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Article
Construction, model-based analysis and characterization of a promoter library for fine-tuned gene expression in Bacillus subtilis Dingyu Liu, Zhitao Mao, Jiaxin Guo, Leyi Wei, Hongwu Ma, Ya-Jie Tang, Tao Chen, Zhiwen Wang, and Xueming Zhao ACS Synth. Biol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.8b00115 • Publication Date (Web): 26 Jun 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on June 27, 2018
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Construction, model-based analysis and characterization of a
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promoter library for fine-tuned gene expression in Bacillus subtilis
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Dingyu Liua, Zhitao Maob,c, Jiaxin Guoa, Leyi Weid, Hongwu Mab,c, Yajie Tange, Tao
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Chena, Zhiwen Wanga* and Xueming Zhaoa
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a
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Research Platform, Collaborative Innovation Center of Chemical Science and
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Engineering (Tianjin), School of Chemical Engineering and Technology, Tianjin
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University, Tianjin 300072, People’s Republic of China.
Key Laboratory of Systems Bioengineering (Ministry of Education); Synbio
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b
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Biotechnology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Tianjin 300308, China
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c
University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China
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d
School of Computer Science and Technology, Tianjin University, Tianjin 300072,
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People’s Republic of China
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e
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Laboratory of Industrial Microbiology, Hubei Provincial Cooperative Innovation
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Center of Industrial Fermentation, Hubei University of Technology, Wuhan 430068,
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China;
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* Corresponding author: Zhiwen Wang.
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Tel: +86-22-85356617; Fax: +86-22-85356617.
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Address: Department of Biochemical Engineering, School of Chemical Engineering
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and Technology, Tianjin University, Tianjin 300072, People’s Republic of China.
Key Laboratory of System Microbial Biotechnology, Tianjin Institute of Industrial
Key Laboratory of Fermentation Engineering (Ministry of Education), Hubei Key
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E-mail addresses:
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Dingyu Liu:
[email protected] 25
Zhitao Mao:
[email protected] 26
Jiaxin Guo:
[email protected] 27
Leyi Wei:
[email protected] 28
Hongwu Ma:
[email protected] 29
Yajie Tang:
[email protected] 30
Tao Chen:
[email protected] 31
Zhiwen Wang:
[email protected] 32
Xueming Zhao:
[email protected] 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 2
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Abstract
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Promoters are among the most important and basic tools for the control of metabolic
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pathways. However, previous researches mainly focused on screening and
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characterization of some native promoters in Bacillus subtilis. To develop a broadly
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applicable promoter system for this important platform organism, we created a de
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novo synthetic promoter library (SPL) based on consensus sequences by analyzing
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microarray transcriptome data of Bacillus subtilis 168. A total of 214 potential
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promoters spanning a gradient of strengths were isolated and characterized by a GFP
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fluorescence assay. Among these, a detailed intensity analysis was conducted on 9
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promoters with different strengths by RT-PCR and SDS-PAGE. Furthermore,
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reconstructed promoters and promoter cassettes (tandem promoter cluster) were
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designed via statistical model-based analysis and tandem dual-promoter, which
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increased by 1.2-fold and 2.77-fold in term of strength compared with promoter P43
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respectively. Finally, the SPL was employed in the production of inosine and acetoin
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by repressing and overexpressing the relevant metabolic pathways, yielding a 700%
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and 44% increase relative to the respective control strains. This is the first report of a
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de novo synthetic promoter library for B. subtilis, which is independent of any native
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promoter. The strategy of improving and fine-tuning promoter strengths will
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contribute to future metabolic engineering and synthetic biology projects in B.
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subtilis.
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KEYWORDS: synthetic promoter library; fine-tuning; model-based analysis; tandem
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promoter clusters; metabolic engineering; synthetic biology. 3
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Metabolic engineering and synthetic biology approaches to the design and
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construction of biological systems have an enormous potential for applications in
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industrial biotechnology.1 The implementation of the synthetic biology concept of
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engineered biological systems depends on the availability of standardized biological
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regulatory elements such as synthetic promoters, RBS (ribosome binding site) and
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terminators, etc..2 Moreover, rationally designed, analyzed and well-characterized
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genetic elements are invaluable tools for various metabolic engineering approaches in
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which the fine-tuning of gene expression is necessary.3, 4 Promoters serve a critical
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role in establishing a baseline transcriptional capacity for natural and synthetic circuits
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or metabolic pathways.5,
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biology parts and play an essential role in controlling biosynthetic pathways.7
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Therefore, a quantitatively characterized library of promoters is required to express
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target genes in a controlled fashion in order to optimize metabolic network.
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Thus, promoter elements are indispensable synthetic
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Native promoters, both constitutive and inducible, have long been used in gene
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expression and metabolic regulation.8-10 Although some native promoters are
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commonly used, they do not provide a wide and continuous range of transcriptional
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levels. Furthermore, naturally occurring promoters are influenced by host regulatory
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networks, complicating the prediction of precise transcriptional activities. Thus, it is
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desirable to develop synthetic promoters with the widest possible range of strengths,
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which are entirely synthetic in nature and orthogonal to intrinsic control networks to
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reduce endogenous cellular interactions. Synthetic promoter libraries (SPL) have been 4
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successfully constructed for Escherichia coli,11 Saccharomyces cerevisiae,12 Pichia
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pastoris,13 Corynebacterium glutamicum,14 Actinomycetesand15 and Lactobacillus
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plantarum.16
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Bacillus subtilis, a non-pathogenic, Gram-positive bacterium that is free of
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exotoxins and endotoxins, has long been used as an important cell factory for
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industrial applications.17-19 The overproduction of target metabolites usually occurs
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during the exponential or stationary phase and is influenced by a variety of
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physiological and environmental factors. For the successful engineering and
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regulation of metabolic networks, it is therefore indispensable to consider the
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appropriate balance of the expression of the involved genes. Hence, transcriptional
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fine-tuning and regulation are essential for optimal gene expression. Recently,
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although there are already some works about native promoters of Bacillus subtilis 20, 21,
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just a few high quality native promoters are wildly used in B. subtilis for gene
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expression and regulation, such as the constitutive promoters P4322 and Pveg,23 as
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well as the inducible promoters Pspa24 and PxylA.25 There are recent reports from
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large-scale “omic”-studies of Bacillus spp. that detected a number of high-quality
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native promoters and performed a strength analysis.26,
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synthetic promoters have been constructed and modified by optimization of their key
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elements to make them more suitable for practical applications.28 However, these
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promoters have not been comprehensively and quantitatively characterized in a same
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host. Moreover, the relevant promoter structures have not been analyzed to uncover
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the correlation between promoter sequences and their strengths in B. subtilis. Instead, 5
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Simultaneously, several
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promoters were only generally described as weak or strong. To the best of our
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knowledge, there are no published reports of a fully artificial synthetic promoter
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library for B. subtilis.
