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Bioactive Constituents, Metabolites, and Functions
Directed co-evolution of #-carotene ketolase and hydroxylase and its application in temperature-regulated biosynthesis of astaxanthin Pingping Zhou, Min Li, Bin Shen, Zhen Yao, Qi Bian, Lidan Ye, and Hongwei Yu J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.8b05003 • Publication Date (Web): 04 Jan 2019 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on January 10, 2019
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Directed co-evolution of β-carotene ketolase and hydroxylase and its application in temperature-regulated biosynthesis of astaxanthin Pingping Zhou2,3, Min Li2, Bin Shen2,Zhen Yao2, Qi Bian2, Lidan Ye1,2*, Hongwei Yu1,2 1Key
Laboratory of Biomass Chemical Engineering of Ministry of Education,
Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310027, PR China 2Institute
of Bioengineering, College of Chemical and Biological Engineering,
Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310027, PR China 3Joint
International Research Laboratory of Agriculture and Agri-Product Safety/Key
Laboratory of Prevention and Control of Biological Hazard Factors (Animal Origin) for Agrifood Safety and Quality, The Ministry of Education of China, Yangzhou University, Yangzhou, 225009, PR China
*Corresponding author: Lidan Ye ORCID iD: 0000-0002-6248-8457 Address: Institute of Bioengineering, College of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Zhejiang University, 310027 Hangzhou, P.R. China. E-mail:
[email protected] Tel/Fax: +86-571-88273997 1
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1
ABSTRACT
2
As an outstanding antioxidant with wide applications, biotechnological production of
3
astaxanthin has attracted increasing research interest. However, the astaxanthin titer
4
achieved to date is still rather low, attributing to the poor efficiency of β-carotene
5
ketolation and hydroxylation, as well as the adverse effect of astaxanthin
6
accumulation on cell growth. In order to address these problems, we constructed an
7
efficient astaxanthin-producing Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain by combining protein
8
engineering and dynamic metabolic regulation. Firstly, superior mutants of β-carotene
9
ketolase and β-carotene hydroxylase were obtained by directed co-evolution to
10
accelerate the conversion of β-carotene to astaxanthin. Subsequently, the
11
Gal4M9-based temperature-responsive regulation system was introduced to separate
12
astaxanthin production from cell growth. Finally, 235 mg/L of (3S, 3'S)-astaxanthin
13
was produced by two-stage high-density fermentation. This study demonstrates the
14
power of combining directed co-evolution and temperature-responsive regulation in
15
astaxanthin
16
biotechnological production of other value-added chemicals.
17
KEYWORDS:
18
astaxanthin, β-carotene hydroxylase, directed co-evolution, temperature-responsive
19
regulation, high-density fermentation
biosynthesis,
and
may
provide
methodological
reference
for
2
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INTRODUCTION
21
Astaxanthin as a tetraterpene with strong antioxidant activity has wide applications in
22
aquaculture, food, pharmaceutical and cosmetic industries 1. Currently, the majority of
23
commercial astaxanthin is obtained from chemical synthesis, while the rest is
24
extracted from Haematococcus pluvialis and Xanthophyllomyces dendrorhous
25
However, the biosafety concern with chemical routes and the high cost of the
26
extraction route limit the extensive application of astaxanthin 6. Moreover, among
27
these sources, only the algae-extracted astaxanthin is the bioactive (3S,
28
3'S)-stereoisomer. Alternatively, microbial chassis cells have been engineered for
29
fermentative production of astaxanthin by means of metabolic engineering techniques
30
7, 8.
31
production of the bioactive (3S, 3'S)-astaxanthin as confirmed in our previous work 9.
32
2-5.
In particular, heterologous expression of algal genes could lead to microbial
Although astaxanthin biosynthesis has been enabled in non-carotenogenic
33
bacteria
34
cloned from natural producers, the yield is rather unsatisfactory as compared with
35
other carotenoids
36
production as compared to astaxanthin implies the ketolation and hydroxylation of
37
β-carotene as the rate-limiting steps in the astaxanthin synthetic pathway
38
improvement of β-carotene ketolase and β-carotene hydroxylase is the key to further
39
enhancement of astaxanthin production. Although some positive mutants of the
40
β-carotene ketolase have been generated adopting a high-throughput screening
41
method based on the color difference between β-carotene and canthaxanthin
10-12
and yeast
17-19.
