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| United States Patent Application |
20080226768
|
| Kind Code
|
A1
|
|
Kappeler; Stefan
;   et al.
|
September 18, 2008
|
Method of producing non-bovine chymosin and use hereof
Abstract
A method of recombinantly producing a non-bovine pre-prochymosin,
prochymosin or chymosin derived from ruminant species including deer
species, buffalo species, antelope species, giraffe species, ovine
species and caprine species; Camelidae species such as Camelus
dromedarius; porcine species; or Equidae species. The recombinant enzymes
are used in milk coagulating compositions in cheese manufacturing based
on cow's milk and milk from any animal species which are used in cheese
manufacturing including camel's milk.
| Inventors: |
Kappeler; Stefan; (Baden, CH)
; Farah; Zakaria; (Thalwil, CH)
; van den Brink; Johannes Maarten; (Herlev, DK)
; Rahbek-Nielsen; Henrik; (Birkerod, DK)
; Budtz; Peter; (Frederiksberg, DK)
|
| Correspondence Address:
|
BROWDY AND NEIMARK, P.L.L.C.;624 NINTH STREET, NW
SUITE 300
WASHINGTON
DC
20001-5303
US
|
| Serial No.:
|
898540 |
| Series Code:
|
11
|
| Filed:
|
September 13, 2007 |
| Current U.S. Class: |
426/40; 435/226 |
| Class at Publication: |
426/40; 435/226 |
| International Class: |
A23C 19/04 20060101 A23C019/04; C12N 9/64 20060101 C12N009/64 |
Claims
1. A composition comprising a non-bovine pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or
chymosin produced by the method comprising the steps of(i) isolating or
constructing a nucleic acid sequence coding for the pre-prochymosin,
prochymosin or chymosin,(ii) constructing an expression vector comprising
said coding sequence and, operably linked thereto, appropriate expression
signals permitting the pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin to be
expressed in a host cell,(iii) transforming said host cell with the
expression vector,(iv) cultivating the thus transformed host cell under
conditions where the coding sequence is expressed, and(v) harvesting the
pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin.
2. A composition according to claim 1 where the pre-prochymosin,
prochymosin or chymosin is in a substantially deglycosylated form.
3. A composition according to claim 1 comprising pre-prochymosin,
prochymosin or chymosin derived from the group consisting of a Camelidae
species, a buffalo species, an ovine species or a caprine species.
4. A method of manufacturing cheese, comprising adding a milk clotting
effective amount of the composition according to claim 1 to milk and
carrying out appropriate further cheese manufacturing steps.
5. A method according to claim 4 wherein the milk is selected from the
group consisting of cow's milk, camel's milk, buffalo milk, goat's milk,
sheep's milk and a mixture of any such milk types.
6. A method according to claim 4 wherein the yield of cheese obtained is
higher than the yield obtained under identical manufacturing conditions
using the same amount of bovine pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin.
7. A composition according to claim 1, wherein:the coding sequence is
derived from a mammalian species selected from the group consisting of a
ruminant species a Camelidae species, a porcine species, an Equidae
species and a primate species; and/orthe coding sequence for
pre-prochymosin, prochymosin and chymosin is isolated or derived from
Camelus dromedarius; and/orthe nucleic acid sequence codes for a fusion
protein comprising pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin; and/orthe
pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin, or a fusion protein thereof, is
secreted over the host cell membrane; and/orthe expression vector is
derived from pGAMpR as described in Ward et al., 1990 by substituting the
coding sequence of that vector for bovine prochymosin with a coding
sequence for the non-bovine pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin;
and/orthe expression vector is pGAMpR-C as contained in the Aspergillus
niger var. awamori strains deposited under the accession numbers CBS
108915 and CBS 108916; and/orthe transformed host cell is selected from
the group consisting of a bacterial cell, a fungal cell, a yeast cell, a
mammalian cell, an insect cell and a plant cell; and/orthe host cell is
Aspergillus niger var. awamori and/or;the yield of pre-prochymosin,
prochymosin or chymosin milk clotting activity is at least 25% higher
than the yield of bovine pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin milk
clotting activity obtained when using, under identical production
conditions, the same expression vector, but with a coding sequence for
bovine pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin in place of the coding
sequence for the non-bovine pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin;
and/orthe method comprises, as a further step, that the harvested
pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin is subjected to a
deglycosylation treatment; and/orthe host cell is a cell expressing a
deglycosylating enzyme (such as endoH).
8. The composition according to claim 7 wherein the mammalian species is
selected from the group consisting of deer species, buffalo species,
antelope species, giraffe species, ovine species and caprine species.
9. The composition according to claim 7 wherein the nucleic acid sequences
code for a fusion protein which also comprises glucoamylase or an
enzymatically active fragment thereof.
10. The composition of claim 1 which comprises a tylopodal
pre-prochymosin, prochymosin, or chymosin.
11. The composition of claim 10 which comprises a camel pre-prochymosin,
prochymosin or chymosin.
12. The composition of claim 11 which comprises a Camelus dromedaries
pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin.
13. The composition of claim 10 in which the host cell is a non-mammalian
cell.
14. The composition of claim 10 in which the host cell is a microbial
cell.
15. The composition of claim 10 in which the host cell is a yeast cell.
16. The composition of claim 10 in which the host cell is an Aspergillus
niger cell.
17. The composition of claim 14 which comprises a camel pre-prochymosin,
prochymosin or chymosin.
18. The composition of claim 14 which comprises a Camelus dromedaries
pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin.
19. The composition of claim 15 which comprises a camel pre-prochymosin,
prochymosin or chymosin.
20. The composition of claim 15 which comprises a Camelus dromedaries
pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin.
Description
FIELD OF INVENTION
[0001]The present invention relates generally to the field of cheese
manufacturing. In particular, novel recombinant means of providing
milk-clotting enzymes of non-bovine, ie non-Bos taurus, animal origin are
provided. Specifically, the invention pertains to a process of
recombinantly providing pre-prochymosin, prochymosin and chymosin of
non-bovine origin including such enzymes that are derived from camels.
TECHNICAL BACKGROUND AND PRIOR ART
[0002]Enzymatic coagulation of milk-by-milk clotting enzymes, such as
chymosin and pepsin, is one of the most important processes in the
manufacture of cheeses. Enzymatic milk coagulation is a two-phase
process: a first phase where a proteolytic enzyme, chymosin or pepsin,
attacks .kappa.-casein, resulting in a metastable state of the casein
micelle structure and a second phase, where the milk subsequently
coagulates and forms a coagulum.
[0003]Chymosin (EC 3.4.23.4) and pepsin (EC 3.4.23.1), the milk clotting
enzymes of the mammalian stomach, are aspartic proteases belonging to a
broad class of peptidases (Kappeler, 1998). Aspartic proteases are found
in eukaryotes, retroviruses and some plant viruses. Eukaryotic aspartic
proteases are monomers of about 35 kDa, which are folded into a pair of
tandemly arranged domains with a high degree of similarity, i.e. 20% or
higher. The overall secondary structure consists almost entirely of
pleated sheets and is low in .alpha.-helices. Each domain contains an
active site centred on a catalytic aspartyl residue with a consensus
sequence [hydrophobic]-Asp-Thr-Gly-[Ser/Thr] which aids in maintaining
the correct .PHI.-loop conformation of the site, and with multiple
hydrophobic residues near the aspartic residue. The two catalytic sites
are arranged face-to-face in the tertiary structure of correctly folded
proteins. In bovine chymosin, the distance between the aspartic side
chains is about 3.5 .ANG.. The residues are reported to be extensively
hydrogen bonded, concomitantly with the adjacent threonine residues, to
the corresponding residues of the other domain or the neighbouring atoms
of the own domain, to stabilise the correct position. Optimum activity of
an aspartic protease is achieved when one of the aspartic residues is
protonated and the other one is negatively charged. The active sites of
chymosin and other aspartic proteases are embedded, with low
accessibility, in the middle of a cleft, about 40 .ANG. in length, which
separates the two domains, and which is covered by a flap that, in bovine
and camel chymosin, extends from about Leu73 to Ile85 in the N-terminal
domain.
[0004]When produced in the gastric mucosal cells, chymosin and pepsin
occur as enzymatically inactive pre-prochymosin and pre-pepsinogen,
respectively. When chymosin is excreted, an N-terminal peptide fragment,
the pre-fragment (signal peptide) is cleaved off to give prochymosin
including a pro-fragment. Prochymosin is a substantially inactive form of
the enzyme which, however, becomes activated under acidic conditions to
the active chymosin by autocatalytic removal of the pro-fragment. This
activation occurs in vivo in the gastric lumen under appropriate pH
conditions or in vitro under acidic conditions.
[0005]The structural and functional characteristics of bovine, ie Bos
taurus, pre-prochymosin, prochymosin and chymosin have been studied
extensively (Foltman et al. 1977). The pre-part of the bovine
pre-prochymosin molecule comprises 16 aa residues and the pro-part of the
corresponding prochymosin has a length of 42 aa residues. Foltman et al.,
1997 have shown that the active bovine chymosin comprising 323 aa is a
mixture of two forms, A and B, both of which are active, and sequencing
data indicate that the only difference between those two forms is an
aspartate residue at position 290 in chymosin A and a glycine residue at
that position in chymosin B.
[0006]Whereas chymosin is produced naturally in mammalian species
including ruminant species such as bovines, caprines, buffaloes and
ovines; pigs (Houen et al., 1996); Camelidae species; primates including
humans and monkeys; and rats, bovine chymosin and (to a lesser extent)
caprine chymosin are presently the only of these animal chymosin species
that are commercially available to the dairy industry. Bovine chymosin,
in particular calf chymosin, is commercially available both as stomach
enzyme extracts (rennets) comprising the natively produced chymosin and
as recombinantly produced chymosin which is expressed in bacterial, yeast
or fungal host cells (see e.g. WO 95/29999, Ward et al. 1990).