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The aim of this study was to construct and characterize a de novo synthetic
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promoter library, and to reconstruct promoter based on tandem assembly and
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model-based analysis, in order to deliver a set of wide-ranging promoter strengths for
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metabolic engineering and synthetic biology in B. subtilis. We demonstrate that a
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previously published easy and fast PCR-based method for constructing promoter
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library in B. subtilis. Randomization of nucleotides was employed to construct a
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synthetic promoter library based on transcriptome analysis of the wild-type strain B.
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subtilis 168. Statistical model-based analysis of promoter sequences was further
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employed to rationally improve the strength of promoter. Fine-tuned expression of
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genes was verified by regulating purA in the purine pathway using different synthetic
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promoters. Finally, a tandem promoter cluster was developed to enhance the
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overexpression of xynA gene for the production of acetoin from xylan, demonstrating
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the potential of the promoter library in bio-based product manufacturing.
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RESULTS
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Analysis of microarray transcriptome data of B. subtilis
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Constitutive promoters offer relatively constant gene expression profiles, and the
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number of transcripts are strongly correlated with the promoter strengths. In our
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previous work, transcriptome profiles of wild-type B. subtilis 168 were performed on 6
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DNA microarray using early stationary phase cell samples grown in LB medium.29
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The microarray transcriptome data were reanalyzed to guide our design of the
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promoter library. The microarray data covered a total of 5039 B. subtilis genes. Global
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analysis of the gene expression profiles revealed the presence of 4167 gene transcripts,
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with 872 gene transcripts being marginal or absent.
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In B. subtilis, there are 17 sigma factors that associate with the RNA polymerase
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core enzyme for promoter recognition. The binding regions of these sigma factors are
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conserved in their respective recognized promoter sequences, and can be easily
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discerned in B. subtilis. Therefore, the SPL was designed based on these consensus
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regions for stable functioning. The 4167 genes were divided into different groups
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based on their different sigma factor-dependency. Most of the detected gene
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expression signals had signal strengths below 1000. To analyze the sequence features
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of high strength promoters, the genes with high transcript levels (signal strength above
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1000) were displayed (Figure 1). It was found that sigma A-dependent genes
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constituted the majority in the set of genes with high transcript levels, which were
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significantly higher than those dependent on other sigma factors. This result revealed
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that the binding regions of the sigma A factor are crucial to maintain an appropriate
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promoter strength. Therefore, the -35 and -10 elements of sigma A-dependent genes
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were integrated into our SPL design to maintain a satisfying strength. The promoter
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sequences of sigma factor-dependent genes and the results of motif alignment were
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obtained from DBTBS (http://dbtbs.hgc.jp/). The conserved -35, -10 boxes were
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consistent with classical “TTGACA” and “TATAAT” in promoter sequences of sigma 7
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A-dependent genes according to the alignment results. In addition, the upstream
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regions of sigma A-recognized -35 elements also exhibited weakly conserved An tracts
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and AT region according to the alignment results and previous reports30. Therefore,
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the UP (upstream of the -35 region) elements (An tracts and AT region) were reserved
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in our SPL to increase basal promoter transcription. Consequently, conserved -35, -10
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boxes and weakly conserved UP elements were designed in our SPL, yielding the
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classical “TTGACA”, “TATAAT” sequences, and An tracts, AT region and extended
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-35 region, respectively.
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Figure 1. Transcript levels of genes with stable expression profiles. A total of 4167
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gene transcripts were present. The genes with signal values above 1000 are shown.
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The Pearson correlation coefficient between the biological duplicates was about 0.95,
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implying that the microarray experiment was reproducible and reliable.
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Design and screening of a synthetic promoter library for B. subtilis
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Generally, a consensus promoter structure for bacteria includes -35, -10 motifs and
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a UP element. In addition, a TG dinucleotide motif, positioned 1 base upstream of the
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-10 region (-16 element), is reported to be conserved in B. subtilis.30 As the -16 region
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is not necessary for many promoters, its utility is context dependent.30 Thus, since the
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-16 element is required to assure the universality and specificity of a promoter, the
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-35,-10,-16 and UP elements were conserved in our synthetic promoter library (Figure
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S1). For evaluation of the promoters, a same ribosome binding site sequence
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“AAGAAGGAGATATACAT” was added between promoters and the gfp open
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reading frame. Finally, we created a de novo synthetic promoter library based on the
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consensus sequences obtained in the transcriptome analysis and additional references
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(Figure 2). The digested PCR fragment containing the varied synthetic promoters, was
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ligated into the reporter vector, and then the ligated plasmids were transformed into E.
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coli to obtain a high number of transformants. The purified library plasmids were used
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to directly transform B. subtilis 168 to screen and sequence the promoter region. The
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B. subtilis 168 synthetic promoter mutants were subsequently grown to stationary
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phase and subjected to a GFP assay for indirect assessment of promoter strengths. The
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GFP fluorescence was standardized to cell density. About 5000 colonies were
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randomly picked from rounds of transformation and the corresponding GFP
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expression levels were investigated. The P43 and Pveg promoters were used as
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positive controls. None of the clones showed a higher signal intensity than the
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promoter P43, and a part of them had a higher strength than Pveg. Taking into account 9
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the intensity gradient and sample size, 214 potential promoters with various strengths
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were isolated for subsequent characterization and analysis (Table S2). As shown in
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Figure 3, the resulting library of 214 synthetic promoters had strengths ranging from 2%
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to 94% of P43. Among these promoters, 49 promoters showed higher strengths than
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Pveg, and the highest strength promoter SP214 was almost equal to P43.
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Figure 2. Schematic overview of the experimental procedure for construction,
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analysis and characterization of SPL. An artificial promoter library was constructed
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rapidly. In step II, the red color in the reverse primer represents a randomized
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sequence. GFP, gfp reporter gene. rep60, origin of replication in B. subtilis. ColE1,
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origin of replication in E. coli. Cm, chloramphenicol resistance gene.
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Figure 3. Promoter strengths of SPL and control. Pveg (blue) and P43 (red) are
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positive controls. pAD123-gfp (white) is negative control without a promoter
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sequence in front of gfp gene.The relative activity is the strength of each promoter
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compared to the promoter P43. The error bars indicate the standard deviations of
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biological triplicates (three independent experiments with the same exconjugant).
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Characterization of the synthetic promoter library using RT-PCR and
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SDS-PAGE
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The GFP fluorescence assay only indirectly reflects the promoter strength since it
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is an indicator of the combined strength of transcription and translation of the
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resulting RNA into the functional reporter protein. To directly assess the promoter
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strength at transcriptional level, RT-PCR analysis was performed to facilitate the
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semi-quantitative analysis of the mRNA transcript of gfp from the selected promoters.