9, 13-16
by heterologous expression of carotenogenic genes
The far higher titer of β-carotene obtained in heterologous
14.
Hence,
9, 20, 21,
3
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the high concentrations of ketocarotenoids in those strains suggest β-carotene
43
hydroxylase as a remaining rate-limiting enzyme. To address this issue, β-carotene
44
hydroxylases from different species were screened and the expression level of
45
β-carotene hydroxylase was adjusted
46
β-carotene hydroxylase is rarely reported due to the lack of structure information and
47
a proper high-throughput screening method. In the astaxanthin biosynthetic pathway,
48
β-carotene is converted to astaxanthin as a result of sequential catalysis by β-carotene
49
ketolase and β-carotene hydroxylase 16, changing the colony color from yellow to red,
50
which provides the basis for development of a color-indicated high-throughput
51
screening method. Directed co-evolution of two or more enzymes in a cascade or
52
pathway has efficiently improved the catalytic performance of cellulases and
53
DXR/DXS/IDI in E. coli
54
β-carotene ketolase and β-carotene hydroxylase based on the distinct color difference
55
between β-carotene and astaxanthin, which may provide a possible solution to the
56
bottleneck in astaxanthin biosynthetic pathway.
25, 26,
12, 22-24,
whereas protein engineering of
inspiring us to conduct directed co-evolution of
57
Besides the catalytic performance of pathway enzymes, the conflict between the
58
heterologous pathway and the native metabolism of the chassis organism is another
59
factor restricting the biosynthesis efficiency. Stored in cell membrane, accumulation
60
of carotenoids often leads to growth inhibition
61
fermentation of astaxanthin is rarely reported. In the few reports on fermentative
62
production of astaxanthin, the cell density was also not high, with OD600 of only 60
63
and 120, respectively
29, 30.
27, 28.
In particular, high-density
When we tried to scale up astaxanthin biosynthesis of S. 4
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cerevisiae strain Yast-D03 which produced 8.10 mg/g dry cell weight (DCW) of
65
(3S,3'S)-astaxanthin in shake-flask cultures 9, difficulty was also encountered to
66
achieve high cell density, implying adverse effect of astaxanthin accumulation on
67
biomass. To decouple heterologous production from cell growth, we have developed a
68
temperature-dependent dynamic control strategy in S. cerevisiae based on the
69
modified GAL regulation system. After knocking out GAL80 encoding the Gal4
70
inhibitor, the expression of PGAL-driven genes is controlled solely by the
71
transcriptional activator Gal4. By replacing the wild-type Gal4 with the
72
temperature-sensitive mutant Gal4M9, we achieved two-stage fermentation of
73
lycopene in S. cerevisiae in response to temperature shift
74
regulation system in astaxanthin biosynthesis may help to minimize the conflict
75
between cell growth and astaxanthin accumulation, and thus make high-density
76
fermentation possible.
31.
The application of this
77
In the present study, directed co-evolution of H. pluvialis β-carotene hydroxylase
78
and β-carotene ketolase was first conducted to accelerate the conversion of β-carotene
79
to astaxanthin, so as to diminish the metabolic bottleneck in the astaxanthin
80
biosynthetic pathway, and then the Gal4M9-based temperature regulation system was
81
introduced to separate the production stage from the growth stage, so as to achieve
82
high-density fermentation of astaxanthin in S. cerevisiae.
83
MATERIALS AND METHODS
84
Strains and growth media
85
Escherichia coli DH5α as the host for propagation of plasmids was cultivated 5
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overnight in Luria-Bertani (LB) complete medium (0.5% Bacto yeast extract, 1%
87
Bacto-tryptone [Difco Laboratories], 1% NaCl, pH 7.0) at 37°C. 100 μg/mL of
88
ampicillin or 50 μg/mL of kanamycin was supplemented for selection of resistance
89
gene.
