| Literature DB >> 30856163 |
Kevin S Myers1, Nicholas M Riley2, Matthew E MacGilvray3, Trey K Sato1, Mick McGee1, Justin Heilberger1, Joshua J Coon2,4,5,6, Audrey P Gasch1,3,4.
Abstract
Microbes can be metabolically engineered to produce biofuels and biochemicals, but rerouting metabolic flux toward products is a major hurdle without a systems-level understanding of how cellular flux is controlled. To understand flux rerouting, we investigated a panel of Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains with progressive improvements in anaerobic fermentation of xylose, a sugar abundant in sustainable plant biomass used for biofuel production. We combined comparative transcriptomics, proteomics, and phosphoproteomics with network analysis to understand the physiology of improved anaerobic xylose fermentation. Our results show that upstream regulatory changes produce a suite of physiological effects that collectively impact the phenotype. Evolved strains show an unusual co-activation of Protein Kinase A (PKA) and Snf1, thus combining responses seen during feast on glucose and famine on non-preferred sugars. Surprisingly, these regulatory changes were required to mount the hypoxic response when cells were grown on xylose, revealing a previously unknown connection between sugar source and anaerobic response. Network analysis identified several downstream transcription factors that play a significant, but on their own minor, role in anaerobic xylose fermentation, consistent with the combinatorial effects of small-impact changes. We also discovered that different routes of PKA activation produce distinct phenotypes: deletion of the RAS/PKA inhibitor IRA2 promotes xylose growth and metabolism, whereas deletion of PKA inhibitor BCY1 decouples growth from metabolism to enable robust fermentation without division. Comparing phosphoproteomic changes across ira2Δ and bcy1Δ strains implicated regulatory changes linked to xylose-dependent growth versus metabolism. Together, our results present a picture of the metabolic logic behind anaerobic xylose flux and suggest that widespread cellular remodeling, rather than individual metabolic changes, is an important goal for metabolic engineering.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30856163 PMCID: PMC6428351 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1008037
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Genet ISSN: 1553-7390 Impact factor: 5.917
Fig 1Response to anaerobiosis in xylose-grown cells.
A) Log2(fold change) in mRNA and protein for cells grown ±O2, on glucose (black) or xylose (colored), with linear fit (R2) listed. B) Expression of 21 classically defined hypoxic genes (S3 Table). Asterisks indicate significant differences in mRNA change relative to Y22-3 (paired T-test). C) Identified promoter element (top) and known Azf1 site [134] (bottom). D) Average (n = 3) and standard deviation of xylose utilization rates in marker-rescued Y128 (Y133) wild-type (‘WT’) or strains lacking AZF1 (azf1Δ), over-expressing (OE) AZF1, or harboring an empty vector (‘Control’) during exponential growth. Xylose utilization rates in marker-rescued Y127 (Y132) empty vector (‘Control’) and OE of AZF1 are included as indicated. Different growth conditions in the two experiments prevent direct comparison. Asterisks indicate significant differences as indicated (paired T-test).
Fig 2Azf1 and Mga2 regulate anaerobic xylose responses.
A) Average log2(fold change) in mRNA abundance of denoted genes as listed in the key. B-D) Distributions of log2(fold change) in mRNA abundances for Hap4 (B), Msn2/Msn4 (C), and Mga2 (D) targets that are affected by AZF1 overexpression and show a corresponding change in Y128 versus controls (see text). Asterisks indicate significant difference compared to azf1Δ versus WT comparison (paired T-test). E-F) OD600 (circles), xylose concentration (squares), and ethanol concentration (triangles) for strain (orange) Y133 (marker-rescued Y128) lacking (mga2Δ, orange plot on the left) or over-expressing (‘OE’, green plot on the right) MGA2, and Y133 wild type (‘WT’) or empty-vector control (black) during anaerobic growth on xylose. Different growth conditions in the two experiments prevent direct comparison.
Fig 3Inferred network regulating phosphorylation changes during anaerobic xylose growth.
A) Modules of peptides are shaped and colored according to class (Class A, diamond; Class B, square) and increase (yellow) or decrease (blue) of phosphorylation change across the strain panel, as described in the text. Each module is labeled with the phospho-motif sequence, with small case letter representing the phosphorylated site and “‥” indicating non-specific residues. Implicated kinase regulators are shown as purple circles; proteins whose peptides belong to each module are shown as smaller circles, color-coded by protein function as listed in the key. Note that proteins with multiple phospho-sites can belong to multiple modules. B) Average (n = 3) and standard deviation of the relative in vitro phosphorylation of a PKA substrate (ABCAM kit, see Methods) for lysates from cells that can (Y128, Y184 bcy1Δ, Y184 Bcy1-AiD–described in text) or cannot (Y22-3, Y127) use xylose anaerobically. Orange bars represent phosphorylation in the presence of PKA inhibitor H-89. C) Average (n = 3) and standard deviation of sugar utilization rates for Y133 tpk1Δtpk3Δtpk2 or Y133 tpk1Δtpk3ΔTPK2 during anaerobic growth, in the presence (green) or absence (black) of 1-NM-PP1. D) OD600 (circles), xylose concentration (squares), and ethanol concentration (triangles) for WT (black) or snf1Δ (orange) Y133 (marker-rescued Y128) grown in xylose -O2. E) Average (n = 3) and standard deviation of xylose utilization rates for strains in the presence (+) or absence (-) of SNF1. Asterisks indicate significant differences according to the key (paired T-tests).
