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Front Microbiol ; 13: 981767, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36060754

ABSTRACT

For regulatable target gene expression in the acetic acid bacterium (AAB) Gluconobacter oxydans only recently the first plasmids became available. These systems solely enable AraC- and TetR-dependent induction. In this study we showed that the l-rhamnose-dependent regulator RhaS from Escherichia coli and its target promoters P rhaBAD , P rhaT , and P rhaSR could also be used in G. oxydans for regulatable target gene expression. Interestingly, in contrast to the responsiveness in E. coli, in G. oxydans RhaS increased the expression from P rhaBAD in the absence of l-rhamnose and repressed P rhaBAD in the presence of l-rhamnose. Inserting an additional RhaS binding site directly downstream from the -10 region generating promoter variant P rhaBAD(+RhaS-BS) almost doubled the apparent RhaS-dependent promoter strength. Plasmid-based P rhaBAD and P rhaBAD(+RhaS-BS) activity could be reduced up to 90% by RhaS and l-rhamnose, while a genomic copy of P rhaBAD(+RhaS-BS) appeared fully repressed. The RhaS-dependent repression was largely tunable by l-rhamnose concentrations between 0% and only 0.3% (w/v). The RhaS-P rhaBAD and the RhaS-P rhaBAD(+RhaS-BS) systems represent the first heterologous repressible expression systems for G. oxydans. In contrast to P rhaBAD , the E. coli promoter P rhaT was almost inactive in the absence of RhaS. In the presence of RhaS, the P rhaT activity in the absence of l-rhamnose was weak, but could be induced up to 10-fold by addition of l-rhamnose, resulting in a moderate expression level. Therefore, the RhaS-P rhaT system could be suitable for tunable low-level expression of difficult enzymes or membrane proteins in G. oxydans. The insertion of an additional RhaS binding site directly downstream from the E. coli P rhaT -10 region increased the non-induced expression strength and reversed the regulation by RhaS and l-rhamnose from inducible to repressible. The P rhaSR promoter appeared to be positively auto-regulated by RhaS and this activation was increased by l-rhamnose. In summary, the interplay of the l-rhamnose-binding RhaS transcriptional regulator from E. coli with its target promoters P rhaBAD , P rhaT , P rhaSR and variants thereof provide new opportunities for regulatable gene expression in G. oxydans and possibly also for simultaneous l-rhamnose-triggered repression and activation of target genes, which is a highly interesting possibility in metabolic engineering approaches requiring redirection of carbon fluxes.

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