Tac-Promoter
The Tac-Promoter, or tac vector is a synthetically produced DNA promoter, produced from the combination of promoters from the trp and lac operons. It is commonly used for protein production in Escherichia coli.
Two hybrid promoters functional in Escherichia coli were constructed. These hybrid promoters, tacI and tacII, were derived from sequences of the trp and the lac UV5 promoters. In the first hybrid promoter, the DNA upstream of position –20 with respect to the transcriptional start site was derived from the trp promoter. The DNA downstream of position –20 was derived from the lac UV5 promoter. In the second hybrid promoter, the DNA upstream of position –11 at the Hpa I site within the Pribnow box was derived from the trp promoter. The DNA downstream of position –11 is a 46-base-pair synthetic DNA fragment that specifies part of the hybrid Pribnow box and the entire lac operator. It also specifies a Shine–Dalgarno sequence flanked by two unique restriction sites.
The tacI and the tacII promoters respectively direct transcription approximately 11 and 7 times more efficiently than the derepressed parental lac UV5 promoter and approximately 3 and 2 times more efficiently than the trp promoter in the absence of the trp repressor. Both hybrid promoters can be repressed by the lac repressor and both can be derepressed with isopropyl-beta-D-thiogalactoside. Consequently, these hybrid promoters are useful for the controlled expression of foreign genes at high levels in E. coli. In contrast to the trp and the lac UV5 promoters, the tacI promoter has not only a consensus –35 sequence but also a consensus Pribnow box sequence. This may explain the higher efficiency of this hybrid promoter with respect to either one of the parental promoters.
About
The tac promoter is used to control and increase the expression levels of a target gene and is used in the over-expression of recombinant proteins. The tac promoter is named after the two promoters which comprise its sequence: the 'trp' and the 'lacBacterial promoters consist of two parts, the '–35' region and the '–10' region. These two regions bind the sigma factor of RNA polymerase, which then initiates transcription of the downstream gene. The tac promoter consists of the '–35' region of the trp promoter and the '–10' region of the lac promoter. The tac promoter is, therefore, inducible by IPTG, whilst also allowing higher maximum gene expression than either the lac or trp promoters. This makes it suitable for high-efficiency protein production of a recombinant protein. The strong repression of expression in the 'off' state is important since foreign proteins can be toxic to the host cell.