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1.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 52(12): 7367-7383, 2024 Jul 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38808673

RESUMO

Temperature is an important control factor for biologics biomanufacturing in precision fermentation. Here, we explored a highly responsive low temperature-inducible genetic system (LowTempGAL) in the model yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Two temperature biosensors, a heat-inducible degron and a heat-inducible protein aggregation domain, were used to regulate the GAL activator Gal4p, rendering the leaky LowTempGAL systems. Boolean-type induction was achieved by implementing a second-layer control through low-temperature-mediated repression on GAL repressor gene GAL80, but suffered delayed response to low-temperature triggers and a weak response at 30°C. Application potentials were validated for protein and small molecule production. Proteomics analysis suggested that residual Gal80p and Gal4p insufficiency caused suboptimal induction. 'Turbo' mechanisms were engineered through incorporating a basal Gal4p expression and a galactose-independent Gal80p-supressing Gal3p mutant (Gal3Cp). Varying Gal3Cp configurations, we deployed the LowTempGAL systems capable for a rapid stringent high-level induction upon the shift from a high temperature (37-33°C) to a low temperature (≤30°C). Overall, we present a synthetic biology procedure that leverages 'leaky' biosensors to deploy highly responsive Boolean-type genetic circuits. The key lies in optimisation of the intricate layout of the multi-factor system. The LowTempGAL systems may be applicable in non-conventional yeast platforms for precision biomanufacturing.


Assuntos
Regulação Fúngica da Expressão Gênica , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae , Saccharomyces cerevisiae , Fatores de Transcrição , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Fatores de Transcrição/metabolismo , Fatores de Transcrição/genética , Proteínas Repressoras/metabolismo , Proteínas Repressoras/genética , Proteínas de Ligação a DNA/metabolismo , Proteínas de Ligação a DNA/genética , Temperatura Baixa , Galactose/metabolismo , Técnicas Biossensoriais
2.
Metab Eng ; 77: 143-151, 2023 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36990382

RESUMO

The end-to-end fusion of enzymes that catalyse successive steps in a reaction pathway is a metabolic engineering strategy that has been successfully applied in a variety of pathways and is particularly common in terpene bioproduction. Despite its popularity, limited work has been done to interrogate the mechanism of metabolic enhancement from enzyme fusion. We observed a remarkable >110-fold improvement in nerolidol production upon translational fusion of nerolidol synthase (a sesquiterpene synthase) to farnesyl diphosphate synthase. This delivered a titre increase from 29.6 mg/L up to 4.2 g/L nerolidol in a single engineering step. Whole-cell proteomic analysis revealed that nerolidol synthase levels in the fusion strains were greatly elevated compared to the non-fusion control. Similarly, the fusion of nerolidol synthase to non-catalytic domains also produced comparable increases in titre, which coincided with improved enzyme expression. When farnesyl diphosphate synthase was fused to other terpene synthases, we observed more modest improvements in terpene titre (1.9- and 3.8-fold), corresponding with increases of a similar magnitude in terpene synthase levels. Our data demonstrate that increased in vivo enzyme levels - resulting from improved expression and/or improved protein stability - is a major driver of catalytic enhancement from enzyme fusion.


Assuntos
Alquil e Aril Transferases , Sesquiterpenos , Geraniltranstransferase/genética , Proteômica , Sesquiterpenos/metabolismo , Alquil e Aril Transferases/genética , Terpenos
3.
Biotechnol Bioeng ; 120(11): 3276-3287, 2023 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37489850