[0007]Recently, studies on functional characteristics of rennet extracted
from the stomach of Camelus dromedarius chymosin have been reported
(Wangoh et al., 1993; Elagamy, 2000) and it has been found that the
clotting time of camel's milk is significantly reduced when camel rennet
is used instead of bovine calf rennet. Fractions of crude camel and calf
rennets, which were isolated by anion-exchange chromatography, have been
tested for their respective capabilities to clot camel's milk and cow's
milk and it was found that the main clotting activity of calf rennet
(i.e. an extract containing both chymosin and pepsin) resides in the
pepsin fraction, i.e. bovine chymosin is substantially inactive in
respect of clotting camel's milk, whereas the main clotting activity of
camel rennet extracts on camel's milk resided in a first fraction that,
compared to calf chymosin, eluted at a somewhat lower NaCl concentration.
The active enzyme of this fraction has not yet been characterised, but it
is assumingly chymosin. It has also been demonstrated that this camel
rennet fraction has a clotting activity on cow's milk that is similar to
that of bovine chymosin (Wangoh et al., 1993). It is evident, therefore,
that more effective clotting of camel's milk could be achieved at an
industrial level were camel chymosin commercially available and it is
also conceivable that camel chymosin is highly suitable as a cow's milk
clotting enzyme as well.
[0008]The primary structure of chymosin isolated from gastric mucosa of
camels has been determined (Kappeler, 1998). The mature and active form
of camel chymosin is 323 aa residues long and it has a molecular weight
of 35.6 kDa and an isoelectric point at pH 4.71. It shows 85.1% aa
sequence identity with bovine chymosin.
[0009]Presently, bovine chymosin is manufactured industrially using
recombinant DNA technology, e.g. using filamentous fungi such as
Aspergillus species (see e.g. Ward, 1990), yeast strains, e.g. of
Klyuveromyces species, or bacterial species, e.g. E. coli, as host
organisms. Such recombinant microbial production strains are constructed
and continuously improved using DNA technology as well as classical
strain improvement measures directed towards optimising the expression
and secretion of the heterologous protein, but it is evident that the
productivity in terms of overall yield of gene product is an important
factor for the cost effectiveness of industrial production of the enzyme.
Accordingly, a continued industrial need exists to improve the yield of
chymosin in recombinant expression systems.
[0010]Whereas efforts to improve yields of chymosin activity up till now
have exclusively been concerned with chymosin of bovine origin, the
industry has not yet explored the possibility of providing effective
chymosin preparations based on non-bovine, ie non-Bos taurus, chymosin
species. However, the present inventors have surprisingly found that it
is possible to provide industrially highly useful non-bovine chymosin
using recombinant DNA technology at a production yield level which,
relative to that which can be obtained in current, optimised bovine
chymosin production systems, is significantly improved.
[0011]In addition to the potential of significantly improved chymosin
production cost-effectiveness, the provision of such non-bovine chymosin
species at a commercial level makes available chymosin products that are
not only capable of clotting cow's milk at least as effectively as
chymosin of bovine origin, but which, additionally, are capable of more
effectively clotting milk from other animal species including milk of the
source species. Specifically, the invention has made it possible to
provide, for the first time, camel chymosin in sufficient quantities to
render an industrial, cost-effective and high quality production of
cheese based on camel's milk possible, which, due to the scarcity of
camel calf stomach material, has not hitherto been possible.
[0012]Additionally, it has been discovered that camel chymosin has a high
clotting activity on cow's milk, which renders the enzyme useful for
manufacturing cheese based on cow's milk. It was a surprising finding of
the present inventors that camel chymosin has a specific .kappa.-casein
hydrolysing activity (Phe-Met 105/106), i.e. C/P ratio as defined
hereinbelow, which is superior to that of bovine chymosin. A higher C/P
ratio implies generally that the loss of protein during cheese
manufacturing due to non-specific protein degradation is reduced, i.e.
the yield of cheese is improved, and that the development of bitter taste
in the cheese during maturation is reduced.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0013]The invention relates in one aspect to a method of producing a
non-bovine pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin, the method
comprising the steps of (i) isolating or constructing a nucleic acid
sequence coding for the pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin, (ii)
constructing an expression vector comprising said coding sequence and,
operably linked thereto, appropriate expression signals permitting the
pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin to be expressed in a host cell,
(iii) transforming said host cell with the expression vector, (iv)
cultivating the thus transformed host cell under conditions where the
coding sequence is expressed and (v) harvesting the pre-prochymosin,
prochymosin or chymosin. As used herein the expression "non-bovine
pre-prochymosin, pro-chymosin or chymosin" refers to such enzymes or
precursors herefor that are derived from a mammalian species other than
Bos taurus.
[0014]In further aspects, the invention pertains to a DNA construct
capable of expressing non-bovine pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or
chymosin, said construct comprising an expression vector comprising a
nucleic acid sequence comprising a gene coding for the pre-prochymosin,
prochymosin or chymosin and, operably linked thereto, appropriate
expression signals permitting the pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or
chymosin to be expressed in a host cell, and to a host cell transformed
with such a DNA construct.
[0015]In still further aspects a composition is provided comprising a
non-bovine pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin produced by the above
method including such an enzyme that is in a substantially deglycosylated
form and a method of manufacturing cheese, comprising adding a milk
clotting effective amount of such a composition to milk and carrying out
appropriate further cheese manufacturing steps.
[0016]In yet another aspect, the invention relates to a method of
manufacturing cheese, comprising adding a milk clotting effective amount
of a non-bovine prochymosin or chymosin to the milk and carrying out
appropriate further cheese manufacturing steps, the non-bovine
prochymosin or chymosin having in said milk a C/P ratio as determined
herein which is in the range of 2-20.
[0017]In other aspects the invention provides a milk clotting composition
comprising a bovine milk clotting enzyme selected from prochymosin,
chymosin and pepsin and a non-bovine milk clotting enzyme selected from
prochymosin, chymosin, pepsin and a microbial aspartic protease and a
method of manufacturing cheese from milk, comprising adding to milk a
milk clotting effective amount of such a composition, and carrying out
appropriate further cheese manufacturing steps.
DETAILED DISCLOSURE OF THE INVENTION
[0018]In accordance with the invention, there is, in one aspect of the
invention, provided a method of recombinantly producing pre-prochymosin,
prochymosin or chymosin of non-bovine origin.
[0019]For the purposes of this application, the expression "non-bovine
origin" refers to any non-Bos taurus mammalian species where
pre-prochymosin is produced naturally in the gastrointestinal tract. Such
species include any of those mentioned above, e.g. ovine species, caprine
species and Camelidae species comprising the genus Camelus with the two
species Camelus dromedarius and Camelus bactrianus; buffalo species
including water buffaloes, Indian buffaloes and Cape buffaloes, the genus
Lama including Lama glama, Lama guanicoe and Lama paco; and the genus
Vicugna. Camels are ruminating, but do not belong to the suborder
Ruminantia as do e.g. bovine, ovine and caprine species, but they belong
to the suborder Tylopoda.
[0020]However, a non-bovine chymosin as used in this context may also
include a chymosin molecule encoded by a cluster or a shuffling of DNA
segments of different origin resulting in complex rearrangements of the
DNA. Shuffling of DNA segments or gene shuffling is in the present
invention in general to be construed as a method for the construction of
chimeric genes resulting in genes coding for chimeric proteins. Such
proteins will consist of domains derived from two or more parental
proteins. The chimeric genes may be constructed either on the basis of
rational design based on knowledge of protein function or on the basis of
combinatorial laboratory methods generating random chimeric genes. Such
random combinatorial libraries can be screened for the identification of
optimal enzymes by a variety of screening procedures.
[0021]Prochymosin is in the present context to be understood as the
precurser or proenzyme of chymosin. Prochymosin appears to possess a
basic leader sequence (pro-part) on the N-terminal side of chymosin and
said leader sequence is believed to be cleaved off during activation of
the prochymosin. Furthermore in this context preprochymosin consists of
prochymosin to which is added on the N-terminal end of prochymosin a
hydrophobic leader sequence. This leader sequence, also called secretion
signal or prepart, is cleaved off when the protein is secreted. Chymosin
is in the cell initially synthesised as preprochymosin. (Harris, T. J.,
Lowe, P. A., Lyons, A., Thomas, P. G., Millican, T. A., Ptael, T. P.,
Bose, C. C., Carey, N. H., Doel, M. T. Nucleic acid Research 1982, Apr.
10, 2177-2187 Molecular cloning and nucleotide sequence of cDNA coding
for calf preprochymosin.)
[0022]In an initial step of this method, a nucleic acid sequence, i.e. a
polynucleotide, of non-bovine origin that codes for pre-prochymosin,
prochymosin or chymosin is provided. The skilled artisan will appreciate
that several approaches for obtaining such a sequence can be used
including one based on the isolation of mRNA from mucosal cells of the
selected source animal species and using this RNA as template in a
nucleotide amplification procedure such as a PCR reaction using suitable
sense and anti-sense primers which e.g. may be constructed synthetically
based on the known sequences for bovine chymosin species. The person of
skill in the art will appreciate that other methods for obtaining a
coding sequence according to the invention may be used such as
hybridisation procedures using as probes fragments of known coding
sequences for chymosin that will permit the presence of homologous DNA or
RNA to be detected in preparations of cells of the selected non-bovine
source species. Alternatively, it is possible to construct a coding
sequence based on the isolation of the non-bovine pre-prochymosin,
prochymosin or chymosin followed by determining the amino acid sequence
of the enzyme or fragments hereof which in turn permits the construction
of primer oligonucleotides for detection and construction of coding
sequences. The basic techniques that are required in the above procedures
of obtaining coding sequences are generally within the common knowledge
of the skilled artisan (Sambrook et al., 1989).