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Out of the 214 tested promoters, 9 promoters were selected for RT-PCR analysis and
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classified according to their respective levels of fluorescence intensity: high-strength
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group (H-group), intermediate-strength group (I-group) and low-strength group 11
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(L-group). The results showed that a high correlation between the number of mRNA
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transcripts of the gfp gene and the GFP fluorescence assayed in each strain (Figure 4),
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which suggested that the GFP fluorescence assay closely reflected the transcriptional
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level of the gfp gene, which was in agreement with previous studies.31
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Subsequently, the GFP expression levels of the nine strains were also confirmed
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by SDS-PAGE (Figure 5). All promoters in the H-group showed higher GFP protein
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expression levels than those in the I-group, which in turn were higher than those in the
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L-group. These results revealed that there were no discrepancies caused by
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translational influences in GFP expression, implying that the strength of the SPL
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should not be impacted at translational level in the case of easily-folded highly soluble
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proteins such as GFP.
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Figure 4. Results of GFP activity and relative transcription levels. Evaluation of
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promoter strength by fluorescence intensity and RT-PCR. H-group contains SP212,
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SP213 and SP214. I-group contains SP130, SP133 and SP136. L-group contains SP46, 12
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SP48 and SP50. All error bars represent the value of standard deviation which were
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caculated from three repeated experiments.
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Figure 5. Determination of the GFP expression of representative promoters from the
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SPL by SDS-PAGE. The gels were stained with Coomassine brilliant blue G-250.
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Lane 1, Protein Marker; Lanes 2-10, SP214, SP213, SP212, SP136, SP133, SP130,
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SP50, SP48, SP46. Lane 11, Negative control, plasmid of pAD123-P43 without gfp.
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Red arrow indicates GFP (~27 KDa).
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Model-based statistical analysis of promoter sequences
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It would be extremely valuable for metabolic engineering and synthetic biology to
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be able to rationally design promoters with precisely the desired strengths. In previous
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research, a method based on an analysis of the probability distribution of
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position/nucleotide combinations was developed to find nucleotide positions that have
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an influence on the strength of a promoter.32, 33 In this work, we present a similar
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comprehensive analysis of the sequence structures in the SPL. A statistical model was
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established to relate features of sequences and strengths of the corresponding
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promoters.
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The model-based analysis was implemented in the classes of strong and weak 13
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promoters, and a set of probabilities of position/nucleotide pairs was determined using
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equation (1). Position/nucleotide pairs that have a high p-value are shown on the
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x-axis (Figure 6a, Figure 6b and Figure S2). Using this technique, a number of
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high-frequency and low-frequency position/nucleotide pairs could be clearly
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identified as having a high influence on promoter strength. Here, the variable is a
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key parameter for the model, which is strongly related to the probability value and
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reliability of statistical data. The value was too high to obtain enough
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high-frequency position/nucleotide pairs. Otherwise, the statistical results are
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unreliability. When was 10, a number of high-frequency position/nucleotide
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combinations were determined in the class of strong promoters (Figure. 6a). The
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redesign
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position/nucleotide pairs. To design higher strength promoter directly, the
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position/nucleotide
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high-frequency pairs shown in Figure. 6a. The sequences of the promoter Pm1 and
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Pm2 were obtained, and their strength were measured in plasmid pAD123-Pm-gfp via
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GFP fluorescence. Compared to promoter P43, a 1.2-fold increase in terms of GFP
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fluorescence was achieved (Figure S3). This result demonstrated that model-based
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analysis of the SPL was able to effectively improve the promoter strength. However,
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the high-frequency position/nucleotide combinations could not be obtained with
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higher values, and only two high-frequency pairs were obtained, at =15 (Fig. 6b).
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The statistical results were not used to design strong promoter sequences directly
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because the high-frequency pairs were inadequate. However, a series of
of
promoter
pairs
was
of
implemented
SP214
were
based
replaced
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by
the
the
high-frequency
corresponding
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low-frequency position/nucleotide pairs were obtained, which means that these
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position/nucleotide pairs rarely appear in strong promoters. We were able to predict
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the intensity range of certain promoters indirectly via the low-frequency pairs.
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In the class of weak promoters, similar results of low-frequency pairs were obtained
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when was 50 (Figure S2). It means that these low-frequency pairs could be used as
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reference when designing strong promoters. Consequently, improved promoters could
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be designed by analyzing high-frequency position/nucleotide pairs with appropriate
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values. When the high-frequency pairs were inadequate, the low-frequency pairs were
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used for indirect analysis.
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Figure 6. Probability that a certain nucleotide at a certain position in promoter occurs
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more than x times in the promoters classified as strong, assuming it follows a 15
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binomial distribution. Only position/nucleotide combinations with more than 10 (a) or
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15 (b) and with a p-value of more than 0.5 were retained.
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The method of statistical analysis is a quantitative prediction model and focused on
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the influence of single-base/position combinations. The model was used directly to
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design promoter based on replacing original position/nucleotide by the high-frequency
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pairs.
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Nonetheless, the accuracy and rationality of the model-based analysis were
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disturbed by the classification of the promoters. The Partial Least Squares (PLS)
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regression does not have the above mentioned limitations,34 and was consequently
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used to link the promoter sequences to their strengths via matrices of lower
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dimensionality based on latent variables. This generalization of multiple linear
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regression can be used to analyze data with strongly collinear and numerous
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independent variables as is the case for the SPL under study.
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The data-set was randomly divided into two parts: the training set, containing 180
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of the 214 promoters, and the test set, containing the remaining 3432, 35. The PLS
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model was built using the training set. The latent variables were determined using a
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previously described method.35 In this procedure, 16 latent variables were retained in
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the PLS model (when we kept 5 decimal places after the decimal point of PLS
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R-squared).
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Figure. 7. The predicted promoter strength (predicted) versus the observed promoter
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strength (original) of the training set and the test set. The R criterion was given as the
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relative error sum of squares.
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Subsequently, the predictive ability of the model was assessed. The strengths of the
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promoters from the test set were predicted by the fully trained PLS model. The
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predicted strengths versus the observed strength are shown in Figure 7. The strengths
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of almost all of the 34 test samples were predicted reasonably well. The R criterion
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was given as relative error sum of squares. In this work, the R2 was 0.72. This result
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thus indicated a satisfactory correlation of promoter strength to its sequence. However,
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in modeling PLS, the procedure is easy to occur over-fitting due to retaining different
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latent variables. The PLS regression is more suitable for verify qualitatively
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correlation of sequences with strengths. Hence, the statistical model-based analysis of
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promoter sequences presented here was deemed more reasonable to design
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quantitatively promoter. 17
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Construction of tandem promoter clusters using the SPL
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Although, stronger promoters were successfully obtained by redesigning promoter
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based on the model-based analysis of SPL, a more dramatically improved promoter
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was required for recombinant protein production. In terms of the structure of promoter
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sequence in our SPL, only one promoter sequence was designed and involved. We
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didn’t obtain a synthetic promoter that was stronger than promoter P43, which
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contains two promoter sequences and is recognized by two sigma factors (sigma A
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and sigma B).21 To obtain a higher strength of the synthetic promoter, we developed a
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strategy to improve the transcriptional strength by constructing tandem promoter
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clusters consisting of multiple recognition regions of sigma factors that associate with
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RNA polymerase in B. subtilis (Figure 8a). For the construction and characterization
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of tandem promoter clusters, we also chose the pAD123 as the cloning vector and gfp
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gene as the indicator. As shown in Figure 8a, the promoter cluster TP1, which
338
consisted of two SP214 promoters aligned in tandem, was first synthesized artificially.
