| Literature DB >> 34663323 |
Jiliang Deng1,2, Yanling Wu1, Zhaohui Zheng1, Nanzhu Chen1, Xiaozhou Luo3, Hongting Tang4, Jay D Keasling1,5,6,7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Saccharomyces cerevisiae is an important synthetic biology chassis for microbial production of valuable molecules. Promoter engineering has been frequently applied to generate more synthetic promoters with a variety of defined characteristics in order to achieve a well-regulated genetic network for high production efficiency. Galactose-inducible (GAL) expression systems, composed of GAL promoters and multiple GAL regulators, have been widely used for protein overexpression and pathway construction in S. cerevisiae. However, the function of each element in synthetic promoters and how they interact with GAL regulators are not well known.Entities:
Keywords: Carbon sources; Protein expression; Saccharomyces cerevisiae; Synthetic promoter
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34663323 PMCID: PMC8522093 DOI: 10.1186/s12934-021-01691-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Cell Fact ISSN: 1475-2859 Impact factor: 5.328
Fig. 1UASs and their impact on GAL promoter strength in S. cerevisiae. a The architecture of the native GAL1 promoter. Upstream activating sequences (UASGAL1) and core promoter (cPGAL1) are shown. U1, U2, U3, and U4 represented the four UASs of PGAL1; M1 and M2 represent repressor Mig1p binding sites, which was responsible for glucose repression. b The sequence of UASs used in this study. U1-U4 and U4g are from ScPGAL1 (S. cerevisiae, green), U5-U7 from SkPGAL2 (S. kudriavzevii, purple) and U8 from ScPGAL7 (S. cerevisiae, red). (c-d) The effect of UASs on the activities of synthetic promoters when cPGAL1 (c) and cPCYC1 (d) were used as core promoter. The activities of all synthetic promoters were tested after induction with 2% galactose for 24 h. Normalized fluorescence = Fluorescence intensity/OD600. Data are mean ± SD (standard deviation) from three biological replicates
Fig. 2Characterization of the synthetic promoters by core promoter replacement. The normalized fluorescence for constructs with only the core promoter (a) and with UASGAL1 fusion (b). The activities of all synthetic promoters were tested after cultivation with 2% glucose (grey) or galactose (orange) for 24 h. Data are mean ± SD from three biological replicates
Fig. 3GAL80 deletion affected the activities of synthetic promoters under different carbon sources. a The regulation mechanism of GAL1 promoter under galactose and glucose condition. Gal4p: the transcriptional activator responsible for galactose induction; Gal80p: the repressor of Gal4p; Mig1p: the repressor that responds to glucose. WT: Wildtype strain; Δgal80: GAL80 deletion strain. b, c GAL80 deletion improved the activities of GAL promoters in the presence of 2% galactose (b) or 2% glucose (c). The promoter activities were continuously monitored for 36 h. d Glucose inhibition profile of promoters. Synthetic promoters were incubated with 2% raffinose with a glucose gradient from 0 to 2% for 5 h with initial OD600 at 0.1. After inhibition, mean fluorescence intensity of cells was analyzed by flow cytometry. e Galactose induction profile of native and synthetic promoters. 2% raffinose was used as background carbon source with galactose gradient concentration from 0 to 2% for 5 h with initial OD600 at 0.1. After induction, mean fluorescence of intensity of cells was analyzed by flow cytometry. Data are mean ± SD from three biological replicates and the shadow patterns of the curve represents errors as standard deviation
Fig. 4The effect of GAL1 and GAL80 double deletion on synthetic promoters. a Schematic diagram of galactose metabolism. GAL1: Galactokinase; GAL7: Galactose-1-phosphate uridyl transferase; GAL10: UDP-glucose-4-epimerase; GAL5: Phosphoglucomutase. UDP: Uridine diphosphate; EMP: Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas. In this study, GAL1 was deleted to block galactose metabolism. b Double deletion of GAL1 and GAL80 enhanced GAL promoter activity under glucose growth condition. c Double deletion of GAL1 and GAL80 improved synthetic promoter activity under raffinose or fructose conditions. d Galactose induction profile of promoters in GAL1/GAL80 double deletion strain. e Characterization of the synthetic promoter system under different carbon sources. Data are mean ± SD from three biological replicates and the shadow patterns of the curve represents errors as standard deviation
Fig. 5The synthetic promoter system significantly improved β-glucosidase secretion (a) and surface display (b). SED1, a gene encoding yeast cell wall protein which is a commonly used surface-displayed system. Enzyme activities were measured under glucose or galactose growth conditions for 12 h and 24 h, respectively. + represents in the presence of GAL1 or GAL80;—represents the deletion of GAL1 or GAL80.The enzyme activity was quantified by pNPG assay and the data are mean ± SD from three biological replicates