• Volume 35,Issue 8,2019 Table of Contents
    Select All
    Display Type: |
    • >Review
    • Transport of alphaherpesviruses in neurons——axonal “shuttling”

      2019, 35(8):1361-1373. DOI: 10.13345/j.cjb.190050 CSTR: 32114.14.j.cjb.190050

      Abstract (1467) HTML (4018) PDF 1.43 M (1993) Comment (0) Favorites

      Abstract:After a long-term co-evolution, alphaherpesviruses have established mutual adaptability with their hosts. Some alphaherpesviruses have typical neurotropic characteristics, which have received extensive attention and in-depth research. Neurotropic alphaherpesviruses can break through the host barrier to infect neurons and multiply in large numbers in the neuron cell body to complete further proliferation or establish latent infection in the cell body. Either in the process of infecting neurons or further spreading, alphaherpesviruses will undergo transmission along axons or dendrites, so this process is an integral part of the life cycle of the viruses, and is also a key factor for the viruses to spread in nervous system. Therefore, studies on transportation of alphaherpesviruses in neurons will provide new insights of the viruses and promote the development of corresponding vaccines or targeted therapeutic pharmaceuticals. In addition, the neurotropism of alphaherpesviruses is conducive to the analysis of nerve circuits. Herein, the mechanisms of alphaherpesvirus transport in axons were reviewed, and the research direction and application of the transport of alphaherpesviruses in axons were put forward, which can provide reference for the prevention and control of alphaherpesviral infections.

    • Application of cell culture techniques in cultured meat-a review

      2019, 35(8):1374-1381. DOI: 10.13345/j.cjb.190138 CSTR: 32114.14.j.cjb.190138

      Abstract (2886) HTML (6503) PDF 913.14 K (3464) Comment (0) Favorites

      Abstract:As one of the top 10 breakthrough and emerging technologies in the world in 2018, cultured meat has attracted extensive attention due to its advantages of traceable origin, food safety and green sustainable development. Europe and the United States have invested a lot of resources to focus on research about cultured meat, which will affect our domestic meat and food market in the future. At present, the challenge of cultured meat production is how to efficiently simulate the growth environment of animal muscle tissue and realize large-scale production in bioreactor. Although cell tissue engineering has been deeply studied and achieved varying successful application, it is still difficult to obtain large-scale cultured meat production due to the high cost and technical requirements. Therefore, the development of efficient and safe cell culture technology is an urgent problem for large-scale cultured meat production, which can effectively reduce costs and achieve industrial application. In this review, we summarize the research progress of animal cell tissue culture technology used for cultured meat, and highlighted the current challenges and possible strategies in further applications.

    • Gene knockout technology and its application in the study of the relationship between mitochondrial dynamics and insulin resistance

      2019, 35(8):1382-1390. DOI: 10.13345/j.cjb.190121 CSTR: 32114.14.j.cjb.190121

      Abstract (1191) HTML (2263) PDF 1.04 M (1749) Comment (0) Favorites

      Abstract:Mitochondrial dynamics, the processes of mitochondrial fusion and fission maintain homeostasis, are precisely regulated by fusion/fission-related proteins, and play an important physiological role in mitochondrial metabolism, quality and function. The aberrant changes of these proteins can trigger mitochondrial dynamics imbalance, which cause mitochondrial dysfunctions and result various disease states. This article focuses on gene knockout technology, and reviews the role and application progress of genes encoding for fusion and fission knockout mice in insulin resistance researches, in order to lay a foundation for future studies on signal transduction mechanism of mitochondrial dynamics imbalance in insulin resistance.

    • Progress in the mechanisms of anticancer peptides

      2019, 35(8):1391-1400. DOI: 10.13345/j.cjb.190033 CSTR: 32114.14.j.cjb.190033

      Abstract (1808) HTML (7023) PDF 1.98 M (2438) Comment (0) Favorites

      Abstract:In recent years, cancer has become a major concern in relation to human morbidity and mortality. Anticancer peptides (ACPs) are the bioactive peptide with antitumor activity and found in many organisms, including mammals, amphibians, insects, plants and microorganisms. ACPs have been suggested as promising agents for antitumor therapy due to their numerous advantages over traditional chemical agents such as low molecular masses, relatively simple structures, greater tumor selectivity, fewer adverse reactions, ease of absorption, a variety of routes of administration and low risk for inducing multi-drug resistance. Combining with the related research in our group, we summarized the mechanisms of ACPs to provide some directions for research and development of peptide-based anticancer drugs.

