Mingzhi Xu, Cindy Vallières, Chris Finnis, Klaus Winzer, Simon V Avery
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Gene expression noise (variation in gene expression among individual cells of a genetically uniform cell population) can result in heterogenous metabolite production by industrial microorganisms, with cultures containing both low- and high-producing cells. The presence of low-producing individuals may be a factor limiting the potential for high yields. This study tested the hypothesis that low-producing variants in yeast cell populations can be continuously counter-selected, to increase net production of glutathione (GSH) as an exemplar product.
Results: A counter-selection system was engineered in Saccharomyces cerevisiae based on the known feedback inhibition of gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase (GSH1) gene expression, which is rate limiting for GSH synthesis: the GSH1 ORF and the counter-selectable marker GAP1 were expressed under control of the TEF1 and GSH-regulated GSH1 promoters, respectively. An 18% increase in the mean cellular GSH level was achieved in cultures of the engineered strain supplemented with D-histidine to counter-select cells with high GAP1 expression (i.e. low GSH-producing cells). The phenotype was non-heritable and did not arise from a generic response to D-histidine, unlike that with certain other test-constructs prepared with alternative markers.
Conclusions: The results corroborate that the system developed here improves GSH production by targeting low-producing cells. This supports the potential for exploiting end-product/promoter interactions to enrich high-producing cells in phenotypically heterogeneous populations, in order to improve metabolite production by yeast.
期刊介绍:
Microbial Cell Factories is an open access peer-reviewed journal that covers any topic related to the development, use and investigation of microbial cells as producers of recombinant proteins and natural products, or as catalyzers of biological transformations of industrial interest. Microbial Cell Factories is the world leading, primary research journal fully focusing on Applied Microbiology.
The journal is divided into the following editorial sections:
-Metabolic engineering
-Synthetic biology
-Whole-cell biocatalysis
-Microbial regulations
-Recombinant protein production/bioprocessing
-Production of natural compounds
-Systems biology of cell factories
-Microbial production processes
-Cell-free systems