RESUMO

Pichia pastoris (Komagataella phaffii) is a fast-growing methylotrophic yeast with the ability to assimilate several carbon sources such as methanol, glucose, or glycerol. It has been shown to have outstanding secretion capability with a variety of heterologous proteins. In previous studies, we engineered P. pastoris to co-express Escherichia coli AppA phytase and the HAC1 transcriptional activator using a bidirectional promoter. Phytase production was characterized in shake flasks and did not reflect industrial conditions. In the present study, phytase expression was explored and optimized using instrumented fermenters in continuous and fed-batch modes. First, the production of phytase was investigated under glucose de-repression in continuous culture at three dilution factors, 0.5 d-1 , 1 d-1 , and 1.5 d-1 . The fermenter parameters of these cultures were used to inform a kinetic model in batch and fed-batch modes for growth and phytase production. The kinetic model developed aided to design the glucose-feeding profile of a fed-batch culture. Kinetic model simulations under glucose de-repression and fed-batch conditions identified optimal phytase productivity at the specific growth rate of 0.041 h-1 . Validation of the model simulation with experimental data confirmed the feasibility of the model to predict phytase production in our newly engineered strain. Methanol was used only to induce the expression of phytase at high cell densities. Our results showed that high phytase production required two stages, the first stage used glucose under de-repression conditions to generate biomass while expressing phytase, and stage two used methanol to induce phytase expression. The production of phytase was improved 3.5-fold by methanol induction compared to the expression with glucose alone under de-repression conditions to a final phytase activity of 12.65 MU/L. This final volumetric phytase production represented an approximate 36-fold change compared to the flask fermentations. Finally, the phytase protein produced was assayed to confirm its molecular weight, and pH and temperature profiles. This study highlights the importance of optimizing protein production in P. pastoris when using novel promoters and presents a general approach to performing bioprocess optimization in this important production host.

4.
Bioprocess Biosyst Eng ; 42(5): 883-896, 2019 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30820665

RESUMO

Industrial production of lignocellulosic ethanol requires a microorganism utilizing both hexose and pentose, and tolerating inhibitors. In this study, a hydrolysate-cofermenting Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain was obtained through one step in vivo DNA assembly of pentose-metabolizing pathway genes, followed by consecutive adaptive evolution in pentose media containing acetic acid, and direct screening in biomass hydrolysate media. The strain was able to coferment glucose and xylose in synthetic media with the respective maximal specific rates of glucose and xylose consumption, and ethanol production of 3.47, 0.38 and 1.62 g/g DW/h, with an ethanol titre of 41.07 g/L and yield of 0.42 g/g. Industrial wheat straw hydrolysate fermentation resulted in maximal specific rates of glucose and xylose consumption, and ethanol production of 2.61, 0.54 and 1.38 g/g DW/h, respectively, with an ethanol titre of 54.11 g/L and yield of 0.44 g/g. These are among the best for wheat straw hydrolysate fermentation through separate hydrolysis and cofermentation.


Assuntos
Biomassa , Etanol/metabolismo , Lignina , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Triticum/química , Glucose/química , Glucose/metabolismo , Hidrólise , Lignina/química , Lignina/farmacologia , Xilose/química , Xilose/metabolismo
5.
Metab Eng ; 47: 83-93, 2018 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29471044

RESUMO

Monoterpene production in Saccharomyces cerevisae requires the introduction of heterologous monoterpene synthases (MTSs). The endogenous farnesyl pyrosphosphate synthase (FPPS; Erg20p) competes with MTSs for the precursor geranyl pyrophosphate (GPP), which limits the production of monoterpenes. ERG20 is an essential gene that cannot be deleted and transcriptional down-regulation of ERG20 has failed to improve monoterpene production. Here, we investigated an N-degron-dependent protein degradation strategy to down-regulate Erg20p activity. Degron tagging decreased GFP protein half-life drastically to 1 h (degron K3K15) or 15 min (degrons KN113 and KN119). Degron tagging of ERG20 was therefore paired with a sterol responsive promoter to ensure sufficient metabolic flux to essential downstream sterols despite the severe destabilisation effect of degron tagging. A dual monoterpene/sesquiterpene (linalool/nerolidol) synthase, AcNES1, was used as a reporter of intracellular GPP and FPP production. Transcription of the synthetic pathway was controlled by either constitutive or diauxie-inducible promoters. A combination of degron K3K15 and the ERG1 promoter increased linalool titre by 27-fold to 11 mg L-1 in the strain with constitutive promoter constructs, and by 17-fold to 18 mg L-1 in the strain with diauxie-inducible promoter constructs. The sesquiterpene nerolidol remained the major product in both strains. The same strategies were applied to construct a limonene-producing strain, which produced 76 mg L-1 in batch cultivation. The FPPS regulation method developed here successfully redirected metabolic flux toward monoterpene production. Examination of growth defects in various strains suggested that the intracellular FPP concentration had a significant effect on growth rate. Further strategies are required to balance intracellular production of FPP and GPP so as to maximise monoterpene production without impacting on cellular growth.