Fig 4Mutation of BCY1 decouples growth from anaerobic xylose metabolism.
A) OD600 (circles), xylose concentration (squares), and ethanol concentration (triangles) for Y184 (Y22-3 gre3Δisu1Δ) (black) and Y184 bcy1Δ (green) during anaerobic growth on xylose. Note that the culture was inoculated at low OD to show the effect; cells do not use all the xylose because there are very few cells in the experiment. B-D) Phospho-peptide changes in Y184 bcy1Δ relative to references, for phospho-peptides (rows) specific to Y184 bcy1Δ (B) or similar to Y184 (C) or Y184 ira2Δ (D). Functional enrichments for each denoted cluster are listed below each heat map. (E-F) Growth of strains in glucose +O2 (E) and xylose -O2 (F) as indicated in the key. (G-H) Average (n = 3) specific xylose consumption rate (G) or ethanol production rate (H). Asterisks indicate significant differences relative to Y128 (paired T-test).
Fig 5Integrative model incorporating transcript, phospho-protein, and metabolite changes across the strain panel.
Map of central carbon metabolism. Each step is annotated with boxes indicating mRNA difference (left) or phosphorylation difference (middle) in Y128 versus Y22-3, or phosphorylation difference (right) in Y184 bcy1Δ versus Y184 grown anaerobically on xylose, according to the key. Gray indicates no significant change, white represents missing data, and multi-colored blue/yellow boxes indicate multiple phospho-sites with different changes. Metabolites measured previously [29] are colored to indicate an increase (orange) or decrease (magenta) in abundance in Y128 versus Y22-3 grown anaerobically on xylose. Reactions predicted to be active (orange) or suppressed (magenta) in xylose fermenting strains based on mRNA, protein, and/or metabolite abundances are highlighted. Hexose transporters marked with a star have been implicated in xylose transport.
Strains used in this study.
| Strain Name | Description | Ref |
|---|---|---|
| Y22-3 | CRB Strain with xylose utilization genes (G418R) | [ |
| Y127 | Evolved Y22-3 for aerobic xylose utilization (G418R) | [ |
| Y128 | Evolved Y127 for anaerobic xylose utilization (G418R) | [ |
| Y36 | Y22-3 marker-rescued (MR)—lacking | [ |
| Y132 | Y127 marker-rescued (MR)—lacking | [ |
| Y133 | Y128 marker-rescued (MR)—lacking | [ |
| Y133 | Y133 | This Study |
| Y133 | Y133 containing | This Study |
| Y133 MoBY Control | Y133 containing Empty Vector MoBY 2.0 Plasmid (G418R) | This Study |
| Y36 | Y36 containing | This Study |
| Y36 MoBY Control | Y36 containing Empty Vector MoBY 2.0 Plasmid (G418R) | This Study |
| CEN.PK113-5D Xylose Strain | CEN.PK113-5D with | [ |
| CEN.PK113-5D Xylose Strain | CEN.PK113-5D Xylose Strain containing | This Study |
| CEN.PK113-5D Xylose Strain MoBY Control | CEN.PK113-5D Xylose Strain containing Empty Vector MoBY 2.0 Plasmid (G418R) | This Study |
| Y184 | Y22-3 | This Study |
| Y243 | Y22-3 | [ |
| Y132 | Y132 | This Study |
| Y184 | Y22-3 | This Study |
| Y243 | Y22-3 | This Study |
| Y133 | Y133 | This Study |
| Y184 | Y22-3 | This Study |
| Y184 | Y22-3 | This Study |
| Y243 | Y22-3 | This Study |
| Y243 | Y22-3 | This Study |
| Y133 | Y133 | This Study |
| Y133 | Y133 | This Study |
| Y133 | Y133 | This Study |
| Y133 | Y133 containing | This Study |
| Y133 | Y133 | This Study |
| Y133 | Y133 | This Study |
| Y133 | Y133 | This Study |
| Y133 | Y133 | This Study |
| Y133 | Y133 | This Study |
| Y133 | Y133 | This Study |
| Y133 | Y133 | This Study, [ |
| Y184 | Y22-3 | This Study |
| Y184 | Y22-3 | This Study |
| Y132 | Y132 | This Study, [ |
| Y184 | Y22-3 | This Study, [ |
| Y243 | Y36 | This Study, [ |