339
However, TP1 did not achieve the desired effect, and was only 1.2-fold stronger than
340
the SP214 promoter (Figure 8b). By contrast, TP2, which consisted of SP213 and
341
SP214 arranged in tandem, resulted in a remarkable improvement of promoter activity,
342
and was 2.95-fold stronger than the SP214. Moreover, the strength of TP2 exceeded
343
that of P43, corresponding to a 177% increase. In order to further improve the
344
strength of the promoter clusters, TP3 and TP4 were constructed by tandem
345
arrangements of corresponding promoters (Figure 8a). However, there was little 18
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346
improvement in the promoter strength of TP3 and TP4. It was difficult to prepare
347
excessive tandem repeats due to their self-recombination effort36. In light of
348
convenience and stability, the promoter cluster TP2 has the most potential for
349
practical applications, since it is more amenable to genetic manipulation owing to a
350
lack of superabundant repetitive sequences.
351
352 353 354
Figure 8. Construction and charaterization of promoter clusters. a Architecture of
355
different promoter clusters cassesstes. Multiple recognition regions of sigma A were
356
designed in promoter clusters cassesstes (-35 box, “TTGACA” and -10 box
357
“TATAAT”). b The fluorescence intensity of cells with GFP expression constructs
358
driven by different promoter clusters. Promoters SP214 and P43 were used as
359
controls.
360 19
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361
Modification of purine pathway for inosine production by fine-tuning expression
362
of purA using synthetic weak promoters
363
Adenylosuccinate synthetase, encoded by purA, catalyzes the first step of the
364
conversion of IMP to AMP. Studies on inosine-overproducing B. subtilis showed a
365
significant increase of productivity in complex medium when purA gene was
366
inactivated.37, 38 However, the gene purA is an essential gene, which cannot be deleted
367
for cell growth in minimal medium. To repress the expression of purA, we previously
368
engineered strain I15 based on site saturation mutagenesis (SSM), which brought a
369
significant increase in inosine production while keeping the ability to grow in minimal
370
medium.37 This results were obtained by complex structural modeling and
371
time-consuming screening. In this work, the expression of purA was fine-tuned
372
dynamically using our SPL. Three weaker promoters, SP39, SP112 and SP144, with
373
15%, 35% and 65% of the PpurA, respectively (Figure 9b), were selected to substitute
374
the native promoter of purA in chromosome of the inosine-producing strain I12 using
375
a two-step mark-free modulation method39, resulting in strains BSP39, BSP112 and
376
BSP144 (Figure 9a).
377
These strains were further analyzed in shake flask fermentations to verify their
378
ability of inosine accumulation and cell growth. The strain BSP112 showed slower
379
growth and glucose consumption rates than BSP144 and I12 in M9 medium with 18
380
g/L original glucose. By contrast, BSP39 lost the ability to grow in M9 medium
381
because of insufficient supply of adenine due to the low expression level of purA.
382
(Figure 9c). At the same time, modulating purA resulted in an obvious improvement 20
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383
of inosine production. The control strain I12 consumed 18 g/L glucose in 48 h and
384
accumulated 61.67 mg/L of inosine. Compared to I12, the inosine production of
385
BSP112, BSP144 and the SSM-strain I15 was increased 7.01-fold, 4.75-fold and
386
6.69-fold, respectively. The best strain BSP112, accumulated 428.67 mg/L of inosine
387
with a yield of 23.78 mg/g glucose (Figure 9d).
388
To further verify the downregulation of adenylosuccinate synthetase activity by
389
the SPL-derived weak promoters, crude enzyme extracts were prepared from different
390
engineered strains and their adenylosuccinate synthetase activities were analyzed
391
(Table 2). The SPL-modified strains and the SSM-strain showed a significantly
392
reduction of enzyme activity, which was most apparent in BSP112 (from 113.6 to 48.2
393
102 ΔA280 min-1 mg-1 protein). The introduction of the weak promoters therefore
394
clearly led to a decrease of enzyme activity and corresponding flux of IMP to AMP
395
conversion in BSP112 and BSP144. In conclusion, we successfully fine-tuned the
396
expression of a key gene in an important metabolic pathway using our promoter
397
library.
398 399 400 401
Table 2 Adenylosuccinate synthetase activity in different mutant strains Adenylosuccinate synthetase activity Strains Modifying type (102 △A280 min-1 mg-1 protein) I12
control
113.6±13.8
I15
SSM-strain
68.8±10.2
BSP112
SP112-modifying strain
48.2±9.5
BSP144
SP144-modifying strain
73.5±8.7
21
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402
a
403
synthetase activity, their corresponding inosine was increased. Data were averages of
404
values from three experiments.
SPL-modifying strain and SSM-strain showed a decreased adenylosuccinate
405
406 407
Figure 9. Modification of purine pathway for inosine production. a Metabolic
408
network of purine synthesis in B. subtilis and metabolic engineering strategies for
409
inosine production. Modified genes for improving inosine production are highlighted
410
in Bold. × indicates metabolic reactions that have been blocked by gene deletions.
411
Dotted arrow indicate step that are repressed by metabolic engineering strategies.
412
Abbreviations:
413
5-phospho-α-D-ribosyl-1-pyrophosphate; IMP, inosine 5’-mono-phosphate ; GMP,
414
guanosine
Ru-5-P,
5’-momo-phosphate;
Ribose-5-phosphate;
GTP,
guanosine
22
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5’-tri-phosphate;
PRPP,
sAMP,
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415
succinyladenosine mono-phosphate; AMP, adenosine 5’-momo-phosphate ; ATP,
416
adenosine 5’-tri-phosphate. b Promoters weaker than the native purA promoter
417
(PpurA). The strength of PpurA was measured in plasmid pAD123-PpurA-gfp via
418
GFP fluorescence. The relative activity is the strength of each promoter compared to
419
the promoter P43. The error bars indicate the standard deviations of biological
420
triplicates (three independent experiments with the same exconjugant). c Cell growth
421
curves and residual glucose during shake-flask fermentation. d Comparison of inosine
422
production and yield between engineered strains developed using different metabolic
423
engineering strategies. BSP112, SP112-purA; BSP144, SP144-purA; I15, purAP242N.
424
All error bars represent the value of standard deviation which were caculated from
425
three repeated experiments.
426 427
Production of acetoin by expression of xylanase XynA driven by synthetic
428
promoter clusters
429
The applicability of SPL was extended by constructing tandem promoter clusters.