Assuntos
Geraniltranstransferase , Engenharia Metabólica , Monoterpenos/metabolismo , Proteólise , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae , Saccharomyces cerevisiae , Geraniltranstransferase/genética , Geraniltranstransferase/metabolismo , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo
6.
Metab Eng ; 39: 209-219, 2017 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27939849

RESUMO

Sesquiterpenes are C15 isoprenoids with utility as fragrances, flavours, pharmaceuticals, and potential biofuels. Microbial fermentation is being examined as a competitive approach for bulk production of these compounds. Competition for carbon allocation between synthesis of endogenous sterols and production of the introduced sesquiterpene limits yields. Achieving balance between endogenous sterols and heterologous sesquiterpenes is therefore required to achieve economical yields. In the current study, the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae was used to produce the acyclic sesquiterpene alcohol, trans-nerolidol. Nerolidol production was first improved by enhancing the upstream mevalonate pathway for the synthesis of the precursor farnesyl pyrophosphate (FPP). However, excess FPP was partially directed towards squalene by squalene synthase (Erg9p), resulting in squalene accumulation to 1% biomass; moreover, the specific growth rate declined. In order to re-direct carbon away from sterol production and towards the desired heterologous sesquiterpene, a novel protein destabilisation approach was developed for Erg9p. It was shown that Erg9p is located on endoplasmic reticulum and lipid droplets through a C-terminal ER-targeted transmembrane peptide. A PEST (rich in Pro, Glu/Asp, Ser, and Thr) sequence-dependent endoplasmic reticulum-associated protein degradation (ERAD) mechanism was established to decrease cellular levels of Erg9p without relying on inducers, repressors or specific repressing conditions. This improved nerolidol titre by 86% to ~100mgL-1. In this strain, squalene levels were similar to the wild-type control strain, and downstream ergosterol levels were slightly decreased relative to the control, indicating redirection of carbon away from sterols and towards sesquiterpene production. There was no negative effect on cell growth under these conditions. Protein degradation is an efficient mechanism to control carbon allocation at flux-competing nodes in metabolic engineering applications. This study demonstrates that an engineered ERAD mechanism can be used to balance flux competition between the endogenous sterol pathway and an introduced bio-product pathways at the FPP node. The approach of protein degradation in general might be more widely applied to improve metabolic engineering outcomes.


Assuntos
Farnesil-Difosfato Farnesiltransferase/metabolismo , Melhoramento Genético/métodos , Engenharia Metabólica/métodos , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/fisiologia , Sesquiterpenos/metabolismo , Vias Biossintéticas/fisiologia , Ativação Enzimática , Farnesil-Difosfato Farnesiltransferase/genética , Redes e Vias Metabólicas/fisiologia , Fosfatos de Poli-Isoprenil/metabolismo , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Sesquiterpenos/isolamento & purificação
7.
Microb Cell Fact ; 14: 70, 2015 May 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25981595

