:
0.125M Tris-HCl pH 6.8
4% sodium dodecylsulfate
20% glycerol
0.002% bromophenol blue
10% .beta.-mercaptoethanol
after which the mixture is heated at 100.degree. C. for 10 min. 10 .mu.g ofsolubilized proteins are deposited on an SDS-polyacrylamide electrophoresisgel according to the protocol described by Laemmli (Laemmli, Nature, 227, 1970, 680-685). After electrophoresis, the proteins of the gel are transferred to an Immobilon membrane (made of PVDF) by electrotransfer according to the technique of H. Towbin et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 76, 1979, 4350-4354.
Immunodetection is performed according to a protocol which comprises the following steps:
saturation of the PVDF membrane to which the proteins have been transferredby incubation for at least 2 h at 37.degree. C. in a 3% solution of gelatin;
3 washes in phosphate buffered saline containing 0.05% of Tween 20 detergent;
incubation (for 1 h at 37.degree. C.) in the presence of the previously prepared immune serum (containing the polyclonal antibodies recognizing the chitinase of Aphanocladium album) diluted to 1/10,000 in phosphate buffered saline;
3 washes in phosphate buffered saline containing 0.05% of Tween 20 detergent.
The antigen-antibody complex is then developed with the aid of a streptavidin-biotin system conjugated with alkaline phosphatase using the RPN 23 kit from Amersham ("Blotting detection kit") in accordance with themanufacturer's instructions.
For the cotransformants Tr8 and Tr7, the blot obtained shows the presence of a protein of about 41.+-.3 kDa with the same apparent molecular weight as the purified chitinase of A. album obtained in section 1, which is absent from the control strain.
The non-expression for the cotransformants Tr5 and Tr6 probably results from insertion of the recombinant gene into a context which does not permit transcription.
The chitinase activity of the wild-type F. oxysporum strain (control) and that of the cotransformants Tr7 and Tr8 are measured by the radiochemical method of Molano et al. (1977, Anal. Biochem., 83, 648-656) summarized in paragraph (b) of section 1. The total amount of proteins is determined by Bradford's method (Bradford M. M., 1976, Anal. Biochem., 72, 248-254). Theresults are collated in Table (I) below. It is found that the culture medium of the cotransformant Tr8, which best expresses the chitinase of A.album, undergoes an increase in its specific chitinolytic activity by a factor of 25 to 30 compared with the control strain. Furthermore, the activity of the extracellular chitinase of the cotransformants Tr8 and Tr7decreases when the anti-A. album chitinase antibodies (prepared in section 1) are added.
TABLE I______________________________________Comparison of the specific chitinolytic activity of thecotransformants Tr8 and Tr7, expressing the chitinase of A.album, with that of the control strain*Specific chitinolytic activity(dpm/.mu.g of protein)control strain Tr8 Tr7______________________________________Exp1 52 1493 402Exp2 83 2019 760Exp3 83 135 157______________________________________*For each of these strains, two protein extracts of independent culture filtrates were prepared and their chitinolytic activity was determined 3 times independently by the radiochemical method of Molano et al.; the values shown in the Table represent the averages of these three measurements. Exp1 is the value obtained for the first extract and Exp2 ithat obtained for the 2nd extract. Exp3 represents the value obtained for the first extract after it has been incubated for 1 h 30 min in the antichitinase serum prepared in section 1.
Section 9: Expression of the mature chitinase of Aphanocladium album in E. coli
a) Construction of intermediate plasmid pEMR680
Plasmid pUC18 (Clontech), which comprises a polylinker carrying the PstI, SalI and BamHI sites in particular, is unwound by cleavage with the endonucleases PstI and SalI. The PstI-SalI fragment, carrying the origin of replication, is purified.
Cleavage of the cDNA (cf. section 6 and FIGS. 1(A) and 1(B) with the restriction enzymes PstI and XhoI generates a PstI-XhoI fragment of about 1250 base pairs. This fragment was purified on agarose gel and then ligated with the above PstI-SalI fragment with the aid of T4 polymerase (the SalI and XhoI sites disappear through ligation). The ligation mixtureis used to transform the strain E. coli RRI.
The plasmid obtained is called plasmid pEMR680. This plasmid contains an incomplete fragment in its 5' part of the cDNA coding for the prepro-chitinase of Aphanocladium album. 47 base pairs are missing betweenthe PstI site and the ATG codon marking the initiation of translation.
b) Construction of the vector for expression in E. coli: plasmid pEMR682
Partial hydrolysis of plasmid pEMR680 with the enzyme AccI and total hydrolysis with the enzyme BamHI makes it possible to free a fragment of about 1100 bp. This fragment codes for a 3' part of the coding sequence ofthe mature chitinase of A. album (cf. FIGS. 1(A) and 1(B)).
The synthetic oligonucleotide of the following sequence (Nt1)(SEQ ID NO:22): ##STR16##makes it possible to reconstitute the 5' end of the mature chitinase of A. album. The first amino acid of the sequence of the mature protein (coded by GGT) is preceded by the sticky end of an NdeI site carrying an ATG translation initiation codon.
Plasmid pAR3040 (Studier F. U. et al., 1986, J. Mol. Biol., 189, 113-130) carries a pBR322 fragment comprising the origin of replication in E. coli and in the gene coding for ampicillin resistance, and a DNA fragment carrying the 10 gene of phage T7, as well as its promoter and its terminator. The 10 gene can easily be replaced with any other gene of interest since it is bounded by the sequences recognized by the restriction enzymes NdeI and BamHI.
Plasmid pAR3040 is hydrolyzed with the enzymes NdeI and BamHI, and the fragment carrying the origin of replication in E. coli and the ampicillin resistance gene, as well as the promoter and the terminator of the 10 geneof phage T7, is purified. Assembly by ligation of the oligonucleotide of sequence (Ntl), the 1100 bp fragment of plasmid pEMR680 and the fragment of plasmid pAR3040 produces, after transformation of the ligation mixture in the strain E. coli RRI, a plasmid called plasmid pEMR682.
c) Expression of the mature chitinase in E. coli
The promoter of the 10 gene of phage T7 is not recognized by the RNA polymerase of E. coli. It is therefore necessary to provide the strain E. coli RRI carrying plasmid pEMR682, called strain RRI/pEMR682, with an RNA polymerase which recognizes the promoter of the 10 gene of phage T7. The means which is chosen for carrying out this operation is to use the recombinant phage CE6 (Studier et al., op. cit.), which carries in its genome the gene coding for the RNA polymerase of phage T7.
Constitution of a stock of CE6 phages
This experiment, which is well known to those skilled in the art, is described by Sambrook et al., op. cit. It consists in infecting 100 .mu.l of the bacterium ED 8739, cultivated in a medium containing 5 g of yeast extract, 10 g of bactotryptone, 5 g of NaCl, 10 mM MgSO.sub.4 and 0.4% of maltose, with phage CE6 so that the suspension is composed of 1 phage per 6 bacteria. This suspension is mixed with 3 ml of a medium called Top Agarhaving the same composition as that indicated above, but complemented with 7 g/l of agar. The mixture, kept at a temperature of 50.degree. C., is plated out on a Petri dish containing the same medium, but complemented with 15 g/l of agar. After incubation overnight at a temperature of 37.degree. C., the gelose is covered with lysis plates containing the phages. The phages are eluted by scraping off the Top Agar and mixing it with 3 ml of MgSO.sub.4 10 mM per Petri dish for 1 h at room temperature. The mixture is then centrifuged for 10 min at 15,000 g and the supernatant, which contains the phages at a concentration of 2.10.sup.10 phages per ml of supernatant, is called the phage stock. The phage stock is kept at a temperature of 4.degree. C.
Expression of the chitinase
The strain RRI/pEMR682 is cultivated in a medium whose composition is identical to that of the medium used to prepare the phage stock, but without agar. After incubation at a temperature of 37.degree. C., with shaking, this culture is diluted 50-fold in the same medium and incubated at a temperature of 37.degree. C. to give a cell density of 10.sup.9 cellsper ml (OD=1). The phages are added to the culture so that the mixture is composed of 10 phages per bacterium. The mixture is incubated for 2 h at atemperature of 42.degree. C. The bacterial residue is then obtained by centrifugation for 10 min at 15,000 g.
d) Analysis of the chitinase produced
Polyacrylamide gel
A bacterial residue derived from a culture of 1 ml which has reached an optical density of 0.2, measured at 600 nm, is suspended in a buffer of the following composition: 0.125 mM Tris-HCl pH 6.8, 4% sodium dodecylsulfate, 20% glycerol, 0.002% bromophenol blue and 10% .beta.-mercaptoethanol. The mixture is immersed for 10 min in boiling water, which makes it possible to lyze the bacteria and solubilize the proteins. The mixture is then subjected to electrophoresis on a 12.5% polyacrylamide gel (Laemmli U.K., 1970, Nature, 227, 680-685) in the presence of a size marker and the purified chitinase of A. album obtained in section 1. After decolorizetion of the gel, which has been stained withCoomassie blue beforehand, an additional band is found to exist for the strain RRI/pEMR682, representing approximately 20% of total proteins relative to the strain RRI/pBR322 used as the control and treated under the same conditions. This band has an apparent molecular weight of the order of 39.+-. 3 kDa, which is slightly less than the apparent molecular weight of the purified chitinase of A. album obtained in section 1.
Immunoblotting
The electrophoresis conditions described in the previous paragraph are maintained. The gel is not stained with Coomassie blue, but the proteins are transferred to a nitrocellulose filter according to the technique described by Towbin et al., 1979, Proc. Ntl. Acad. Sci. USA, 76, 4350-4354, and immunodetection is performed according to the protocol described in section 8.
The blot obtained shows that the additional protein has an apparent molecular weight of about 39.+-.3 kDa, which is slightly less than that ofthe chitinase of A. album isolated in section 1. This protein, which is present in the strain RRI/pEMR682 and absent from the control strain, is recognized by antibodies directed against the chitinase of A. album.
Detection of chitinolytic activity in E. coli
The chitinolytic activity of the extracts of the strain RRI/pEMR682 and that of the control strain are measured by the radiochemical method of Molano et al., summarized in paragraph b1 of section 1. The results, whichare collated in Table II below, show that the strain RRI/pEMR682 has chitinolytic activity, in contrast to the control strain.
