| Literature DB >> 23552365 |
Daniel González-Ramos1, Marcel van den Broek, Antonius Ja van Maris, Jack T Pronk, Jean-Marc G Daran.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: n-Butanol and isobutanol produced from biomass-derived sugars are promising renewable transport fuels and solvents. Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been engineered for butanol production, but its high butanol sensitivity poses an upper limit to product titers that can be reached by further pathway engineering. A better understanding of the molecular basis of butanol stress and tolerance of S. cerevisiae is important for achieving improved tolerance.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23552365 PMCID: PMC3621596 DOI: 10.1186/1754-6834-6-48
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biotechnol Biofuels ISSN: 1754-6834 Impact factor: 6.040
Figure 1Reverse engineering cycle for butanol tolerance in . The figure represents the evolutionary engineering strategy used in this study. It comprises three phases a) generation of biodiversity by evolutionary engineering and screening for improved isolates (1- and 2-), b) analysis of evolved genomes and identification of genetic variations (SNV: Single Nucleotide Variation, INDELS: INsertion - DELetion and CNV: Copy Number Variation) (3-) and c) reverse genetic engineering of detected variation in a “naive” genetic background and characterization of the engineered strain (5-, 6-). Prioritization of the variations prior reintroduction in naive reference was guided by sequence analysis of offspring from three consecutive back crossing (4-).
Figure 2Specific growth rate and final ODmeasured after 48 h of incubation of the reference strains BY4741 (A) and CEN.PK113-7D (B) in 96 well plates in synthetic medium containing -butanol concentrations ranging from 0 to 1.9% (v/v). □: OD660, ▲: μ (h-1). The data presented are average and standard deviation of at least eight biological replicates.
Figure 3An example of screening for -butanol tolerance of a single deletion strain in the CEN.PK background, comparing IMK356 ( Δ) (●) and CEN.PK113-7D (□). The strains were grown in 96 well plates in synthetic medium containing different concentrations of n-butanol, and the OD660 was measured after 48 h. Each point represents the average final OD660 and standard deviation for each n-butanol concentration, calculated from at least 16 independent cultures.
Set of 35 genes whose deletion results in -butanol sensitivity in both BY4741 and CEN.PK113-7D genetic backgrounds
| Alpha 3 subunit of the 20S proteasome. | |
| Chaperone required for correct maturation of the 20S proteasome. | |
| YLR224W | Subunit of the SCF ubiquitin ligase complexes, responsible of recognizing misfolded proteins. |
| Ubiquitin-specific protease and its cofactor, respectively. Responsible of the deubiquitination of proteins. Important to maintain the pull of free ubiquitin in the cells. | |
| Components of the ESCRT-I, -II and –II complexes, respectively. Responsible of sorting ubiquitinated membrane proteins into Multivesicular Bodies (MVB) for their degradation in the vacuole. | |
| Responsible of deubiquitination in the MBV. Important to maintain the pull of free ubiquitin. | |
| Vps34 and Vps15 form a complex responsible for the synthesis of phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate, involved in endosomal membrane trafficking and in the regulation of protein sorting. | |
| Component of the conserved R2TP complex. Interacts with Hsp90 to mediate assembly large protein complexes such as box C/D snoRNPs and RNA polymerase II. | |
| Transcription cofactor required for the unfolded protein response. | |
| Subunits of the GET complex. Involved in the insertion of tail anchored proteins into the ER. Tail anchored proteins play a role in vesicular traffic and folding or degradation of membrane proteins. | |
| Subunit F of the eight-subunit V1 peripheral membrane domain of vacuolar H+−ATPase, and peripheral membrane protein that is required for vacuolar H+−ATPase function, respectively. | |
| Protein that regulates myosin function; involved in endocytosis. | |
| 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase, required for adaptation to oxidative stress. | |
| Subunit of the alpha-1,6 mannosyltransferase complex. Involved in osmotic sensitivity. | |
| Protein of unknown function, required for mitochondrial genome maintenance. | |
| Subunits of the THO complex. Involved in transcription elongation by RNA polymerase II and in telomere maintenance. | |
| Cytoskeletal protein binding protein required for assembly of the cortical actin cytoskeleton. | |
| Epsilon-COP subunit of the coatomer; regulates retrograde Golgi-to-ER protein traffic. | |
| Mitochondrial glutamyl-tRNA synthetase. | |
| Non-essential kinetochore protein, subunit of the Ctf19 central kinetochore complex. | |
| Cytosolic aldehyde dehydrogenase, required for conversion of acetaldehyde to acetate. | |
| Member of the NineTeen Complex. Involved in splicing of nuclear RNAs via the spliceosome. | |
| Regulatory subunit of Glc7p, involved in negative regulation of glucose-repressible genes. | |
| Component of the RSC chromatin remodeling complex. involved in telomere maintenance. | |
| Third subunit of DNA polymerase delta, involved in chromosomal DNA replication. | |
| Cytoplasmic DExD/H-box helicase, stimulates mRNA decapping. | |
| Actin-associated protein involved in cytoskeletal organization and cytokinesis. | |
| Aspartic beta semi-aldehyde dehydrogenase, catalyzes the second step in the common pathway for methionine and threonine biosynthesis. |
Figure 4Hierarchical map of the GO complete categories found enriched in the set of 35 genes whose deletion leads to higher -butanol sensitivity phenotype in both BY4741 and CEN.PK113-7D strains. Pink boxes denote enriched (QFDR< 0.05) GO term categories related to formation of multivesicular bodies, and the purple boxes enriched (QFDR< 0.05) GO term categories related to ubiquitin-proteasome system based on Fisher exact statistics.
