| Literature DB >> 29281679 |
Anita Loeschcke1,2, Dennis Dienst3,2, Vera Wewer4,2, Jennifer Hage-Hülsmann1,2, Maximilian Dietsch3,2, Sarah Kranz-Finger5,2, Vanessa Hüren3,2, Sabine Metzger4,2, Vlada B Urlacher5,2, Tamara Gigolashvili6,2, Stanislav Kopriva6,2, Ilka M Axmann3,2, Thomas Drepper1,2, Karl-Erich Jaeger1,2,7.
Abstract
Cyclic triterpenes constitute one of the most diverse groups of plant natural products. Besides the intriguing biochemistry of their biosynthetic pathways, plant triterpenes exhibit versatile bioactivities, including antimicrobial effects against plant and human pathogens. While prokaryotes have been extensively used for the heterologous production of other classes of terpenes, the synthesis of cyclic triterpenes, which inherently includes the two-step catalytic formation of the universal linear precursor 2,3-oxidosqualene, is still a major challenge. We thus explored the suitability of the metabolically versatile photosynthetic α-proteobacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus SB1003 and cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 as alternative hosts for biosynthesis of cyclic plant triterpenes. Therefore, 2,3-oxidosqualene production was implemented and subsequently combined with different cyclization reactions catalyzed by the representative oxidosqualene cyclases CAS1 (cycloartenol synthase), LUP1 (lupeol synthase), THAS1 (thalianol synthase) and MRN1 (marneral synthase) derived from model plant Arabidopsis thaliana. While successful accumulation of 2,3-oxidosqualene could be detected by LC-MS analysis in both hosts, cyclase expression resulted in differential production profiles. CAS1 catalyzed conversion to only cycloartenol, but expression of LUP1 yielded lupeol and a triterpenoid matching an oxidation product of lupeol, in both hosts. In contrast, THAS1 expression did not lead to cyclic product formation in either host, whereas MRN1-dependent production of marnerol and hydroxymarnerol was observed in Synechocystis but not in R. capsulatus. Our findings thus indicate that 2,3-oxidosqualene cyclization in heterologous phototrophic bacteria is basically feasible but efficient conversion depends on both the respective cyclase enzyme and individual host properties. Therefore, photosynthetic α-proteo- and cyanobacteria are promising alternative candidates for providing new bacterial access to the broad class of triterpenes for biotechnological applications.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29281679 PMCID: PMC5744966 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0189816
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Strain constructs used in this study and their genetic features.
| strain | plasmid insert | Promoter | RBS1 | CDS1 | RBS2 | CDS2 | RBS3 | CDS3 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SQS1 | P | pRhotHi-2 | - | - | - | - | ||
| SQS1-SQE1 | pET | - | - | |||||
| CAS1-SQS1-SQE1 | pET | |||||||
| LUP1-SQS1-SQE1 | ||||||||
| THAS1-SQS1-SQE1 | ||||||||
| MRN1-SQS1-SQE1 | ||||||||
| SQE1 | P | SQE1 | - | - | ||||
| SQE1-CAS1 | BBa0034 | - | - | |||||
| SQE1-LUP1 | - | - | ||||||
| SQE1-THAS1 | - | - | ||||||
| SQE1-MRN1 | - | - |
Rc, Rhodobacter capsulatus SB1003; Syn, Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803; CDS, coding sequence; all Rc expression plasmids were based on pRhon5Hi-2, a derivative of pRhotHi-2 carrying the host-specific Pnif promoter (NCBI Genbank Accession MG208548); all Syn expression plasmids were based on pVZ-spec carrying the host-specific PcoaT promoter from pJPVCS (NCBI Genbank Accession MG191280). DNA sequences of recombinant insert sequences are specified in .
*an NheI site was introduced to the 2nd and 3rd codon of A.t. SQE1.
Triterpene levels in engineered R. capsulatus SB1003 (Rc) and Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 (Syn) strains.
| host bacterium | compound | specific yield | product titer | specific titer | volumetric productivity | specific productivity | precursor conversion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| squalene | 9.44 | 8.24 | 5.50 | 171.43 | 181.51 | - | |
| 2,3-oxido-squalene | 0.32 | 0.28 | 0.19 | 5.33 | 6.17 | quantitative | |
| cycloartenol | 0.40 | 0.34 | 0.24 | 6.47 | 7.77 | quantitative | |
| lupeol | minor amounts of lupeol and proposed hydroxylated lupeol derivative detected | poor | |||||
| thalianol | not detected | - | |||||
| marneral | not detected | - | |||||
| squalene | 9.70 | 5.08 | 4.31 | 30.71 | 58.65 | - | |
| 2,3-oxido-squalene | 2.09 | 1.13 | 0.93 | 9.81 | 18.22 | quantitative | |
| cycloartenol | 2.06 | 1.10 | 0.92 | 9.67 | 18.11 | quantitative | |
| lupeol | 0.29 mg/gDCW lupeol and proposed hydroxylated lupeol derivative detected | good | |||||
| thalianol | not detected | - | |||||
| marneral | marnerol and hydroxymarnerol detected | poor | |||||
Data represent mean values and respective standard deviations from three independent cultivations. Squalene levels were determined in strains Rc_SQS1 and Syn_Δshc, as well as 2,3-oxidosqualene levels in Rc_SQS1-SQE1 and Syn_Δshc-SQE1, and cycloartenol levels in Rc_CAS1-SQS1-SQE1 and Syn_Δshc-SQE1-CAS1. Lupeol levels and synthesis of further triterpenes were determined in strains Rc_LUP1-SQS1-SQE1 and Syn_Δshc-SQE1-LUP1. Strains Rc_THAS1-SQS1-SQE1 and Syn_Δshc-SQE1-THAS1, as well as Rc_MRN1-SQS1-SQE1 and Syn_Δshc-SQE1-MRN1 were analyzed for accumulation of thalianol and marneral, as well as derivatives thereof, respectively.