TABLE II______________________________________Comparison of the chitinolytic activity of the strainRRI/pEMR682 and the control strain for a protein extract atOD = 1 which contains 10 .mu.g of total proteins (amountmeasured by Bradford's method) Chitinolytic activity (dpm/.mu.g of protein) Control strain Strain RRI/pEMR682______________________________________1st experiment 128 2602nd experiment 145 11503rd experiment 130 4104th experiment 185 6005th experiment 195 5646th experiment 120 583______________________________________
Section 10: Expression of the chitinase of Aphanocladium album in yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) and secretion with the aid of the signal peptide of pheromone .alpha.
a) Construction of plasmid pEMR698, a vector for the expression of the mature chitinase of Aphanocladium album:
Plasmid pEMR583 is described in European patent 0 273 800. In particular, it comprises a fragment of plasmid pBR322 carrying the origin of replication in E. coli and the ampicillin resistance gene, a fragment of plasmid 2.mu. which permits replication in yeast, and the genes complementing the auxotrophy of leucine, as well as an IL-8 expression cassette containing a Ga17-ADH2hybrid promoter, the signal peptide of pheromone .alpha., a sequence coding for mature IL-8 and a terminator.
Plasmid pEMR583 is hydrolyzed with the enzymes HindIII and BamHI and the large HindIII-BamHI fragment is purified; this fragment carries the expression system necessary in yeast. It is assembled and ligated with theAccI-BamHI fragment derived from plasmid pEMR680 described in section 9 andwith a synthetic HindIII-AccI oligonucleotide of the following sequence (Nt2), which reconstitutes the 3' sequence of the prepro-region of pheromone .alpha. of S. cerevisiae missing from the large HindIII-BamHI fragment derived from plasmid pEMR583, and the 5' end of the mature chitinase of A, album missing from the AccI-BamHI fragment: ##STR17##The ligation mixture was used to transform the strain E. coli RRI. Plasmid pEMR698 is obtained.
b) Transformation of the yeast strain EMY761 by plasmid pEMR698, with selection for the prototrophy of leucine
The strain EMY761 is a Mat .alpha., leu2, ura3, his3 and ga1 yeast strain which is derived from the strain GRF18, well known to those skilled in theart (Gerry Fink, MIT, USA), by successive crosses of this strain with a ura3 strain obtained from the strain FL100 (deposited in the ATCC under no. 28 383) and with the strain 20B12 (Mat .alpha., trp1, pep4) described by E. W. Jones, 1987, Genetics, 85, 23. This strain can be obtained by plasmid curing of the strain deposited in the CNCM on December 27, 1990 under no. I 1022.
The transformation technique used is a variant of that described by Beggs et al. (Beggs et al., (1978), Nature, 275, 104-109). It consists in subjecting the yeasts to a protoplastization treatment in the presence of an osmotic stabilizer, namely sorbitol at a concentration of 1M.
The precise transformation protocol is indicated in detail below:
a) 200 ml of liquid YPG medium (cf. Table III below) are inoculated with about 5.times.10.sup.6 cells of a culture in the stationary phase, and theculture inoculated in this way is shaken overnight at 30.degree. C.
b) When the culture reaches about 10.sup.7 cells per milliliter, the cells are centrifuged at 4000 rpm for 5 min and the residue is washed with 1M sorbitol.
c) The cells are suspended in 5 ml of 1M sorbitol solution containing 25 mMEDTA and 50 mM dithiothreitol, and incubated for 10 min at 30.degree. C.
d) The cells are washed once with 10 ml of 1M sorbitol and suspended in 20 ml of sorbitol. Zymolyase-100T (a preparation obtained by partial purification of Arthobacter luteus culture supernatant on an affinity column and containing .beta.-1,3-glucan-laminaripentahydrolase, marketed by SEYKAGAKU KOGYO Co. Ltd) is added to a final concentration of 20 .mu.g/ml and the suspension is incubated at room temperature for about 15 min.
e) The cells are resuspended in 20 ml of a sorbitol-containing medium called YPG sorbitol medium (cf. Table III below) and incubated for 20 min at 30.degree. C., with gentle shaking.
f) The suspension is centrifuged for 3 min at 2500 rpm.
g) The cells are resuspended in 9 ml of transformation buffer (sorbitol 1M,Tris-HCl pH 7.5 10 mM and CaCl.sub.2 10 mM).
h) 0.1 ml of cells and 5 .mu.l of DNA solution (about 5 .mu.g) of plasmid pEMR698 are added and the suspension obtained is left for 10 to 15 min at room temperature.
i) 1 ml of the following solution is added: polyethylene glycol PEG 4000 20%, Tris-HCl pH 7.5 10 mM and CaCl.sub.2 10 mM.
j) 0.1 ml of the suspension obtained in i) is poured into a tube containingleucine-free solid regeneration medium (cf. Table III below) which has beenmelted beforehand and kept liquid at about 45.degree. C. The suspension is poured into a Petri dish containing a solidified layer of 15 ml of leucine-free solid regeneration medium.
k) Step j) is repeated with the remainder of the cell suspension obtained in i).
The transformants start to appear after 3 days.
The retained transformant is called EMY761/pEMR698.
TABLE III
Principal media used in sections 10 and 11 --leucine-free solid medium
6.7 g of yeast nitrogen base without amino acids (from DIFCO)
20 mg of adenine
20 mg of uracil
20 mg of 1-tryptophan
20 mg of 1-histidine
20 mg of 1-arginine
20 mg of 1-methionine
30 mg of 1-tyrosine
30 mg of 1-isoleucine
30 mg of 1-lysine
50 mg of 1-phenylalanine
100 mg of 1-glutamic acid
150 mg of 1-valine
400 mg of 1-leucine
20 g of glucose
20 g of agar
Mix all the ingredients in distilled water. Make up to a final volume of 11with distilled water. Autoclave for 15 min at 120.degree. C. After autoclaving, add 200 mg of 1-threonine and 100 mg of 1-aspartic acid.
leucine-free solid regeneration medium
Use the formulation of the leucine-free solid medium, but mix 30 g of agar instead of 20 and add 182 g of sorbitol to the mixture.
leucine-free liquid medium
Use the formulation of the leucine-free solid medium, but omit the agar. Autoclave for 15 min at 120.degree. C. After autoclaving, add 200 mg of 1-threonine and 100 mg of 1-aspartic acid.
liquid YP medium
10 g of yeast extract (Bacto-yeast extract from DIFCO)
20 g of peptone (Bacto-peptone from DIFCO)
Mix the ingredients in distilled water. Make up to a final volume of 1 l with distilled water. Autoclave for 15 min at 120.degree. C.
liquid YPG medium
Use the formulation of the liquid YP medium and, after autoclaving, add glucose to a concentration of 20 g/l.
YP ethanol/glycerol/galactose medium
Use the formulation of the liquid YP medium. After autoclaving, add 10 ml of 100% ethanol, 30 g of glycerol and 30 g of galactose.
c) Expression of the chitinase of A. album by the strain EMY761/pEMR698
The preliminary cultures are prepared in a medium of the following composition: liquid YP medium 1.4%, glucose 3%, histidine 50 .mu.g/ml and uracil 50 .mu.g/ml. After 24 h, the cultures are centrifuged and the residue is taken up in 40 ml of a medium of the following composition: liquid YP medium 1.4%, ethanol 1%, casamino acids 1%, uracil 100 .mu.g/ml,glycerol 3% and galactose 1%.
d) Analysis of the proteins present in the culture medium
Preparation of the samples
After culture for 24 h, the cells cultivated in c) were centrifuged for 20 min and the supernatant was collected. 5 ml of 50% trichloroacetic acid containing 2 mg/ml of deoxycholate were added to 10 ml of supernatant.
The mixture was left at +4.degree. C. for 30 min and then centrifuged for 30 min. The residue was taken up in about 1 ml of cold acetone (+4.degree.C.) and centrifuged again for 30 min. After drying, the residue is taken upin about 20 .mu.l of a so-called loading buffer consisting of Tris-HCl 0.125M pH 6.8, SDS 4%, bromophenol blue 0.002%, glycerol 20% and .beta.-mercaptoethanol 10% (according to the protocol described by Laemmli(1970)). The residue is solubilized by boiling for 15 min and then neutralized by the addition of 10N sodium hydroxide.
Analysis of the proteins by electrophoresis in denaturing SDS gel is performed according to the method described in section 9 d).
The profile obtained shows an additional wide band which is present in the strain EMY761/pEMR698 and absent from the control strain (non-transformed strain EMY761). This band has a molecular weight of between 39 and 46 kDa.The width of this band probably results from different degrees of glycosylation of the protein, which possesses two potential N-glycosylation sites (cf. FIGS. 1(A) and 1(B)). Western blot shows that this protein is recognized by antibodies directed against the chitinase ofAphanocladium album.
e) Detection of chitinolytic activity in Saccharomyces cerevisiae culture supernatant
The chitinolytic activity of extracts of culture supernatant of the strain EMY761/pEMR698 and the control strain is measured by Molano's radiochemical method (1977, Anal. Biochem., 83, 648-656) summarized in paragraph b1 of section 1.
The results, which are collated in Table IV below, show that the chitinolytic activity of the culture supernatant of the strain transformedby plasmid pEMR698 is greater than that of the culture supernatant of the control strain.
TABLE IV______________________________________Comparison of the chitinolytic activity of the yeast strainEMY761/pEMR698 and the control strain for an extract ofculture supernatant, concentrated by diafiltration, whichcontains 10 .mu.g of total proteins (amount measured accordingto Bradford's method), each value being the average of 4independent measurements Chitinolytic activity (dpm/.mu.g of protein) Control strain Strain EMY761/pEMR698______________________________________experiment 1 156 730experiment 2 270 560experiment 3 120 750______________________________________
Section 11
Expression of the chitinase of A. album in yeast and secretion with the aidof its own signal peptide
a) Construction of plasmid pEMR697, a vector for the expression of the prepro-chitinase of Aphanocladium album
Plasmid pEMR473 is described in European patent application 0 408 461. In particular, it comprises a fragment of plasmid pBR322 carrying the origin of replication in E. coli and the ampicillin resistance gene, a fragment of plasmid 2.mu. which permits replication in yeast, and the genes complementing the auxotrophy of leucine, as well as a cassette for the expression of the urate oxidase of Aspergillus flavus, containing a Ga17-ADH.sub.2 hybrid promoter, a sequence coding for the urate oxidase ofA. flavus and a terminator.