    • Development and challenges of gene editing technology

      2019, 35(8):1401-1410. DOI: 10.13345/j.cjb.180532 CSTR: 32114.14.j.cjb.180532

      Abstract (2527) HTML (8692) PDF 507.11 K (4646) Comment (0) Favorites

      Abstract:Gene editing is a technique for modifying gene fragments. The novel gene editing technology focuses on the field of artificial nuclease cleavage technology, mainly ZFN technology, TALEN technology, CRISPR technology and base editing technology. The continuous improvement of gene editing technology has promoted the rapid development of agriculture, animal husbandry and biomedicine, but at the same time, technical defects and ethical controversy have brought enormous challenges to its own development. This article will briefly discuss the development and challenges of gene editing technology, as well as the views at home and abroad, and hope to inspire readers to recognize gene editing technology.

    • Cyanobacteria based photosynthetic production of sucrose: development and prospect

      2019, 35(8):1411-1423. DOI: 10.13345/j.cjb.190026 CSTR: 32114.14.j.cjb.190026

      Abstract (1311) HTML (2415) PDF 824.18 K (2091) Comment (0) Favorites

      Abstract:Biorefinery technologies provide promising solutions to achieve sustainable development facing energy and environment crisis, while abundant sugar feedstock is an essential basis for biorefinery industries. Photosynthetic production of sucrose with cyanobacteria is an alternative sugar feedstock supply route with great potentials. Driven by solar energy, cyanobacteria photosynthetic cell factory could directly convert carbon dioxide and water into sucrose, and such a process could simultaneously reduce carbon emissions and supply sugar feedstocks. Here we introduced the history and updated the state-of-the-art on development of cyanobacteria cell factories for photosynthetic production of sucrose, summarized the progress and problems on mechanisms of sucrose synthesis, metabolic engineering strategies and technology expansions, and finally forecasted the future development direction in this area.

    • Progress in endosomal Na+,K+/H+ antiporter in Arabidopsis thaliana

      2019, 35(8):1424-1432. DOI: 10.13345/j.cjb.180537 CSTR: 32114.14.j.cjb.180537

      Abstract (1206) HTML (2163) PDF 332.65 K (1410) Comment (0) Favorites

      Abstract:Important progress has been made in the interpretation of subcellular location, ion transport characteristics and biological functions of endosomal Na+,K+/H+ antiporter in Arabidopsis thaliana. The endosomal Na+,K+/H+ antiporter contain two members, AtNHX5 and AtNHX6, whose amino acid sequence similarity is 78.7%. Studies have shown that AtNHX5 and AtNHX6 are functionally redundant, and they are all located in Golgi, trans-Golgi network (TGN), endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and prevacuolar compartment (PVC). AtNHX5 and AtNHX6 are critical for salt tolerance stress and the homeostasis of pH and K+. It has been reported that there are conservative acidic amino acid residues that can regulate their ion activity in the endosomal NHXs transmembrane domain, which plays a decisive role in their own functions. The results of the latest research indicate that endosomal NHXs affect vacuolar transport and protein storage, and participate in the growth of auxin-mediated development in A. thaliana. In this paper, the progress of subcellular localization, ion transport, function and application of endosomal NHXs in A. thaliana was summarized.

    • Advances in the correlation between loss of neural homeostasis and diet-induced obesity

      2019, 35(8):1433-1440. DOI: 10.13345/j.cjb.190015 CSTR: 32114.14.j.cjb.190015

      Abstract (1132) HTML (1858) PDF 376.08 K (2024) Comment (0) Favorites

      Abstract:The social problems and medical burdens caused by obesity have become more serious in recent years. Obesity is mainly caused by the imbalance of energy intake and consumption in the body. The central nervous system and related neurons regulate the balance of energy metabolism. The hypothalamic arcuate nucleus (ARC) contains anorexigenic proopiomelanocortin (POMC) neurons and orexigenic neuropeptid Y(NPY)/agouti-related protein (AgRP) neurons that regulate the feeding behavior of body. High-fat diet induces phosphorylation of Rb protein in POMC neurons, and inactivation of Rb phosphorylation leads to re-entry of POMC neurons from the resting-state into the cell cycle, which rapidly shifts to apoptosis. High-fat diet also causes the inhibition of neuronal regeneration, induces inflammation and neuronal damage, loss of neuronal homeostasis, leptin resistance, and ultimately leads to obesity. This review discusses the relationship between loss of neuronal homeostasis and dietary obesity, as well as the underlying mechanisms, which might?provide the evidence for prevention and treatment of these diseases.