[0023]Having isolated or constructed the nucleotide sequence coding for
the non-bovine pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin an expression
vector is constructed that comprises the coding sequence and, operably
linked thereto, appropriate expression signals, i.e. sequences to control
or regulate the expression, permitting the pre-prochymosin, prochymosin
or chymosin to be expressed in a selected host cell. An expression vector
usually includes the components of a typical cloning vector, i.e. an
element that permits autonomous replication of the vector in the selected
host organism and one or more phenotypic markers for selection purposes.
A suitable expression vector may further comprise one or more expression
signals such as promoter sequences, operators, ribosome binding sites,
translation initiation sites and/or sequences coding for repressor or
activator substances. To permit the secretion of the expressed
polypeptide, a signal sequence may be inserted upstream of the coding
sequence for the pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin. In the present
context, the term "expression signal" includes any of the above control
sequences, repressor or activator substances and signal sequences. For
expression under the direction of control sequences, the coding sequence
is operably linked to the control sequences in proper manner with respect
to expression.
[0024]In accordance with the invention, an expression vector carrying the
nucleotide sequence coding for pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin
can be any vector that is capable of expressing the coding sequence in
the selected host organism, and the choice of vector type will depend on
the host cell into which it is to be introduced. Thus, the vector may be
an autonomously replicating vector, i.e. a vector that exists as an
extrachromosomal entity, the replication of which is independent of
chromosomal replication in the host cells, e.g. a plasmid, a
bacteriophage, a minichromosome or an artificial chromosome.
Alternatively, the vector may be a vector which, when introduced into a
host cell, is integrated into the host cell genome and replicated with
the chromosome, including a transposable element.
[0025]In the vector, the nucleotide sequence coding for the non-bovine
pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin is operably combined with a
suitable promoter sequence. The promoter may be any DNA sequence, which
confers transcriptional activity to the host organism of choice and may
be derived from genes encoding proteins, which are either homologous or
heterologous to the host organism. Examples of suitable promoters for
directing the transcription of the coding sequence of the invention in a
bacterial host include the promoter of the lac operon of E. coli, the tac
promoter, the Streptomyces coelicolor agarase gene dagA promoters, the
promoters of the Bacillus licheniformis .alpha.-amylase gene (amyL), the
promoters of the Bacillus stearothermophilus maltogenic amylase gene
(amyM), the promoters of the Bacillus amyloliquefaciens .alpha.-amylase
gene (amyQ), the promoters of the Bacillus subtilis xylA and xylB genes
and promoters of lactic acid bacterial origin such as the regulatable
promoters disclosed in WO 94/16086, which is incorporated herein by
reference.
[0026]For transcription in a fungal species, examples of useful promoters
are those derived from the genes encoding the Pichia pastoris alcohol
oxidase, Aspergillus oryzae TAKA amylase, Rhizomucor miehei aspartic
protein-ase, Aspergillus niger neutral -amylase, Aspergillus niger acid
stable-amylase, A. niger glucoamylase, A. niger gpdA, A. niger pepA,
Rhizomucor miehei lipase, Aspergillus oryzae alkaline protease,
Aspergillus oryzae triose phosphate isomerase or Aspergillus nidulans
acetamidase, A. nidulans gpdA and a Trichoderma reseei chbl promoter. As
examples of suitable promoters for expression in a yeast species the Gal
1 and Gal 10 promoters of Saccharomyces cerevisiae can be mentioned. When
expressed in a bacterial species such as E. coli, a suitable promoter may
be selected from a bacteriophage promoter including a T7 promoter or a
lambda bacteriophage promoter.
[0027]The vector comprising the DNA fragment encoding the non-bovine
pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin active polypeptide may also
comprise a selectable marker, e.g. a gene the product of which
complements a defect in the host organism such as a mutation conferring
an auxothrophic phenotype, or the marker may be one which confers
antibiotic resistance or resistance to heavy metal ions.
[0028]In one specific embodiment, the expression vector is derived from
pGAMpR as described in Ward et al., 1990 by substituting the coding
sequence of that vector for bovine prochymosin with a coding sequence for
the non-bovine pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin. An example of
such a pGAMpR-derived expression vector is pGAMpR-C deposited in an
Aspergillus niger var. awamori host environment under the accession Nos.
CBS 108915 and CBS 108916, respectively.
[0029]The person of skill in the art will readily appreciate that any
sequence coding for a non-bovine pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin
constructable as described above can be modified by substituting,
deleting, inserting or adding one or more nucleosides to obtain a
sequence coding for a non-bovine pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin
comprising the amino acid sequence of the naturally produced non-bovine
enzyme or having, relative to the naturally produced non-bovine enzyme, a
modified amino acid sequence. Such a modified coding sequence includes a
chimeric sequence comprising parts of two or more coding sequences
isolated or derived from non-bovine animal species and chimeric coding
sequences comprising part of a coding sequence from one or more non-Bos
taurus species and part of a Bos taurus coding sequence.
[0030]In a subsequent step of the method a suitable host cell is
transformed with the expression vector. The host cell may be transformed
with an autonomously replicating vector or a vector that permits that the
coding sequence becomes integrated into the host cell chromosome. Such an
integration is generally considered to be advantageous as the coding
sequence is more likely to be stably maintained in the cell. Integration
of the coding sequence into the host chromosome may be carried out
according to conventional methods such as e.g. by homologous or
heterologous recombination or by means of a transposable element.
[0031]In accordance with the invention, the host organism may be a cell of
a higher organism such as an animal cell, including a mammal, an avian or
an insect cell, or a plant cell. However, in preferred embodiments, the
host organism is a microbial cell, e.g. a bacterial or a fungal cell
including a yeast cell.
[0032]Examples of suitable bacterial host organisms are gram positive
bacterial species such as Bacillaceae including Bacillus subtilis,
Bacillus licheniformis, Bacillus lentus, Bacillus brevis, Bacillus
stearothermophilus, Bacillus alkalophilus, Bacillus amyloliquefaciens,
Bacillus coagulans, Bacillus circulans, Bacillus lautus, Bacillus
megaterium and Bacillus thuringiensis, Streptomyces species such as
Streptomyces murinus, lactic acid bacterial species including Lactococcus
spp. such as Lactococcus lactis, Lactobacillus spp. including
Lactobacillus reuteri, Leuconostoc spp. and Streptococcus spp.
Alternatively, strains of a gram negative bacterial species such as a
species belonging to Enterobacteriaceae, including E. coli or to
Pseudomonadaceae may be selected as the host organism.
[0033]A suitable yeast host organism may advantageously be selected from a
species of Saccharomyces including Saccharomyces cerevisiae or a species
belonging to Schizosaccharomyces. Further useful yeast host organisms
include Pichia spp. such as methylotrophic species hereof, including
Pichia pastoris, and Klyuveromyces spp. including Klyuveromyces lactis.
[0034]Suitable host organisms among filamentous fungi include species of
Acremonium, Aspergillus, Fusarium, Humicola, Mucor, Myceliophtora,
Neurospora, Penicillium, Thielavia, Tolypocladium or Trichoderma, such as
e.g. Aspergillus aculeatus, Aspergillus awamori, Aspergillus foetidus,
Aspergillus japonicus, Aspergillus oryzae, Aspergillus nidulans or
Aspergillus niger, including Aspergillus niger var. awamori, Fusarium
bactridioides, Fusarium cerealis, Fusarium crookwellense, Fusarium
culmorum, Fusarium graminearum, Fusarium graminum, Fusarium heterosporum,
Fusarium negundi, Fusarium oxysporum, Fusarium reticulatum, Fusarium
roseum, Fusarium sambucinum, Fusarium sarcochroum, Fusarium
sporotrichiodes, Fusarium sulphureum, Fusarium torulosum, Fusarium
tric
hothecioides, Fusarium venenatum, Humicola insolens, Humicola
langinosa, Mucor miehei, Myceliophtora thermophila, Neurospora crassa,
Penicillium chrysogenum, Penicillium camenbertii, Penicillium
purpurogenum, Rhizomucor miehei, Thielavia terestris, Trichoderma
harzianum, Trichoderma koningii, Trichoderma longibrachiatum, Trichoderma
reesii or Trochoderma viride.
[0035]Examples of Aspergillus niger var. awamori strains transformed with
a vector expressing non-bovine pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin
include the strains deposited under the accession Nos. 108915 and 108916.
[0036]Some of the above useful host organisms, such as fungal species or
gram positive bacterial species, may be transformed by a process which
involves protoplast formation and transformation of the protoplasts
followed by regeneration of the cell wall in a manner known per se.
[0037]In subsequent steps the thus transformed host cell is cultivated
under conditions where the coding sequence is expressed, and the
pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin is harvested. The medium used to
cultivate the transformed host cells may be any conventional medium
suitable for growing the host cells in question and obtaining expression
of the polypeptide. Suitable media are available from commercial
suppliers or can be prepared according to published recipes.