Plasmid pEMR473 is hydrolyzed partially with ClaI and completely with BamHI. The purified large BamHI-ClaI fragment is the whole plasmid from which the gene coding for urate oxidase has been deleted. This fragment isligated in the presence of the synthetic oligonucleotide of sequence (Nt3),which makes it possible to join the non-coding 3' end of the complementary DNA of urate oxidase, the 5' part of the prepro-sequence of the chitinase of A. album and the PstI-BamHI fragment of pEMR680, which carries the 3' part of the coding sequence of the chitinase of A. album. The ligation mixture is used to transform E. coli RRI. The resulting plasmid is pEMR697. ##STR18##
b) Transformation of the yeast strain EMY761 by plasmid pEMR697, with selection for the prototrophy of leucine cf. section 10 b)
The transformant is called EMY761/pEMR697.
c) Culture of the strain EMY761/pEMR697 cf. section 10 c)
d) Analysis of the proteins present in the culture medium 25 cf. section 10d)
e) Detection of chitinolytic activity in Saccharomyces cerevisiae cf. section 10 e)
The results are collated in Table V below.
TABLE V______________________________________Comparison of the chitinolytic activity of the yeast strainEMY761/pEMR697 and the control strain for an extract ofculture supernatant which contains 10 .mu.g of total proteins(amount measured according to Bradford's method) Chitinolytic activity (dpm/.mu.g of protein) Control strain Strain EMY761/pEMR697______________________________________experiment 1 156 624experiment 2 270 2819experiment 3 120 350______________________________________
Section 12
Construction of two vectors for the expression of the chitinase of Aphanocladium album in plant cells
a) Preparation of a gene coding for the mature chitinase of A. album, preceded by a signal peptide
Construction 1: Gene coding for the prepro-chitinase of A. album
The complementary DNA carrying the coding sequence of the prepro-chitinase of A. album was obtained by cleavage of vector pEMR697, described in section 11, with the restriction enzymes ClaI and BamHI. The fragment obtained was purified by electrophoresis on low- melting agarose gel. Thisfragment carries the coding sequence of the complementary DNA of the prepro-chitinase of Aphanocladium album, the initiation ATG being precededby an 11 bp fragment carrying the ClaI site. This fragment was ligated on the one hand at the 5' end with the oligonucleotide of sequence (Nt4) below, carrying a BamHI site at the 5' end and a ClaI site at the 3' end, so as to reconstitute a BamHI site, and on the other hand at the 3' end with the oligonucleotide of sequence (Nt5) below, carrying a sticky site, compatible with the BamHI site, at the 5' end and a SacI site at the 3' end, so as to reconstitute a SacI site. The fragment obtained contains thecoding sequence of the complementary DNA of the preprochitinase of Aphanocladium album, bordered by a BamHI site at the 5' end and a SacI site at the 3' end. These two sites will subsequently permit insertion with a promoter and a terminator.
The sequences of the oligonucleotides used are given below, the restrictionsites being indicated in brackets: ##STR19##The ligation is carried out with the aid of T4 DNA ligase.
Construction 2: Gene coding for the mature chitinase of Aphanocladium album, preceded by the signal peptide of a bean chitinase
The complementary DNA carrying part of the coding sequence of the mature chitinase of Aphanocladium album was obtained from plasmid pEMR680, described in section 9, by partial digestion with the endonucleases AccI and BamHI. The resulting fragment of about 1100 base pairs, which containsthe coding part of the mature chitinase of A. album except for the first 23base pairs, is ligated on the one hand at the 5' end with the oligonucleotide of sequence (Nt6) below, and on the other hand at the 3' end with the oligonucleotide of sequence (Nt5). The oligonucleotide (Nt6) contains a BamHI site at the 5' end, the sequence coding for the signal peptide of a bean chitinase (Broglie K. E. et al., 1986, Proc. Ntl. Acad. Sci. USA, 83, 6820-6824), the first 23 base pairs missing from the mature chitinase of A. album, and an AccI site at the 3' end.
The fragment obtained contains the coding sequence of the mature chitinase of Aphanocladium album, which is fused to the coding sequence of the signal peptide of a 5 bean chitinase, which in turn is bordered by a BamHIsite at the 5' end and a SacI site at the 3' end.
The sequence of the oligonucleotide (Nt6) used is given below (SEQ ID NO:27), the restriction sites being indicated in brackets: ##STR20##Part of the sequence (Nt6) coding for the signal peptide of a bean chitinase (SEQ ID N0:29) as well as the deduced amino acid sequence of said signal peptide (SEQ ID NO:28), shown beneath the nucleotide sequence,are indicated below: ##STR21##
b) Preparation of the promoter sequence comprising the 35S promoter of cauliflower mosaic virus
The HindIII-BamHI fragment of about 900 bp, containing the 35S promoter, isisolated from plasmid pBI121 (Clontech) by cleavage with the endonucleases HindIII and BamHI, followed by electrophoresis on agarose gel. This fragment is cleaved again with HindII. The fragment of about 410 bp, carrying the BamHI site, is treated with T4 DNA ligase in the presence of a HindIII linker (a synthetic sequence containing a HindIII site). After cleavage with the endonuclease HindIII and electrophoresis on agarose gel,the resulting HindIII-BamHI fragment (of about 420 bp) is isolated and purified.
c) Preparation of the terminator sequence comprising the terminator of the nopaline synthase (NOS) of Agrobacterium tumefaciens
A fragment of about 250 bp, containing the terminator of nopaline synthase,was isolated from plasmid pBI121 (Clontech) by cleavage with the restriction enzymes SacI and EcoRI, followed by electrophoresis on agarosegel.
Cloning into binary vector pBIN19
T4 DNA ligase was used to ligate the promoter sequence (cf. section 12 b)),the coding sequence of the complementary DNA of the chitinase of constructions 1 and 2, and the terminator sequence (cf. section 12 c)) into binary vector pBIN19 opened with the endonucleases HindIII and EcoRI.This vector carries two kanamycin resistance genes, one being capable of expression in bacteria and the other, located immediately upstream of the complete recombinant gene (cf. Bevan, 1984, Nucl. Ac. Res., 12, 8711-8721), being capable of transfer to plant cells. The kanamycin resistance gene will be used as a selection marker during the steps for transformation and analysis of the descendants of the transformed plants.
The vector obtained is called plasmid pBR61 if it contains construction 1 and plasmid pBR62 if it contains construction 2. The nucleotide sequence of the complete recombinant gene was verified by sequencing for each of plasmids pBR61 and pBR62. The coding sequence of this gene, bordered by the BamHI and SacI restriction sites, is shown in FIGS. 4(A) and 4(B) for plasmid pBR61 and in FIGS. 5(A) and 5(B) for plasmid pBR62. These plasmidsare cloned into the strain E. coli JM109 (Stratagene).
Section 13
Transfer, into Agrobacterium tumefaciens, of plasmids pBR61 and pBR62 containing a gene coding for the chitinase of Aphanocladium album
a) Transfer into Agrobacterium tumefaciens
This transfer is effected as described below by triparental conjugation between the strain E. coli JM109 (Sambrook et al., op. cit.), containing vector pBR61 or pBR62, and the strain Agrobacterium tumefaciens LBA4404 (Clontech) with the aid of the strain E. coli HB101, containing mobilizingplasmid pRK2013 (D. M. Figurski et al., 1979, Proc. Ntl. Acad. Sci. USA, 76, 1648-1652).
The strain E. coli JM109, containing plasmid pBR61 or pBR62, and a strain E. coli HB101 (Clontech), containing mobilizing plasmid pRK2013, are cultivated at 37.degree. C. in Luria medium (Gibco) in the presence of 25 mg/l of kanamycin.
The strain Agrobacterium tumefaciens LBA4404 is cultivated at 28.degree. C.in Luria medium (Gibco) in the presence of 100 mg/l of rifampicin (it is resistant to this antibiotic); 200 .mu.l of each of the three cultures aremixed, plated out on gelose-containing Luria medium (Gibco) and incubated overnight at 28.degree. C. The bacteria are then resuspended in 5 ml of Luria medium and aliquots are plated out on Petri dishes containing a minimum gelose medium (described in "Plant Molecular Biology Manual", Gelvin et al., Kluwer Academic Press, 1988) in the presence of 100 mg/l ofrifampicin and 25 mg/l of kanamycin. Only those colonies of Agrobacterium tumefaciens which have integrated plasmid pBR61 or pBR62 grow under these conditions (the E. coli strains cannot grow under these conditions). Said colonies contain the recombinant gene of chitinase in a context which permits its replication.
The resistance of the selected colonies to both antibiotics is verified by subculture of the colonies on the same selection medium twice in succession. The presence of the recombinant gene of chitinase in Agrobacterium tumefaciens is verified by the Southern blot method on a total DNA preparation (lysis of the cells, purification of the DNA by extraction with a phenol/ chloroform mixture according to the protocol described by Gelvin in the work cited above, cleavage of the purified DNA with restriction enzymes, electrophoresis on agarose gel, transfer to a membrane and hybridization according to the techniques well known to thoseskilled in the art).
b) Transfer into Agrobacterium rhizogenes
This transfer is effected in the same way as the transfer into Agrobacterium tumefaciens described in a), with the strain Agrobacterium rhizoaenes A4 described by GUERCHE et al., (1987), Mol. Gen. Genet., 206, 382.
Section 14: Production of transformed tobacco plants
The tobacco Nicotiana tabacum, cultivated in vitro, was infected with Agrobacterium tumefaciens, containing plasmid pBR61 or pBR62, according tothe procedure of Horsch et al., which is well known to those skilled in theart (Horsch R. B. et al., 1985, Science, 227, 1229-1231) and the principal steps of which are explained below.
