| Literature DB >> 17880710 |
José Luis Báez-Viveros1, Noemí Flores, Katy Juárez, Patricia Castillo-España, Francisco Bolivar, Guillermo Gosset.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The rational design of L-phenylalanine (L-Phe) overproducing microorganisms has been successfully achieved by combining different genetic strategies such as inactivation of the phosphoenolpyruvate: phosphotransferase transport system (PTS) and overexpression of key genes (DAHP synthase, transketolase and chorismate mutase-prephenate dehydratase), reaching yields of 0.33 (g-Phe/g-Glc), which correspond to 60% of theoretical maximum. Although genetic modifications introduced into the cell for the generation of overproducing organisms are specifically targeted to a particular pathway, these can trigger unexpected transcriptional responses of several genes. In the current work, metabolic transcription analysis (MTA) of both L-Phe overproducing and non-engineered strains using Real-Time PCR was performed, allowing the detection of transcriptional responses to PTS deletion and plasmid presence of genes related to central carbon metabolism. This MTA included 86 genes encoding enzymes of glycolysis, gluconeogenesis, pentoses phosphate, tricarboxylic acid cycle, fermentative and aromatic amino acid pathways. In addition, 30 genes encoding regulatory proteins and transporters for aromatic compounds and carbohydrates were also analyzed.Entities:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17880710 PMCID: PMC2089068 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2859-6-30
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Cell Fact ISSN: 1475-2859 Impact factor: 5.328
Figure 1Glucose transport and central metabolism reactions in . Glucose transport through outer and inner membranes and main pathways involved in the biosynthesis of L-Phe in strains with an active PTS (strain JM101).
Figure 2Glucose transport and central metabolism reactions in . Glucose transport through outer and inner membranes in derivative E. coli strains with an inactive PTS. These strains such as PB12-ev2 and PB13-ev2 use GalP and Glk for glucose transport and phosphorylation.
Accumulation of aromatic intermediates, acetate, L-Phe yields and productivities in L-Phe overproducing strains assessed in resting cell cultures containing 1 g of biomass. The results of the JM101-ev2, PB12-ev2 and PB13-ev2 strains have been previously reported [15, 69].
| 0.17 ± 0.01 | 70 ± 0.41 | 0.020 ± 0.001 | 0.029 ± 0.002 | 0.396 ± 0.025 | 0.22 ± 0.01 | 36.34 ± 2.50 | |
| 0.12 ± 0.01 | 30 ± 0.22 | 0.054 ± 0.003 | 0.034 ± 0.001 | 0.460 ± 0.015 | 0.33 ± 0.01 | 40.60 ± 3.17 | |
| 0.14 ± 0.01 | 40 ± 0.25 | 0.054 ± 0.004 | 0.034 ± 0.002 | 0.300 ± 0.019 | 0.20 ± 0.02 | 29.25 ± 2.50 |
Symbols: qGlc, specific consumption rate of glucose; qAcetate, specific consumption rate of acetate; qPhe, specific production rate of phenylalanine; Y, yield of phenylalanine synthesized from glucose. DHS, 5-dehydroshikimate; SHIK, shikimate; gDCW, grams of dry cell weight.
Figure 3Relative transcript levels for genes from carbon central metabolism for PB12 (first value) and PB13 (second value), as compared to JM101. Metabolic network showing the relative gene transcription levels of genes related to the carbon central metabolism, fermentative pathways and the connection with the common aromatic amino acid pathway. Most relevant transcriptional responses in host strains without plasmids are shown: PB12 (first value), PB13 (second value) as compared to JM101. According to the significance criterion, only those relative gene transcription values ≥ 2 (up-regulation, data in red) or ≤ 0.5 (down-regulation, data in blue), as compared to JM101 reference strain, are shown. The relative gene transcription value for JM101 is always equal to 1 and for that reason was omitted. No significant values were written in black. Metabolites abbreviations: GLC, glucose; G6P, glucose-6-phosphate; F6P, fructose-6-phosphate; PBP, fructose-1,6-biphosphate; DHAP, dihydroxyacetone phosphate; GAP, glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate; 1,3-BGP, 1,3-biphosphoglycerate; 3PG, 3-phosphoglycerate; 2PG, 2-phophoglycerate; PEP, phosphoenolpyruvate; PYR, pyruvate; 6PGLN, 6-phosphoglucono-δ-lactone; 6PGNT, 6-phophogluconate; Ru5P, ribulose-5-phosphate; R5P, ribose-5-phosphate; Xu5P, xylulose-5-phosphate; S7P, sedoheptulose-7-phosphate; E4P, erythrose-4-phosphate; Ac-CoA, acetyl coenzyme A; Ac-P, acetyl phosphate; Ac-AMP, acetyl-AMP; CIT, citrate; ICT, isocitrate; GOX, glyoxylate; α-KG, α-ketoglutarate; SUC-CoA, succinyl-coenzyme A, SUC, succinate; FUM, fumarate; MAL, malate; OXA, oxaloacetate.