[0038]The resulting non-bovine pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin is
typically recovered or harvested from the cultivation medium by
conventional procedures including separating the host cells from the
medium by centrifugation or filtration, if necessary, after disruption of
the cells, followed by precipitating the proteinaceous components of the
supernatant or filtrate e.g. by adding a salt such as ammonium sulphate,
followed by a purification step. Alternatively, the cell-free cultivation
medium may also, optionally after concentrating or diluting it or
addition of conventional additives, be used directly as a coagulant
product for cheese manufacturing.
[0039]It will be appreciated that the non-bovine pre-prochymosin,
prochymosin or chymosin as isolated can be subjected to sequence
modifications by deleting, substituting, modifying or adding one or more
amino acids as long as the resulting modified molecule retains at least
part of the milk clotting activity of the non-bovine pre-prochymosin,
prochymosin or chymosin as isolated. Such modifications can readily be
performed by the person of skill in the art using methods for protein
modifications that are commonly known in the art.
[0040]In accordance with the invention, the nucleotide sequence coding for
non-Bos taurus preprochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin is isolated or
derived from a mammalian species selected from the group consisting of a
ruminant species, a Camelidae species, a porcine species, an Equidae
species and a primate species. A ruminant species source animal may be
selected from camel species, deer species, buffalo species, antelope
species, giraffe species, ovine species and caprine species. A
particularly interesting source animal is Camelus dromedarius.
[0041]It has been found that expression and secretion of a heterologous
gene product can be enhanced by expressing the gene product in the form
of a fusion protein. In this context, the term "fusion protein" denotes a
chimeric protein comprising pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin or
at least a milk coagulation active part hereof and, as the fusion
partner, at least one amino acid of a different polypeptide. Accordingly,
in one embodiment of the invention, the above method is one wherein the
nucleic acid sequence codes for a fusion protein comprising
pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin. More specifically, the fusion
partner may be glucoamylase or a fragment thereof. In one embodiment the
pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin, or a fusion protein thereof, is
secreted over the host cell membrane.
[0042]One major objective of the present invention is to provide a method
of producing a non-bovine pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin
recombinantly at a high yield. During the experimentation leading to the
invention it was a highly unexpected finding that a non-bovine
pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin, when expressed in the same host
cell and under essentially identical conditions, is expressed at activity
yields which are significantly higher than are the obtained activity
yields of bovine chymosin.
[0043]In accordance herewith, the above method of the invention is
preferably a method wherein the yield of non-bovine pre-prochymosin,
prochymosin or chymosin milk clotting activity is at least 10%, 25%, 50%,
100% or 200% higher than the yield of bovine pre-prochymosin, prochymosin
or chymosin milk clotting activity obtained when using, under identical
production conditions, the same expression vector, but with a coding
sequence for bovine pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin in place of
the sequence coding for the non-bovine pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or
chymosin.
[0044]It is generally known that polypeptides expressed by eukaryotic host
organisms may be glycosylated when expressed, the degree of glycosylation
depending on the type of polypeptide and host organism. It has been found
previously that the milk clotting activity of aspartic proteases of
microbial origin that are glycosylated upon expression may be enhanced by
subjecting the proteases to a deglycosylating treatment to at least
partially remove the sugar moieties attached to the proteases. Such a
deglycosylation treatment may e.g. comprise treating the glycosylated
protease with an enzyme having a deglycosylating activity including as
examples PNGase and endo-.beta.-N-acetylglucosaminidase (EC 3.2.1.96)
(Endo-H). Alternatively, the deglycosylation may be obtained by
subjecting the glycosylated protease to a chemical treatment, such as
treatment with periodate.
[0045]Accordingly, in a specific embodiment, the above method comprises,
as a further step, that the harvested pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or
chymosin is subjected to a deglycosylation treatment.
[0046]It is also contemplated that deglycosylation of an expressed
pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin can be obtained in a more direct
manner by providing a host cell that in addition to the pre-prochymosin,
prochymosin or chymosin expresses a deglycosylating enzyme such as Endo-H
whereby the initially glycosylated pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or
chymosin is deglycosylated intracellularly or following secretion.
Accordingly, in a another embodiment the host cell is a cell further
expressing a deglycosylating enzyme capable of deglycosylating
co-expressed pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin.
[0047]In another aspect, the invention provides a DNA construct capable of
expressing non-bovine pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin. This
construct comprises an expression vector comprising a nucleic acid
sequence comprising a gene coding for the pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or
chymosin and, operably linked thereto, appropriate expression signals as
defined above, permitting the pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin to
be expressed in a host cell. Accordingly, such a construct includes a
construct that comprises a sequence coding for a signal peptide for the
pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin and/or an expression signal that
is a promoter not natively associated with the coding sequence.
[0048]The coding sequence of the DNA construct of the invention can be
derived from any of the above non-bovine, i.e. non-Bos taurus, animal
species including Camelus dromedarius. In useful embodiments, the DNA
construct comprises a nucleic acid sequence that codes for a fusion
protein as also defined above, comprising the pre-prochymosin,
prochymosin or chymosin or a fragment hereof having milk clotting
activity. In a further embodiment, the the fusion protein comprises
glucoamylase or a fragment thereof. The expression vector of the DNA
construct may be any of the expression vectors mentioned above including
pGAMpR-derived vectors such as the pGAMpR-C vector as described in the
below examples. Additionally, the DNA construct according to the
invention may further comprise a sequence coding for a deglycosylating
enzyme such as endoH.
[0049]The sequence of the DNA construct according to the invention that
codes for a non-bovine pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin may be a
naturally occurring coding sequence. However, as it will be appreciated
by the person of skill in the art, the coding sequence may also be one
that is derived from such a naturally occurring coding sequence by one or
more silent nucleotide substitution(s), the term "silent" implying that
the codon in which the substitution(s) occur codes for the same amino
acid as the corresponding codon in the naturally occurring coding
sequence.
[0050]In a further aspect, the invention provides a host cell transformed
with a DNA construct as described above. The host cell is selected from
any of the above organisms, i.e. bacterial cells, fungal cells including
Aspergillus niger var. awamori such as the strains deposited as CBS
108915 and CBS 108916, yeast cells, mammalian cells, insect cells and
plant cells.
[0051]In a still further aspect a milk clotting composition is provided
comprising a non-bovine prochymosin or chymosin as defined herein and
produced by the above method including such a prochymosin or chymosin
that is in a substantially deglycosylated form. Such a composition may,
in addition to the active milk clotting enzyme, comprise additives that
are conventionally used in rennets of animal origin such as e.g. NaCl. In
preferred embodiments, the composition comprises pre-prochymosin,
prochymosin or chymosin derived from the group consisting of a Camelidae
species, a buffalo species, an ovine species or a caprine species.
[0052]The recombinant non-bovine pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin
as provided herein is useful as a milk coagulant product. Accordingly, an
important objective of the invention is to provide a method of
manufacturing cheese, comprising adding a milk clotting effective amount
of the above composition to milk and carrying out appropriate further
cheese manufacturing steps. The pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin
of the invention is suitable for cheese manufacturing processes wherein
the milk is selected from cow's milk, camel milk, buffalo milk, goat's
milk and sheep's milk.
[0053]An aspartic protease such as chymosin that is suitable for cheese
manufacturing should have a high specific milk clotting activity (C) and
a low general, i.e. non-specific, proteolytic activity (P) with regard to
milk proteins. Accordingly, the C/P ratio should preferably be as high as
possible, as a relatively high P-value, during the cheese manufacturing
pro??cess and during maturation of the cheese will lead to the formation
of low molecular peptides and free amino acids, which in turn may confer
to the finished cheese an undesirable bitter taste and also result in a
loss of cheese yield. As used herein, the term "C/P ratio" is defined by
the methods for determining a C-value and a P-value, respectively as
described in the below examples.
[0054]As shown in the below Examples, the use of a recombinantly produced
non-bovine prochymosin or chymosin in cheese manufacturing results in a
higher yield of cheese than the yield obtained with the same amount of
milk clotting activity of bovine prochymosin or chymosin. Accordingly, in
one embodiment the invention provides a cheese manufacturing method
wherein the yield of cheese obtained is higher than the yield obtained
under identical manufacturing conditions using the same amount of bovine
prochymosin or chymosin.
[0055]It is demonstrated in the below examples, that the non-bovine
pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or chymosin has a higher C/P ratio, relative
to the conventionally used bovine chymosin. Accordingly, the invention
pertains in yet another aspect to a method of manufacturing cheese,
comprising adding a milk clotting effective amount of a non-bovine
prochymosin or chymosin to the milk including bovine milk and carrying
out appropriate further cheese manufacturing steps, the non-bovine
prochymosin or chymosin having in said milk a C/P ratio in the range of
2-20, preferably a C/P ratio of at least 3, such as at least 5 or even at
least 10.
[0056]In one specific embodiment such a pre-prochymosin, prochymosin or
chymosin is derived from Camelus dromedarius.
[0057]It is a further objective of the invention to provide a milk
clotting composition comprising a milk clotting bovine enzyme selected
from prochymosin, chymosin and pepsin and a non-bovine milk clotting
enzyme selected from prochymosin, chymosin and pepsin including such a
composition where the milk clotting activity ratio between the bovine and
the non-bovine milk clotting enzyme is in the range of 1:99 to 99:1,
including a composition where at least 2% of the milk clotting activity
is from the non-bovine enzyme such as at least 5%, 10%, 20%, 50%, 75, 90
or 98% of the activity. In one preferred embodiment, the non-bovine
enzyme in such a mixed composition is derived from Camelus dromedarius.
[0058]There is also provided a method of manufacturing cheese from milk
including cow's milk, camel's milk, buffalo milk, goat's milk, sheep's
milk and a mixture of any such milk types, comprising adding a milk
clotting effective amount of the above composition and carrying out
appropriate further cheese manufacturing steps.