Discs of leaves of axenic plants of the tobacco N. tabacum (Wisconsin Havana 38 variety sensitive to pathogenic fungi) are incubated in a culture of A. tumefaciens containing plasmid pBR61 or pBR62. The discs, drained on Whatman paper, were transferred to culture media in Petri dishes so as to multiply the transformed cells to give calluses, and subsequently regenerated plants.
Section 15: Detection of the expression of the chitinase of A. album in thetransformed tobacco calluses and plant leaves
a) Preparation of the crude protein extracts of transformed tobacco
The tissue fragments (calluses or plant leaves) were frozen in liquid nitrogen, reduced to powder and stored at -20.degree. C. The powder was extracted at 4.degree. C. in the presence of a 0.1M ammonium acetate buffer of pH 5.2 and centrifuged at 10,000 g. The total protein concentration was determined on the supernatants, hereafter called the crude protein extracts, according to Bradford's technique (Bradford M. M.,1976, Anal. Biochem., 72, 248-254).
b) Detection of the recombinant chitinase by immunoblotting (Western blot)
The crude protein extracts of different transformed calluses (or plant leaves) and non-transformed calluses (or plant leaves) (controls) are subjected to a Western blot, a technique well known to those skilled in the art and described in particular by H. Towbin et al., Proc. Ntl. Acad. Sci. USA, 76, 1979, 4350-4354, which comprises the following steps:
denaturation by heating at 100.degree. for 10 min in a buffer, called a loading buffer, consisting of Tris- HCl 0.125M pH 6.8, SDS 4%, bromophenolblue 0.002%, glycerol 20% and .beta.-mercaptoethanol 10% (according to the protocol described by Laemmli, U.K. Laemmli, Nature, 227, 1970, 680-685);
electrophoretic separation of the different proteins contained in the solubilizate according to the protocol described by Laemmli (op. cit.);
electrotransfer of said proteins contained in the gel to a PVDF membrane (according to the technique of H. Towbin et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 76, 1979, 4350-4354).
Immunodetection is effected according to a protocol which comprises the following steps:
saturation of the PVDF membrane to which the proteins have been transferredby incubation for at least 2 h at 37.degree. C. in a 3% solution of gelatin;
3 washes in phosphate buffered saline containing 0.05% of Tween 20 detergent;
incubation (for 1 h at 37.degree. C.) in the presence of the previously prepared immune serum (containing the polyclonal antibodies recognizing the recombinant protein) diluted to 1/10,000 in phosphate buffered saline;
3 washes in phosphate buffered saline containing 0.05% of Tween 20 detergent.
The antigen-antibody complex is then developed with the aid of a streptavidin-biotin system conjugated with alkaline phosphatase using the RPN 23 kit from Amersham ("Blotting detection kit") in accordance with themanufacturer's instructions.
The blot obtained shows the presence of a protein with an apparent molecular weight of about 41.+-.3 kDa for the tobacco calluses and plant leaves transformed by each of plasmids pBR61 and pBR62, which is absent from the control calluses and plant leaves. This protein has the same apparent molecular weight as the purified chitinase of A. album obtained in section 1.
c) Detection of the chitinolytic activity of the recombinant chitinase
The chitinolytic activity of the 5 crude protein extracts of tobacco calluses and plant leaves transformed by each of plasmids pBR61 and pBR62 and 5 crude protein extracts of non-transformed tobacco calluses and plantleaves is measured according to the radiochemical method of Molano et al., described in section 1 b1. In view of the endogenous chitinolytic activity, a simple means of showing the chitinolytic activity of the recombinant chitinase is specifically to inactivate the latter with antibodies and observe the drop in total chitinolytic activity of the extracts.
10 .mu.l of these crude extracts are brought into contact, for 5 min at room temperature, with 1 .mu.l of the polyclonal antibodies directed against the chitinase of A. album (prepared in section 1 c)). The chitinolytic activity of these crude extract/antibodies mixtures is also measured by the radiochemical method of Molano et al. (section 1 b)).
The chitinolytic activity of the crude protein extracts of tobacco callusesand plant leaves transformed by each of plasmids pBR61 and pBR62 is significantly higher than that of the extracts of the control calluses andplant leaves. After incubation in the presence of antibodies against the chitinase of A. album, the activity of the extracts of tobacco calluses and plant leaves transformed by each of plasmids pBR61 and pBR62 decreases, whereas that of the extracts of the control calluses and plant leaves is not affected.
The recombinant chitinase of A. album expressed in tobacco therefore possesses chitinolytic activity.
d) Purification of the recombinant chitinase and determination of its amino-terminal sequence
d1) Purification of the recombinant chitinase
The recombinant protein was purified from the crude protein extracts of tobacco plant leaves transformed by each of plasmids pBR61 and pBR62 by precipitation with ammonium sulphate and then liquid chromatography according to Pharmacias's FPLC technique on a cation exchange column basedon synthetic polymer on a crosslinked agarose according to the protocol described below:
Protocol for the purification of the recombinant chitinase step 1
The protein extract is precipitated with ammonium sulphate (60% saturation). The proteins which have precipitated are recovered by centrifugation (15,000 g for 30 min) and subsequently solubilized in a buffer solution (100 mM ammonium acetate, pH 5.2) and dialyzed overnight at 4.degree. C. against a 100mM ammonium acetate buffer solution of pH 5.2.
Immediately before proceeding, the concentration of the buffer solution of the protein extract is brought to 10mM by passage through ready-to-use minicolumns (Pharmacia PD10).
step 2
The protein extract is then purified by chromatography on an ion exchange column based on synthetic polymer (Mono S column from Pharmacia) accordingto Pharmacia's FPLC technique.
The extract is deposited on the Mono S column equilibrated with a 10mM ammonium acetate buffer solution of pH 5.2. The proteins retained on the column are eluted by a linear gradient of 10 to 500 mM ammonium acetate.
At each step the chitinase is identified by its molecular weight (electrophoresis on a polyacrylamide gel in the presence of SDS-developingwith silver), its immunoblot (cf. section 8b), and its activity which is measured by the radiochemical method described in section 1.b1.
d2) Determination test of the amino-terminal sequence of the recombinant chitinase
After purification of the recombinant chitinase according to the protocol described above, sequencing of the amino-terminal end was carried out. Thesamples to be treated are placed on the surface of a PVDF (Polyvinylidenedifluoride) filter by electrotransfer according to the method described by H. Towbin et al., Proc. Natl.Acad. Sci. USA (1979), 4350-4354 after electrophoresis on a polyacrylamide gel in the presence ofSDS. The filter is introduced into a protein sequencer (model 470 A, marketed by Applied Biosystems, USA) equipped with a chromatograph (model 430 from Applied Biosystems), which continuously analyzes the phenylthiohydantoic derivatives formed after each degradation cycle.
The following amino-terminal sequence (amino acids 1-12 of SEQ ID NO:1) is obtained for the recombinant protein obtained from the tobacco leaves transformed by each of plasmids pBR61 and pBR62: ##STR22##Cleavage of the signal peptide therefore occurs at the expected site.
Section 16: Production of transformed colza plants
Transformation is effected according to the protocol of P. Guerche et al. (P. Guerche et al., 1987, Mol. Gen. Genet., 206, 382). The different culture media are those described by Pelletier et al. (Pelletier et al., 1983,Mol. Gen. Genet., 191-244). Their composition will be explained below(Table VI).
a) Production of transformed roots
Stem segments are taken from the apical end of colza plants (Brassica napus: spring varieties Brutor, Westar and winter varieties) of about 1 m in height. These segments are sterilized on the surface, rinsed in sterilewater, cut into segments of about 1.5 cm in length and placed in a tube containing medium A.
The end of this segment is inoculated by the deposition of a suspension of the Agrobacterium rhizogenes strain containing plasmid pBR61 or pBR62.
Transformed roots appear on the stem segment after 1 to 2 weeks; they are removed and placed on medium B containing gelose (15 g/l) and complementedwith 500 .mu.g of cefotaxim/ml.
b) Regeneration of transformed plants
Root fragments are incubated for 15 days on medium D containing 3 mg/l of 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid and are then placed on RCC medium for inducing buds. Rooted plants are then obtained by transfer of the buds to media F and G (Table VI below).
TABLE VI______________________________________Composition of the different media used to obtaintransformed colza plants MediumComposition (mg/l) A B RCC F G______________________________________NH.sub.4 NO.sub.3 1650 1650 1650 825KNO.sub.3 1900 2500 1900 1900 950(NH.sub.4).sub.2 SO.sub.4 134NaH.sub.2 PO.sub.4 150KH.sub.2 PO.sub.4 170 170 170 85CaCl.sub.2.2H.sub.2 O 440 750 440 440 220MgSO.sub.4.7H.sub.2 O 370 250 370 370 185H.sub.3 BO.sub.3 12.4 3 12.4 6.2 6.2MnSO.sub.4.4H.sub.2 O 33.6 10 33.6 22.3 22.3ZnSO.sub.4.7H.sub.2 O 21 2 21 8.6 8.6KI 1.66 0.75 1.66 0.83 0.83Na.sub.2 MoO.sub.4.2H.sub.2 O 0.5 0.25 0.5 0.25 0.25CuSO.sub.4.5H.sub.2 O 0.05 0.025 0.05 0.25 0.25CoCl.sub.2.6H.sub.2 O 0.05 0.025 0.05 0.25 0.25FeSO.sub.4.7H.sub.2 O 22.24 27.8 27.8 27.8 22.24Na.sub.2 EDTA 29.84 37.3 37.3 37.3 29.84Inositol 100 100 100 100 100Nicotinic acid 0.5 1 0.5 1 0.5Pyroxidine.HCl 0.5 1 0.5 1 0.5Thiamine 10 10Glycine 2 2 2Glucose 10,000 20,000 10,000Sucrose 10,000 10,000 10,000D-Mannitol 70,000 10,000NAA 1 1 0.1 0.1BAP 1 0.5 0.52,4-D 0.25Adenine sulfateIPA 0.5GA.sub.3 0.02Tween 80 10Agar 8000 8000 8000 8000pH 5.8 5.8 5.8 5.8 5.8Gentamycin (sulfate) 10______________________________________NAA = naphthaleneacetic acidBAP = 6benzylaminopurine2,4D = 2,4dichlorophenoxyacetic acidIPA = N.sup.6(.DELTA..sup.2isopentenyl)adenineGA.sub.3 = gibberellic acidEDTA = ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid
Section 17: Detection of the expression of the chitinase of A. album in transformed colza roots
a) Preparation of the crude protein extracts of transformed colza roots
The extracts are prepared as indicated in section 15 a).
b) Detection of the recombinant chitinase by immunoblotting (Western blot)
The protocol adopted is that described previously in section 15 b).
