| Literature DB >> 24282652 |
Rama Raju Baadhe1, Naveen Kumar Mekala, Sreenivasa Rao Parcha, Yalavarthy Prameela Devi.
Abstract
The yeast strain (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) MTCC 3157 was selected for combinatorial biosynthesis of plant sesquiterpene amorpha-4,11-diene. Our main objective was to overproduce amorpha 4-11-diene, which is a key precursor molecule of artemisinin (antimalarial drug) produced naturally in plant Artemisia annua through mevalonate pathway. Farnesyl diphosphate (FPP) is a common intermediate metabolite of a variety of compounds in the mevalonate pathway of yeast and leads to the production of ergosterols, dolichol and ubiquinone, and so forth. In our studies, FPP converted to amorphadiene (AD) by expressing heterologous amorphadiene synthase (ADS) in yeast. First, ERG9 (squalane synthase) promoter of yeast was replaced with repressible methionine (MET3) promoter by using bipartite gene fusion method. Further to overcome the loss of the intermediate FPP through competitive pathways in yeast, fusion protein technology was adopted and farnesyldiphosphate synthase (FPPS) of yeast has been coupled with amorphadiene synthase (ADS) of plant origin (Artemisia annua L.) where amorphadiene production was improved by 2-fold (11.2 mg/L) and 4-fold (25.02 mg/L) in yeast strains YCF-002 and YCF-005 compared with control strain YCF-AD (5.5 mg/L), respectively.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24282652 PMCID: PMC3826331 DOI: 10.1155/2013/140469
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Anal Methods Chem ISSN: 2090-8873 Impact factor: 2.193
List of the primers used in this study.
| List of primers |
|---|
| (1) GGGACTAGTGTTTAATTTAGTACTAACAGAGACTT |
| (2) CCCCCGCGGCATGTTAATTATACTTTATTCTTGTT |
| (3) GATCCCCGGGAATTGCCATGACGCTGCAGGTCGACAACCC |
| (4) CCATGAGTGACGACTGAATCCGG |
| (5) CTATCGATTGTATGGGAAGCCCG |
| (6) CAATGCCAATTGTAATAGCTTCCCAT |
| (7) GTTAATTATACTTTATTCTTGTTATTATTATAC |
| (8) AGCCTCAGTACGCTGGTACCCG |
| (9) CATGGCAATTCCCGGGGATCTGGGCTATGAAATGTACTGAGTCAG |
| (10) ATGGGAAAGCTATTACAATTGGCATTG |
| (11) GTCGTA-GTCGTGGACGGTTTGC |
| (12) AGCCTCAGTACGCTGGTACCCG |
| (13) ATGGCTTCAGAAAAAGAAATTAGGAGAGAGAGA |
| (14) TTCAGTCAAGGCCACTATTTGCTTCTCTTGTAAACTTTGTTCAAGAAC |
| (15) GAGAAGCAAATAGTGGCCTTGACTGAAGAGAAACCTATAAGGC |
| (16) TTAGATAGACATAGGGTAAACTAGCAATGATTTGATCAA |
| (17) ATGGCTTCAGAAAAAGAAATTAGGAGAGAGAGA |
| (18) TTAGATAGACATAGGGTAAACTAGCAATGATTTGATCAA |
| (19) ATGGCCTTGACTGAAGAGAAACCT |
| (20) ATTTCTTTTTCTGAAGCCATTTAGATAGACATAGGGTAAACTAGCAATGATTTG ATCAA |
| (21) TTTACCCTATGTCTATCTAAATGGCTTCAGAAAAAGAAATTAGGAGAGAGAG |
| (22) CTATTTGCTTCTCTTGTAAACTTTGTTCAAGAACG |
| (23) ATGGCCTTGACTGAAGAGAAACCT |
| (24) CTATTTGCTTCTCTTGTAAACTTTGTTCAAGAACG |
Figure 1Promoter replacement of ERG9 gene by using bipartite gene fusion method.
Yeast strains and plasmids used in this study.
| Strain | Genotype | Plasmid | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| MTCC 3157 |
| None | Imtech |
| YCF-001 |
| None | In this study |
| YCF-AD |
|
| In this study |
| YCF-002 |
|
| In this study |
| YCF-004 |
| pY01 | In this study |
| YCF-005 |
| pY01 | In this study |
| YCF-006 |
| pY01 | In this study |
Figure 2Effect of methionine on the growth pattern of ERG9 repressed yeast strain (YCF-005) cultivated in shake flasks containing minimal medium and 20 g/L glucose (average data obtained from triplicate of the experiments were represented).
The final ergosterol content with varying concentrations of methionine (average data obtained from triplicate of the experiments were represented).
| Strain | Methionine concentration (mM) | Ergosterol (mg/g DW) |
|---|---|---|
| MTCC 3157 | 0 | 19.25 |
| YCF-005 | 0 | 19.21 |
| YCF-005 | 1 | 14.05 |
| YCF-005 | 1.5 | 13.98 |
| YCF-005 | 2.0 | 13.75 |
| YCF-005 | 2.5 | 12.57 |
| YCF-005 | 3.0 | 3.31 |
Figure 3GC-MS profile of the amorphadiene and farnesol produced by YCF-005 strain. (a) Standard chromatogram of amorphadiene and farnesol, (b) ethyl extract sample chromatogram, (c) farnesol authentic standard mass spectrum, (d) amorphadiene authentic standard mass spectrum, (e) amorphadiene, and (f) farnesol sample mass spectrum generated from sample chromatogram (b).
Figure 4Amorphadiene concentration as a function of time in repressed (YCF-002, YCF-005, YCF-006) and nonrepressed (YCF-AD) yeast strains expression free enzymes (ADS) and chimera enzymes (FPPS-ADS and ADS-FPPS) (average data obtained from triplicate of the experiments were represented).
Figure 5SDS/PAGE of recombinant enzymes produced in different yeast strains. Lane M: molecular mass standards; lane a, crude extract FPPS; lane b: purified FPPS; lane c: crude extract ADS; lane d: purified ADS; lane e: crude extract FPPS-ADS; lane f: purified FPPS-ADS lane g: crude extract ADS-FPPS; lane h: purified ADS-FPPS. The calculated molecular weights of FPPS, ADS, and the fusion enzymes were 40, 63, and 103 kDa, respectively.