    • >Animal and Veterinary Biotechnology
    • Vaccine pretreatment for quantification of 146S antigen in foot-and-mouth disease vaccines by high performance size exclusion chromatography

      2019, 35(8):1441-1452. DOI: 10.13345/j.cjb.190047 CSTR: 32114.14.j.cjb.190047

      Abstract (1080) HTML (1557) PDF 1.30 M (1525) Comment (0) Favorites

      Abstract:We developed a pre-treatment method to remove interfering substances during quantification of 146S antigens in foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) vaccines by high performance size exclusion chromatography (HPSEC). Three methods, including ultracentrifugation, PEG precipitation and nuclease digestion, were optimized and compared for removal efficiency of the interfering impurities in FMD vaccines. Under optimized conditions, the 146S contents in two batches of FMD vaccines were determined to be 7.1 and 7.6 μg/mL by ultracentrifugation, 9.7 and 10.4 μg/mL by PEG precipitation, and 10.5 and 10.4 μg/mL by nuclease digestion. The optimal condition for nuclease digestion using Benzonase determined by response surface method was as follows: appending Benzonase into 200 μL of antigen phase to a final concentration of 421 U/mL and incubating at 25.1 °C for 1.29 h. This method has advantages including efficient removal of the interfering impurities, fast processing speed, and mild operating conditions. Then 12 bathes of FMD vaccines with different serotypes produced by 4 manufacturers were tested to verify the established treatment method. Results showed the method was applicable to various FMD vaccines with good reproducibility (RSD<5.3%, n=3). The developed method removed interference from impurities during quantification of 146S, and therefore would broaden the application of HPSEC in vaccine quality control and ensure the accuracy and reliability.

    • Immunogenicity of the truncated NDV F protein surface-displayed on Lactobacillus casei

      2019, 35(8):1453-1462. DOI: 10.13345/j.cjb.190106 CSTR: 32114.14.j.cjb.190106

      Abstract (1169) HTML (1391) PDF 1.01 M (1526) Comment (0) Favorites

      Abstract:To evaluate immune efficacy of the recombinant Lactobacillus casei, we constructed pLA-Newcastle disease virus (NDV)-F/L. casei and obtained the expression products. PCR amplified the NDV F gene carrying part of the major epitopes. The target gene was inserted to the shuttle plasmid pLA, and then transformed into Escherichia coli BL21 (DE3) in order to screen positive recombinant plasmid. The positive recombinant plasmid was transformed into L. casei by electroporation to construct pLA-NDV-F/L. casei. The positive strains were identified by PCR. The reactivity of the recombinant bacteria was identified by Western blotting and the protein expression was detected by indirect immunofluorescence, flow cytometry and laser confocal microscopy. The 14-day-old chickens in each group were vaccinated by oral plus nose drops. The pLA-NDV-F/L. casei twice immunization group and three times immunization group, the commercial vaccine group, the pLA/L. casei group, the unchallenge PBS and the challenge PBS group were established. IgG in serum and sIgA in the lavage fluid of intestinal, nasal and lung were detected by ELISA. The protection rate of chickens was evaluated. The results showed that 94.10% of the recombinant bacteria expressed the F protein. The recombinant protein was highly expressed on the surface of L. casei with a protein size of 62 kDa, which specifically bound to anti-NDV serum. The levels of anti-F IgG and sIgA antibodies in each test group were significantly higher than those in the control groups. The duration of antibody in the pLA-NDV-F/L. casei three-time immunization group lasted 28 days longer than that in the twice immunized group, and there was no significant difference between antibody peak values. The attack protection rates in each group of immunized pLA-NDV-F/L. casei three times, twice, attenuated vaccine, pLA/L. casei and PBS were 80%, 80%, 90%, 0% and 0%, respectively. Therefore, the antigenic protein of NDV F was successfully expressed by L. casei expression system, which has of reactogenicity and immunogenicity, and could induce protective immune responses in chickens.