The blot obtained shows a protein with an apparent molecular weight of about 41.+-.3 kDa, which is present in the roots transformed by plasmid pBR61 or plasmid pBR62 and absent from the extracts of non- transformed roots used as the control. This protein has the same apparent molecular weight as the purified natural chitinase of A. album obtained in section 1.
__________________________________________________________________________SEQUENCE LISTING(1) GENERAL INFORMATION:(iii) NUMBER OF SEQUENCES: 29(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:1:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 389 amino acids(B) TYPE: amino acid(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: protein(vii) IMMEDIATE SOURCE:(B) CLONE: protein having endochitinase activity(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:1:GlySerGlyPheAlaAsnAlaValTyrPheThrAsnTrpGlyIleTyr151015GlyArgAsnPheGlnProAlaAspLeuProAlaSerGluIleThrHis 202530ValLeuTyrSerPheMetAsnValArgAlaAspGlyThrIlePheSer354045GlyAspThrTyrAlaAspTy rGluLysHisTyrAlaGlyAspSerTrp505560AsnAspValGlyThrAsnAlaTyrGlyCysValLysGlnLeuTyrLeu657075 80LeuLysLysGlnAsnArgAsnMetLysValMetLeuSerIleGlyGly859095TrpThrTrpSerThrAsnPheProAlaAlaAlaSerSerAla AlaThr100105110ArgLysThrPheAlaGlnSerAlaValGlyPheMetLysAspTrpGly115120125PheAspGlyIl eAspIleAspTrpGluTyrProAlaAspAlaThrGln130135140AlaGlnAsnMetValLeuLeuLeuGlnAlaValArgSerGluLeuAsp145150 155160SerTyrAlaAlaGlnTyrAlaLysGlyHisHisPheLeuLeuSerIle165170175AlaAlaProAlaGlyProAspAsnTyrAsnL ysLeuLysPheAlaGlu180185190LeuGlyLysValLeuAspTyrIleAsnLeuMetAlaTyrAspTyrAla195200205 GlySerTrpSerAsnTyrThrGlyHisAspAlaAsnIleTyrAlaAsn210215220ProGlnAsnProAsnAlaThrProTyrAsnThrAspAspAlaValGln225 230235240AlaTyrIleAsnGlyGlyValProAlaAsnLysIleValLeuGlyMet245250255ProIleTyrGlyArgSerPh eGlnGlnThrGluGlyIleGlyLysPro260265270TyrAsnGlyIleGlySerGlySerTrpGluAsnGlyIleTrpAspTyr275280 285LysAlaLeuProLysAlaGlyAlaThrValLysCysAspAspThrAla290295300LysGlyCysTyrSerTyrAspProSerThrLysGluLeuIleSerPhe305 310315320AspThrProAlaMetIleSerThrLysValSerTrpLeuLysGlyLys325330335GlyLeuGly GlySerMetPheTrpGluAlaSerAlaAspLysLysGly340345350SerAspSerLeuIleSerThrSerHisGlnGlyLeuGlySerGlnAsp355 360365SerThrGlnAsnTyrLeuAspTyrProAsnSerLysTyrAspAsnIle370375380LysLysGlyMetAsn385(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:2:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: (A) LENGTH: 89 amino acids(B) TYPE: amino acid(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: peptide(vii) IMMEDIATE SOURCE:(B) CLONE: signal peptide of preproendothiapepsin(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:2:MetSerSerProLeuLysAsnAlaLeuValThrAlaMetLeuAlaGly15 1015GlyAlaLeuSerSerProThrLysGlnHisValGlyIleProValAsn202530AlaSerProGluValGlyProGlyLysT yrSerPheLysGlnValArg354045AsnProAsnTyrLysPheAsnGlyProLeuSerValLysLysThrTyr505560LeuL ysTyrGlyValProIleProAlaTrpLeuGluAspAlaValGln65707580AsnSerThrSerGlyLeuAlaGluArg85(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:3: (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 24 amino acids(B) TYPE: amino acid(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: peptide(vii) IMMEDIATE SOURCE:(B) CLONE: signal peptide(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:3:MetArgArgThrSerLysLeuThrThrPheSerLeuLeuPheSerLeu1 51015ValLeuLeuSerAlaAlaLeuAla20(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:4:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 22 amino acids(B) TYPE: amino acid(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: peptide(vii) IMMEDIATE SOURCE:(B) CLONE: signal peptide(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:4:MetLeuSerPheValLysLysSerIleAlaLeuValAlaAlaLeuGln151015AlaValThrAlaLeuAla 20(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:5:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 12 amino acids(B) TYPE: amino acid(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: peptide(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:5:ThrProIleSerSerGluAlaGlyValGluLysArg15 10(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:6:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 1167 base pairs(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: single(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA(vii) IMMEDIATE SOURCE:(B) CLONE: sequence coding for SEQ ID NO: 1(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:6:GGTAGTGGTTTTGCAAATGCCGTCTACTTC ACCAACTGGGGCATTTATGGCCGCAACTTC60CAGCCTGCCGACCTTCCTGCCTCGGAGATTACTCACGTACTCTACTCCTTCATGAATGTC120CGCGCAGATGGCACCATCTTTTCCGGTGATACCTATGCCGACTACGAGAAGCACTACGCT180GGTGACT CTTGGAACGATGTGGGCACGAACGCTTACGGTTGTGTTAAGCAACTTTATCTT240CTCAAGAAGCAGAACCGCAACATGAAGGTGATGCTGTCGATTGGTGGTTGGACATGGTCT300ACCAACTTCCCCGCTGCCGCCAGCTCGGCTGCTACCCGAAAGACTTTTGCTC AGTCTGCT360GTTGGCTTCATGAAGGACTGGGGTTTCGACGGTATTGATATCGACTGGGAGTACCCCGCC420GATGCCACTCAGGCTCAGAATATGGTTCTCTTGCTACAGGCTGTCCGCAGTGAGCTCGAC480TCCTACGCTGCCCAGTACGCCAAGGGTCAC CACTTCCTGCTTTCAATTGCCGCCCCTGCT540GGACCTGACAATTATAACAAGCTGAAGTTTGCTGAGCTTGGCAAGGTTCTCGATTACATT600AACCTCATGGCTTACGATTACGCTGGATCTTGGAGCAACTACACTGGCCACGATGCCAAC660ATATACG CAAACCCGCAGAACCCCAACGCCACCCCTTACAACACGGACGATGCTGTCCAG720GCCTATATCAACGGCGGCGTCCCTGCCAACAAGATCGTCCTTGGTATGCCAATCTACGGC780CGATCCTTCCAGCAAACCGAGGGTATCGGTAAGCCTTACAATGGTATTGGCT CTGGTAGC840TGGGAGAACGGTATCTGGGACTACAAGGCTCTCCCCAAGGCTGGTGCCACCGTCAAGTGC900GACGATACCGCCAAGGGATGCTACAGCTACGATCCAAGCACTAAGGAGCTTATTTCTTTC960GATACGCCGGCTATGATCAGCACCAAAGTT AGCTGGCTCAAGGGCAAGGGCCTTGGCGGC1020AGCATGTTCTGGGAGGCTTCTGCCGACAAGAAGGGCTCGGACTCTCTTATTAGCACCAGC1080CACCAAGGTCTCGGTAGCCAGGACAGCACTCAGAACTACCTCGACTACCCTAACTCCAAG1140TACGACA ACATCAAGAAGGGCATGAAC1167(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:7:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 66 base pairs(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: single(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA(vii) IMMEDIATE SOURCE: (B) CLONE: sequence coding for SEQ ID NO: 4(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:7:ATGTTGAGCTTTGTCAAAAAGTCGATCGCCTTGGTGGCGGCCCTGCAGGCGGTCACTGCC60CTGGCC66(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:8:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 36 base pairs(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: single(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA(vii) IMMEDIATE SOURCE:(B) CLONE: sequence coding for SEQ ID NO: 5(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:8:ACGCCAATCTCCAGTGAAGCTGGTGTTGAGAAGCGC 36(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:9:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 1405 base pairs(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: single(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA(ix) FEATURE:(A) NAME/KEY: sigpeptide(B) LOCATION: 97..198(ix) FEATURE:(A) NAME/KEY: matpeptide (B) LOCATION: 199..1365(ix) FEATURE:(A) NAME/KEY: CDS(B) LOCATION: 97..1365(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:9:AGCAACTCAATAGGTACAAGCCTAACAGCATAGCTCCCTCTAGAGTCAGCACGCCGAATC60AGTTGATTCTCTACAACCTTCTGTACCTCAACTACTATG TTGAGCTTTGTCAAA114MetLeuSerPheValLys34-30AAGTCGATCGCCTTGGTGGCGGCCCTGCAGGCG GTCACTGCCCTGGCC162LysSerIleAlaLeuValAlaAlaLeuGlnAlaValThrAlaLeuAla25-20- 15ACGCCAATCTCCAGTGAAGCTGGTGTTGAGAAGC GCGGTAGTGGTTTT210ThrProIleSerSerGluAlaGlyValGluLysArgGlySerGlyPhe10-51GCAAATGCCGTCTACTTCACCAACTGGGGCATTTATGGC CGCAACTTC258AlaAsnAlaValTyrPheThrAsnTrpGlyIleTyrGlyArgAsnPhe5101520CAGCCTGCCGACCTTCCTGCCTCGGAGATTACTCAC