430
To demonstrate an application of the promoter clusters, the strongest promoter cluster
431
TP2 was used to overexpress the xylanase XynA in B. subtilis. XynA xylanase,
432
encoded by xynA in B. subtilis, is a key enzyme in the endoxylanase system for
433
utilization of xylan.40 Overexpression of xynA in B. subtilis, which promoted the
434
depolymerization of xylan, significantly improved the utilization of xylan.
435
In our previous study, we developed a B. subtilis strain 168ARSRCP∆acoA∆bdhA
436
which harbors three point mutations that enable it to efficiently utilize xylose to 23
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437
produce acetoin under microaerobic conditions.41 In this work, xynA overexpression
438
was conducted based on the plasmid pHP13 using the promoter cluster TP2 to
439
improve the xylan-utilization capacity of strain 168ARSRCP∆acoA∆bdhA, with P43
440
promoter as control. The resulting strain BSDY harboring pHP13-TP2-xynA exhibited
441
higher growth rate under aerobiotic conditions in minimal medium containing xylan
442
than BS201, which contained pHP13-P43-xynA (Figure 10a). Moreover, the
443
maximum OD600 of BSDY (OD600=7.98) was higher than that of BS201 (OD600=6.84)
444
after 66 h. In addition, xylose was accumulated to a concentration of 2.33 g/L, which
445
was higher than that of strain BS201 (Figure 10a). This results can be attributed to the
446
fact that more xylan was converted into xylose due to a higher expression level of
447
xynA in the strain that uses the promoter TP2. In order to further validate the promoter
448
cluster’s activities and potential in metabolic engineering, the performance of acetoin
449
production from xylan of the strain BSDY was explored under microaerobic
450
conditions. As shown in Figure 10b, the strain BSDY had distinct advantages over
451
BS201 in the growth rate and utilization of xylan. At the same time, the strain BSDY
452
produced 2.81g/l acetoin from xylan in 60h, representing a 44% increase over BS201,
453
as expected. The higher acetoin titer of BSDY resulted from increased substrate
454
consumption due to higher xylanase activity.
455
To further validate the promoter activities, the endoxylanase activities of BSDY
456
and BS201 were analyzed. The strain BSDY exhibited a higher endoxylanase activity
457
of 684.7±3.5 U/L protein than that of strain BS201, which only had 344.2±3.3 U/L.
458
These results confirmed that the expression of XynA under the different promoters 24
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459
was well correlated with the promoter strengths.
460 461
Figure 10. Fermentations of strain BS201 and BSDY under aerobic and microerobic
462
conditions. a The cell growth and xylose consumption of engineered strains in M9
463
xylan minimal medium under aerobic conditions. b Production of acetoin by strains
464
BS201 and BSDY in M9 xylan minimal medium under microaerobic conditions. The
465
error bars represent the standard deviations calculated from duplicates.
466 467
Discussion
468
As a commonly used gene expression host, B. subtilis has been successfully used to
469
produce many useful chemicals.42 In recent studies, promoter engineering of B.
470
subtilis based on endogenous promoters was widely employed in the production of
471
industrial enzymes.23,
472
promoter libraries were screened and characterized under different conditions.20, 21, 46
473
However, the isolation and characterization of native promoter can be tedious and
474
dependent on the specific genetic-context. Synthetic promoter libraries offer a rapid,
475
easy and efficient strategy to obtain suitable promoters for a specific application, and
476
as such have been widely employed in various industrial strains. To the best of our
43-45
Furthermore, endogenous and endogenous-dependent
25
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477
knowledge, this is the first report of a fully non-native synthetic promoter library for B.
478
subtilis, which is independent of any endogenous promoter. The similar strategies of
479
SPL construction have been also established in other bacteria14, 31, 47, 48 and yeast49, 50,
480
but the majority of which were dependent on certain endogenous promoter or
481
completely random sequences. The library used in this study was reliably designed
482
based on specific microarray transcriptome data, enabling it to overcome the
483
limitations of endogenous promoter and random screening. The SPL spanned a wide
484
range of promoter strengths and was flexibly applied to gene downregulation and
485
overexpression in different genetic-contexts. As suspected, the relative promoter
486
strengths revealed by the GFP reporter, RT-PCR, and SDS-PAGE were consistent in
487
the same host strain. Furthermore, the synthetic promoters were short enough (52 bp)
488
to easily be incorporated into PCR primers and directly inserted in front of a gene or
489
operon. These results show that the SPL constructed in this study may be useful as a
490
plug-and-play synthetic biology toolbox for complex metabolic engineering goals in B.
491
subtilis.
492
During optimizing and analysis of metabolic networks, generating a dynamic range
493
of transcriptional levels is necessary to achieve diverse metabolic engineering goals.51
494
However, one challenge is that the limited number of synthetic biology tools restricts
495
the implementation of complex metabolic strategies. In our SPL, strong promoters as
496
well as tandem promoter clusters were generated for the overexpression of a key gene.
497
At the same time, the regulation of essential genes that require only low expression
498
levels for maintaining growth would benefit from weak promoters. As a toolkit, the 26
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499
library can satisfy the needs of metabolic pathway regulation and can be helpful for
500
achieving of complex synthetic biology designs.
501
Although the synthetic promoter libraries have already been important regulatory
502
elements for developing different hosts as microbial cell factories, most of SPL were
503
constructed for up-regulation. In this study, our SPL could work for both
504
down-regulation and up-regulation in B. subtilis.
505
The ability to dynamically perturbing gene expression plays important roles in the
506
regulation of metabolic networks in bacteria, especially for essential genes, which
507
cannot be statically down-regulated by gene knockout approaches. In this work, the
508
SPL was employed to regulate the essential gene purA using weak promoters to
509
improve inosine production in strain I12. The engineered strain BSP112 produced
510
428.67 mg/L of inosine, a 7.01-fold increase compared to I12. Importantly, this strain
511
kept the ability to grow in inexpensive minimal medium. The performance of the
512
strain BSP112 regarding cell growth and inosine production was similar to that of
513
SSM-strain I15, which harbors the leaky mutation purAp242N. These results indicated
514
that both promoter engineering and site saturation mutagenesis are effective strategies
515
for metabolic engineering. Once a universal SPL with a wide-range of strengths is
516
obtained, promoter engineering becomes more rapid and efficient than other strategies
517
that employ complex design and high-throughput screening. Consequently, the
518
synthetic promoters in our library with tiny increments in strength can be used as tool
519
cassettes to achieve precise metabolic regulation goals in fine-tuned metabolic
520
networks for the production of target products. 27
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521
Typical experiments in genetic engineering also include the overexpression of a
522
gene of interest. We showed that our SPL can be successfully used for acetoin
523
production from xylan through the overexpression of xynA. XynA converts xylan to
524
xylose, which leads to an increase of biomass in xylose-utilizing strains. When the
525
promoter TP2, which is a tandem derivative of the SPL promoters, was used to
526
express xynA, the production of acetoin in the 168ARSRCP∆acoA∆bdhA host was
527
increased by 44% compared with the P43 promoter. In particular, the utilization of
528
xylan was successfully improved by SPL in biochemical production process of B.