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Xylose isomerase (XI) catalyzes the conversion of xylose to xylulose, which is the key step for anaerobic ethanolic fermentation of xylose. Very few bacterial XIs can function actively in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Here, we illustrate a group of XIs that would function for xylose fermentation in S. cerevisiae through phylogenetic analysis, recombinant yeast strain construction, and xylose fermentation. RESULTS: Phylogenetic analysis of deposited XI sequences showed that XI evolutionary relationship was highly consistent with the bacterial taxonomic orders and quite a few functional XIs in S. cerevisiae were clustered with XIs from mammal gut Bacteroidetes group. An XI from Bacteroides valgutus in this cluster was actively expressed in S. cerevisiae with an activity comparable to the fungal XI from Piromyces sp. Two XI genes were isolated from the environmental metagenome and they were clustered with XIs from environmental Bacteroidetes group. These two XIs could not be expressed in yeast with activity. With the XI from B. valgutus expressed in S. cerevisiae, background yeast strains were optimized by pentose metabolizing pathway enhancement and adaptive evolution in xylose medium. Afterwards, more XIs from the mammal gut Bacteroidetes group, including those from B. vulgatus, Tannerella sp. 6_1_58FAA_CT1, Paraprevotella xylaniphila and Alistipes sp. HGB5, were individually transformed into S. cerevisiae. The known functional XI from Orpinomyces sp. ukk1, a mammal gut fungus, was used as the control. All the resulting recombinant yeast strains were able to ferment xylose. The respiration-deficient strains harboring B. vulgatus and Alistipes sp. HGB5 XI genes respectively obtained specific xylose consumption rate of 0.662 and 0.704 g xylose gcdw(-1) h(-1), and ethanol specific productivity of 0.277 and 0.283 g ethanol gcdw(-1) h(-1), much comparable to those obtained by the control strain carrying Orpinomyces sp. ukk1 XI gene. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrated that XIs clustered in the mammal gut Bacteroidetes group were able to be expressed functionally in S. cerevisiae and background strain anaerobic adaptive evolution in xylose medium is essential for the screening of functional XIs. The methods outlined in this paper are instructive for the identification of novel XIs that are functional in S. cerevisiae.


Assuntos
Aldose-Cetose Isomerases/metabolismo , Bacteroidetes/metabolismo , Engenharia Genética/métodos , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Animais , Fermentação , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo
8.
Microb Cell Fact ; 14: 91, 2015 Jun 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26112740

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Predictable control of gene expression is necessary for the rational design and optimization of cell factories. In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the promoter is one of the most important tools available for controlling gene expression. However, the complex expression patterns of yeast promoters have not been fully characterised and compared on different carbon sources (glucose, sucrose, galactose and ethanol) and across the diauxic shift in glucose batch cultivation. These conditions are of importance to yeast cell factory design because they are commonly used and encountered in industrial processes. Here, the activities of a series of "constitutive" and inducible promoters were characterised in single cells throughout the fermentation using green fluorescent protein (GFP) as a reporter. RESULTS: The "constitutive" promoters, including glycolytic promoters, transcription elongation factor promoters and ribosomal promoters, differed in their response patterns to different carbon sources; however, in glucose batch cultivation, expression driven by these promoters decreased sharply as glucose was depleted and cells moved towards the diauxic shift. Promoters induced at low-glucose levels (P(HXT7), P(SSA1) and P(ADH2)) varied in induction strength on non-glucose carbon sources (sucrose, galactose and ethanol); in contrast to the "constitutive" promoters, GFP expression increased as glucose decreased and cells moved towards the diauxic shift. While lower than several "constitutive" promoters during the exponential phase, expression from the SSA1 promoter was higher in the post-diauxic phase than the commonly-used TEF1 promoter. The galactose-inducible GAL1 promoter provided the highest GFP expression on galactose, and the copper-inducible CUP1 promoter provided the highest induced GFP expression following the diauxic shift. CONCLUSIONS: The data provides a foundation for predictable and optimised control of gene expression levels on different carbon sources and throughout batch fermentation, including during and after the diauxic shift. This information can be applied for designing expression approaches to improve yields, rates and titres in yeast cell factories.


Assuntos
Carbono/metabolismo , Regulação Fúngica da Expressão Gênica/genética , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Fermentação
9.
Synth Syst Biotechnol ; 9(4): 820-827, 2024 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39072146

RESUMO

In synthetic biology, microbial chassis including yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae are iteratively engineered with increasing complexity and scale. Wet-lab genetic engineering tools are developed and optimised to facilitate strain construction but are often incompatible with each other due to shared regulatory elements, such as the galactose-inducible (GAL) promoter in S. cerevisiae. Here, we prototyped the cyanamide-induced I- SceI expression, which triggered double-strand DNA breaks (DSBs) for selectable marker removal. We further combined cyanamide-induced I- SceI-mediated DSB and maltose-induced MazF-mediated negative selection for plasmid-free in situ promoter substitution, which simplified the molecular cloning procedure for promoter characterisation. We then characterised three tetracycline-inducible promoters showing differential strength, a non-leaky ß-estradiol-inducible promoter, cyanamide-inducible DDI2 promoter, bidirectional MAL32/MAL31 promoters, and five pairs of bidirectional GAL1/GAL10 promoters. Overall, alternative regulatory controls for genome engineering tools can be developed to facilitate genomic engineering for synthetic biology and metabolic engineering applications.