90
S. cerevisiae reference strain BY4741
32
was used as the host for construction of
91
recombinant yeast strains, and the detailed genotypes of these strains are listed in
92
Table 1. The YPD plate (20 g/L D-glucose, 20 g/L peptone, 10 g/L yeast extract, 2%
93
agar) (Sangon Biotech, Shanghai, China) containing 200 μg/mL of geneticin (G418)
94
was used for screening of recombinant strains harboring kanMX gene. For
95
investigation of carotenoids production, the recombinant strains were cultivated in
96
YPD broth supplemented with 0.52 mM of Fe2+. Synthetic drop out media (SD) were
97
used for cultivation of the selected transformants carrying plasmids with the
98
corresponding auxotroph marker, whereas synthetic complete plate supplemented
99
with 100 μg/mL 5-fluoroorotic acid was used for counter-selection of yeast strains
100
with KanMX-URA-PRB322ori marker excision.
101
Gene amplification and plasmids construction
102
All primers (purchased from Sangon Biotech, Shanghai, China) used for gene
103
amplification and plasmids construction are listed in Table 2. To assemble a highly
104
efficient astaxanthin biosynthetic pathway, the tHMG1 gene from S. cerevisiae
105
BY4741 and the positive crtE mutant created previously (crtE03M) were amplified
106
from pUMRI-10-LYC01
107
were amplified from pUMRI-13-crtYB-crtI
33.
crtI and crtYB of X. dendrorhous CGMCC As2.1557 9.
The codon-optimized OcrtZ 6
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(KP866869) and positive Obkt mutant ObktM of H. pluvialis Flotow N-212 were
109
cloned from pUMRI-11-OcrtZ-ObktM
110
were used for integration of the pathway genes into different loci 9, 34. Meanwhile, the
111
left and right homologous arms of YPLO62W were amplified from the genome DNA
112
of
113
YPL062WUP-F/YPL062WUP-R primers respectively and fused together by overlap
114
extension PCR to generate the “YPL062W left arm-SfiI-YPL062W right arm”
115
structure. Replacing the DPP1 homologous arms of pUMRI-11 with the above
116
constructed YPL062W homologous arms generated the pUMRI-20 plasmid. In
117
addition, p416XWP01/04-OcrtZ-ObktM plasmids containing bidirectional promoters
118
of different strength were constructed based on p416XWP-PGAL10-Obkt for validation
119
of the screening method in directed co-evolution 9. All recombinant plasmids are
120
listed in Table 3.
121
Directed co-evolution of β-carotene ketolase and β-carotene hydroxylase
122
For construction of OcrtZ and ObktM random mutagenesis library, error-prone PCR
123
was
124
PCYC1-BST1-F/ADH1tR2 respectively with the plasmid p416XWP04-OcrtZ-ObktM
125
as template. p416XWP04-OcrtZ-ObktM was linearized by SalI/ BglII digestion. The
126
5’-end of the ObktM mutant cassette overlapped with SalI and BglII digested plasmid
127
p416XWP04, while the 3’-end overlapped with the OcrtZ mutant cassette. The 3’-end
128
of OcrtZ mutant cassette also overlapped with the vector p416XWP04.
129
Co-transformation of the two mutant libraries and the linearized p416XWP04 into the
strain
carried
BY4741
out
using
9, 16.
using
the
primer
A set of SfiI-linearized pUMRI plasmids
YPL062WD-F/YPL062WD-R
pair
qtHMG1R1/PCYC1-BST1-R
and
and
7
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β-carotene-producing
131
p416XWP04-ObktM-OcrtZ mutant libraries via homologous recombination. After
132
three-day cultivation on SD-URA- plate at 30°C, colonies that showed darker red
133
color, indicating improved activity of β-carotene ketolase and β-carotene hydroxylase,
134
were isolated and further confirmed by shake-flask culture, followed by DNA
135
sequencing (Sangon Biotech, Shanghai, China).
136
Real-time quantitative PCR analysis
137
Total RNA was extracted from yeast cells using RNAiso Plus Kit (TaKaRa, Dalian,
138
China) according to the manufacturer's protocol. Then genomic DNA elimination and
139
reverse transcription were conducted using a PrimeScript™ RT reagent Kit with
140
gDNA Eraser (TaKaRa, Dalian, China). Quantitative PCR was performed using TB
141
GreenTM Premix Ex Taq™ II (Tli RNaseH Plus) (TaKaRa, Dalian, China) on
142
BIO-RAD CFX ConnectTM Real-Time PCR Detection Systems (Bio-Rad, California,
143
USA). ACT1 was used as an internal control gene to normalize different samples. The
144
transcriptional level was calculated by using the 2−ΔΔCT method36.