[0059]The invention will now be described in further details in the
following, non-limiting examples and the drawings where:
[0060]FIG. 1 is a map of plasmid pSK-SbXb-mut containing a glucoamylase
A-chymosin B expression cassette. A silent mutation results in a unique
Pm/l site;
[0061]FIG. 2 is a map of plasmid pGAMpR-pml which is identical to plasmid
pGAMpR except for a silent mutation resulting in a unique Pm/l site;
[0062]FIG. 3 is a map of plasmid pGAMpR-C, a camel chymosin expression
construct;
[0063]FIG. 4 shows the milk clotting activity in arbitrary units in
supernatants of plasmid pGAMpR-C transformed Aspergillus niger var.
awamori cultivated in shake flasks in CSL medium for 24-48 hrs at
37.degree. C. and 200 rpm;
[0064]FIG. 5 shows the production of camel chymosin activity in pilot
scale fermentation of pGAMpR-C transformed Aspergillus niger var. awamori
strain #21 and #28 as compared to production of bovine chymosin activity
using an Aspergillus niger var. awamori strain transformed with pGAMpR;
[0065]FIG. 6 illustrates the progress of whole casein digestion over time
using recombinantly produced camel chymosin (.box-solid. - - - -
.box-solid.) and bovine chymosin (.diamond-solid. - - - -
.diamond-solid.), respectively;
[0066]FIG. 7 illustrates the general, non-specific proteolytic activity as
absorbancy of 3% TCA-precipitated supernatant of 100 nM recombinantly
produced camel chymosin (.box-solid. - - - - .box-solid.) and bovine
chymosin (.diamond-solid. - - - - .diamond-solid.), respectively in 33 nM
MES, pH 5.80 using 0.5% N,N-de-methylated bovine casein as the substrate
and incubating at 32.degree. C. for 30-180 min. at different pH;
[0067]FIG. 8 illustrates the general, non-specific proteolytic activity as
absorbancy of 3% TCA-precipitated supernatant of 100 nM recombinantly
produced camel chymosin (.box-solid. - - - - .box-solid.) and bovine
chymosin (.diamond-solid. - - - - .diamond-solid.), respectively in 33 nM
MES, pH 5.80 using 0.5% N,N-de-methylated bovine casein as the substrate
and incubating at 32.degree. C. for 30-180 min. at different Ca.sup.2+
concentrations;
[0068]FIG. 9 illustrates the general, non-specific proteolytic activity as
absorbancy of 3% TCA-precipitated supernatant of 100 nM recombinantly
produced camel chymosin (.box-solid. - - - - .box-solid.) and bovine
chymosin (.diamond-solid. - - - - .diamond-solid.), respectively in 33 nM
MES, pH 5.80 using 0.5% N,N-de-methylated bovine casein as the substrate
and incubating at 32.degree. C. for 30-180 min. at different
temperatures; and
[0069]FIG. 10 shows peptide and protein concentration in 50 .mu.l of the
soluble phase of a coagulum of reconstituted bovine skimmed milk
coagulated for 5, 60 and 1320 min., respectively with 65 mlMCU ml.sup.-1
recombinantly produced camel chymosin (.box-solid. - - - - .box-solid.)
and bovine chymosin (.diamond-solid. - - - - .diamond-solid.),
respectively, measured as absorbancy at 280 nm, and diluted in 950 .mu.l
of 8M guanidine-HCl.
EXAMPLE 1
Construction of a Vector for the Expression of Camel Chymosin
[0070]Unless indicated otherwise, recombinant DNA techniques were
according to Sambrook et al., 1989.
1.1 Cloning of Camelus dromedarius Chymosin Gene
[0071]A DNA sequence containing a camel prochymosin (cd-prochymosin)
coding sequence and adjacent 5' and 3' sequences of the pGAMpR vector
(Ward et al., 1990) was amplified by PCR. The pGAMpR vector comprises, as
a selection marker, the pyr4 gene of Neurospora crassa, which is capable
of complementing a pyrG mutation in a recipient strain. mRNA was isolated
from mucosal tissue of a 3 year old camel using a direct mRNA Kit
(Quiagen, D-40724 Hilden, Germany). Based on this isolated mRNA, a cDNA
template for PCR was generated by reverse transcription. For PCR
amplification the following pair of primers were used:
TABLE-US-00001
cd-prochymosin forward:
Pml/I
(SEQ ID NO:1)
5'-cacgtggcggAGTGGGATCACCAGGATCCCTCTG-3'
cd-prochymosin reverse:
XbaI
(SEQ ID NO:2)
5'-tctagaggaTCAGATGGCCTTGGCCAGCCCCACG-3'
[0072]The PCR product was ligated into a pCR-script vector (Stratagene, La
Jolla, Calif.) according to the manufacturer's recommendations.
1.2 Construction of cd-Prochymosin Expression Vector, pGAMpR-C
[0073]For construction of pGAMpR-C, a Spel-Xbal fragment containing a
fusion between the Aspergillus niger glucoamylase and the Bos taurus
prochymosin coding sequences was isolated from pGAMpR. This fragment was
cloned into pBluescript-SK II+, resulting in vector pSK-SpXb.
[0074]A silent mutation was introduced into pSK-SpXb by
oligonucleotide-based mutagenesis in the 3'-region of the glucoamylase to
create a unique site for Pm/l, resulting in plasmid pSK-SpXb-mut (FIG.
1). The following pair of oligonucleotide primers was used (bases
introducing the mutation in the vector are shown in capitals):
TABLE-US-00002
(SEQ ID NO:3)
5'-gcgacggtgactgacacGtggcgggcagaaataac-3'
(Pml/I mutation forward)
(SEQ ID NO:4)
5'-gttatttctgcccgccaCgtgtcagtcaccgtcgc-3'
(Pml/I mutation reverse)
[0075]The Spel-Xbal fragment from pSK-SpXb-mut was used to replace the
corresponding fragment in pGAMpR, resulting in pGAMpR-pml (FIG. 2).
pGAMpR-pml was digested with Pm/l and Xbal and the camel cDNA clone,
digested with the same restriction enzymes, was inserted, resulting in
pGAMpR-C (FIG. 3). The sequence of the glucoamylase-camel prochymosin
fusion in pGAMpR-C was confirmed on both strands.
[0076]Accordingly, the Aspergillus expression vector plasmid pGAMpR-C is
identical to pGAMpR, the expression plasmid used for expression of bovine
chymosin, except that the prochymosin coding sequence is that isolated
from Camelus dromedarius. When expressed and secreted, the camel
prochymosin is converted into chymosin by autocatalytical cleavage of the
pro-sequence.
EXAMPLE 2
Transformation of Aspergillus niger var. awamori with pGAMpR-C
[0077]For these transformation experiments, a derivative of Aspergillus
niger var. awamori, strain dgr246pyrG (Ward et al., 1993) was used as
recipient. This strain is a derivative of Aspergillus niger var. awamori
strain GCI-HF1-2dgr246 having a pyrG mutation, rendering the strain
incapable of growing in the absence of uridine, and which comprises
several copies of the pGAMpR plasmid. The derivative strain, dgr246pyrG
used as recipient is derived by curing the pyrG mutant parent strain for
all copies of pGAMpR.
[0078]The dgr246pyrG strain has been deposited under the Budapest Treaty
with the Centraalbureau voor Schimmelcultures (CBS), Oosterstraat 1, P.O.
Box 273, 3740 AG Baarn, The Netherlands, on 13 Jun. 2000 under the
accession No. CBS 108914.
[0079]An optimised protocol as developed by Chr. Hansen A/S was applied
for transformation of the "cured" Aspergillus strain. This protocol
comprises the steps of providing a liquid culture medium, propagation of
fungal biomass, generation of protoplasts and transformation including
regeneration of protoplasts and selection of transformants.
2.1 Propagation of Fungal Biomass
[0080]50 ml of CSL medium [per litre: corn steep liquor, 100 g;
NaH.sub.2PO.sub.4.2H.sub.2O, 1 g; MgSO.sub.4, 0.5 g; Mazu antifoaming
agent, 2g, maltose, 100 g, glucose, 10 g, fructose, 50 g, water 736.5 g]
is added to a sterile 250 ml flask, 0.5 ml penicillin/streptomycin
supplement (Gibco-BRL #15140-114)] is added and the medium inoculated
with 10.sup.6 spores per ml. The inoculated medium is cultivated
overnight at 34-37.degree. C. at 200-250 rpm to obtain a dense suspension
of mycelium. 10 ml of this pre-culture is transferred to 100 ml complete
Aspergillus medium in a 500 ml flask without baffles, incubation
overnight at 34-37.degree. C. at 200-250 rpm to obtain a mycelial
biomass.
2.2 Generation of Protoplasts
[0081]Mycelium as obtained in the above step is filtered over sterile
myracloth, washed with sterile water and subsequently with 1700 mOsmol
NaCl/CaCl.sub.2 (0.27 M CaCl.sub.2.2 H.sub.2O, 39.7 g/l; 0.58 M NaCl,
33.9 g/l), gently squeezed dry and transferred to a Falcon tube to
determine the weight and left to stand on ice.
[0082]20 ml 1700 mOsmol NaCl/CaCl.sub.2 per g mycelium is added to
resuspend the mycelium followed by adding 50 mg Sigma L-1412 Trichoderma
harzianum Lytic Enzyme per g mycelium dissolved in a small volume of 1700
mOsmol NaCl/CaCl.sub.2, incubation in an Erlenmeyer flask at 100 rpm,
37.degree. C. for about 4 hrs during which period the mycelium is
repeatedly resuspended every 30 minutes.
