FAQ: What are the strain properties (C3027)?
Disulfide bond formation in the cytoplasm: Normally reductases in the E. coli cytoplasm keep cysteines in their reduced form, thereby reducing any disulfide bond that may form in this compartment. SHuffle has deletions of the genes for glutaredoxin reductase and thioredoxin reductase (Δgor ΔtrxB), which allows disulfide bonds to form in the cytoplasm. This combination of mutations is normally lethal, but the lethality is suppressed by a mutation in the peroxiredoxin enzyme (ahpC*). In addition, SHuffle expresses a version of the periplasmic disulfide bond isomerase DsbC which lacks its signal sequence, retaining it in the cytoplasm. This enzyme has been shown to act on proteins with multiple disulfide bonds, to correct mis-oxidized bonds and promote proper folding. The gene for the cytoplasmic DsbC is present on the chromosome.
T1 Phage Resistant (fhuA2): T1, an extremely virulent phage requires the E. coli ferric hydroxamate uptake receptor for infectivity. Deletion of this gene confers resistance to this type of phage, but does not significantly affect the transformation or growth characteristics of the cell.