145
Analysis of carotenoids
146
The carotenoids were extracted using acetone from HCl-heat-treated cells
147
Astaxanthin was quantified by HPLC (SHIMADZU LC-20 AT) equipped with an
148
Amethyst C18-H column (4.6×150 mm, 5 μm, Sepax Technologies, Inc.) and a
149
UV/VIS detector at 470 nm. Samples were eluted with a gradient program at a flow
150
rate of 1.0 mL/ min at 40°C. The proportion of solvent A (90 % acetonitrile, 10%
151
water) was gradually decreased from 100% to 10% while solvent B (60% methyl
strain
YXWP-7435
resulted
in
transformants
with
16.
8
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alcohol, 40% isopropyl alcohol ) increased from 0 to 90% during 0-15 min, and kept
153
at 10% solvent A and 90% solvent B for 15 min. Finally, the solvent B was decreased
154
from 90% to 0 within the last 5 min.
155
Fed-batch fermentation
156
Single colonies were picked into 5 mL YPD tubes and incubated overnight at 30ºC as
157
precultures, which was then inoculated (1% v/v) to 500 mL shake flasks containing
158
100 mL YPD medium and further incubated for 20 h at 30ºC. Two flasks of seed
159
culture were inoculated (10% v/v) into a 5-L bioreactor (Shanghai Baoxing
160
Bioengineering Equipment Co. Ltd, China) containing 2.3 L fermentation medium
161
which consisted of 20 g/L corn steep liquor (Yuan Peptide Biotechnology Co., Ltd,
162
Shanghai, China), 40 g/L glucose, 10 mL/L concentrated trace metal solution. The
163
concentrated trace element solution contained: EDTA, 15 g/L; ZnSO4·7H2O 5.75 g/L;
164
MnCl2·4H2O, 0.32 g/L; CuSO4, 0.50 g/L; CoCl2·6H2O, 0.47 g/L; Na2MoO4·2H2O,
165
0.48 g/L; CaCl2, 2.9 g/L; FeSO4·7H2O 2.8 g/L
166
Dongfeng Chemical Factory (Wuxi, China) and all other metal compounds were
167
obtained from Sangon Biotech (Shanghai, China).
37.
CoCl2·6H2O was purchased from
168
The dissolved oxygen was maintained at 30% during fermentation by manually
169
adjusting the air flow rate in range of 1-3.0 vvm and the agitation speed of 300-700
170
rpm. pH was controlled at 5.5 by automatic addition of 50% ammonia hydroxide. A
171
temperature-regulated two-stage fed-batch fermentation process was adopted for
172
high-cell density fermentation (defined as volumetric dry biomass ≥30 g/L or OD600
173
≥120). In the first stage, the temperature was maintained at 30ºC to sustain fast cell 9
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growth, and 500 g/L glucose was fed into bioreactors to keep the glucose
175
concentration below 2 g/L. During this period, 50 mL of concentrated corn steep
176
liquor (400 g/L) was fed into the bioreactor every 8 h. At the second stage, the
177
temperature was changed to 24ºC to induce astaxanthin biosynthesis. After the
178
residual glucose was depleted, 400 g/L of ethanol was fed at a flow rate of 2 g/L/h-4
179
g/L/h to promote astaxanthin accumulation until harvest of the cells. The glucose
180
concentration in the fermentation broth was measured by a glucose assay kit (Rsbio,
181
Shanghai, China). The ethanol concentration was analyzed by a GC-9790 gas
182
chromatography system (Fuli, Wenling, China) equipped with a flame ionization
183
detector and an HP-FFAP column (30 m×0.25 mm, 0.25 µm film thickness, Agilent,
184
USA). The temperatures of oven, detector and injector were 120°C, 180°C and
185
180°C, respectively.