GTACTCTACTCC306GlnProAlaAspLeuProAlaSerGluIleThrHisValLeuTyrSer253035TTCATGAATGTCCGCGCAGATGGCACCATCTTTTC CGGTGATACCTAT354PheMetAsnValArgAlaAspGlyThrIlePheSerGlyAspThrTyr404550GCCGACTACGAGAAGCACTACGCTGGTGACTCTTGGA ACGATGTGGGC402AlaAspTyrGluLysHisTyrAlaGlyAspSerTrpAsnAspValGly556065ACGAACGCTTACGGTTGTGTTAAGCAACTTTATCTTCTCAAG AAGCAG450ThrAsnAlaTyrGlyCysValLysGlnLeuTyrLeuLeuLysLysGln707580AACCGCAACATGAAGGTGATGCTGTCGATTGGTGGTTGGACATGGTCT 498AsnArgAsnMetLysValMetLeuSerIleGlyGlyTrpThrTrpSer859095100ACCAACTTCCCCGCTGCCGCCAGCTCGGCTGCTACCCGAAAGACTTT T546ThrAsnPheProAlaAlaAlaSerSerAlaAlaThrArgLysThrPhe105110115GCTCAGTCTGCTGTTGGCTTCATGAAGGACTGGGGTTTCGACGGTA TT594AlaGlnSerAlaValGlyPheMetLysAspTrpGlyPheAspGlyIle120125130GATATCGACTGGGAGTACCCCGCCGATGCCACTCAGGCTCAGAATATG 642AspIleAspTrpGluTyrProAlaAspAlaThrGlnAlaGlnAsnMet135140145GTTCTCTTGCTACAGGCTGTCCGCAGTGAGCTCGACTCCTACGCTGCC69 0ValLeuLeuLeuGlnAlaValArgSerGluLeuAspSerTyrAlaAla150155160CAGTACGCCAAGGGTCACCACTTCCTGCTTTCAATTGCCGCCCCTGCT738GlnTyr AlaLysGlyHisHisPheLeuLeuSerIleAlaAlaProAla165170175180GGACCTGACAATTATAACAAGCTGAAGTTTGCTGAGCTTGGCAAGGTT786Gly ProAspAsnTyrAsnLysLeuLysPheAlaGluLeuGlyLysVal185190195CTCGATTACATTAACCTCATGGCTTACGATTACGCTGGATCTTGGAGC834Le uAspTyrIleAsnLeuMetAlaTyrAspTyrAlaGlySerTrpSer200205210AACTACACTGGCCACGATGCCAACATATACGCAAACCCGCAGAACCCC882AsnT yrThrGlyHisAspAlaAsnIleTyrAlaAsnProGlnAsnPro215220225AACGCCACCCCTTACAACACGGACGATGCTGTCCAGGCCTATATCAAC930AsnAlaThr ProTyrAsnThrAspAspAlaValGlnAlaTyrIleAsn230235240GGCGGCGTCCCTGCCAACAAGATCGTCCTTGGTATGCCAATCTACGGC978GlyGlyValProAlaAsn LysIleValLeuGlyMetProIleTyrGly245250255260CGATCCTTCCAGCAAACCGAGGGTATCGGTAAGCCTTACAATGGTATT1026ArgSerPheGlnGl nThrGluGlyIleGlyLysProTyrAsnGlyIle265270275GGCTCTGGTAGCTGGGAGAACGGTATCTGGGACTACAAGGCTCTCCCC1074GlySerGlySerT rpGluAsnGlyIleTrpAspTyrLysAlaLeuPro280285290AAGGCTGGTGCCACCGTCAAGTGCGACGATACCGCCAAGGGATGCTAC1122LysAlaGlyAlaThr ValLysCysAspAspThrAlaLysGlyCysTyr295300305AGCTACGATCCAAGCACTAAGGAGCTTATTTCTTTCGATACGCCGGCT1170SerTyrAspProSerThrLys GluLeuIleSerPheAspThrProAla310315320ATGATCAGCACCAAAGTTAGCTGGCTCAAGGGCAAGGGCCTTGGCGGC1218MetIleSerThrLysValSerTrpLeuLy sGlyLysGlyLeuGlyGly325330335340AGCATGTTCTGGGAGGCTTCTGCCGACAAGAAGGGCTCGGACTCTCTT1266SerMetPheTrpGluAlaSerAlaA spLysLysGlySerAspSerLeu345350355ATTAGCACCAGCCACCAAGGTCTCGGTAGCCAGGACAGCACTCAGAAC1314IleSerThrSerHisGlnGlyLeu GlySerGlnAspSerThrGlnAsn360365370TACCTCGACTACCCTAACTCCAAGTACGACAACATCAAGAAGGGCATG1362TyrLeuAspTyrProAsnSerLysTyr AspAsnIleLysLysGlyMet375380385AACTAAGCAGTCGGTGTTTGCATAGCTTGATTGATGCTCGAGG1405Asn(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:10:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A ) LENGTH: 423 amino acids(B) TYPE: amino acid(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: protein(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:10:MetLeuSerPheValLysLysSerIleAlaLeuValAlaAlaLeuGln34- 30-25-20 AlaValThrAlaLeuAlaThrProIleSerSerGluAlaGlyValGlu15-10-5LysArgGlySerGlyPheAlaAsnAlaValTyrPheThrAsnTrpGly1 510IleTyrGlyArgAsnPheGlnProAlaAspLeuProAlaSerGluIle15202530ThrHisValLeuTyrSerPheMe tAsnValArgAlaAspGlyThrIle354045PheSerGlyAspThrTyrAlaAspTyrGluLysHisTyrAlaGlyAsp5055 60SerTrpAsnAspValGlyThrAsnAlaTyrGlyCysValLysGlnLeu657075TyrLeuLeuLysLysGlnAsnArgAsnMetLysValMetLeuSerI le808590GlyGlyTrpThrTrpSerThrAsnPheProAlaAlaAlaSerSerAla95100105110AlaThrArgLys ThrPheAlaGlnSerAlaValGlyPheMetLysAsp115120125TrpGlyPheAspGlyIleAspIleAspTrpGluTyrProAlaAspAla130 135140ThrGlnAlaGlnAsnMetValLeuLeuLeuGlnAlaValArgSerGlu145150155LeuAspSerTyrAlaAlaGlnTyrAlaLysGlyHi sHisPheLeuLeu160165170SerIleAlaAlaProAlaGlyProAspAsnTyrAsnLysLeuLysPhe175180185190 AlaGluLeuGlyLysValLeuAspTyrIleAsnLeuMetAlaTyrAsp195200205TyrAlaGlySerTrpSerAsnTyrThrGlyHisAspAlaAsnIleTyr 210215220AlaAsnProGlnAsnProAsnAlaThrProTyrAsnThrAspAspAla225230235ValGlnAlaTyrIleAsnGlyGly ValProAlaAsnLysIleValLeu240245250GlyMetProIleTyrGlyArgSerPheGlnGlnThrGluGlyIleGly255260265 270LysProTyrAsnGlyIleGlySerGlySerTrpGluAsnGlyIleTrp275280285AspTyrLysAlaLeuProLysAlaGlyAlaThrValLysCysAs pAsp290295300ThrAlaLysGlyCysTyrSerTyrAspProSerThrLysGluLeuIle305310315SerPheAspThr ProAlaMetIleSerThrLysValSerTrpLeuLys320325330GlyLysGlyLeuGlyGlySerMetPheTrpGluAlaSerAlaAspLys335340 345350LysGlySerAspSerLeuIleSerThrSerHisGlnGlyLeuGlySer355360365GlnAspSerThrGlnAsnTyrLeuAspTyrPro AsnSerLysTyrAsp370375380AsnIleLysLysGlyMetAsn385(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:11:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 1701 base pairs(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: single (D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: DNA (genomic)(ix) FEATURE:(A) NAME/KEY: intron(B) LOCATION: 266..320(D) OTHER INFORMATION: /number=1(ix) FEATURE:(A) NAME/KEY: intron(B) LOCATION: 420..472(D) OTHER INFORMATION: /number=2(ix) FEATURE:(A) NAME/KEY: intron (B) LOCATION: 523..571(D) OTHER INFORMATION: /number=3(ix) FEATURE:(A) NAME/KEY: CDS(B) LOCATION: join(126..265, 321..419, 473..522, 572..1551)(ix) FEATURE:(A) NAME/KEY: sigpeptide(B) LOCATION: 126..227(ix) FEATURE:(A) NAME/KEY: matpeptide(B) LOCATION: join(228..265, 321..419, 473..522, 572..1551)(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:11:TCGGCCTCTC TCAACTCTTCTCTATCAGCAGCAACTCAATAGGTACAAGCCTAACAGCAT60AGCTCCCTCTAGAGTCAGCACGCCGAATCAGTTGATTCTCTACAACCTTCTGTACCTCAA120CTACTATGTTGAGCTTTGTCAAAAAGTCGATCGCCTTGGTGGCGGCC 167MetLeuSerPheValLysLysSerIleAlaLeuValAlaAla34-30-25CTGCAGGCGGTCACTGCCCTGGCCACGCCAATCTCCAGTGAAGCTGGT215Le uGlnAlaValThrAlaLeuAlaThrProIleSerSerGluAlaGly20-15-10- 5GTTGAGAAGCGCGGTAGTGGTTTTGCAAATGCCGTCTACTTCACCAACTG2 65ValGluLysArgGlySerGlyPheAlaAsnAlaValTyrPheThrAsnTrp1510GTTTGTGCATCCTCATCTTGTTATCTCTTGTTCGTAATAGTTAACGAATGTTTAGG 321GGCATTTATGGCCGCAACTTCCAGCCTGCCGACCTTCCTGCCTCGGAG369GlyIleTyrGlyArgAsnPheGlnProAlaAspLeuProAlaSerGlu152025ATTA CTCACGTACTCTACTCCTTCATGAATGTCCGCGCAGATGGCACCAT419IleThrHisValLeuTyrSerPheMetAsnValArgAlaAspGlyThrIle3035404 5GTGAGTGATGGAGTTCCTAGATCTTGTGCCGCATTTTCTGACAAAGCAACTAGCTTT476PheTCCGGTGATACCTATGCCGACTACGAGAAGCACTACGCTGGT GACT522SerGlyAspThrTyrAlaAspTyrGluLysHisTyrAlaGlyAsp505560GTGAGAATCTCTACATTTCTTTTGGCAAAAAGAAGAAACTAACAATTAGCTTGG 576SerTrpAACGATGTGGGCACGAACGCTTACGGTTGTGTTAAGCAACTTTATCTT624AsnAspValGlyThrAsnAlaTyrGlyCysValLysGlnLe uTyrLeu65707580CTCAAGAAGCAGAACCGCAACATGAAGGTGATGCTGTCGATTGGTGGT672LeuLysLysGlnAsnArgAsnMetLysValMetLeuS erIleGlyGly859095TGGACATGGTCTACCAACTTCCCCGCTGCCGCCAGCTCGGCTGCTACC720TrpThrTrpSerThrAsnPheProAlaAlaAlaSer SerAlaAlaThr100105110CGAAAGACTTTTGCTCAGTCTGCTGTTGGCTTCATGAAGGACTGGGGT768ArgLysThrPheAlaGlnSerAlaValGlyPheMetLys AspTrpGly115120125TTCGACGGTATTGATATCGACTGGGAGTACCCCGCCGATGCCACTCAG816PheAspGlyIleAspIleAspTrpGluTyrProAlaAspAlaTh rGln130135140GCTCAGAATATGGTTCTCTTGCTACAGGCTGTCCGCAGTGAGCTCGAC864AlaGlnAsnMetValLeuLeuLeuGlnAlaValArgSerGluLeuAsp145 150155160TCCTACGCTGCCCAGTACGCCAAGGGTCACCACTTCCTGCTTTCAATT912SerTyrAlaAlaGlnTyrAlaLysGlyHisHisPheLeuLeuSerIle 165170175GCCGCCCCTGCTGGACCTGACAATTATAACAAGCTGAAGTTTGCTGAG960AlaAlaProAlaGlyProAspAsnTyrAsnLysLeuLysPheAlaGlu180185190CTTGGCAAGGTTCTCGATTACATTAACCTCATGGCTTACGATTACGCT1008LeuGlyLysValLeuAspTyrIleAsnLeuMetAlaTyrAspTyrAla 195200205GGATCTTGGAGCAACTACACTGGCCACGATGCCAACATATACGCAAAC1056GlySerTrpSerAsnTyrThrGlyHisAspAlaAsnIleTyrAlaAsn210 215220CCGCAGAACCCCAACGCCACCCCTTACAACACGGACGATGCTGTCCAG1104ProGlnAsnProAsnAlaThrProTyrAsnThrAspAspAlaValGln225 230235240GCCTATATCAACGGCGGCGTCCCTGCCAACAAGATCGTCCTTGGTATG1152AlaTyrIleAsnGlyGlyValProAlaAsnLysIleValLeuGlyMet 245250255CCAATCTACGGCCGATCCTTCCAGCAAACCGAGGGTATCGGTAAGCCT1200ProIleTyrGlyArgSerPheGlnGlnThrGluGlyIleGlyLysPro2 