529
subtilis, which will be beneficial in metabolic potential of B. subtilis for direct
530
conversion of hemicellulose to chemical feedstocks. Hence, SPL has great potential in
531
microbial biotechnology and production.
532
Synthetic biology requires accurate biological regulatory elements to design genetic
533
circuits in which the expression levels of the genetic components are tuned to an
534
appropriate input level for the next section of the circuit.52 Some examples of such
535
“tunability” have been achieved by rationally designing promoter sequences to adjust
536
their strengths using model-based prediction algorithms.48, 53 Furthermore, promoter
537
engineering is becoming an enabling technology to achieve the aims of rational design
538
and prediction of promoter elements.54 Some models have been established by
539
characterizing and analyzing core motifs of native promoters to estimate promoter
540
strengths based on thermodynamic and energetic principles.54,
541
conserved regions and core motifs were determined in advance, and the strength
542
gradient of SPL was created by introducing non-conserved sequences. Thus, these 28
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55
In this study,
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543
models were not suitable for our SPL. In this study, model-based statistical analysis
544
and PLS regression were established, and these two models were useful tools to
545
rationally design a suitable promoter. Finally, we present a comprehensive statistical
546
analysis of non-conserved sequences in the SPL. This method focused on the
547
influence of single-base/position combinations. We developed a modular procedure
548
that was moderately predictive of promoter strength and showed that finding
549
high-frequency position/nucleotide combinations continued to improve the strength of
550
strongest promoter in SPL. Finally, the strengths of the redesigning promoter Pm1 and
551
Pm2 were increased by 20% compared to P43. These results have significant
552
implications for understanding the structure and rational design of promoters. Our
553
results also point to the significant challenges remaining before we are able to
554
understand more complex sequence structures and acquire stronger promoters by
555
model-based analysis of SPL. Furthermore, the method based on probability
556
distribution of position/nucleotide combinations could be used as a supplemental
557
strategy for models based on core motifs. We speculated that future promoter design
558
will likely focus on model-predicted conserved regions and statistical model-analysis
559
of non-conserved regions.
560
Another technology for improving strength of promoters is based on tandem
561
promoter clusters. A regulatory mechanism for improving gene expression has been
562
engineered in E. coli by using promoter clusters consisting of the same tac promoter56
563
or Pvgb promoter arranged in tandem repeats57. However, in this work, a tandem
564
repeat of the SP214 promoter did not achieve desired result in B. subtilis. Another 29
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565
strategy widely used for developing stronger promoters is based on a dual-promoter
566
system, comprising two different promoters in tandem43. In a similar way, a TP2
567
dual-promoter exhibited the best performance, almost 3-fold stronger than that of P43.
568
This phenomenon was in accordance with previous reports in which the
569
transcriptional level was improved by using a dual-promoter system in B. subtilis43.
570
However, further attempts (TP3 and TP4) did not result in significant increases in
571
strength of promoter clusters (increased by 2.6% and 3.8%), which might be due to
572
more complex effects in the promoter region. Apparently, for promoter clusters,
573
excessive repeats and tandem arrangements were ineffective in terms of strength.
574
Nevertheless, in our work, stronger promoters were successfully obtained on the basis
575
of the original promoter library by constructing dual-promoter clusters consisting of
576
two different promoters in tandem. Therefore, it is possible to construct a derivative
577
library for enriching the range of strengths by using various original promoters in
578
tandem.
579 580
Conclusions
581
In summary, to develop more biology tools to facilitate the flexible fine-tuning of
582
genetic pathways, a synthetic promoter library with a gradient of strengths has been
583
constructed, characterized and put through a model-based analysis in B. subtilis.
584
Subsequently, model-based promoter redesign and construction of tandem promoter
585
cassettes were conducted based on the SPL. Finally, the practical applicability of
586
promoters was demonstrated by using them in two typical projects of metabolic 30
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587
engineering in B. subtilis. We anticipate that our SPL will be of high value for the
588
design of metabolic pathways and development of synthetic biology tools. To the best
589
of our knowledge, this is the first report of a de novo synthetic promoter library for
590
Bacillus subtilis, which is independent of any native promoter. The SPL will
591
contribute to the extensive fine-tuning of genetic pathways and engineering of
592
synthetic biology parts in B. subtilis in the future.
593 594
Materials and methods
595
Strains, media and growth conditions.
596
All bacterial strains and plasmids used in this work are listed in Table 1. E. coli.
597
DH5α was used as the host strain for cloning and plasmid construction. B. subtilis 168
598
was used as the host for promoter library construction. All other B. subtilis strains
599
were derived from the wild-type B. subtilis168. Luria-Bertani (LB) medium was used
600
for plasmid construction in E. coli. SOC medium was used for transformed cell
601
recovery. M9 medium supplemented with glucose was used for inosine production
602
and test of physiological characterizations. M9 medium plus xylan was used for
603
acetoin production. 5FU medium was used for the selection of marker-free engineered
604
colonies of B. subtilis.39 During strain construction, the cultures were grown
605
aerobically at 37 °C in LB medium. When required, antibiotics were added to the
606
media at the following concentrations: 100 µg/ml ampicillin and 10 µg/ml
607
chloramphenicol for E. coli selection; 5 µg/ml chloramphenicol for B. subtilis
608
selection. 31
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609
Strains were stored at -80 °C and revived by streaking on LB agar plates. Single
610
colonies were transferred into 5 mL of the indicated medium containing
611
corresponding antibiotics when required. All cultivations were performed at 37 °C.
612
To test the inosine biosynthetic activity of the strains, a single colony was transferred
613
into 5 ml of LB medium containing corresponding antibiotics and incubated at 220
614
rpm for 12 h to prepare the inocula. Then inocula were then added to flasks (500 mL)
615
containing 50 mL of M9 medium with 18 g/L glucose (initial OD600=0.05). For
616
fermentation from xylan, the seed culture was prepared in a 250-mL shake flask
617
containing 50 mL of M9 medium with 20 g/L xylan (1% v/v inoculum, 220 rpm, 12 h),
618
then cells were inoculated into 100 mL corresponding culture in a 250-mL flask with
619
silica gel plug kept agitated at a speed of 100 rpm with an initial OD600 of 0.05 for the
620
microaerobic fermentation. The aerobic fermentation from xylan was implemented
621
under the same medium and conditions as microaerobic fermentation, except 50 mL
622
culture with 220 rpm. Tryptophan (50 mg/L) was added to the M9 medium for all B.
623
subtilis strains. Cell growth was determined by measuring the optical density at 600
624
nm (OD600) using a UV-Vis spectrophotometer.