10.
ACS Synth Biol ; 13(1): 141-156, 2024 Jan 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38084917

RESUMO

The variability in phenotypic outcomes among biological replicates in engineered microbial factories presents a captivating mystery. Establishing the association between phenotypic variability and genetic drivers is important to solve this intricate puzzle. We applied a previously developed auxin-inducible depletion of hexokinase 2 as a metabolic engineering strategy for improved nerolidol production in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and biological replicates exhibit a dichotomy in nerolidol production of either 3.5 or 2.5 g L-1 nerolidol. Harnessing Oxford Nanopore's long-read genomic sequencing, we reveal a potential genetic cause─the chromosome integration of a 2µ sequence-based yeast episomal plasmid, encoding the expression cassettes for nerolidol synthetic enzymes. This finding was reinforced through chromosome integration revalidation, engineering nerolidol and valencene production strains, and generating a diverse pool of yeast clones, each uniquely fingerprinted by gene copy numbers, plasmid integrations, other genomic rearrangements, protein expression levels, growth rate, and target product productivities. Τhe best clone in two strains produced 3.5 g L-1 nerolidol and ∼0.96 g L-1 valencene. Comparable genotypic and phenotypic variations were also generated through the integration of a yeast integrative plasmid lacking 2µ sequences. Our work shows that multiple factors, including plasmid integration status, subchromosomal location, gene copy number, sesquiterpene synthase expression level, and genome rearrangement, together play a complicated determinant role on the productivities of sesquiterpene product. Integration of yeast episomal/integrative plasmids may be used as a versatile method for increasing the diversity and optimizing the efficiency of yeast cell factories, thereby uncovering metabolic control mechanisms.


Assuntos
Saccharomyces cerevisiae , Sesquiterpenos , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Plasmídeos/genética , Sesquiterpenos/metabolismo , Engenharia Metabólica/métodos
11.
Adv Sci (Weinh) ; 10(32): e2303415, 2023 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37750486

RESUMO

Enzyme spatial organization is an evolved mechanism for facilitating multi-step biocatalysis and can play an important role in the regulation of promiscuous enzymes. The latter function suggests that artificial spatial organization can be an untapped avenue for controlling the specificity of bioengineered metabolic pathways. A promiscuous terpene synthase (nerolidol synthase) is co-localized and spatially organized with the preceding enzyme (farnesyl diphosphate synthase) in a heterologous production pathway, via translational protein fusion and/or co-encapsulation in a self-assembling protein cage. Spatial organization enhances nerolidol production by ≈11- to ≈62-fold relative to unorganized enzymes. More interestingly, striking differences in the ratio of end products (nerolidol and linalool) are observed with each spatial organization approach. This demonstrates that artificial spatial organization approaches can be harnessed to modulate the product profiles of promiscuous enzymes in engineered pathways in vivo. This extends the application of spatial organization beyond situations where multiple enzymes compete for a single substrate to cases where there is competition among multiple substrates for a single enzyme.


Assuntos
Sesquiterpenos , Sesquiterpenos/metabolismo , Redes e Vias Metabólicas
12.
Metab Eng ; 14(1): 9-18, 2012 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22178745

RESUMO

Effective conversion of xylose in lignocelluloses is expected to reduce the production cost of second-generation biofuels significantly. The factors affecting xylose fermentation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae that express xylose reductase-xylitol dehydrogenase (XR-XDH) are studied. Although overproduction of non-oxidative pentose phosphate pathway significantly increased the aerobic-specific growth rate on xylose and slightly improved conversion of xylose to ethanol under oxygen-limited conditions, the elimination of respiration by deleting cytochrome C oxidase subunit IV gene impeded aerobic growth on xylose. However, the adaptive evolution of the respiratory-deficient strain with an NADP(+)-preferring XDH mutant in xylose media dramatically improved its xylose-fermenting ability. The specific growth rate, ethanol yield, and xylitol yield of the evolved strain on xylose were 0.06h(-1), 0.39gg(-1), and 0.13gg(-1) consumed xylose, respectively. Similar to anaerobic fermentation, the evolved strain exhibited accumulated ethanol rather than recycled it under aerobic conditions.