60265270TACAATGGTATTGGCTCTGGTAGCTGGGAGAACGGTATCTGGGACTAC1248TyrAsnGlyIleGlySerGlySerTrpGluAsnGlyIleTrpAspTyr275 280285AAGGCTCTCCCCAAGGCTGGTGCCACCGTCAAGTGCGACGATACCGCC1296LysAlaLeuProLysAlaGlyAlaThrValLysCysAspAspThrAla290 295300AAGGGATGCTACAGCTACGATCCAAGCACTAAGGAGCTTATTTCTTTC1344LysGlyCysTyrSerTyrAspProSerThrLysGluLeuIleSerPhe305310 315320GATACGCCGGCTATGATCAGCACCAAAGTTAGCTGGCTCAAGGGCAAG1392AspThrProAlaMetIleSerThrLysValSerTrpLeuLysGlyLys325 330335GGCCTTGGCGGCAGCATGTTCTGGGAGGCTTCTGCCGACAAGAAGGGC1440GlyLeuGlyGlySerMetPheTrpGluAlaSerAlaAspLysLysGly340 345350TCGGACTCTCTTATTAGCACCAGCCACCAAGGTCTCGGTAGCCAGGAC1488SerAspSerLeuIleSerThrSerHisGlnGlyLeuGlySerGlnAsp355360 365AGCACTCAGAACTACCTCGACTACCCTAACTCCAAGTACGACAACATC1536SerThrGlnAsnTyrLeuAspTyrProAsnSerLysTyrAspAsnIle370375 380AAGAAGGGCATGAACTAAGCAGTCGGTGTTTGCATAGCTTGATTGATGCTCGAGG1591LysLysGlyMetAsn385TTGGATGTGGTCCGCGCTGTATATATTTCCAAACCAGCCTTACCCTGAGGCTTATCAAGT1651CATTCTATACT TTCAACGTACATATTATTGCTGCCATTGGCATGCAAATA1701(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:12:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 423 amino acids(B) TYPE: amino acid(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: protein(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:12:MetLeuSerPheValLysLys SerIleAlaLeuValAlaAlaLeuGln34- 30-25-20AlaValThrAlaLeuAlaThrProIleSerSerGluAlaGlyValGlu15-10 -5LysArgGlySerGlyPheAlaAsnAlaValTyrPheThrAsnTrpGly1510IleTyrGlyArgAsnPheGlnProAlaAspLeuProAlaSerGluIl e15202530ThrHisValLeuTyrSerPheMetAsnValArgAlaAspGlyThrIle354045Phe SerGlyAspThrTyrAlaAspTyrGluLysHisTyrAlaGlyAsp505560SerTrpAsnAspValGlyThrAsnAlaTyrGlyCysValLysGlnLeu65 7075TyrLeuLeuLysLysGlnAsnArgAsnMetLysValMetLeuSerIle808590GlyGlyTrpThrTrpSerThrAsnPheProAlaAla AlaSerSerAla95100105110AlaThrArgLysThrPheAlaGlnSerAlaValGlyPheMetLysAsp115120 125TrpGlyPheAspGlyIleAspIleAspTrpGluTyrProAlaAspAla130135140ThrGlnAlaGlnAsnMetValLeuLeuLeuGlnAlaValArgSerGlu 145150155LeuAspSerTyrAlaAlaGlnTyrAlaLysGlyHisHisPheLeuLeu160165170SerIleAlaAlaProAlaGlyPro AspAsnTyrAsnLysLeuLysPhe175180185190AlaGluLeuGlyLysValLeuAspTyrIleAsnLeuMetAlaTyrAsp195 200205TyrAlaGlySerTrpSerAsnTyrThrGlyHisAspAlaAsnIleTyr210215220AlaAsnProGlnAsnProAsnAlaThrProTyrAsnThr AspAspAla225230235ValGlnAlaTyrIleAsnGlyGlyValProAlaAsnLysIleValLeu240245250GlyMetProIleT yrGlyArgSerPheGlnGlnThrGluGlyIleGly255260265270LysProTyrAsnGlyIleGlySerGlySerTrpGluAsnGlyIleTrp275 280285AspTyrLysAlaLeuProLysAlaGlyAlaThrValLysCysAspAsp290295300ThrAlaLysGlyCysTyrSerTyrAsp ProSerThrLysGluLeuIle305310315SerPheAspThrProAlaMetIleSerThrLysValSerTrpLeuLys320325330Gl yLysGlyLeuGlyGlySerMetPheTrpGluAlaSerAlaAspLys335340345350LysGlySerAspSerLeuIleSerThrSerHisGlnGlyLeuGlySer 355360365GlnAspSerThrGlnAsnTyrLeuAspTyrProAsnSerLysTyrAsp370375380AsnIleLysLysGlyM etAsn385(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:13:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 1364 base pairs(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: single(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:13:GGATCCGCTAACTGACATCGATATACACAATGTTGAGCTTTGTCAAAA AGTCGATCGCCT60TGGTGGCGGCCCTGCAGGCGGTCACTGCCCTGGCCACGCCAATCTCCAGTGAAGCTGGTG120TTGAGAAGCGCGGTAGTGGTTTTGCAAATGCCGTCTACTTCACCAACTGGGGCATTTATG180GCCGCAACTTCCAGCCTGCCGACCT TCCTGCCTCGGAGATTACTCACGTACTCTACTCCT240TCATGAATGTCCGCGCAGATGGCACCATCTTTTCCGGTGATACCTATGCCGACTACGAGA300AGCACTACGCTGGTGACTCTTGGAACGATGTGGGCACGAACGCTTACGGTTGTGTTAAGC360AA CTTTATCTTCTCAAGAAGCAGAACCGCAACATGAAGGTGATGCTGTCGATTGGTGGTT420GGACATGGTCTACCAACTTCCCCGCTGCCGCCAGCTCGGCTGCTACCCGAAAGACTTTTG480CTCAGTCTGCTGTTGGCTTCATGAAGGACTGGGGTTTCGACGGTATTG ATATCGACTGGG540AGTACCCCGCCGATGCCACTCAGGCTCAGAATATGGTTCTCTTGCTACAGGCTGTCCGCA600GTGAGCTCGACTCCTACGCTGCCCAGTACGCCAAGGGTCACCACTTCCTGCTTTCAATTG660CCGCCCCTGCTGGACCTGACAATTA TAACAAGCTGAAGTTTGCTGAGCTTGGCAAGGTTC720TCGATTACATTAACCTCATGGCTTACGATTACGCTGGATCTTGGAGCAACTACACTGGCC780ACGATGCCAACATATACGCAAACCCGCAGAACCCCAACGCCACCCCTTACAACACGGACG840AT GCTGTCCAGGCCTATATCAACGGCGGCGTCCCTGCCAACAAGATCGTCCTTGGTATGC900CAATCTACGGCCGATCCTTCCAGCAAACCGAGGGTATCGGTAAGCCTTACAATGGTATTG960GCTCTGGTAGCTGGGAGAACGGTATCTGGGACTACAAGGCTCTCCCCA AGGCTGGTGCCA1020CCGTCAAGTGCGACGATACCGCCAAGGGATGCTACAGCTACGATCCAAGCACTAAGGAGC1080TTATTTCTTTCGATACGCCGGCTATGATCAGCACCAAAGTTAGCTGGCTCAAGGGCAAGG1140GCCTTGGCGGCAGCATGTTCTGGGA GGCTTCTGCCGACAAGAAGGGCTCGGACTCTCTTA1200TTAGCACCAGCCACCAAGGTCTCGGTAGCCAGGACAGCACTCAGAACTACCTCGACTACC1260CTAACTCCAAGTACGACAACATCAAGAAGGGCATGAACTAAGCAGTCGGTGTTTGCATAG1320CT TGATTGATGCTCGACTCTAGAGGATCGAACTGTACCGAGCTC1364(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:14:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 1320 base pairs(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: single(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:14:G GATCCATGAAGAAGAATAGGATGATGATGATGATATGGAGCGTAGGAGTGGTGTGGATG60CTGTTGTTGGTTGGAGGAAGCTACGGAGGTAGTGGTTTTGCAAATGCCGTCTACTTCACC120AACTGGGGCATTTATGGCCGCAACTTCCAGCCTGCCGACCTTCCTGC CTCGGAGATTACT180CACGTACTCTACTCCTTCATGAATGTCCGCGCAGATGGCACCATCTTTTCCGGTGATACC240TATGCCGACTACGAGAAGCACTACGCTGGTGACTCTTGGAACGATGTGGGCACGAACGCT300TACGGTTGTGTTAAGCAACTTTAT CTTCTCAAGAAGCAGAACCGCAACATGAAGGTGATG360CTGTCGATTGGTGGTTGGACATGGTCTACCAACTTCCCCGCTGCCGCCAGCTCGGCTGCT420ACCCGAAAGACTTTTGCTCAGTCTGCTGTTGGCTTCATGAAGGACTGGGGTTTCGACGGT480A TTGATATCGACTGGGAGTACCCCGCCGATGCCACTCAGGCTCAGAATATGGTTCTCTTG540CTACAGGCTGTCCGCAGTGAGCTCGACTCCTACGCTGCCCAGTACGCCAAGGGTCACCAC600TTCCTGCTTTCAATTGCCGCCCCTGCTGGACCTGACAATTATAACAA GCTGAAGTTTGCT660GAGCTTGGCAAGGTTCTCGATTACATTAACCTCATGGCTTACGATTACGCTGGATCTTGG720AGCAACTACACTGGCCACGATGCCAACATATACGCAAACCCGCAGAACCCCAACGCCACC780CCTTACAACACGGACGATGCTGTC CAGGCCTATATCAACGGCGGCGTCCCTGCCAACAAG840ATCGTCCTTGGTATGCCAATCTACGGCCGATCCTTCCAGCAAACCGAGGGTATCGGTAAG900CCTTACAATGGTATTGGCTCTGGTAGCTGGGAGAACGGTATCTGGGACTACAAGGCTCTC960C CCAAGGCTGGTGCCACCGTCAAGTGCGACGATACCGCCAAGGGATGCTACAGCTACGAT1020CCAAGCACTAAGGAGCTTATTTCTTTCGATACGCCGGCTATGATCAGCACCAAAGTTAGC1080TGGCTCAAGGGCAAGGGCCTTGGCGGCAGCATGTTCTGGGAGGCTTC TGCCGACAAGAAG1140GGCTCGGACTCTCTTATTAGCACCAGCCACCAAGGTCTCGGTAGCCAGGACAGCACTCAG1200AACTACCTCGACTACCCTAACTCCAAGTACGACAACATCAAGAAGGGCATGAACTAAGCA1260GTCGGTGTTTGCATAGCTTGATTG ATGCTCGACTCTAGAGGATCGAACTGTACCGAGCTC1320(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:15:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 26 base pairs(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: single(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA(ix) FEATURE:(A) NAME/KEY: miscfeature(B) LOCATION: 3(D) OTHER INFORMATION: /note="N =inosine"(ix) FEATURE:(A) NAME/KEY: miscfeature(B) LOCATION: 9(D) OTHER INFORMATION: /note="N =inosine"(ix) FEATURE:(A) NAME/KEY: miscfeature(B) LOCATION: 15(D) OTHER INFORMATION: /note="N =inosine"(ix) FEATURE:(A) NAME/KEY: miscfeature (B) LOCATION: 18(D) OTHER INFORMATION: /note="N =inosine"(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:15:GGNTTYGCNAAYGCNGTNTAYTTYAC26(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:16:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 8 amino acids(B) TYPE: amino acid(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: protein(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:16:GlyPheAlaAsnAlaValTyrPhe15(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:17:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 12 base pairs(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: single(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:17:GATCCGGGCCCT12(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:18:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 