    • Prokaryotic expression and transmembrane transfer of fusion protein TAT-RIG-I-GFP

      2019, 35(8):1463-1468. DOI: 10.13345/j.cjb.190110 CSTR: 32114.14.j.cjb.190110

      Abstract (1059) HTML (1674) PDF 1.29 M (1786) Comment (0) Favorites

      Abstract:We studied the construction of fusion protein TAT-RIG-I-GFP prokaryotic expression vector and verified the function of TAT in transmembrane delivery. First, four pairs of specific primers were designed, and the RIG-I gene of Mallard Duck (Anas platyrhynchos) was cloned. Then, the pET-TAT-RIG-I-GFP and pET-RIG-I-GFP prokaryotic expression vectors were constructed. Meanwhile, they were converted to E. coli BL21 (DE3), which were induced to be expressed after culture. After the purification of His-60 nickel affinity chromatography column and the identification of SDS-PAGE, the purified TAT-RIG-I-GFP and RIG-I-GFP proteins were incubated to DF-1 cells. Finally, fluorescence microscopy was used to observe whether the corresponding fluorescence was produced in DF-1 cells. The results showed that pET-TAT-RIG-I-GFP fusion with TAT showed obvious green fluorescence in DF-1 cells. However, the pET-RIG-I-GFP without TAT cannot display green fluorescence. This shows that TAT-fused protein have successfully delivered DF-1 cells and play a key role in transmembrane delivery. In conclusion, these results provide a solid material basis for further study of antiviral drugs in poultry.

    • Activity and transcriptional regulatory elements of the promoter in Arctic fox (Vulpes lagopus) β-defensin103 gene

      2019, 35(8):1469-1477. DOI: 10.13345/j.cjb.190063 CSTR: 32114.14.j.cjb.190063

      Abstract (1119) HTML (1257) PDF 574.36 K (1381) Comment (0) Favorites

      Abstract:The aim of this study was to screen the active regions and transcription factor binding sites in the promoter of the CBD103 gene related to Arctic fox coat color, and to provide a basis for revealing the molecular genetic mechanism of CBD103 gene regulating the coat color formation. The 5′-flanking region fragment 2 123 bp of Arctic fox CBD103 gene was cloned, and 4 truncated promoter reporter vectors of different lengths were constructed. The promoter activity was detected by the dual-luciferase reporter assay system. Point mutations were performed on the 3 predicted specificity protein 1 (Sp1) transcription factor binding sites in the highest promoter active region, and 3 mutant vectors were constructed. The activity was then detected by the dual-luciferase reporter assay system. The results showed that the region 1 656 (?1 604/+51) had the highest activity in the 4 truncated promoters of different lengths, and the promoter activity of the three mutant vectors constructed in this region were significantly lower than that of the wild type (fragment 1 656). The region of ?1 604 /+51 was the core promoter region of CBD103 gene in Arctic fox and ?1 552/?1 564, ?1 439/?1 454 and ?329/?339 regions were positive regulatory regions. This study successfully obtained the core promoter region and positive regulation regions of the Arctic fox CBD103 gene, which laid a foundation for further study on the molecular genetic mechanism of this gene regulating Arctic fox coat color.

    • >Industrial Biotechnology
    • Construction and application of theophylline-activated RNA switches in the regulation of expression of recombinant proteins in Bacillus subtilis

      2019, 35(8):1478-1490. DOI: 10.13345/j.cjb.190037 CSTR: 32114.14.j.cjb.190037

      Abstract (1352) HTML (2653) PDF 2.15 M (1736) Comment (0) Favorites

      Abstract:Bacillus subtilis can be widely used as an important microorganism for metabolic engineering and recombinant proteins expression in industrial biotechnology and synthetic biology. However, it is difficult to make accurate regulation of exogenous gene by biological tools in B. subtilis, which limits the application of B. subtilis in synthetic biology. The purpose of this study is to develop regulatory tools for precise control of gene expression by using non-coding RNAs, by which the activation of heterologous gene could be achieved without the auxiliary protein factors. We constructed the synthetic riboswitch E and aptazyme AZ using the theophylline aptamer. Six different native promoters from B. subtilis were functionally adapted with the E and AZ to fabricate an array of novel regulatory elements activated by theophylline. Then, we determined the performance of these elements using green fluorescence protein as reporter, and then further verified using red fluorescence protein and pullulanase as cargo proteins. Results showed that the same kind of RNA elements with different promoters showed different levels of efficiency. Promoter PsigW and E combination (sigWE) had the highest induction rate in B. subtilis. Compared with the control group, it can produce the induction rate of 16.8. Promoter PrpoB and AZ combination (rpoBAZ) showed the highest induction rate of 6.2. SigWE mediated mCherry induction rate was 9.2, and P43E mediated pullulanase induction rate was 32.8, in which enzyme activity reached 81 U/mL. This study confirmed that GFP, mCherry and pullulan can all be regulated by riboswitch and aptazyme, but there were differences between different combinations of promoters with RNA regulators.

