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Metabolic engineering of the non-conventional yeast Pichia ciferrii for production of rare sphingoid bases.
Börgel, Daniel; van den Berg, Marco; Hüller, Thomas; Andrea, Heiko; Liebisch, Gerhard; Boles, Eckhard; Schorsch, Christoph; van der Pol, Ruud; Arink, Anne; Boogers, Ilco; van der Hoeven, Rob; Korevaar, Kees; Farwick, Mike; Köhler, Tim; Schaffer, Steffen.
Afiliación
  • Börgel D; Evonik Degussa, Project House ProFerm, Creavis Technologies & Innovation, Rodenbacher Chaussee 4, D-63457 Hanau, Germany. daniel.boergel@fresenius-kabi.com
Metab Eng ; 14(4): 412-26, 2012 Jul.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22449569
ABSTRACT
The study describes the identification of sphingolipid biosynthesis genes in the non-conventional yeast Pichia ciferrii, the development of tools for its genetic modification as well as their application for metabolic engineering of P. ciferrii with the goal to generate strains capable of producing the rare sphingoid bases sphinganine and sphingosine. Several canonical genes encoding ceramide synthase (encoded by PcLAG1 and PcLAF1), alkaline ceramidase (PcYXC1) and sphingolipid C-4-hydroxylase(PcSYR2), as well as structural genes for dihydroceramide Δ(4)-desaturase (PcDES1) and sphingolipid Δ(8)-desaturase (PcSLD1) were identified, indicating that P. ciferrii would be capable of synthesizing desaturated sphingoid bases, a property not ubiquitously found in yeasts. In order to convert the phytosphingosine-producing P. ciferrii wildtype into a strain capable of producing predominantly sphinganine, Syringomycin E-resistant mutants were isolated. A stable mutant almost exclusively producing high levels of acetylated sphinganine was obtained and used as the base strain for further metabolic engineering. A metabolic pathway required for the three-step conversion of sphinganine to sphingosine was implemented in the sphinganine producing P. ciferrii strain and subsequently enhanced by screening for the appropriate heterologous enzymes, improvement of gene expression and codon optimization. These combined efforts led to a strain capable of producing 240mgL(-1) triacetyl sphingosine in shake flask, with tri- and diacetyl sphinganine being the main by-products. Lab-scale fermentation of this strain resulted in production of up to 890mgkg(-1) triacetyl sphingosine. A third by-product was unequivocally identified as triacetyl sphingadienine. It could be shown that inactivation of the SLD1 gene in P. ciferrii efficiently suppresses triacetyl sphingadienine formation. Further improvement of the described P. ciferrii strains will enable a biotechnological route to produce sphinganine and sphingosine for cosmetic and pharmaceutical applications.
Asunto(s)

Texto completo: 1 Bases de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Pichia / Esfingosina / Ingeniería Metabólica Idioma: En Revista: Metab Eng Asunto de la revista: ENGENHARIA BIOMEDICA / METABOLISMO Año: 2012 Tipo del documento: Article País de afiliación: Alemania

Texto completo: 1 Bases de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Pichia / Esfingosina / Ingeniería Metabólica Idioma: En Revista: Metab Eng Asunto de la revista: ENGENHARIA BIOMEDICA / METABOLISMO Año: 2012 Tipo del documento: Article País de afiliación: Alemania