[0083]When good protoplasting is obtained, i.e. many free protoplasts
occur and with hardly any intact mycelium left, the mixture is filtered
on ice, using Mesh sheet or myracloth and an equal volume of ice cold
STC1700 (1.2 M sorbitol, 218 g/l; 35 mM NaCl, 2.04 g/l; 10 mM Tris.HCl pH
7.5 and 50 mM CaCl.sub.2.2 H.sub.2O, 7.35 g/l) is added. The number of
protoplasts is counted using a glass Burger-Turk chamber. The protoplast
suspension is spun using a bench top centrifuge at 2,000 rpm at 4.degree.
C. The resulting pellet is resuspended very gently in 20 ml ice cold
STC1700. This washing procedure is repeated twice and the final pellet is
resuspended in ice cold STC1700 to a final concentration of about
1.times.10.sup.8 protoplasts per ml followed by adjustment to
1.times.10.sup.8 protoplasts per ml.
2.3 Transformation
[0084]200 .mu.l (2.times.10.sup.7 protoplasts), 2 .mu.l of 0.5 M ATA (0.5
M aurine carboxylic acid (Sigma) in 20% ethanol) and DNA (comprising a
marker) up till 15 .mu.l, typically 5-10 .mu.g of DNA, is mixed in a 12
ml test tube. As control a corresponding mixture, but without DNA is
used. The transformation mixtures are incubated on ice for 25 min.
followed by adding a first drop of 250 .mu.l PTC (60% PEG 4000; 10 mM
Tris.HCl pH 7.5; 50 mM CaCl.sub.2) by tipping the tube a couple of times
without letting the mixture touch the lid and a second drop of 250 .mu.l,
mixing and adding 850 .mu.l followed by mixing. Each tube is incubated at
room temperature exactly 20 min. followed by filling the tubes with ice
cold STC1700 and mixing by reverting the tubes. The mixture is
centrifuged for 8-10 min. using a bench top centrifuge at 2000 rpm at
4.degree. C. The resulting pellet is dissolved gently in about 400-800
.mu.l STC1700.
2.4 Regeneration and Selection of Transformants
[0085]The transformation mixture is spread onto solid selective
regeneration medium plates containing per I medium: agar, 15 g; sorbitol,
218 g; AspA salts 50.times.(per litre: 300 g NaNO.sub.3, 26 g KCl, 76 g
KH.sub.2PO.sub.4, 18 ml 10 M KOH, pH about 6.5); glucose 50%, 20 ml;
Gibco-BRL #15140-114 Pen-Strep, 10 ml; MgSO.sub.4, 2 ml; trace elements
(2.2 g ZnSO.sub.4, 1.1 g H.sub.3BO.sub.3, 0.5 g MnCl.sub.2.7H.sub.2O, 0.5
g FeSO.sub.4.7H.sub.2O, 0.17 g CoCl.sub.2.6H.sub.2O, 0.16
CuSO.sub.4.5H.sub.2O, 0.15 NaMoO.sub.4.2H.sub.2O, 5 g EDTA, water to 100
ml, pH 6.5), 1 ml. The plates are incubated at 37.degree. C. for 5-10
days and transformants selected.
[0086]About 80 transformants were obtained and spores of these
transformants were obtained.
EXAMPLE 3
Production of Camel Chymosin Using Recombinant Aspergillus niger var.
awamori
3.1 Selection of Transformants Producing High Amounts of Chymosin
[0087]To select the transformants that produced the most chymosin, a small
scale (20 ml) shake flask experiments with 45 transformants was carried
out. 20 ml of CSL medium (see above) was inoculated with 1.times.10.sup.6
spores of each transformant, incubation 24-48 hrs at 37.degree. C. and
200 rpm. 2 ml of these precultures was used for inoculation of 20 ml
medium followed by incubation for 10 days at 37.degree. C., 200 rpm.
After incubation the cultures were centrifuged at 14,000 rpm using an
Eppendorf centrifuge and the clear supernatants were collected and stored
at -20.degree. C. until determination of chymosin activity. As controls,
both the recipient strain and an Aspergillus niger var. awamori
production strain for bovine chymosin, dgr246chlor25 (Dunn-Coleman et
al., 1991) containing the pGAMpR (spores of this strain used as inoculum
material is referred to herein as PIM2075) were included.
[0088]The results of these experiments are summarised in FIG. 4. It
appears that 5 of the tested strains produced in excess of 40 arbitrary
units per ml supernatant. Among the tested transformants, the best
producers were strains #21 and #28.
[0089]A sample of the strains #21 and #28 were deposited under the
Budapest Treaty with the Centraalbureau voor Schimmelcultures (CBS),
Oosterstraat 1, P.O. Box 273, 3740 AG Baarn, The Netherlands, on 13 Jun.
2000 under the accession Nos. 108915 and 108916, respectively.
[0090]A colony PCR experiment was carried out to verify that the chymosin
produced by the transformants in fact was camel chymosin. Mycelium of the
transformants was analysed using two primer sets, one specific for bovine
chymosin and one specific for camel chymosin. It was confirmed that all
transformants only contained the Camelus dromedarius gene in that no
bands were observed in any of the transformants using the bovine primer
set, but bands were generated in all of the transformants when the camel
chymosin primer set was used. Both the cured recipient strain and the
bovine chymosin production strain were tested similarly. No bands could
be observed with either primer set when the cured strain was tested
whereas the control production strain yielded PCR products only with the
bovine chymosin primer set.
3.2 Pilot Scale Production of Camel Chymosin
[0091]The two best produces from the above small scale screening procedure
were tested further for their chymosin production capabilities in 19 I
Bioengineering NLF22 fermentors. As a control, an Aspergillus niger var.
awamori strain transformed with pGAMpR, referred to as PIM2075 was tested
similarly.
[0092]The basic medium used in this experiment had the following
composition per litre: Dan-pro.RTM. soya, 44.68 g; KH.sub.2PO.sub.4, 1.06
g; Mazu DF204K antifoaming agent, 1.00 g; MgSO.sub.4.7H.sub.2O, 2.07 g;
NaH.sub.2PO.sub.4.2H.sub.2O, 1.20 g; (NH.sub.3).sub.2PO.sub.4, 17.29 g;
H.sub.2SO4 38%, 0.80 ml, water to l litre. A 35% aqueous solution of
maltose was used as the carbon source and to maintain the pH at the
pre-set value, a 25% NH.sub.3 solution was used. The fermentation
parameters were the following: pH: 5.5; temperature: 35.degree. C.;
agitation: 600 rpm; air supply: 12 I per min.; overpressure: 0.5 bar.
[0093]During 164 hrs of fermentation, the concentration of camel and
bovine chymosin activity, respectively was determined at intervals in the
fermentation broths. The results are summarised in FIG. 5. As it appears,
the yield of camel chymosin activity from both transformant strains was,
during the entire fermentation period, significantly higher than that of
bovine chymosin. At the end of the fermentations, the chymosin milk
clotting activity yield of recombinant strains #21 and #28 was 361 and
343 arbitrary units, respectively, whereas the yield of bovine chymosin
activity produced by PIM2075 was 215 arbitrary units, i.e. the
recombinant strains expressing Camelus dromedarius chymosin produced
about 70% more chymosin activity than the bovine chymosin producing
strain did under identical production conditions.
EXAMPLE 4
Non-Specific Proteolytic Activity of Recombinant Camelus dromedarius
Chymosin
[0094]In this experiment, the general (non-specific) proteolytic activity
(P-value) of recombinantly produced Camelus dromedarius chymosin (Cd
chymosin) as obtained in Example 3 on bovine whole casein was studied.
For comparison, a recombinantly produced bovine chymosin, ChyMax.RTM. (Bt
chymosin) was included. The P-value was tested over time and the effect
on the proteolytic activity of Ca.sup.2+ and pH, respectively, was
studied.
5 4.1 Assay
[0095]Unless otherwise stated, the activity reactions were done under the
following conditions: 0.5% N,N-dimethylated bovine casein (Sigma C9801),
100 nM chymosin in 33 nM MES, pH 5.80 at 32.degree. C. for 30 min. to 180
min. The absorbency of 3% TCA supernatants was measured at 280 nm. The
conditions for the activity reactions were selected so as to include
those of a conventional cheese manufacturing process in respect of
substrate to be analysed, concentrations of substrate and enzyme,
temperature (30-35.degree. C.), pH (about 6.6), Ca.sup.2+ concentration
(0-2 nM) and reaction time.
4.2 Results
[0096]Over a time period of 180 min., the P-value of the Bt chymosin
increased progressively to an A.sub.280 of about 0.5 whereas, during the
reaction period the Cd chymosin showed a much lower non-specific
proteolytic activity, ending at an A.sub.280 of about 0.1 (FIG. 6).
[0097]The effects of pH in the range of 5.4-6.8, Ca.sup.2+ concentration
in the range of 0-8 mM and the temperature in the range of 30-65.degree.
C., on the non-specific proteolytic activity of Cd chymosin and Bt
chymosin, respectively are summarised in FIGS. 7-9. As it appears, the
non-specific proteolytic activity of the Camelus dromedarius chymosin was
generally significantly lower that that of the bovine chymosin under all
test conditions used.
[0098]A higher non-specific proteolytic activity was observed when the pH
of the assay was lowered (FIG. 7). The relation of the P-values between
camel and bovine chymosin remained substantially constant over the pH
range studied.