    • On-line monitoring of multiple component parameters during ethanol fermentation by near-infrared spectroscopy

      2019, 35(8):1491-1499. DOI: 10.13345/j.cjb.190012 CSTR: 32114.14.j.cjb.190012

      Abstract (1104) HTML (2415) PDF 670.19 K (1711) Comment (0) Favorites

      Abstract:The quantity of biomass, glucose concentration and ethanol concentration are important parameters in ethanol fermentation. Traditional methods are usually based on samples for off-line measurement, which not only requires multiple instruments for test and analysis but also consumes notable time and effort, and therefore is inconvenient for real-time process control and optimization. In this study, an in-situ detection method based on the near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy is proposed for measuring the above process parameters in real time. The in-situ measurement is carried out by using an immersion type NIR spectroscopy. A multi-output prediction model for simultaneously estimating the quantity of glucose, biomass and ethanol is established based on a multi-output least-squares support vector regression algorithm. The experimental results show that the proposed method can precisely measure the quantity of glucose, biomass and ethanol during the ethanol fermentation process. Compared to the existing partial-least-squares method for modeling and prediction of individual components, the proposed method could evidently improve the measurement accuracy and reliability.

    • >Agricultural Biotechnology
    • MarR family transcription regulator HpaR and XC0449 coordinately regulate the virulence of Xanthomonas campestris pv. campestris

      2019, 35(8):1500-1510. DOI: 10.13345/j.cjb.190057 CSTR: 32114.14.j.cjb.190057

      Abstract (1227) HTML (4349) PDF 911.81 K (1692) Comment (0) Favorites

      Abstract:MarR family transcription regulators are ubiquitous among bacteria and archaea. They extensively control multiple cellular processes and elaborately regulate the expression of genes involved in virulence, stress response and antibiotics at translational level. In Xanthomonas campestris pv. campestris, insertional inactivation of MarR family transcription regulator HpaR (XC2827) resulted in significantly decrease in virulence and increase in the production of the extracellular proteases. Here, we reported that the genome of Xcc 8004 encodes nine MarR family transcription regulators. The MarR family transcription regulators, HpaR (XC2827) and XC0449, were heterologous expressed and purified. In vitro MST and Pull-down assay confirmed the physical interaction between HpaR and XC0449. Phenotypical assay determined that deletion of XC0449 resulted in substantial virulence attenuation. In vitro EMSA, in vivo qRT-PCR and GUS activity assay identified that HpaR and XC0449 coordinately act as the transcriptional activator to regulate the expression of the virulence-associated gene XC0705, and eventually control the bacterial virulence and the production of extracellular proteases.

    • Preparation and purification of Cry1Ah protein candidate reference material

      2019, 35(8):1511-1519. DOI: 10.13345/j.cjb.190053 CSTR: 32114.14.j.cjb.190053

      Abstract (1059) HTML (735) PDF 1.34 M (1341) Comment (0) Favorites

      Abstract:With the rapid development of transgenic technology, the safety of genetically modified products has received extensive attention. Certified reference materials for the detection of genetically modified organisms play important roles in ensuring comparability and traceability of the qualitative and quantitative detection of genetically modified products. However, the development of protein reference materials is relatively slow, and one of the difficulties is the preparation of protein candidates with high purity. The cry1Ah1 gene of Bacillus thuringiensis has been used for the development of transgenic insect-resistant crops because of its excellent insecticidal activity against lepidopteran pests such as Asian corn borer, and has obtained transgenic lines with good insect resistance traits. In order to develop Cry1Ah protein certified reference material, it is urgent to establish a preparation and purification system. In this study, a system for preparing Cry1Ah protein by Bt expression system was optimized, and a high-purity Cry1Ah protein (size exclusion chromatography purity: 99.6%) was obtained by ion-exchange chromatography and size exclusion chromatography stepwise purification. The results of biological activity assay showed that there was no significant difference in the insecticidal activity of purified Cry1Ah protein and protoxin against diamondback moths (Plutella xylostella). Finally, the amino acid sequence of the activated Cry1Ah protein was determined using Edman degradation and mass spectrometry. In summary, the obtained Cry1Ah pure protein can be used for the development of protein reference materials.

