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Dive into the research topics where Krishna Jyoti Mukherjee is active.

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Featured researches published by Krishna Jyoti Mukherjee.


Microbial Cell Factories | 2014

Genome engineering for improved recombinant protein expression in Escherichia coli

Shubhashree Mahalik; Ashish K. Sharma; Krishna Jyoti Mukherjee

AbstractA metabolic engineering perspective which views recombinant protein expression as a multistep pathway allows us to move beyond vector design and identify the downstream rate limiting steps in expression. In E.coli these are typically at the translational level and the supply of precursors in the form of energy, amino acids and nucleotides. Further recombinant protein production triggers a global cellular stress response which feedback inhibits both growth and product formation. Countering this requires a system level analysis followed by a rational host cell engineering to sustain expression for longer time periods. Another strategy to increase protein yields could be to divert the metabolic flux away from biomass formation and towards recombinant protein production. This would require a growth stoppage mechanism which does not affect the metabolic activity of the cell or the transcriptional or translational efficiencies. Finally cells have to be designed for efficient export to prevent buildup of proteins inside the cytoplasm and also simplify downstream processing. The rational and the high throughput strategies that can be used for the construction of such improved host cell platforms for recombinant protein expression is the focus of this review.


Journal of Biotechnology | 1999

Enhancing recombinant protein yields in Escherichia coli using the T7 system under the control of heat inducible λPL promoter

Jagdish C. Gupta; Manish Jaisani; Gaurav Pandey; Krishna Jyoti Mukherjee

A recombinant plasmid containing the complete lacZ gene downstream of the T7 promoter was used to transform Escherichia coli containing another plasmid which had the T7 RNA polymerase gene under the control of heat inducible lambda PL promoter. This recombinant E. coli containing the two plasmids was studied in order to enhance beta-galactosidase expression. The heat shock time which effectively regulates the T7 RNA polymerase was optimized and best expression of beta-galactosidase was obtained with 2 min heat shock. Substrate feeding increased the duration of log phase and allowed induction at a higher cell density without affecting the specific activity. A high cell density (7 g l-1) and high specific activity (approximately 20,000 U) were achieved which effectively increased the product concentration 18-fold.


Enzyme and Microbial Technology | 2001

Two-stage cultivation of recombinant Saccharomyces cerevisiae to enhance plasmid stability under non-selective conditions: experimental study and modeling

Jagdish C. Gupta; Gaurav Pandey; Krishna Jyoti Mukherjee

A leucine auxotroph strain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae was used to study plasmid stability and expression using a recombinant plasmid, which contained a foreign gene for firefly luciferase (luc). This recombinant yeast was tested in a series of continuous cultures in semi-defined media with varying concentrations of yeast extract in order to study its effect on stability. While the biomass concentration and luciferase activity increased with increasing concentrations of yeast extract, the plasmid stability declined. An analysis of the growth rates showed that the recombinants enjoyed a growth rate advantage over the plasmid-free cells at critically low yeast extract concentrations, possibly due to leucine starvation in the media. A two-stage cultivation strategy was designed in order to create a yeast extract limited environment so that plasmid-free cells could not grow and overtake the recombinant cells. The cells were cultivated in selective media in the first stage, and then transferred continuously to the second stage where the media was enriched by feeding yeast extract. The feed rate was kept low in order to ensure yeast extract and hence leucine starvation, thereby selecting against the plasmid-free cells. This strategy resulted in a stable existence of recombinant cells, which stabilized around 60% at steady state during the tested period of cultivation. The complex nitrogen feed helped in increasing the cell density and volumetric activity by approximately 9 and 18-fold respectively with respect to that achieved in minimal medium. The experimental data was used to formulate a mathematical model to predict cell growth and plasmid stability in two-stage cultivation, which correctly explained the experimental data.


Biotechnology Letters | 1998

Overexpression of streptokinase using a fed-batch strategy

Syed Shams Yazdani; Krishna Jyoti Mukherjee

The structural gene for streptokinase was cloned under the T7 promoter containing the ompA secretory signal sequence. The T7 RNA polymerase was induced with IPTG when the biomass concentration was 1.2 mg dry cells/ml and pulse feeding of concentrated substrate was done at different time intervals. The biomass concentration reached 1.8 mg dry cells/ml and the activity obtained in the supernatant was 180 plasmin units/ml compared to 17 plasmin units/ml obtained by growing and inducing the cells in simple LB medium. The results indicate that high expression levels can be obtained with high cell density cultivation in the T7 system by using a proper feeding strategy.