625 626
Plasmids construction
627
All primers used in this study are listed in Table S1. The fragments containing
628
synthetic promoters were individually fused to a truncated gapA fragment for easy
629
cloning, which was amplified from the B. subtilis 168 genome using SPL-F and the
630
corresponding reverse primers with embedded synthetic promoter sequences. The 32
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631
PCR products were digested with KpnI-BamHI, and cloned into the same restriction
632
sites of pAD123-gfp to create a series of pAD123-gfp derivatives. The tandem
633
promoter clusters TP1, TP2 and TP3 were synthesized artificially and ligated with
634
KpnI-BamHI
635
pAD123-TP1-gfp, pAD123-TP2-gfp and pAD123-TP3-gfp. The TP1 was digested
636
with BglII-BamHI, and ligated with BamHI sites of plasmid pAD123-TP1-gfp,
637
yielding pAD123-TP4-gfp.
sites
of
plasmid
of
pAD123-gfp,
resulting
the
plasmids
638
For markerless replacement of the native promoter of purA, the purA upstream
639
fragment purA-F was first amplified from the B. subtilis genome using the primers
640
purA-F-U/L. Then, the downstream fragment SP39-purA-B was amplified from the B.
641
subtilis genome using the primers purA-B-SP39-U and purA-B-L, whereby promoter
642
SP39 was placed upstream of the purA gene. The two fragments were fused and
643
amplified by overlap-extension PCR with primers purA-FsnU/L. The fused fragment
644
was then digested with SalI-BamHI, and was ligated into the same digested sites of
645
pSS
646
pSS-SP144-purAFB were created with corresponding primers for the downstream
647
fragments.
to
create
pSS-SP39-purAFB.
Analogously,
pSS-SP112-purAFB
and
648
For the overexpression of xynA, the xynA gene and promoter P43 were amplified
649
from the B. subtilis 168 genome using the primers xynA-201U/L and P43-U/L.
650
Subsequently fragments xynA and P43 were cloned into plasmid pHP13 to yield
651
pHP13-P43-xynA. Plasmid pHP13-TP2-xynA was created with corresponding primers
652
for fragments xynA and TP2. Promoter TP2 was amplified from plasmid 33
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653
pAD123-TP2-gfp. The method used for these constructs was based on Gibson
654
assembly.58
655
Strains construction
656
The construction of BSP39 was based on a mutation delivery system as
657
described previously by Shi et al39. The plasmid pSS-SP39-purAFB was integrated
658
into strain I12 chromosome by first single-crossover chromosomal transformation and
659
the transformant was selected by chloramphenicol. Next, the resulting transformant
660
was cultured in LB liquid medium for 12 h, and then the cells were spread on a 5FU
661
medium plate. The grown colonies on 5FU plate were verified by PCR and Sanger
662
sequencing to confirm that the upp-cassette was popped out. After the upp-cassette
663
recycling event, the promoter SP39 was introduced upstream of purA locus, which
664
was denoted as BSP39. Analogously, BSP112 and BSP144 were constructed with
665
plasmids pSS-SP112-purAFB and pSS-SP144-purAFB. Plasmids of pHP13-TP2-xynA
666
and pHP13-P43-xynA were transformed into 168ARSRCP∆acoA∆bdhA to yield
667
BSDY and BS201.
668 669 670
Table 1 Strains and plasmids used in this study Name
Relevant genotype
Source/reference
B. subtilis 168
Wild-type strain, trpC2
BGSCa
E. coli. DH5α
Cloning host
Invitrogen
I12
Inosine-producing strain
37
I15
I12, purAP242N
37
BSP39
I12, SP39-purA
This study
Strains
34
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ACS Synthetic Biology
BSP112
I12, SP112-purA
This study
BSP144
I12, SP144-purA
This study
168ARSRCP
B. subtilis 168araR*
41
∆acoA∆bdhA
sinR*comP*∆acoA∆bdhA
BS201
168ARSRCP∆acoA∆bdhA
This study
harboring pHP13-P43-xynA BSDY
168ARSRCP∆acoA∆bdhA
This study
harboring pHP13-TP2-xynA Plasmids pAD123-gfp
Cmr, B. subtilis/E. coli shuttle vector, Lab stock for the expression of gfp
pAD123-SPL-gfp
pAD123-gfp derivative with
This study
synthetic promoter in front of gfp pAD123-SP212-gfp
pAD123-gfp derivative with
This study
SP212 in front of gfp pAD123-SP213-gfp
pAD123-gfp derivative with
This study
SP213 in front of gfp pAD123-SP214-gfp
pAD123-gfp derivative with
This study
SP214 in front of gfp pAD123-SP130-gfp
pAD123-gfp derivative with
This study
SP130 in front of gfp pAD123-SP133-gfp
pAD123-gfp derivative with
This study
SP133 in front of gfp pAD123-SP136-gfp
pAD123-gfp derivative with
This study
SP136 in front of gfp pAD123-SP46-gfp
pAD123-gfp derivative with
This study
SP46 in front of gfp pAD123-SP48-gfp
pAD123-gfp derivative with SP48 in front of gfp 35
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This study
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pAD123-SP50-gfp
pAD123-gfp derivative with
Page 36 of 52
This study
SP50 in front of gfp pAD123-PpurA-gfp
pAD123-gfp derivative with
This study
PpurA in fromt of gfp pAD123-Pm1-gfp
pAD123-gfp derivative with
This study
Pm1 in front of gfp pAD123-Pm2-gfp
pAD123-gfp derivative with
This study
Pm1 in front of gfp pAD123-TP1-gfp
pAD123-gfp derivative with
This study
TP1 in front of gfp pAD123-TP2-gfp
pAD123-gfp derivative with
This study
TP2 in front of gfp pAD123-TP3-gfp
pAD123-gfp derivative with
This study
TP3 in front of gfp pAD123-TP4-gfp
pAD123-gfp derivative with
This study
TP4 in front of gfp pSS
Ampr, Cmr, pUC18 containing
39
the cat-upp cassette pSS-SP80-purAFB
pSS containing purA
This study
flanks under SP80 pSS-SP30-purAFB
pSS containing purA
This study
flanks under SP30 pSS-SP13-purAFB
pSS containing purA
This study
flanks under SP13 pHP13
Cmr, Emr,B. subtilis/E.coli
Lab stock
shuttle vector pHP13-TP2-xynA
derived from pHP13, for overexpression of xynA under TP2 promoter 36
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This study
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ACS Synthetic Biology
pHP13-P43-xynA
derived from pHP13,
This study
for overexpression of xynA under P43 promoter 671
a
Bacillus Genetic Stock Center
672 673
Generation of the synthetic promoter library
674
The synthetic promoter library was constructed using the degenerate primer
675
SPL-L, containing 26 bp of the degenerate oligonucleotide N (with a 25% possibility
676
of each of the A, G, C, and T bases). The fragment containing the synthetic promoter
677
fused to a truncated gapA fragment was amplified from the B. subtilis168 genome
678
using the primers SPL-F and SPL-L. The synthetic promoter library was generated in
679
pAD123-gfp-SPL. Plasmid pAD123-gfp-SPL was then introduced into E. coli DH5α,
680
and transformed cells were cultured in SOC medium for recovery. The plasmids with
681
synthetic promoters were purified and stored. After cell cultivation and plasmid
682
preparation, the purified plasmid library was finally transferred into B. subtilis 168.