Figure 5Growth of the strains IMI088 (overexpressing YLR224W) (●) and CEN.PK113-7D (□) in the presence of butanol. A: Growth rate in synthetic medium containing n-butanol concentrations ranging from 1% to 1.7%. The data represent the average apparent growth rate μ (h-1) and standard deviation of a minimum of four independent cultures. B: Growth in the presence of 1.33% n-butanol. The values correspond to the average final OD660 of three independent cultures and the standard deviation of replicate cultures.
Figure 6Evolutionary engineering of -butanol tolerance in sequential shake flask cultivation. A: OD660 measured at the end of each batch throughout the evolution process. After 55 batches (vertical line) the n-butanol concentration was raised to 1.25%. The laboratory evolution was stopped after 83 batches. B: n-Butanol tolerance of the evolved strains IMS0351 (○) and IMS0344 (●) and the reference strain CEN.PK113-7D (□). The strains were grown in 96 well plates in synthetic medium in the presence of n-butanol concentrations ranged from 0 to 1.9%. The data represent the average and the standard deviation of the biomass yield (OD660) measured after 48 h from 16 independent cultures. C: Growth (OD660) in anaerobic pH controlled-bioreactor of the strains IMS0351 (○) and CEN.PK113-7D (□) in the presence of 1.5% n-butanol. The concentration of n-butanol throughout the experiments is shown for IMS0351 (----) and CEN.PK113-7D (····).
Figure 7Tolerance of the strains IMS0344 (●) and IMS0351 (○) and CEN.PK113-7D (□) to different alcohols. The strains were grown in 96 well plates containing synthetic medium with increasing concentrations of isobutanol, 2-butanol, propanol and ethanol. The strains were grown in 96 well plates in synthetic medium in the presence of different concentration of alcohols. The data represent the average and the standard deviation of the biomass yield (OD660) measured after 48 h from 16 independent cultures. A: Growth in the presence of isobutanol, B: Growth in the presence of 2-butanol, C: Growth in the presence of propanol, D: Growth in the presence of ethanol.
Figure 8Segregation of the mutations found in the evolved -butanol tolerant strains IMS0344 and IMS0351 and the F1, F2 and F3 generation of back crossing. The evolved strains IMS0344 and IMS0351 were crossed with IMK439 (MATα isogenic of CEN.PK113-7D and deleted in URA3) to create a diploid. The diploid was sporulated, one haploid segregant with the same tolerance as the evolved strain was selected and the cycle repeated was repeated three times.
Single nucleotide variation identified in the evolved strains IMS0344 and IMS0351 by whole-genome resequencing
| IMS0344 | G1518C | K506N | |
| | A235G | K79E | |
| | C3974A | P1325Q | |
| | A3194G | E1065G | |
| IMS0351 | C1546T | Q516* | |
| | C256A | L86I | |
| | C545A | S182* | |
| | C2129A | S710* | |
| | T2543G | F736V | |
| | change from G to C 296 bp upstream of | —————— | |
| change from T to C 984 bp upstream of | —————— |
* denotes the introduction of an early stop codon.
Figure 9-Butanol tolerance of the strains IMI218 (containing the allele) (▲), IMI238 (containing the allele) (◊), CEN.PK113-7D (□) and the evolved strain IMS0344 (●). The data represent the average and the standard deviation of the biomass yield (OD660) measured after 48 h from at least 16 independent cultures in presence of different concentration of n-butanol.
Figure 10Protein degradation under butanol stress. The gene deletion that resulted in strains with a reduced butanol tolerance are shown in red. After their ubiquitination, membrane proteins are internalized via endocytosis and endocytic vesicles fuse with the membrane of Multivesicular Bodies (MBVs). In the MBVs, proteins are deubiquitinated and sorted into vesicules. When the membrane of the MBVs fuses with the vacuole, releases the vesicles that are degraded by vacuolar hydrolases. Ubiquitinated cytosolic proteins are degraded in the proteasome, producing small peptides and free ubiquitin. Rpn4p induces the expression of proteasome genes including PRE9, and was found to be relevant for butanol tolerance in the evolutionary engineering approach.
strains used in this study
| BY4741 | Euroscarfa | |
| Yeast KO collection | OpenBiosystemsb | |
| CEN.PK113-7D | Euroscarfa | |
| CEN.PK113-1A | Euroscarfa | |
| IMK439 | This study | |
| IMK440 | This study | |
| Deletion strains* | This study | |
| Overexpression strains* | This study | |
| IMS0344 | This study | |
| IMS0345 | This study | |
| IMS0346 | This study | |
| IMS0347 | This study | |
| IMS0348 | This study | |
| IMS0349 | This study | |
| IMS0350 | This study | |
| IMS0351 | This study | |
| IMS0352 | This study | |
| IMS0353 | This study | |
| IMS0354 | This study | |
| IMS0355 | This study | |
| IMS0356 | This study | |
| IMS0357 | This study | |
| IMI218 | This study | |
| IMI238 | This study |
* the complete list of the deletion and overexpression strains is provided in Additional file 1: Table S1. ahttp://web.uni-frankfurt.de/fb15/mikro/euroscarf/, bhttp://www.thermoscientificbio.com/molecular-biology/.