Assuntos
Etanol/metabolismo , Fermentação/genética , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Xilose/farmacologia , Aldeído Redutase/genética , Aldeído Redutase/metabolismo , Anaerobiose/efeitos dos fármacos , Anaerobiose/genética , D-Xilulose Redutase/genética , D-Xilulose Redutase/metabolismo , Transporte de Elétrons/efeitos dos fármacos , Transporte de Elétrons/genética , Complexo IV da Cadeia de Transporte de Elétrons/genética , Complexo IV da Cadeia de Transporte de Elétrons/metabolismo , Fermentação/efeitos dos fármacos , Mutação , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Xilose/metabolismo
13.
Appl Microbiol Biotechnol ; 96(4): 1079-91, 2012 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23053078

RESUMO

Factors related to ethanol production from xylose in engineered Saccharomyces cerevisiae that contain an exogenous initial metabolic pathway are still to be elucidated. In the present study, a strain that expresses the xylose isomerase gene of Piromyces sp. Pi-xylA and overexpresses XKS1, RPE1, RKI1, TAL1, and TKL1, with deleted GRE3 and COX4 genes was constructed. The xylose utilization capacity of the respiratory deficiency strain was poor but improved via adaptive evolution in xylose. The µ (max) of the evolved strain in 20 g l(-1) xylose is 0.11 ± 0.00 h(-1), and the evolved strain consumed 17.83 g l(-1) xylose within 72 h, with an ethanol yield of 0.43 g g(-1) total consumed sugars during glucose-xylose cofermentation. Global transcriptional changes and effect of several specific genes were studied. The result revealed that the increased xylose isomerase acivity, the upregulation of enzymes involved in glycolysis and glutamate synthesis, and the downregulation of trehalose and glycogen synthesis, may have contributed to the improved xylose utilization of the strain. Furthermore, the deletion of PHO13 decreased the xylose growth in the respiration deficiency strain although deleting PHO13 can improve the xylose metabolism in other strains.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Transcriptoma , Xilose/metabolismo , Fermentação , Regulação Fúngica da Expressão Gênica , Engenharia Genética , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo
14.
Nat Commun ; 13(1): 2895, 2022 05 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35610221

RESUMO

Bottlenecks in metabolic pathways due to insufficient gene expression levels remain a significant problem for industrial bioproduction using microbial cell factories. Increasing gene dosage can overcome these bottlenecks, but current approaches suffer from numerous drawbacks. Here, we describe HapAmp, a method that uses haploinsufficiency as evolutionary force to drive in vivo gene amplification. HapAmp enables efficient, titratable, and stable integration of heterologous gene copies, delivering up to 47 copies onto the yeast genome. The method is exemplified in metabolic engineering to significantly improve production of the sesquiterpene nerolidol, the monoterpene limonene, and the tetraterpene lycopene. Limonene titre is improved by 20-fold in a single engineering step, delivering ∼1 g L-1 in the flask cultivation. We also show a significant increase in heterologous protein production in yeast. HapAmp is an efficient approach to unlock metabolic bottlenecks rapidly for development of microbial cell factories.


Assuntos
Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae , Saccharomyces cerevisiae , Amplificação de Genes , Limoneno/metabolismo , Engenharia Metabólica/métodos , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo
15.
Commun Biol ; 5(1): 135, 2022 02 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35173283