683
The transformation of B. subtilis was performed using a standard protocol for natural
684
competence.59 Transformed cells were cultivated on LB agar plates at 37 °C for 24 h.
685
All colonies were collected and stored at -80 °C as a 15% glycerol stock.
686 687
Library screening using a GFP reporter gene assay
688
Cells harboring the promoters were grown in LB medium at 220 rpm and 37 °C.
689
The expression of GFP was monitored by measuring whole-cell fluorescence on a
690
multimode microplate reader at stationary phase (OD600 of 4.0-6.0). The OD600 of 37
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691
cells were firstly measured, then cells were centrifuged at 10 000 × g for 2 minutes,
692
the supernatant was discarded, and the cells resuspended in an equal volume of double
693
distilled water. A 200-µl sample was transferred to a black 96-well plate, and the GFP
694
fluorescence was measured at 533 nm after excitation at 485 nm using a plate reader
695
(Tecan). The activity of GFP was characterized by using GFP fluorescence/OD600. B.
696
subtilis 168 carrying the plasmid pAD123-gfp without a promoter sequence in front of
697
the gfp gene was used as the negative control and double distilled water was used as a
698
blank. Standard deviations are based on a minimum of three statistically independent
699
experiments.
700 701
Model-based analysis of promoter sequences
702
Promoter sequences were analyzed by a published statistical method32 for
703
identifying correlations between nucleotide positions and strengths of promoters. The
704
promoters were firstly divided into two classes based on the strength of promoter
705
Pveg: strong and weak, containing 49 and 165 promoters, respectively. The
706
probability of finding the nucleotide under consideration follows a binomial
707
distribution with chance p and population size q. The actual probability that a
708
nucleotide at given position occurs more than times in a given class was calculated
709
using equation (1).
− ≥ = 1 − 1 −
710
The position/nucleotide pairs with high p-values were obtained using statistical
711
calculation. The p-value was defined as ≥ , when ≥ > 0.5. 38
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ACS Synthetic Biology
712
Otherwise, the p-value was defined as 1- ≥ . when ≥ ≤ 0.5. Finally,
713
position/nucleotide pairs with high p-values were displayed.
714
The value was used to evaluate the reliability of probabilities. In this work, the
715
value was determined by 20% or 30% of the population size in a certain class
716
(x=10 or 15 in the strong class and x=50 in the weak class) for obtaining appropriate
717
statistical model.
718 719
Analysis of fermentation products and metabolites
720
The concentrations of acetoin and xylose were determined by using HPLC
721
(HP1100, Agilent Technologies, Palo Alto, USA) equipped with a ion exclusion
722
Aminex HPX 87-H column (Bio-Rad, Richmond, USA) with 5 mM H2SO4
723
(0.4ml/min) as the mobile phase at 65 °C.Inosine concentrations in the culture broth
724
were measured by RP-HPLC (HP 1100, Agilent Technologies, USA) equipped with a
725
C18 column
726
mobile phase at room temperature. Glucose concentrations in the culture broth were
727
determined enzymatically by a bioanalyzer (SBA-40E, Shandong, China).
(Luna 150 ×4.6 mm) with 4% (v/v) acetonitrile (0.8 ml/min) as the
728 729
Real-time quantitative PCR (RT-PCR)
730
B. subtilis168 and its derivatives were harvested when grown to the exponential
731
phase under aerobic conditions. Total RNA was extracted using the RNA prep pure
732
Kit (TransGen Beijing, China). 500 ng of total RNA was transcribed into cDNA using
733
the Quant Reverse Transcriptase with random primers (TransGen Beijing, China). 39
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734
Samples were then analyzed using a Light Cycler 480 II (Roche, Basel, Switerland)
735
with Real Master Mix (SYBR Green). The 16S rRNA gene was selected as a
736
reference for normalization and three biological replicates were performed. The
737
obtained data were analyzed by using the 2−∆∆Ct method as described previously.60
738
SDS-PAGE analysis of reporter proteins
739
After 16 h of cultivation, cells were harvested and lysed completely in isotonic PBS.
740
An aliquot comprising 20 µl of the supernatant containing GFP was subjected to
741
SDS-PAGE. SDS-PAGE was performed using a 4% acrylamide stacking gel and 12%
742
acrylamide resolving gel. Protein bands were detected using staining with Coomassie
743
brilliant blue G-250, and the areas below the GFP peaks were used to determine the
744
relative GFP amounts.
745 746
Enzyme activity assays
747
For adenylosuccinate synthase activity analysis, crude cell extracts were prepared
748
as described previously 29, and the enzyme activity in cell-free extracts was measured
749
according to a previously described method.61 The specific activity was defined as the
750
100 fold of the absorbance increase at 280 nm caused by 1 mg of enzyme extract in 1
751
min (100 × ∆A280 min-1 mg-1 protein). Total protein concentrations were determined
752
according to the Bradford method.62
753
Endoxylanase activity was determined using beech-wood xylan as substrate in
754
cell-free media by a modified method.63 The reducing monosaccharides released from
755
beech-wood xylan were measured by HPLC as described in section 2.7, with 40
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ACS Synthetic Biology
756
D-xylose as the standard substrate for standard curves plot. One unit of enzyme
757
activity was defined as the amount of enzyme that releases 1 μmol of xylose
758
equivalents in 1 min under the described assay conditions.
759 760
ASSOCIATED CONTENT
761
Supporting Information
762
Figure S1. Oligonucleotide sequence (SPL) with consensus sequence and randomized
763
spacer sequences
764
Figure S2. Probability that a certain nucleotide at a certain position in promoter occurs
765
more than x times in the promoters classified as weak
766
Figure S3. Strengths of reconstructed promoter
767
Table S1. Primers used in this study
768
Table S2. Sequences of promoters used in this study
769
This material is available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs,acs,org.
770 771
AUTHOR INFORMATION
772
Corresponding Author
773
Email:
[email protected] 774
Author Contributions
775
D.L. and Z.W. designed the experiments; D.L., Z.M., J.G., H.M., Y.T. and L.W.
776
performed the experiments and analyzed the results; D.L., T.C. and Z.W wrote the
777
manuscript; Z.W. and X.Z. supervised the work. 41
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778
Notes
779
The authors declare no competing financial interest.
780
Acknowledgement
781
This work was supported by National Natural Science Foundation of China
782
(NSFC-21576200, NSFC-21776209 and NSFC-21621004).
783 784
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Caption : For Table of Contents Use Only Manuscript title:Construction, model-based analysis and characterization of a promoter library for finetuned gene expression in Bacillus subtilis Authors:Dingyu Liu, Zhitao Mao, Jiaxin Guo, Leyi Wei, Hongwu Ma, Yajie Tang, Tao Chen, Zhiwen Wang* and Xueming Zhao 80x39mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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