186
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
187
Development of screening method for co-evolution of β-carotene ketolase and
188
β-carotene hydroxylase
189
In our previous protein engineering effort of H. pluvialis codon-optimized β-carotene
190
ketolase (OBKT) targeting at improved ketolation of β-carotene, a positive triple
191
mutant OBKTM (H165R/V264D/F298Y) was obtained9. However, overaccumulation
192
of echinenone and canthaxanthin due to insufficient activity of the codon-optimized
193
β-carotene hydroxylase (OCrtZ) remains a barrier to efficient astaxanthin production
194
in S. cerevisiae. The color difference between β-carotene and astaxanthin inspired us
195
to seek for simultaneous engineering of β-carotene ketolase and β-carotene 10
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
hydroxylase by directed co-evolution.
197
To validate the feasibility of directed co-evolution of β-carotene ketolase and
198
β-carotene hydroxylase based on the color difference between β-carotene and
199
astaxanthin,
200
co-expressing the two enzymes with bidirectional promoters of different strength (Fig.
201
1A) were respectively transformed into strain YXWP-74 with moderate production of
202
β-carotene
203
p416XWP04-ObktM-OcrtZ with weak promoters tended to be yellow, whereas that
204
carrying p416XWP01-ObktM-OcrtZ with strong promoters showed deepened colony
205
color, showing consistence between the colony color and the expression/activity of
206
these two enzymes (Fig. 1B). HPLC analysis showed astaxanthin accumulation in the
207
strain expressing OBKTM and OCrtZ under strong promoters while β-carotene was
208
hardly converted under week promoters (Fig. 1C). Thus, the yellow-to-red
209
color-based screening system could be used for directed co-evolution of β-carotene
210
ketolase and β-carotene hydroxylase.
211
Directed co-evolution of β-carotene ketolase and β-carotene hydroxylase
212
To avoid color saturation and meanwhile facilitate easy distinguishing of positive
213
mutants with enhanced color intensity by visual inspection, the weak bidirectional
214
promoter PCYC1 and PBST1 was adopted to control the expression of OBKTM and
215
OCrtZ
216
p416XWP04-ObktM-OcrtZ as the template for construction of ObktM and OcrtZ
217
mutant libraries (Fig. 2). From 6000 colonies, 8 recombinant strains with darker color
p416XWP01-ObktM-OcrtZ
35
and
p416XWP04-ObktM-OcrtZ
to avoid color saturation. As anticipated, the strain harboring
respectively.
Error-prone
PCR
was
carried
out
using
11
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were selected and verified by DNA sequencing (Fig. S1). The plasmids carrying the
219
positive mutants were then digested with BamHI and SalI or EcoRI and BglII to
220
obtain ObktM mutant segments and OcrtZ mutant segments and inserted into the same
221
sites of pUMRI-11-OcrtZ
222
integration into the previously constructed β-carotene hyper-producing strain
223
Ycarote-02(-) 9 for further confirmation.
16
or pUMRI-11-ObktM
9
respectively, followed by
224
Among these isolated mutants, some had mutations solely in OBKTM or OCrtZ,
225
whereas the other had mutations in both enzymes. Since canthaxanthin and
226
astaxanthin are similar in color
227
mutants
228
canthaxanthin/echinenone rather than astaxanthin may also be screened out, in
229
addition to those with both improved ketolation and hydroxylation activities.
230
Therefore, the method should be used with caution when superior β-carotene
231
hydroxylase mutant is the sole target. In order to achieve the best OBKTM and OCrtZ
232
mutants, all mutations were recreated and combined, and the performance of the
233
resulting mutants in astaxanthin biosynthesis was comparatively analyzed. The best
234
OCrtZ mutant OCrtZM1 carrying an L288R mutation increased the astaxanthin
235
production by about 33% as compared to the wild-type OCrtZ (Fig. 3). To our
236
knowledge, this is the first report on directed evolution of algal β-carotene
237
hydroxylase. To further confirm that the catalytic efficiency rather than the expression
238
level of OCrtZM1 mutant changed, real-time quantitative PCR was conducted to
239
investigate the transcriptional level of OcrtZM1. Similar trends were found in the
with
solely
38,
improved
using this colony-based colorimetric screening, ketolation
activity
which
produce
more
12
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240
transcriptional level of OcrtZM1 and OcrtZ (Fig. S2), ascribing the improvement in
241
astaxanthin production to the enhanced β-carotene hydroxylase activity. Lin et al
242
recently reported the creation of a β-carotene hydroxylase (Hpchyb) mutant K90R
243
with 1.34-fold activity improvement by site-directed mutagenesis
244
unmatch of the indicated site and the presented primers with the provided amino acid
245
sequence of the enzyme in the publication, as well as the lack of mutant design
246
principle, caused difficulty in repetition or extension of that work.