RESUMO

Temporal control of heterologous pathway expression is critical to achieve optimal efficiency in microbial metabolic engineering. The broadly-used GAL promoter system for engineered yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) suffers from several drawbacks; specifically, unintended induction during laboratory development, and unintended repression in industrial production applications, which decreases overall production capacity. Eukaryotic synthetic circuits have not been well examined to address these problems. Here, we explore a modularised engineering method to deploy new genetic circuits applicable for expanding the control of GAL promoter-driven heterologous pathways in S. cerevisiae. Trans- and cis- modules, including eukaryotic trans-activating-and-repressing mechanisms, were characterised to provide new and better tools for circuit design. A eukaryote-like tetracycline-mediated circuit that delivers stringent repression was engineered to minimise metabolic burden during strain development and maintenance. This was combined with a novel 37 °C induction circuit to relief glucose-mediated repression on the GAL promoter during the bioprocess. This delivered a 44% increase in production of the terpenoid nerolidol, to 2.54 g L-1 in flask cultivation. These negative/positive transcriptional regulatory circuits expand global strategies of metabolic control to facilitate laboratory maintenance and for industry applications.


Assuntos
Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae , Saccharomyces cerevisiae , Engenharia Metabólica , Regiões Promotoras Genéticas , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Terpenos/metabolismo
16.
Methods Enzymol ; 670: 235-284, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35871838

RESUMO

Isoprenoids, also known as terpenes or terpenoids, are a very large and diverse group of natural compounds. These compounds fulfil a myriad of critical roles in biology as well as having a wide range of industrial uses. Isoprenoids are produced via two chemically distinct metabolic pathways, the mevalonate (MVA) pathway and the methylerythritol phosphate (MEP) pathway. Downstream of these two pathways is the shared prenyl phosphate pathway. Because of their importance in both basic physiology and industrial biotechnology, extraction, identification, and quantification of isoprenoid pathway intermediates is an important protocol. Here we describe methods for extraction and analysis of intracellular metabolites from the MVA, MEP, and prenyl phosphate pathways for five key model microbes: the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the bacterium Escherichia coli, the diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum, the green algae Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, and the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. These methods also detect several central carbon intermediates. These protocols will likely work effectively, or be readily adaptable, to a variety of related microorganisms and metabolic pathways.


Assuntos
Cianobactérias , Terpenos , Cianobactérias/metabolismo , Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Eucariotos/metabolismo , Ácido Mevalônico/metabolismo , Fosfatos/metabolismo , Terpenos/metabolismo
17.
Wei Sheng Wu Xue Bao ; 51(7): 914-22, 2011 Jul.
Artigo em Zh | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22043792

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: To investigate xylose metabolism in the Saccharomyces cerevisiae stains overexpressing the xylulokinase gene XKS1 at different levels by replacing the promoter in the chromosome. METHODS: Based on S. cerevisiae CEN. PK 113-5D, we constructed xylose-metabolizing strains where the promoter of xylulokinase gene XKS1 was replaced by TEF1 promoter, PGK1 promoter and HXK2 promoter on the chromosome. We quantitated the transcriptional level of XKS1 gene (accumulated mRNA) and measured the activity of xylulokinase in each stains. Furthermore, we also determined the intracellular level of ATP and evaluated the xylose-fermenting abilities of the engineered strains. RESULTS: The engineered strains exhibited higher expression of xylulokinase than the parental strain at both transcription and enzyme activity levels. The highest xylulokinase activity was observed in the strain whose XKS1 was controlled by PGKlp, and was decreasingly followed by the strains whose XKS1 was controlled by TEF1p, HXK2p and native promoter. The expression level of xylulokinase negatively correlated with intracellular level of ATP and positively correlated with ability of ethanol production from xylose. The highest ethanol yield was 0.35 g/g consumed sugars while the lowest xylitol yield, which was 0.18 g/g consumed xylose, was observed. CONCLUSION: By promoter replacement, xylulokinase was overexpressed at different levels. In this work, higher expressional level of xylulokinase improved the conversion of xylose to ethanol.


