| Literature DB >> 32100120 |
Thomas Vogl1,2, Jasmin Elgin Fischer1, Patrick Hyden1, Richard Wasmayer1, Lukas Sturmberger1, Anton Glieder3.
Abstract
Methylotrophic yeasts such as Komagataella phaffii (syn. Pichia pastoris, Pp), Hansenula polymorpha (Hp), Candida boidinii (Cb) and Pichia methanolica (Pm) are widely used protein production platforms. Typically, strong, tightly regulated promoters of genes coding for their methanol utilization (MUT) pathways are used to drive heterologous gene expression. Despite highly similar open reading frames in the MUT pathways of the four yeasts, the regulation of the respective promoters varies strongly between species. While most endogenous Pp MUT promoters remain tightly repressed after depletion of a repressing carbon, Hp, Cb and Pm MUT promoters are derepressed to up to 70% of methanol induced levels, enabling methanol free production processes in their respective host background. Here, we have tested a series of orthologous promoters from Hp, Cb and Pm in Pp. Unexpectedly, when induced with methanol, the promoter of the HpMOX gene reached very similar expression levels as the strong methanol, inducible, and most frequently used promoter of the Pp alcohol oxidase 1 gene (PPpAOX1). The HpFMD promoter even surpassed PPpAOX1 up to three-fold, when induced with methanol, and reached under methanol-free/derepressed conditions similar expression as the methanol induced PPpAOX1. These results demonstrate that orthologous promoters from related yeast species can give access to otherwise unobtainable regulatory profiles and may even considerably surpass endogenous promoters in P. pastoris.Entities:
Keywords: Derepression; Komagataella phaffii; Methanol-free; Orthologous promoters; Pichia pastoris
Year: 2020 PMID: 32100120 PMCID: PMC7042429 DOI: 10.1186/s13568-020-00972-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AMB Express ISSN: 2191-0855 Impact factor: 3.298
Orthologous MUT promoters of related species and endogenous P. pastoris promoters used in this study
| Type | Abbreviation | Species | Gene name | Regulation in native species | Length (bp) | GC content (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Orthologous promoters | Formate dehydrogenase | Strongly derepressed, methanol inducible | 623 | 53.3 | ||
| Methanol oxidase | Strongly derepressed, methanol inducible | 1510 | 56.0 | |||
| Formaldehyde dehydrogenase | Moderately derepressed, methanol inducible | 572 | 31.6 | |||
| Alcohol oxidase 1 | Moderately derepressed, methanol inducible | 1652 | 28.6 | |||
| Methanol oxidase 1 | Strongly derepressed, methanol inducible | 1157 | 37.9 | |||
| Methanol oxidase 2 | Tightly repressed, methanol inducible | 1662 | 37.3 | |||
| Alcohol oxidase 1 | Tightly repressed, methanol inducible | 940 | 42.6 | |||
| Catalase 1 | Moderately derepressed, methanol inducible | 500 | 40.8 | |||
| Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase | Constitutive | 486 | 46.7 |
Moderately derepressed: < 50% of methanol induced levels; strongly derepressed: > 50% of methanol induced levels [according to the data by (Hartner and Glieder 2006)]. Promoter lengths used in this study are listed and deviate in part slightly form values reported in the literature (see “Materials and methods” section and Additional file 1: S2)
Fig. 1Orthologous MUT promoters outperform P. pastoris endogenous promoters. Reporter protein fluorescence of all orthologous and P. pastoris endogenous promoters tested. The orthologous MUT promoters of different methylotrophic yeasts were cloned upstream of an enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP) and transformed into P. pastoris. The strains were cultivated in deep well plates (DWPs) on BMD1 (glucose) media and subsequently induced with methanol (Weis et al. 2004; Vogl et al. 2016). Reporter protein fluorescence and OD600 were measured under glucose repressed (16 h) and derepressed (60 h) conditions and different time points of methanol induction. Fluorescence measurements were normalized per OD600. Mean values (MVs) and standard deviations (SDs) of biological quadruplicates are shown
Fig. 2P enables strong derepression and exceeds the strength of methanol induced endogenous P. pastoris promoters. Strains bearing selected promoters from Fig. 1 (HpFMD, HpMOX, PpAOX1, PpCAT1, PpGAP) were cultivated in shake flasks and inoculated to a low starting OD600 of 0.05. Reporter protein fluorescence, OD600 and glucose levels were measured. Fluorescence/OD600 values at t = 0 are not shown, as the starting OD600 of 0.05 was outside the linear range of the spectrometer used. The initial glucose concentration of the media was 55.5 mM (10 g/L). MVs and SDs of biological triplicates are shown
Fig. 3Applying the HpFMD promoter for expression of the enzymes HRP (a), CalB (b) and MeHNL (c) confirms the high expression observed with eGFP (Fig. 1). The strains were grown in DWPs on BMD1 media until glucose depletion for 60 h and were subsequently induced with methanol. HRP and CalB activities in the supernatants were measured and cells lysed to measure intracellular MeHNL activity. Mean values (MVs) and standard deviation (SDs) of biological quadruplicates are shown. The activities of the methanol induced HpFMD promoter compared to the state of the art AOX1 promoter are highlighted (after 72 h of methanol induction)