14.
However, the
247
Meanwhile, mutant OBKTM29 (H165R/V264D/F298Y/M1T/N188D/L271R)
248
showed the best performance among all OBKTM mutants obtained by directed
249
co-evolution. After transformation of pUMRI-11-ObktM29-OcrtZ into Ycarote-02(-),
250
the canthaxanthin yield was further increased by about 51% and the β-carotene
251
accumulation was decreased by about 44% in comparison with those of the strain
252
integrated with pUMRI-11-ObktM-OcrtZ (Fig. 3). To investigate which mutation was
253
responsible for the improvement of β-carotene ketolase activity, mutants OBKTMM1T,
254
OBKTMN188D, OBKTML271R were generated based on OBKTM by introducing the
255
newly emerged site mutations. Interestingly, no obvious difference in carotenoids
256
production were observed between OBKTM and mutants OBKTMN188D or
257
OBKTML271R, while OBKTMM1T with mutation in the start codon, shifting the
258
translation initiation site to the 8th amino acid, gave an enhanced canthaxanthin
259
accumulation in spite of slightly lower activity as compared to OBKTM29, which
260
may be explained by the improved gene expression or changed protein structure due
261
to the truncation of N-terminal amino acids. 13
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When ObktM29 was integrated together with OcrtZM1 into the genome of
263
Ycarote-02(-), the resulting strain YPP-27 accumulated 5.70 mg/g DCW of
264
astaxanthin, exhibiting 39% improvement over the previously constructed strain
265
YPP-17 harboring ObktM and OcrtZ 9. Comparing to the diploid strain Yast-D03
266
harboring 2*2 copies of OBKTM and 2*3 copies of wild-type OCrtZ 9, the haploid
267
strain YPP-27 expressing only 1 copy each of the mutants OBKTM29 and OCrtZM1
268
produced 70% as much astaxanthin, demonstrating protein engineering as a potent
269
substitution to protein overexpression which has a risk of causing metabolic burden.
270
Construction of temperature-regulated astaxanthin biosynthetic pathway
271
As lipophilic compounds, carotenoids tend to accumulate in the cellular membranes,
272
causing burden for the host cells 39, 40. The host-unfriendly nature of carotenoids have
273
inspired us to develop a temperature-dependent dynamic control strategy based on
274
GAL regulation system to facilitate decoupling of production from growth 31. In order
275
to achieve high-density fermentation of astaxanthin in S. cerevisiae, this
276
temperature-responsive system was employed here to regulate the astaxanthin
277
biosynthetic pathway (Fig. 4). The temperature-sensitive Gal4M9 was integrated into
278
the GAL4/GAL80 double-knockout strain based on YPP-27 containing PGAL1/10-driven
279
astaxanthin synthetic pathway to construct a temperature-regulated yeast cell factory
280
for astaxanthin. The resulting strain Yast-TS8 showed scarcely any astaxanthin
281
accumulation (0.08 mg/g DCW) at 30°C, while accumulated astaxanthin to about 2.08
282
mg/g DCW in shaking-flask fermentation with temperature shift from 30°C to 24°C
283
(Table 4). This result further demonstrated the universality of the Gal4M9-based 14
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temperature regulation system in multi-gene pathways. Subsequently, the auxotrophic
285
marker MET13 was complemented in Yast-TS8 to generate the prototrophic haploid
286
strain Yast-TS9 which showed not only superior cell growth ability but also enhanced
287
astaxanthin accumulation (3.96 mg/g DCW) upon temperature shift from 30°C to
288
24°C. The result suggested that prototrophic strains were more robust and may
289
provide more cellular sources to support the target metabolic flux.
