Effects of recombinant plasmid content on growth properties and cloned gene product formation in Escherichia coli

Biotechnol Bioeng. 1985 Dec;27(12):1668-74. doi: 10.1002/bit.260271207.

Abstract

Plasmid-host cell interactions have been investigated experimentally using Escherichia coli HB101, plasmid RSF1050 which contains the origin of replication of pMB1, and four other closely related copy number mutant plasmids. Growth characteristics of these recombinant strains and beta-lactamase activity expressed from a plasmid gene were investigated in Luria broth (LB) and in minimal medium (M9) containing in some cases casamino acids or different concentrations of alpha-methylglucoside, a competitive inhibitor of glucose transport. Maximum specific growth rates in LB and minimal media were reduced for increasing plasmid content per cell. Plasmid copy number increased when specific growth rate was reduced by changing medium composition. Growth rates of high copy number strains were less sensitive to alpha-methylglucoside than lower copy number strains and the plasmidfree host. The overall efficiency of plasmid gene expression, measured as the ratio of beta-lactamase specific activity to plasmid content, decreased significantly with increasing plasmid content in LB medium.