    • Construction and application of actin fluorescent marker in Verticillium dahliae Kleb.

      2019, 35(8):1520-1528. DOI: 10.13345/j.cjb.190183 CSTR: 32114.14.j.cjb.190183

      Abstract (1019) HTML (2091) PDF 1.90 M (1674) Comment (0) Favorites

      Abstract:Actin filaments play an important role in fungal life processes such as growth, development and cytokinesis. The expression vector pSULPH-Lifeact-mCherry of fluorescent mCherry-labeled actin was transferred into Verticillium dahliae Kleb. wild type V592 by the genetic transformation system mediated by Agrobacterium tumefaciens to obtain the stable fluorescent labeled actin strain V592/Lifeact-mCherry. Then we detected its biological phenotype and the dynamic changes of actin fluorescence during the process of spore germination, mycelial growth and development. There was no significant difference in the colony morphology, colonial growth rate, sporulation and germination rate between the fluorescent labeled actin strain and the wild type. The actin fluorescence signal was observed at the tip of the conidia and hyphae and the septum clearly. Actin participated in the formation of the contractile actomyosin ring (CAR) during cytokinesis by observing the dynamic behavior of the actin in the process of hyphal septum formation. The fluorescent labeled actin strain can be used to study the dynamics of actin in fungal development to provide theoretical and practical support for further study of the mechanism of actin in fungal development and pathogenesis.

    • >Medical and Immunological Biotechnology
    • Design of a chimeric antigen containing multiple immunodominant epitopes and its use in detection of IgM antibodies against Rubella virus

      2019, 35(8):1529-1536. DOI: 10.13345/j.cjb.190031 CSTR: 32114.14.j.cjb.190031

      Abstract (953) HTML (1308) PDF 721.67 K (1511) Comment (0) Favorites

      Abstract:A chimeric antigen designated B103 containing six immunodominant regions derived from three structural proteins of Rubella virus (RV) was designed and its utility in serological diagnosis was assessed. Protein B103 is comprised of aa 1–30 & aa 96–123 of C protein, aa 31–105 of E2 protein, as well as aa 11–39, aa 154–277 & aa 389–412 of E1 protein. In addition, it contains thioredoxin (TRX) at the N-terminal and His tag at the C-terminal. B103 was expressed in Escherichia coli BL21(DE3) and purified by Streamline Chelating affinity and DEAE anion exchange chromatography. Based on the antigenicity of B103 as verified by Western blotting analysis, we constructed and evaluated a novel capture ELISA for RV-IgM detection. B103 was expressed in a soluble form, accounting for 18.57% of the total bacterial proteins. After purification, the concentration and purity of protein B103 were 3.026 mg/mL and 95.35%, respectively. Western blotting analysis demonstrated that protein B103 could react with acute-phase serum of RV. By ELISA, 40 negative sera and 40 RV-acute phase sera were detected. The sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value and coincidence rate of the ELISA were 92.50%, 95.00%, 94.87%, 92.68% and 93.75%, respectively. The McNemer analysis suggested that there was no statistical difference between the ‘Gold standard’ and the novel ELISA with a kappa coefficient of 0.900, indicating excellent consistency. B103 chimeric protein with excellent antigenicity obtained from prokaryotic expression followed by chromatography purification could prove useful for early diagnosis of RV infection.

    • >Methods in Biotechnology
    • Construction of engineered exosomes with high loading efficiency of cellular endogenous proteins

      2019, 35(8):1537-1545. DOI: 10.13345/j.cjb.190124 CSTR: 32114.14.j.cjb.190124

      Abstract (1331) HTML (4512) PDF 2.10 M (1919) Comment (0) Favorites

      Abstract:Exosomes have many advantages as natural drug delivery carriers, but their application is limited by the inefficient loading of intracellular drugs (such as proteins and nucleic acids). In this study, mCherry, a red fluorescent protein, was used as the endogenous cargo target. Through gene modification of donor cells and fusion expression of membrane localization elements (PB, CAAX, Palm and CD63), mCherry was specifically sorted into exosomes through biogenesis. Results show that CD63 had the highest sorting efficiency, followed by Palm. PB and CAAX led enrichment of mCherry on the plasma membrane, but not in exosomes. The approach provides an alternative to facilitate packaging of cargo by exosomes and thus to increase the efficient delivery of endogenous protein drugs.