EXAMPLE 5
The milk clotting activity of recombinant Camelus dromedarius chymosin
[0099]In this experiment, the milk clotting activity (C-value) of the
recombinant Cd chymosin of the invention was studied at 32.degree. C.
using as substrate 10% (w/v) low heat spray-dried bovine skimmed milk
(Hochdorf). The concentration of Cd chymosin used was 3.1 nM. For
comparison, the C-value of recombinant Bt chymosin (ChyMax.RTM.) at a
concentration of 5.4 nM (same milk clotting activity in IMCUs as the Cd
chymosin) was determined under the same conditions. The milk clotting
activity and final curd strength were determined. In addition, the effect
of changes in pH and Ca.sup.2+ concentration on the milk clotting
activity of both enzymes was determined. The results of these experiments
can be summarised as follows:
[0100]The milk clotting activity of the camel chymosin is less affected by
changes in pH and Ca.sup.2+ concentration. The average clotting activity
(C) per mole of camel chymosin was about 170% of the activity per mole of
the bovine chymosin. Under typical cheese manufacturing conditions as
described above, the camel chymosin C-value is about 180% of the
corresponding value for bovine chymosin. The final milk curd strength was
essentially the same for both enzymes, indicating similar clotting and
syneresis reactions.
[0101]Based on the results in this Example and those found in Example 4,
the C/P ratio for camel chymosin can be estimated, relative to that for
bovine chymosin. These data are summarised in the below table 5.1 which
also shows corresponding data for porcine chymosin, bovine pepsin B and
two microbial aspartic proteases:
TABLE-US-00003
TABLE 5.1
Milk clotting activity, non-specific proteolytic
activity and C/P value for porcine chymosin, bovine
pepsin B and two microbial aspartic proteases:
Milk clotting Non-specific
activity proteolytic activity
(% of bovine (% of bovine
chymosin) chymosin) C/P value
Bovine chymosin 100 100 1.00
Camel chymosin 170 25 7.00
Porcine chymosin 25 12 2.10
M. pusillus protease 33 147 0.22
M. miehei protease 19 149 0.13
Bovine pepsin A 124 2731 0.05
[0102]These data shows that among the listed aspartic proteases,
recombinant camel chymosin has the highest milk clotting activity and the
second lowest non-specific proteolytic activity on bovine casein,
resulting in by far the highest C/P value among these proteases. In
particular, it is significant that in respect of these parameters, camel
chymosin outperforms the commercial recombinant bovine chymosin
significantly.
EXAMPLE 6
Determination of the Amount of Enzymatic Digests and Whey Protein in the
Soluble Phase of Milk Coagulum using Recombinant Camelus dromedarius (Cd)
Chymosin or ChyMax.RTM. (Bt chymosin)
[0103]10% (w/v) spray-dried bovine skimmed milk was dissolved in 50 mM
MES, 1 mM CaCl.sub.2, pH 5.6. The milk was coagulated with 65 mIMCU
ml.sup.-1 of the respective recombinant chymosin preparations, i.e.
recombinant Camelus dromedarius (Cd) chymosin or ChyMax.RTM. (Bt
chymosin) for 5, 60, 180 and 1320 min., respectively. The formed coagula
were centrifuged at 20,000.times.g at 4.degree. C. for 5 min. Fifty .mu.l
of the supernatant containing breakdown products of enzymatic digests and
whey proteins was diluted in 950 .mu.l of 8M guanidine-HCl, pH 6.5 and
the absorbancy at 280 nm was measured.
[0104]The results are summarised in FIG. 10. As it appears, the amount of
peptides and protein was highest in supernatants derived from coagulation
with the bovine chymosin, indicating that the camel chymosin under milk
clotting conditions has less non-specific proteoiytic activity than
bovine chymosin.
EXAMPLE 7
Coagulation of Raw Cow's Milk and Camel Milk Using Recombinantly Produced
Recombinant Camelus dromedarius (Cd) Chymosin or ChyMax.RTM. (Bt
chymosin)
[0105]Raw milk was stored for two days at 4.degree. C. Milk samples (10
per analysis) were coagulated with 65 mlMCU ml.sup.-1. The rennet
coagulation time (r[min]) and the curd strength of the coagula
(A.sub.60[mm]) were determined. Curd strength was determined using a
Formagraph device (Foss Electric, Hillerod, Denmark). The results are
summarised in Table 7.1.
[0106]Dilutions of camel and bovine chymosin adjusted to the same clotting
activity on bovine spray-dried skimmed milk in 1 mM CaCl.sub.2 showed
activity on raw bovine milk which was similarly higher (shorter rennet
coagulation time) for both enzymes, relative to the activity on the
spray-dried bovine milk. The strength of the final curd of bovine milk
was slightly higher when using the camel chymosin. Bovine chymosin hardly
had any renneting activity on raw camel milk, whereas camel chymosin
showed a high activity resulting in a curd of medium curd strength.
TABLE-US-00004
TABLE 7.1
Rennet coagulation time and curd strength
using bovine or camel chymosin
Enzyme Milk r[min] A.sub.60[mm]
Bt chymosin Bovine raw milk 12.34 48.94
Cd chymosin Bovine raw milk 12.20 50.56
Cd chymosin Bovine skimmed milk 22.07 37.96
Bt chymosin Camel raw milk 59.45 0.40
Cd chymosin Camel raw milk 12.66 18.24
EXAMPLE 8
Examination of the Proteolytic Activity of Recombinant Camelus dromedarius
(Cd) Chymosin and ChyMax.RTM. (Bt Chymosin)
[0107]Two synthetic peptidases, which correspond to the chymosin sensitive
regions of camel- and bovine .kappa.-casein (CN), were proteolytically
cleaved with bovine and camel chymosin, respectively. K.sub.M and
k.sub.cat were determined at pH 5.6. Additionally, temperature and pH
optima of these reactions were measured. The two following synthetic
peptides were used in this study:
TABLE-US-00005
Synthetic peptide corresponding to bovine .kappa.-CN
(SEQ ID NO:5)
NH.sub.2-His-Pro-His-Pro-His-Leu-Ser-(p-NO.sub.2)Phe.infin.Met-
Ala-Ile-COOH
Synthetic peptide corresponding to camel .kappa.-CN
(SEQ ID NO:6)
NH.sub.2-Arg-Pro-Arg-Pro-Arg-Pro-Ser-(p-NO.sub.2)Phe.infin.Ile-
Ala-Ile-COOH
.infin. fissile bond
[0108]The measurement of samples was repeated 3 to 6 times, the
Michaelis-Menten and the turnover values were determined from
Lineweaver-Burke plots with weighted linear regression of data.
[0109]The results are summarised in Table 8.1
TABLE-US-00006
TABLE 8.1
Summary of results
Bt Chymosin Cd Chymosin
K.sub.M for Bt .kappa.-CN 0.165 + 0.077 +
0.015/-0.014 mM 0.019/-0.015 mM
k.sub.cat for Bt .kappa.-CN 44.3 + 11.7 +
1.3/-1.2 s.sup.-2 1.5/-1.2 s.sup.-1
K.sub.M for Cd .kappa.-CN 0.134 + 0.056 +
0.022/-0.021 mM 0.035/-0.021 mM
k.sub.cat for Cd .kappa.-CN 4.3 + 5.1 +
0.2/-0.1 s.sup.-2 1.7/-1.0 s.sup.-1
Temp. optimum (Bt .kappa.-CN ~42.degree. C. ~42.degree. C.
Temp. optimum (Cd .kappa.-CN) ~58.degree. C. ~47.degree. C.
pH optimum (Bt .kappa.-CN) ~4.9 ~5.1
[0110]Marked differences were found when the enzymes were examined for
proteolytic activity towards two synthetic peptides representing part of
the chymosin sensitive regions of bovine and camel .kappa.-casein. The
substrate binding of camel chymosin was found to be about double as high
(half K.sub.M value) as the substrate binding of bovine chymosin and the
turnover rate of camel chymosin against the bovine .kappa.-CN peptide was
about four times lower than the turnover rate of bovine chymosin.
[0111]These findings may explain the higher C/P ratio found for camel
chymosin in Example 5. Since the fissile bond of .kappa.-CN represents
only a small fraction of the fissile sites in milk proteins, a higher
specific binding of the target molecule, and a low non-specific
proteolytic activity, effecting self-inhibition of the enzyme and
subsequent activation by the target molecule, will lead to a high C/P
ratio. Furthermore, similar temperature and pH optima were found for
proteolysis of the Bt .kappa.-CN peptide, and the temperature optima for
the Cd .kappa.-CN peptide were found to be markedly higher, mainly the
one of bovine chymosin.
EXAMPLE 9
Determination of the Cheese Yield Using ChyMaX.RTM. (FPC) and camel
chymosin (FPCC)
9.1 Introduction
[0112]The effect of milk clotting enzymes on cheese yield is a
characteristic of great commercial importance. Careful measurement of the
level of dry matter in whey is used as a method of comparing the effect
of enzymes on cheese yield. In this study the cheese yield obtained by
using the commercial product ChyMax.RTM. (FPC) and the fermented produced
camel chymosin (FPCC), both of Chr. Hansen A/S origin, were compared.
9.2 Materials and Methods
9.2.1 Milk Clotting Enzymes
[0113]The milk clotting enzymes used were FPC (batch no. 2114475, 198
IMCU/ml) and fermented produced camel chymosin, FPCC, (batch no. SR
30.05.00, 234 IMCU/ml). The amounts used were such that a cutting time of
30 minutes were obtained. Dosages were kept constant throughout the
study. Variation in the coagulability of the milk were compensated by
varying cutting times.