290
Accumulation of the intermediate canthaxanthin in Yast-TS9 indicated that the
291
insufficient hydroxylation efficiency of OCrtZM1 as compared to the ketolation
292
capability of OBKTM29. In order to drain the intermediate metabolites and further
293
pull the flux to astaxanthin biosynthesis, we constructed strain Yast-TS10 by
294
overexpressing one additional copy of OcrtZM1 in Yast-TS9. As a result, the
295
astaxanthin yield was improved to 5.02 mg/g DCW, which was 27% higher than
296
Yast-TS9. However, accumulation of the intermediate lycopene was still observed in
297
Yast-TS10 (Fig. S3), implying lycopene cyclization catalyzed by CrtYB as a
298
remaining rate-limiting step. Thus, Yast-TS11 was generated by overexpressing an
299
additional copy of crtYB in Yast-TS10, leading to production of 6.19 mg/g DCW of
300
astaxanthin upon temperature shift. Although the astaxanthin yield of Yast-TS11 is
301
slightly lower than that of the previously constructed diploid strain YastD-03 9, the
302
total number of gene copies in this haploid strain is much lower, implying less
303
metabolic burden and higher potential to be scaled up to high-density fermentation.
304
Two-stage fed-batch fermentation of astaxanthin
305
In order to maximize astaxanthin production, two-stage fed-batch fermentation with 15
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temperature shift was conducted to obtain high cell density. The temperature was held
307
at 30°C in the first stage for rapid growth of the cells. After the biomass reached
308
OD600=120 indicating the strain entered the mid-log phase, the culture temperature
309
was changed to 24°C to initiate astaxanthin synthesis. The time for temperature shift
310
was set at the mid log phase instead of the end of the log phase, considering the time
311
required for Gal4 synthesis, subsequent transcription and translation of the astaxanthin
312
biosynthetic pathway genes, and finally synthesis of the metabolic intermediates and
313
the final product astaxanthin. Fermentation of Yast-TS11 achieved a high OD600 (up
314
to 258) and an astaxanthin titer of 107 mg/L in 121 h, however, with canthaxanthin
315
(160 mg/L) accumulated as the dominant component of carotenoids in the
316
fermentation broth (data not shown), indicating insufficient hydroxylation efficiency.
317
Further integration of an additional OcrtZM1 copy created Yast-TS14, which showed
318
slightly improved astaxanthin production in shake-flask fermentation as compared to
319
Yast-TS11 (Table 4), but significantly outperformed Yast-TS11 in fed-batch
320
fermentation. The accumulation of canthaxanthin was largely diminished (50 mg/L),
321
and the astaxanthin titer reached 235 mg/L in 83 h (Fig. 5), higher than the best
322
astaxanthin-producing yeast ever reported (218 mg/L achieved in 140 h)30.
323
To sum up, this study suggests the potential of directed co-evolution in
324
engineering of rate-limiting pathway enzymes that lack direct screening features, and
325
demonstrates the universality of temperature-responsive regulation system in
326
high-density fermentation, providing methodological reference for biotechnological
327
production of astaxanthin and other value-added chemicals. 16
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ABBREVIATIONS USED
329
DCW, dry cell weight; LB, Luria-Bertani; YPD, yeast extract peptone dextrose
330
medium; G418, geneticin; SD, synthetic drop out medium; HPLC, high-performance
331
liquid chromatography.
332
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
333
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
334
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
335
This work was financially supported by Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science
336
Foundation of China (Grant No. LY18B060001), and the Natural Science Foundation
337
of China (Grant Nos. 21576234 and 21776244).
338
SUPPORTING INFORMATION DESCRIPTION
339
Supporting Information. Fig. S1, the results of OCrtZ and OBKTM directed
340
co-evolution; Fig. S2, transcriptional levels of OcrtZM1 and OcrtZ in Y-carot02(-)
341
during shake-flask fermentation; Fig. S3, HPLC analysis of carotenoids in Yast-TS10
342
(A) and Yast-TS11 (B). The Supporting information is available free of charge on the
343
ACS Publications website.
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Figure captions
467
Fig. 1 Pre-experiment to evaluate the color-indicated high-throughput screening
468
method for directed co-evolution of β-carotene ketolase and β-carotene hydroxylase.