    • Comparison of chemical constituents of wild silkworm cocoon and domestic silkworm cocoon by UHPLC-MS technology

      2019, 35(8):1546-1556. DOI: 10.13345/j.cjb.190027 CSTR: 32114.14.j.cjb.190027

      Abstract (1100) HTML (1643) PDF 973.87 K (1561) Comment (0) Favorites

      Abstract:Identifying and comparing the chemical constituents of wild silkworm cocoon and silkworm cocoon is of great significance for understanding the domestication of silkworm. In this study, we used high?temperature?and?high?pressure and methanol-water system to extract cocoon chemical constituents. We used UHPLC-MS to identify and compare cocoon chemical constituents of wild silkworm and domestic silkworm Dazao and Haoyue strains. The cocoon metabolic fingerprints?of wild silkworm and domestic silkworm Dazao and Haoyue strains were obtained by using the UHPLC-MS in the positive ion mode and negative ion mode. By annotation, we found that cocoon chemical compounds with high abundances contained amino acids, flavonoids, alkaloids, terpenes, organic acids, and lignans. PLS-DA showed that the cocoon components were significantly different among the wild silkworm and two domestic silkworm strains Dazao and Haoyue. Proline, leucine/isoleucine and phenylalanine showed significantly higher abundances in the cocoon of domestic silkworm Dazao strain than in those of wild silkworm and domestic silkworm Haoyue strain. The flavonoid secondary metabolites are abundant in the Dazao cocoon, including quercetin, isoquercetin, quercetin 3-O-sophoroside, quercetin-3-O-α-L-rhamnoside, quercetin-3-O- rutinoside, and kaempferol. The other secondary metabolites, alkaloids, terpenes and lignans, showed higher abundances in the wild silkworm cocoon than in the domestic silkworm cocoon, including neurine, candicine, pilocarpidine, artemisiifolin, eupassopin, and eudesobovatol. By exposing cocoons to UV light and observing the green fluorescence of flavonoids, we found that Dazao cocoon had the most flavonoids, and Haoyue cocoon had least flavonoids and wild silkworm cocoon had mediate flavonoids. Alkaloids and organic acids are good anti-insect and antimicrobial agents, which have high abundance in the wild silkworm cocoon and could enhance the defense ability of wild silkworm cocoon. Flavonoids are abundant in the cocoon of domestic silkworm Dazao strain, which the main factors are leading to the yellow-green cocoon of Dazao.

    • Construction and identification of an apoptosis detection system based on firefly luciferase reporter gene

      2019, 35(8):1557-1565. DOI: 10.13345/j.cjb.180276 CSTR: 32114.14.j.cjb.180276

      Abstract (1280) HTML (2430) PDF 1.07 M (1557) Comment (0) Favorites

      Abstract:To construct a eukaryotic expression plasmid containing the luciferase reporter gene (Fluc) to quickly detect apoptosis. Four amino acids, Asp-Glu-Val-Asp (DEVD), the recognize motif of Caspase-3, were introduced into the middle of the Fluc-C and N fragment. Meanwhile, four amino acids, Asp-Glu-Val-Gly (DEVG), were selected as a negative control. Subsequently, the recombinant gene was cloned into the N and C terminal end of the split intein, and named as pFluc-DEVD and pFluc-DEVG. Then the plasmids were transfected into cells and renilla luciferase was co-transfected in each sample as an internal control for transfection efficiency. Then the apoptosis level was detected by the double luciferase reporter gene and the Western blotting analysis. The results showed that when apoptosis occurred, the content of firefly luciferase expressed in the pFluc-DEVD plasmid transfected group was about 3 times higher than pFluc-DEVG plasmid transfected group. Furthermore, Western blotting detection indicated that the Fluc level was significantly increased in pFluc-DEVD transfected group when pre-treated by apoptosis stimulants. The activation degree of Caspase-3 was closely related to the expression of Fluc, and had a significant statistical difference. These results confirmed that firefly luciferase protein expressed by pFluc-DEVD plasmid can be cleaved by the intracellular Caspase-3 enzyme, and this plasmid can accurately reflect the cell apoptosis level, which provides a useful method for quantitative detection of apoptosis.

Current Issue


Volume , No.

Table of Contents

Archive

Volume

Issue

Most Read

Most Cited

Most Downloaded