Assuntos
Fosfotransferases (Aceptor do Grupo Álcool)/genética , Regiões Promotoras Genéticas , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Xilose/metabolismo , Trifosfato de Adenosina/metabolismo , Fermentação , NADP/metabolismo
18.
Microb Biotechnol ; 14(6): 2627-2642, 2021 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34499421

RESUMO

The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae uses the pyruvate dehydrogenase-bypass for acetyl-CoA biosynthesis. This relatively inefficient pathway limits production potential for acetyl-CoA-derived biochemical due to carbon loss and the cost of two high-energy phosphate bonds per molecule of acetyl-CoA. Here, we attempted to improve acetyl-CoA production efficiency by introducing heterologous acetylating aldehyde dehydrogenase and phosphoketolase pathways for acetyl-CoA synthesis to enhance production of the sesquiterpene trans-nerolidol. In addition, we introduced auxin-mediated degradation of the glucose-dependent repressor Mig1p to allow induced expression of GAL promoters on glucose so that production potential on glucose could be examined. The novel genes that we used to reconstruct the heterologous acetyl-CoA pathways did not sufficiently complement the loss of endogenous acetyl-CoA pathways, indicating that superior heterologous enzymes are necessary to establish fully functional synthetic acetyl-CoA pathways and properly explore their potential for nerolidol synthesis. Notwithstanding this, nerolidol production was improved twofold to a titre of ˜ 900 mg l-1 in flask cultivation using a combination of heterologous acetyl-CoA pathways and Mig1p degradation. Conditional Mig1p depletion is presented as a valuable strategy to improve the productivities in the strains engineered with GAL promoters-controlled pathways when growing on glucose.


Assuntos
Saccharomyces cerevisiae , Sesquiterpenos , Acetilcoenzima A , Ácidos Indolacéticos , Engenharia Metabólica , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética
19.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 1051, 2021 02 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33594068

RESUMO

In metabolic engineering, loss-of-function experiments are used to understand and optimise metabolism. A conditional gene inactivation tool is required when gene deletion is lethal or detrimental to growth. Here, we exploit auxin-inducible protein degradation as a metabolic engineering approach in yeast. We demonstrate its effectiveness using terpenoid production. First, we target an essential prenyl-pyrophosphate metabolism protein, farnesyl pyrophosphate synthase (Erg20p). Degradation successfully redirects metabolic flux toward monoterpene (C10) production. Second, depleting hexokinase-2, a key protein in glucose signalling transduction, lifts glucose repression and boosts production of sesquiterpene (C15) nerolidol to 3.5 g L-1 in flask cultivation. Third, depleting acetyl-CoA carboxylase (Acc1p), another essential protein, delivers growth arrest without diminishing production capacity in nerolidol-producing yeast, providing a strategy to decouple growth and production. These studies demonstrate auxin-mediated protein degradation as an advanced tool for metabolic engineering. It also has potential for broader metabolic perturbation studies to better understand metabolism.


Assuntos
Ácidos Indolacéticos/farmacologia , Engenharia Metabólica , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Terpenos/metabolismo , Proteínas de Bactérias/metabolismo , Pontos de Checagem do Ciclo Celular/efeitos dos fármacos , Coenzima A Ligases/metabolismo , Glucose/metabolismo , Hexoquinase/metabolismo , Limoneno/metabolismo , Análise do Fluxo Metabólico , Fosfatos de Poli-Isoprenil/metabolismo , Proteólise/efeitos dos fármacos , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/citologia , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/efeitos dos fármacos , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Sesquiterpenos/metabolismo
20.
ACS Synth Biol ; 7(2): 748-751, 2018 02 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29301066

RESUMO

The GAL promoters are applied in metabolic engineering and synthetic biology to control gene expression in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In gal80Δ background strains, they show diauxie-inducible expression, a feature beneficial in metabolic pathway optimization. However, only a limited number of GAL promoters have been characterized and are available for engineering purposes. Multiple uses of the same promoters can result in genetic instability in engineered strains due to homologous recombination. Here, 11 GAL1/2 promoters from other Saccharomyces species were isolated and characterized in S. cerevisiae. They exhibited diauxie-inducible expression patterns with low strength in exponential growth phase and induction in the ethanol growth phase. These promoters represent an expansion to the collection of GAL promoters available for genetic engineering in S. cerevisiae, including an increased diversity of expression levels. This provides the capacity for increased numbers of genetic manipulations with a lower risk of genetic instability.


Assuntos
Galactoquinase/genética , Expressão Gênica , Proteínas de Transporte de Monossacarídeos/genética , Regiões Promotoras Genéticas , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética
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