Molecular Biotechnology | 2005

Combined effect of protein fusion and signal sequence greatly enhances the production of recombinant human GM-CSF in Escherichia coli

Palash Bhattacharya; Gaurav Pandey; Poonam Srivastava; Krishna Jyoti Mukherjee

Granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) is a hematopoietic growth factor, that has been used as a therapeutic agent in facilitating bone marrow and stem cell transplantation and in other clinical cases like neutropenia. Although biologically active recombinant GM-CSF has been successfully produced in Escherichia coli, the reported levels are extremely poor. In this study we looked into the possible reasons for poor expression and found that protein toxicity coupled with protease-based degradation was the principal reason for low productivity. To overcome this problem we attached a signal sequence, as well as an amino-terminal His-tag fusion to the GM-CSF gene. This combination had a dramatic effect on expression levels, which increased from 0.8 µg/mL in the control to 40 µg/mL. When a larger fusion partner, such as the Maltose-binding protein (MBP-tag), was used the expression levels increased further to 69.5 µg/mL, which along with the MBP-tag represented approx 12% of the total cellular protein.


Preparative Biochemistry & Biotechnology | 2001

CLONING, CHARACTERIZATION, AND EXPRESSION OF XYLANASE GENE FROM BACILLUS LYTICUS IN ESCHERICHIA COLI AND BACILLUS SUBTILIS

Poonam Srivastava; Krishna Jyoti Mukherjee

A genomic library of Bacillus lyticus was constructed in λ GEM 11 vector and screened for the xylanase gene using Congo red plate assay. A 16-kb fragment containing the xylanase gene was obtained which was further subcloned using Mbo I partial digestion in an E.coli pUC 19 vector. A 1.3-kb sub-fragment was obtained which coded for a xylanase gene of Mr23,650 Da. This fragment was sequenced and the homology was checked with known xylanases. The maximum homology was 97%, which was obtained with an endo xylanase gene from Bacillus species at the DNA level, while the translated sequence showed only one amino acid change from alanine to serine at position number 102. Expression was checked in E.coli, using the native promoter, and an extracellular activity of 5.25 U/mL was obtained. Cloning of the gene was done in Bacillus subtilis using a shuttle vector pHB 201, which resulted in increasing the basal level xylanase activity from 14.02 to 22.01 U/mL.


Microbial Cell Factories | 2007

Development of expression vectors for Escherichia coli based on the pCR2 replicon

Rupali Walia; J.K. Deb; Krishna Jyoti Mukherjee

BackgroundRecent developments in metabolic engineering and the need for expanded compatibility required for co-expression studies, underscore the importance of developing new plasmid vectors with properties such as stability and compatibility.ResultsWe utilized the pCR2 replicon of Corynebacterium renale, which harbours multiple plasmids, for constructing a range of expression vectors. Different antibiotic-resistance markers were introduced and the vectors were found to be 100% stable over a large number of generations in the absence of selection pressure. Compatibility of this plasmid was studied with different Escherichia coli plasmid replicons viz. pMB1 and p15A. It was observed that pCR2 was able to coexist with these E.coli plasmids for 60 generations in the absence of selection pressure. Soluble intracellular production was checked by expressing GFP under the lac promoter in an expression plasmid pCR2GFP. Also high level production of human IFNγ was obtained by cloning the h-IFNγ under a T7 promoter in the expression plasmid pCR2-IFNγ and using a dual plasmid heat shock system for expression. Repeated sub-culturing in the absence of selection pressure for six days did not lead to any fall in the production levels post induction, for both GFP and h-IFNγ, demonstrating that pCR2 is a useful plasmid in terms of stability and compatibility.ConclusionWe have constructed a series of expression vectors based on the pCR2 replicon and demonstrated its high stability and sustained expression capacity, in the absence of selection pressure which will make it an efficient tool for metabolic engineering and co-expression studies, as well as for scale up of expression.


Biotechnology Journal | 2015

Indole generates quiescent and metabolically active Escherichia coli cultures.