Figure 4Relative transcript levels for genes from carbon central metabolism for L-Phe overproducing strains. Metabolic network showing the relative gene transcription levels of genes related to the carbon central metabolism, fermentative pathways and the connection with the common aromatic amino acid pathway. Most relevant transcriptional responses in L-Phe overproducing strains are shown: JM101-ev2 (first value), PB12-ev2 (second value) and PB13-ev3 (third value), as compared to JM101. Metabolites abbreviations are depicted in Figure 3 legend.
Figure 5Relative transcript levels for genes from the shikimate and aromatic specific pathways. Metabolic transcription analysis of genes related to the shikimate pathway and specific aromatic amino acid pathways. Metabolites abbreviations: PEP, phosphoenolpyruvate; E4P, erythrose 4-phosphate; DAHP, 3-deoxy-D-arabino-heptulosonate-7-phosphate; DHQ, 5-dehydroquinate; DHS, 5-dehydroshikimate; SHIK, shikimate; S3P, shikimate 5-phosphate; ESPS, 3-enolpyruvylshimate-5-phosphate; CHO, chorismate; PPA, prephenate; PPY, phenylpyruvate; HPP, 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate; ANTA, anthranilate; PRAA, N-(5'-Phosphoribosyl)-anthranilate; CDRP, enol-1-o-carboxyphenylamino-1-deoxy-ribulose phosphate; I3GP, indol-3-glycerol phosphate; IND, indole; L-Phe, phenylalanine; L-Tyr, tyrosine; L-Trp, tryptophan, L-Ser, serine; L-Gln, glutamine; L-Glu, glutamate.
Nucleotide sequences of the primers sets used for RT-PCR assays. The rest of the primer sets has been already reported [18].
| Gene | Primer | Primer sequence |
| Aromatic amino acid pathways | ||
| aroFa | 5' CAGAATCCGTGGTTGCTCAA 3' | |
| aroFb | 5' CGGTTGCTCGGAAGACTGAT 3' | |
| aroGa | 5' GTCGGCTTCAAAAATGGCAC 3' | |
| aroGb | 5' CCCCATTTCGTTACGGACAG 3' | |
| aroHa | 5' CTGCTCGATCCACGATCTCA 3' | |
| aroHb | 5' AGGTGCGCATTACGATTTCC 3' | |
| aroBa | 5' GTTATCCTCCCTGACGGCG 3' | |
| aroBb | 5' ACCAGCGTAGTATCGCGACC 3' | |
| aroDa | 5' AGCCGAAGAAATCATTGCCC 3' | |
| aroDb | 5' ACGTCAGCACATCGCTGGTA 3' | |
| aroEa | 5' AATCCGATAGCCCACAGCAA 3' | |
| aroEb | 5' TCATTGATGGGTGCCAACAC 3' | |
| ydiBa | 5' AAAAGCGGGATTGCCATTTA 3' | |
| ydiBb | 5' CAGTTCCGCGCATTTTGAG 3' | |
| aroLa | 5' CCGGAAGAAGATTTACGGCC 3' | |
| aroLb | 5' TGCGCAACTTCGCGATATAG 3' | |
| aroKa | 5' GCACTATTGGGCGCCAGTTA 3' | |
| aroKb | 5' GAAAACCCAGCCCACATCAG 3' | |
| aroMa | 5' CCAGAAGCAGGCGAAGACAC 3' | |
| aroMb | 5' TCAACCACACCTTGCAGGTC 3' | |
| aroAa | 5' CATATTCCTGATGCGGCGAT 3' | |