20 base pairs(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: single(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:18:CAAATGCCGTCTACTTCACC20(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:19:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 20 base pairs(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: single(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:19:CCTCATGGCTTACGATTACG20(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:20:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 20 base pairs(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: single(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:20:TCCAACCTCGAGCATCAATC20(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:21:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 34 amino acids(B) TYPE: amino acid(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: peptide(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:21: MetLeuSerPheValLysLysSerIleAlaLeuValAlaAlaLeuGln151015AlaValThrAlaLeuAlaThrProIleSerSerGluAlaGlyValGlu 202530LysArg(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:22:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 27 base pairs(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: double(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:22:TATGGGTAGTGGTT TTGCAAATGCCGT27(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:23:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 38 base pairs(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: double(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:23:AGCTTGGATAAAA GAGGTAGTGGTTTTGCAAATGCCGT38(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:24:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 58 base pairs(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: double(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:24:CGATATACACAA TGTTGAGCTTTGTCAAAAAGTCGATCGCCTTGGTGGCGGCCCTGCA58(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:25:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 17 base pairs(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: double(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:25:GATCCGCTAAC TGACAT17(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:26:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 19 base pairs(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: double(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:26:GATCGAACTG TACCGAGCT19(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:27:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 109 base pairs(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: double(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:27:GATCCATGAA GAAGAATAGGATGATGATGATGATATGGAGCGTAGGAGTGGTGTGGATGC60TGTTGTTGGTTGGAGGAAGCTACGGAGGTAGTGGTTTTGCAAATGCCGT109(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:28:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 27 amino acids(B) TYPE: amino acid (D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: peptide(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:28:MetLysLysAsnArgMetMetMetMetIleTrpSerValGlyValVal151015TrpMetLeuLeuLeuValG lyGlySerTyrGly2025(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:29:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 81 base pairs(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: single(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA(vii) IMMEDIATE SOURCE:(B) CLONE: sequence coding for SEQ ID NO: 28(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:29:ATGAAGAAGAATAGGATGATGATGATGATATGGAGCGTAGGAGTGGTGTGGATGCTGTTG60TTGGTTGGAGGAAGCTACGGA81
Claims
  • 1. A recombinant DNA construct which codes for a protein with endochitinase activity, wherein said protein comprises the following sequence (a1) (SEQ ID NO:1): ##STR23##
  • 2. A recombinant DNA construct according to claim 1 which contains a signal sequence upstream of the sequence (a1).
  • 3. A recombinant DNA construct according to claim 2 wherein the signal sequence is a sequence coding for the signal peptide of the following sequence (a2)(SEQ ID NO:4): ##STR24##
  • 4. A recombinant DNA construct according to claim 2 wherein the signal peptide coded by the signal sequence is separated from the sequence (a1) of the coded protein by the peptide of the following sequence (a3)(SEQ ID NO:5): ##STR25##
  • 5. A recombinant DNA construct according to claim 2 wherein the signal sequence is a sequence coding for the signal peptide of the following sequence (a5)(SEQ ID NO:28): ##STR26##
  • 6. A recombinant DNA construct according claim 1 which comprises a promoter sequence containing the 35S promoter of cauliflower mosaic virus.
  • 7. A recombinant DNA construct according to claim 1 which comprises a terminator sequence containing the transcription termination sequence of the nopaline synthase gene of Agrobacterium tumefaciens.
  • 8. A recombinant DNA construct according to claim 1 wherein the nucleotide sequence coding for the amino acid sequence (a1) is the following sequence (Nal)(SEQ ID NO:6): ##STR27##
  • 9. A recombinant DNA construct according to claim 3 wherein the nucleotide sequence coding for the amino acid sequence (a2) is the following sequence (Na2)(SEQ ID NO:7): ##STR28##
  • 10. A recombinant DNA construct according to claim 4 wherein the nucleotide sequence coding for the amino acid sequence (a3) is the following sequence (Na3)(SEQ ID NO:8): ##STR29##
  • 11. A recombinant DNA construct according to claim 5 wherein the nucleotide sequence coding for the amino acid sequence (a5) is the following sequence (Na5)(SEQ ID NO:29): ##STR30##
  • 12. A bacterium which contains the recombinant DNA construct according to claim 1, together with the means necessary for its replication and its expression.
  • 13. A yeast which contains the recombinant DNA construct according to claim 1, together with the means necessary for its replication and its expression.
  • 14. A filamentous fungus which contains the recombinant DNA construct according to claim 1, together with the means necessary for its replication and its expression.
  • 15. A plant cell which is transformed by a recombinant DNA construct according to claim 1, together with the means necessary for its expression.
  • 16. A plant cell according to claim 15, which belongs to one of the species of Nicotiana tabacum, Helianthus annuus and Brassica napus.
  • 17. A recombinant DNA construct according to claim 3, wherein the signal peptide coded by the signal sequence is separated from the sequence (a1) of the coded protein by the peptide of the following sequence (a3) (SEQ ID NO:5): ##STR31##
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
91 11072 Sep 1991 FRX
US Referenced Citations (1)
Number Name Date Kind
4394443 Weissman et al. Jul 1983
Foreign Referenced Citations (4)
Number Date Country
290123 Nov 1988 EPX
437320 Jul 1991 EPX
8800976 Feb 1988 WOX
9007001 Jun 1990 WOX
Non-Patent Literature Citations (6)
Entry
Jones et al (1988) Mol Gen Genet. 212: 536-542.
Rothstein et al (1984) Nature 308: 662-665.
Vasseur et al. (1990) J. Gen Microbiol 136: 2561-2567.
Malardier et al (1989) Gene 78: 147-156.
Comai et al (1988) J. Biol Chem 263(29): 15104-15109.
A. Srivastava et al., "Secretion of Chitinase by Aphanocladium album, a Hyperparasite of Wheat Rust", Experientia, vol. 41, 1985, pp. 1612-1613.