Chih-Chin Chen; Rupali Walia; Krishna Jyoti Mukherjee; Subhashree Mahalik; David K. Summers

An inherent problem with bacterial cell factories used to produce recombinant proteins or metabolites is that resources are channeled into unwanted biomass as well as product. Over several years, attempts have been made to increase efficiency by unlinking biomass and product generation. One example was the quiescent cell (Q-Cell) expression system that generated non-growing but metabolically active Escherichia coli by over-expressing a regulatory RNA (Rcd) in a defined genetic background. Although effective at increasing the efficiency with which resources are converted to product, the technical complexity of the Rcd-based Q-Cell system limited its use. We describe here an alternative method for generating Q-Cells by the direct addition of indole, or related indole derivatives, to the culture medium of an E. coli strain carrying defined mutations in the hns gene. This simple and effective approach is shown to be functional in both shake-flask and fermenter culture. The cells remain metabolically active and analysis of their performance in the fermenter suggests that they may be particularly suitable for the production of cellular metabolites.


Microbial Cell Factories | 2012

An inverse metabolic engineering approach for the design of an improved host platform for over-expression of recombinant proteins in Escherichia coli.

Chaitali Ghosh; Rashmi Gupta; Krishna Jyoti Mukherjee

BackgroundA useful goal for metabolic engineering would be to generate non-growing but metabolically active quiescent cells which would divert the metabolic fluxes towards product formation rather than growth. However, for products like recombinant proteins, which are intricately coupled to the growth process it is difficult to identify the genes that need to be knocked-out/knocked-in to get this desired phenotype. To circumvent this we adopted an inverse metabolic engineering strategy which would screen for the desired phenotype and thus help in the identification of genetic targets which need to be modified to get overproducers of recombinant protein. Such quiescent cells would obviate the need for high cell density cultures and increase the operational life span of bioprocesses.ResultsA novel strategy for generating a library, consisting of randomly down regulated metabolic pathways in E. coli was designed by cloning small genomic DNA fragments in expression vectors. Some of these DNA fragments got inserted in the reverse orientation thereby generating anti-sense RNA upon induction. These anti-sense fragments would hybridize to the sense mRNA of specific genes leading to gene ‘silencing’. This library was first screened for slow growth phenotype and subsequently for enhanced over-expression ability. Using Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP) as a reporter protein on second plasmid, we were able to identify metabolic blocks which led to significant increase in expression levels. Thus down-regulating the ribB gene (3, 4 dihydroxy-2-butanone-4-phosphate synthase) led to a 7 fold increase in specific product yields while down regulating the gene kdpD (histidine kinase) led to 3.2 fold increase in specific yields.ConclusionWe have designed a high throughput screening approach which is a useful tool in the repertoire of reverse metabolic engineering strategies for the generation of improved hosts for recombinant protein expression.


AMB Express | 2011

Comparative transcriptomic profile analysis of fed-batch cultures expressing different recombinant proteins in Escherichia coli

Ashish K. Sharma; Shubhashree Mahalik; Chaitali Ghosh; Anuradha B. Singh; Krishna Jyoti Mukherjee

There is a need to elucidate the product specific features of the metabolic stress response of the host cell to the induction of recombinant protein synthesis. For this, the method of choice is transcriptomic profiling which provides a better insight into the changes taking place in complex global metabolic networks. The transcriptomic profiles of three fed-batch cultures expressing different proteins viz. recombinant human interferon-beta (rhIFN-β), Xylanase and Green Fluorescence Protein (GFP) were compared post induction. We observed a depression in the nutrient uptake and utilization pathways, which was common for all the three expressed proteins. Thus glycerol transporters and genes involved in ATP synthesis as well as aerobic respiration were severely down-regulated. On the other hand the amino acid uptake and biosynthesis genes were significantly repressed only when soluble proteins were expressed under different promoters, but not when the product was expressed as an inclusion body (IB). High level expression under the T7 promoter (rhIFN-β and xylanase) triggered the cellular degradation machinery like the osmoprotectants, proteases and mRNA degradation genes which were highly up-regulated, while this trend was not true with GFP expression under the comparatively weaker ara promoter. The design of a better host platform for recombinant protein production thus needs to take into account the specific nature of the cellular response to protein expression.

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Ashish K. Sharma

Jawaharlal Nehru University

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Gaurav Pandey

Jawaharlal Nehru University

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Amardeep Khushoo

Jawaharlal Nehru University

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Jagdish C. Gupta

Jawaharlal Nehru University

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Rupali Walia

Jawaharlal Nehru University

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Yogender Pal

Jawaharlal Nehru University

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Anuradha B. Singh

Jawaharlal Nehru University

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Poonam Srivastava

Jawaharlal Nehru University

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