9.2.2 Cheese Making in Beakers
[0114]Whole pasteurised non-homogenised milk from Arla Foods, Slagelse,
Denmark, was used. The cheese making procedure is summarised in Table
9.1. 4000 g of milk was added to a 5-litre beaker. GluconoDeltaLactone
(GDL) from "DAN BOUQUET" was added in an amount of 3,200 g. 1,600 g of
CaCl.sub.2 was added. Cutting took place after about 30 min. Curd and
whey were transferred to cheesecloth after healing and stirring for 30
min, and left to drain overnight. Both milk clotting enzymes were used in
each of the 16 trials.
9.2.3 Sampling and Analysis
[0115]Well mixed total whey was filtered through a layer of gauze to
remove cheese dust. Dry matter was determined by drying about 25 g of
whey on lapis pumices p.a. for 4 hours at a temperature of 110.degree. C.
The analyses were done in duplicate.
9.2.4 Statistical Analysis
[0116]A paired students t test was used on n=16 differences in total dry
matter of the whey, using
t=x.sub.mean/s.sub.2/n).sub.1/2
as an estimate,
t.sub.16(90%)=1,34, t.sub.16(95%)=1,75, t.sub.16(99,5%)=2,92
9.3 Results and Discussion
[0117]Table 9.1 summaries some parameters for the cheese making procedure.
Recovery of milk as cheese and whey was over 99%. Clotting activity of
140 IMCU FPC and 140 IMCU FPCC, respectively, were used for all beakers.
Cutting time was in average 30 min.
TABLE-US-00007
TABLE 9.1
Cheese making parameters
Parameter n s
mean
Milk, amount in g 4000 16 constant
GDL in g 3.200 16 constant
Milk coagulating FPC 8 constant
enzyme IMCU/4 FPCC 8 constant
CaCl.sub.2/g 1.60 16
Time, min.
acidification 30 constant
cutting time 2
healing time 3 constant
stirring 25 constant
scooping 1 constant
scooping to press 60 constant
pH
milk 6.66
setting 6.40
whey n.d
Temperature, .degree. C.
setting 31.5
Weights, g
milk 4000 constant
whey 3350
curd 610
[0118]Table 9.2 summaries the results on the individual cheese trials, in
particular dry matter (DM) in the whey, with delta-dry-matter calculated
as the difference between FPC amount of whey times DM % deducting FPCC
amount of whey times DM %. Average dry a matter was found to be 221,4156
g in FPC whey and 221,8666 g in FPCC whey.
TABLE-US-00008
TABLE 9.2
Results of the individual cheese trials
Dry mat- Total dry Delta to-
Type of ter in matter in Delta dry tal dry
No. Date rennet Recovery whey (%) whey matter matter
28 Nov. 2000 FPC 98.69 6.639 221.32
1 28 Nov. 2000 FPCC 98.74 6.606 220.71 0.03304 0.60581
29 Nov. 2000 FPC 98.89 6.685 222.14
2 29 Nov. 2000 FPCC 99.00 6.681 222.66 0.00433 -0.51101
30 Nov. 2000 FPC 98.38 6.641 220.62
3 30 Nov. 2000 FPCC 98.62 6.602 220.85 0.03898 -0.22351
04 Dec. 2000 FPC 99.27 6.610 223.60
4 04 Dec. 2000 FPCC 98.87 6.628 223.22 -0.01807 0.38949
05 Dec. 2000 FPC 98.80 6.613 222.36
5 05 Dec. 2000 FPCC 98.71 6.635 222.41 -0.02205 -0.04471
06 Dec. 2000 FPC 99.02 6.446 217.65
6 06 Dec. 2000 FPCC 98.95 6.570 221.32 -0.12420 -3.67446
07 Dec. 2000 FPC 98.81 6.365 213.15
7 07 Dec. 2000 FPCC 98.61 6.442 214.95 -0.07644 -1.79965
12 Dec. 2000 FPC 98.81 6.520 218.35
8 12 Dec. 2000 FPCC 98.61 6.508 217.15 0.01279 1.19616
13 Dec. 2000 FPC 98.88 6.611 223.18
9 13 Dec. 2000 FPCC 98.82 6.614 222.48 -0.00290 0.70228
15 Dec. 2000 FPC 98.78 6.665 222.37
10 15 Dec. 2000 FPCC 98.87 6.688 223.31 -0.02258 -0.94070
20 Dec. 2000 FPC 98.23 6.685 221.63
11 20 Dec. 2000 FPCC 98.26 6.636 219.32 0.04856 2.31351
21 Dec. 2000 FPC 98.13 6.46 215.13
12 21 Dec. 2000 FPCC 98.40 6.50 217.58 -0.04364 -2.45507
16 Jan. 2001 FPC 98.70 6.752 223.83
13 16 Jan. 2001 FPCC 98.73 6.814 226.32 -0.06126 -2.49389
17 Jan. 2001 FPC 98.73 6.801 226.43
14 17 Jan. 2001 FPCC 98.73 6.747 225.99 0.05351 0.43229
18 Jan. 2001 FPC 98.49 6.695 221.48
15 18 Jan. 2001 FPCC 98.63 6.725 222.01 -0.02969 -0.52480
09 Feb. 2001 FPC 98.88 6.867 229.39
16 09 Feb. 2001 FPCC 99.08 6.854 299.58 0.01354 -0.18775
FPC AVG 6.628 221.4156 -0.0123 -0.4510
FPCC AVG 6.641 221.8666
s.sub.2 0.0467 1.4837
X.sub.mean on delta-dry-matter was found to be 0,4510, s.sub.2 to be
1,4837 and n=16, and thus an estimate for t can be calculated as:
t.sub.0=0,4510/(1,4837/16).sub.1/2=1,4811
which shows that the hypothesis that there is no differences between the
dry matter losses of FPC and FPCC can be rejected with more than 90%
probability.
[0119]Speculatively, the difference in dry matter of 0,4510 g could give
cause to a cheese weight of 1 g or a cheese yield increase of 0,16% or
1,6%.
[0120]In summary, the sixteen paired laboratory cheese trials, each using
ChyMax.RTM. (FPC) and fermented produced camel chymosin (FPCC) were
compared and it was found with more than 90% probability that fermented
produced camel chymosin gives lower dry matter loss to whey, reflecting
an expectation of a higher cheese yield.
REFERENCES
[0121]Dunn-Coleman, N. S., Bloebaum, P., Berka, R. M., Bodie, E.,
Robinson, N., Armstrong, G., Ward, M., Przetak, M., Carter, G. L.,
LaCost, R., Wilson, L. J., Kodoma, K. H., Baliu, E. F., Houen, G.,
Madsen, M. T, Harlow, K. W., Lonblad, P. and Foltmann, B. (1996) The
Primary Structure and Enzymic Properties of Porcine Prochymosin and
Chymosin, Int. J. Biochem. Cell Biol. 28:667-675.Elagamy, E. I. (2000)
Physicochemical, molecular and immunological characterization of camel
calf rennet: A comparison with buffalo rennet, J. Dairy Res.
67:73-81.Foltmann, B., Pedersen, V. B., Jacobsen, H., Kauffman, D. and
Wybrandt, G. (1977) The complete amino acid sequence of prochymosin.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 74:2321-2324.Houen, G., Madsen, M. T., Harlow, K.
W., Lonblad, P. and Foltman, b. (1996) The primary structure and
enzymatic properties of porcine prochymosin and chymosin. Int. J.
Biochem. Cell. Biol. 28:667-675.Kappeler, S. (1998) Compositional and
Structural Analysis of Camel Milk Proteins with Emphasis on Protective
Proteins, Dissertation ETH No. 12947, Swiss Federal Institute of
Technology.Sambrook, J., Fritsch, E. F. and Maniatis, T. (1989) Molecular
cloning. A laboratory maual. 2.sup.nd edition. Cold Spring Harbor
Laboratory Press.Wangoh, J., Farah, Z. and Puhan, Z. (1993). Extraction
of camel rennet and its comparison with calf rennet extract,
Milchwissenschaft 48:322-325.Ward, M., Wilson, L. J., Kodoma, K. H., Rey,
M. W. and Berka, R. M. (1990) Improved production of chymosin in
Aspergillus by expression of glycoamylase-chymosin fusion, Bio/Technology
8:435-440.Ward, M., Wilson, L. J. and Kodoma, K. H. (1993) Use of
Aspergillus overproducing mutants, cured for integrated plasmid, to
overproduce heterologous proteins, Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol.
39:738-743.WO 94/16086, Chr. Hansen A/S and Bioteknologisk Institut, 21
Jul. 1994
Sequence CWU
1
7134DNAArtificial SequencePrimer for PCR amplification 1cacgtggcgg
agtgggatca ccaggatccc tctg
34234DNAArtificial SequencePrimer for PCR amplification 2tctagaggat
cagatggcct tggccagccc cacg
34335DNAArtificial SequenceOligonucleotide primer for
oligonucleotide-basedmutagenesis 3gcgacggtga ctgacacgtg gcgggcagaa ataac
35435DNAArtificial SequenceOligonucleotide
for oligonucleotide-based mutagenesis 4gttatttctg cccgccacgt
gtcagtcacc gtcgc 35511PRTArtificial
SequenceChymosin hydrolizes the peptide bond between
nitrophenylalanine and Met. 5His Pro His Pro His Leu Ser Xaa Met Ala Ile
1 5 10611PRTArtificial SequenceChymosin
hydrolizes the peptide bond between nitrophenylalanine and Ile. 6Arg
Pro Arg Pro Arg Pro Ser Xaa Ile Ala Ile 1 5
1074PRTArtificial Sequencesynthetic 7Asp Thr Gly Xaa 1
* * * * *