| aroAb | 5' TCGGTCTCTTTAACACGCCAG 3' | |
| aroCa | 5' GGGACATCGCGCTATACCAC 3' | |
| aroCb | 5' AACAAGCCAATGCTGGTGC 3' | |
| pheARa | 5' ATGACCCGTCTGGAATCACG 3' | |
| pheARb | 5' GCTTTTTGCATTTCCGCTG 3' | |
| pheAa | 5' ACTCAGCAGGCTTTGCTCCA 3' | |
| pheAb | 5' GCCGCAAGATGGGAATAAGAA 3' | |
| tyrAa | 5' GTCAGATGGGACGCCTGTTC 3' | |
| tyrAb | 5' GGCAACAATATCAGCCGCTC 3' | |
| aspCa | 5' GGCGATTCGCGCTAACTACT 3' | |
| aspCb | 5' GCTCTTGTTCCCAAATCGCA 3' | |
| trpEa | 5' CGCAACTGTCAGCGGAAAAT 3' | |
| trpEb | 5' GGCCTGAATACGGGTGCTTT 3' | |
| trpAa | 5' CGTTCCTTTCGTCACGCTC 3' | |
| trpAb | 5' CGTTCCTTTCGTCACGCTC 3' | |
| Aromatic amino acid transport | ||
| phePa | 5' CGGCTGTATTGCTGGGCTAC 3' | |
| phePb | 5' AAATGAACCGGATACCGGCT 3' | |
| aroPa | 5' TGGTAATCAACTGGGCGATG 3' | |
| aroPb | 5' CGGATAAAGCAGAGCAGGGA 3' | |
| tyrPa | 5' CCGGTGTTGGTTTTAGCGTT 3' | |
| tyrPb | 5' CGGAACATGCTGGTACACCTC 3' | |
| mtra | 5' TTGATGTGCTGGTACAGGCG 3' | |
| mtrb | 5' GAGGAACGAACTCGCTACCG 3' | |
| shiAb | 5' ATTATCAAGCTGCCGCGAAA 3' | |
| shiAb | 5' CAATTCGCACAGTCGTAGCG 3' | |
| ilvEa | 5' AAGGCATCCGTTGCTACGAC 3' | |
| ilvEb | 5' CGGGAAGCGATAGATTTTGG 3' | |
| aroPa | 5' TGGTAATCAACTGGGCGATG 3' | |
| aroPb | 5' CGGATAAAGCAGAGCAGGGA 3' | |
| Regulators | ||
| trpRa | 5' CAGAACAGCGTCACCAGGAG 3' | |
| trpRb | 5' TGGCGTCAGCATCAGGTTTA 3' | |
| tyrRa | 5' GGCGAGCTGTCAGCTTTTTG 3' | |
| tyrRb | 5' CGCTTTCCAGCCAACGTAAA 3' | |
| csrAa | 5' TCTGACTCGTCGAGTTGGTGA 3' | |
| csrAb | 5' GGGCATTTACGCCAATACGT 3' | |
| rpoDa | 5' GATTCTGCGACCACCGAAAG 3' | |
| rpoDb | 5' TCGATACCGAAACGCATACG 3' | |
| rpoEa | 5' GAACTATTGAGTCCCTCCCGG 3' | |
| rpoEb | 5' CGGACAATCCATGATAGCGG 3' | |
| fnra | 5' CGGAAAAGCGAATTATACGGC 3' | |
| fnrb | 5' TTCGTTGAGTGTGAACGGGA 3' | |
| Carbohydrate transport | ||
| malEa | 5' AGAAATTCCCACAGGTTGCG 3' | |
| malEb | 5' TTCAGCCAACAGGCCAGATT 3' | |
E. coli strains and plasmids used for the construction of L-phenylalanine overproducing strains in this study.
| 70 | ||
| Derived from JM101, but Δ | 2 | |
| Derived from PB11; PB12 grows faster than PB11 on glucose | 2 | |
| Derived from PB11; PB13 grows faster than PB11 on glucose. | 2 | |
| 6 | ||
| 15 | ||
| Evolved feedback insensitive | 15 | |
| JM101 transformed with pJLB | 15 | |
| PB12 transformed with pJLB | 15 | |
| PB13 transformed with pJLB | 69 | |
Figure 6Relative transcript levels for genes encoding regulatory proteins. Gene transcription profiling of genes encoding regulatory proteins of central metabolism and aromatic amino acid pathways are shown.