Tom Morris, Friederike Gerstl, Sascha Jung, Timothy C. Cairns, Vera Meyer
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Advances in tissue printing and wound healing necessitate a continuous global supply of collagen. Microbial systems are highly desirable to meet these demands as recombinant collagenous proteins can be guaranteed as free from animal viruses. The filamentous cell factory Aspergillus niger has been instrumental for decades in the production of organic acids, enzymes and proteins, yet this fungus has not been explored for recombinant collagen production. In this study, we conducted extensive genetic engineering and fermentation optimization to provide proof of principle that A. niger can produce hydroxylated collagen. We used a modular cloning system to generate a suite of cassettes encoding numerous N-terminal secretion signals, native collagen genes and, additionally, various prolyl-4-hydroxylases (P4H) for protein hydroxylation. Collagen transcription was supported by both luciferase reporter and eGFP tagged approaches. Peptide sequencing from culture supernatant confirmed A. niger produced partially hydroxylated collagen. We then conducted a range of media optimizations and RNA sequencing to, respectively, increase collagen production and identify proteases which we hypothesized were detrimental to recombinant protein titers. Thus, we deleted an endopeptidase encoding gene, protA, which was likely responsible for degrading secreting collagen. Ultimately, we were able to generate an isolate capable of producing hydroxylated collagen at titers of 5 mgL−1 in shake flask models of fermentation. This study thus proves A. niger is a promising heterologous system to address the demand for virus-free collagen.
期刊介绍:
Biotechnology for Biofuels is an open access peer-reviewed journal featuring high-quality studies describing technological and operational advances in the production of biofuels, chemicals and other bioproducts. The journal emphasizes understanding and advancing the application of biotechnology and synergistic operations to improve plants and biological conversion systems for the biological production of these products from biomass, intermediates derived from biomass, or CO2, as well as upstream or downstream operations that are integral to biological conversion of biomass.
Biotechnology for Biofuels focuses on the following areas:
• Development of terrestrial plant feedstocks
• Development of algal feedstocks
• Biomass pretreatment, fractionation and extraction for biological conversion
• Enzyme engineering, production and analysis
• Bacterial genetics, physiology and metabolic engineering
• Fungal/yeast genetics, physiology and metabolic engineering
• Fermentation, biocatalytic conversion and reaction dynamics
• Biological production of chemicals and bioproducts from biomass
• Anaerobic digestion, biohydrogen and bioelectricity
• Bioprocess integration, techno-economic analysis, modelling and policy
• Life cycle assessment and environmental impact analysis