469
A. Structure of p416XWP01-ObktM-OcrtZ and p416XWP04-ObktM-OcrtZ plasmids;
470
B. Color difference of the β-carotene producing yeast strain YXWP-74 after
471
transformed
472
respectively. C. HPLC analysis of carotenoids in YXWP-74 after transformed with
473
p416XWP01-ObktM-OcrtZ or p416XWP04-ObktM-OcrtZ. 01 indicated introduction
474
of p416XWP01-ObktM-OcrtZ with strong promoters PGAL1 and PGAL10. 04 indicated
475
introduction of p416XWP04-ObktM-OcrtZ with weak promoters PCYC1 and PBST1.
476
Fig. 2 The flow chart of color-based high-throughput screening for directed
477
co-evolution of β-carotene ketolase and β-carotene hydroxylase. Error-prone PCR was
478
carried out for construction of OcrtZ and ObktM mutant libraries, followed by
479
co-transformation of the two mutant libraries with SalI/BglII-linearized p416XWP04
480
into the β-carotene producing strain YXWP-74. The colonies exhibiting deepened
481
color were screened out from the library.
482
Fig. 3 The results of OBKTM and OCrtZ directed co-evolution. The carotenoids
483
production of Ycarote-02(-) expressing OCrtZ and OBKTM was set to 1. OCrtZ
484
mutants together with OBKTM or second-round mutants of OBKTM together with
485
wild-type OCrtZ were transformed into the β-carotene hyper-producing strain
486
Ycarote-02(-) respectively. OBKTM: OBKT(H165R/V264D/F298Y).
487
Fig. 4 Overview of Gal4M9-mediated temperature-responsive regulation of
with
p416XWP01-ObktM-OcrtZ
and
p416XWP04-ObktM-OcrtZ
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488
astaxanthin metabolic pathway. HMG-CoA: hydroxyl methylglutaryl coenzyme A;
489
FPP: farnesyl pyrophosphate; GGPP: geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate; tHMG1,
490
CrtE03M: positive mutant of geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate synthase (GGPPS);
491
CrtYB: bifunctional phytoene synthase and lycopene cyclase; CrtI: phytoene
492
desaturase; OCrtZM1: positive mutant of β-carotene hydroxylase; OBKTM29:
493
positive mutant of β-carotene ketolase.
494
Fig. 5 High cell-density fermentation of Yast-TS14 for astaxanthin production. A.
495
Feeding profile in the two-stage feeding process. Feeding rates are displayed as
496
milliliter feeding solution per hour and the time point for switching the feeding
497
solution from glucose to ethanol is indicated by black arrow. B. Time courses of cell
498
growth, carotenoids production and carbon sources of Yast-TS14 during
499
temperature-regulated high density fermentation. The time point for temperature shift
500
from 30°C to 24°C is indicated by the blue arrow.
501
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Table 1 The strains used in this study strain
genotype/ description
reference
BY4741
MATa, his3Δ1,leu2Δ0 , met15Δ0, ura3Δ0
32
YXWP-74
BY4741,
41
Δdpp1::TADH1-crtE-PGAL10-PGAL1-tHMG1-TCYC1,
Δho::TADH1-crtYB-PGAL10-PGAL1-crtI-TCYC1, Δty4::TADH1-crtYB-PGAL10-PGAL1-crtI-TCYC1, Δgal80::LEU2 Y-carot02(-)
BY4741, Δgal80::LEU2,
9
Δho::TADH1-crtE03M-PGAL10-PGAL1-crtI-TCYC1-TPGK1-crtYB-PGAL2-PG AL7-tHMG1-TTPS1,
Δgal1-7::TADH1-crtYB-PGAL10-PGAL1-crtI-TCYC1, marker recycling YPP-17
Ycarot-02(-), Δdpp1::TADH1-OcrtZ-PGAL10-PGAL1-ObktM-TCYC1
This study
YPP-27
Ycarot-02(-), Δdpp1::TADH1-OcrtZM1-PGAL10-PGAL1-ObktM29-TCYC1
This study
Yast-TS8
YPP27, gal4::HIS3, Δlpp1::PACT1-GAL4M9-TADH1
This study
Yast-TS9
Yast-TS8, met15::MET15
This study
Yast-TS10
Yast-TS9, ΔTy4::TADH1-OcrtZM1-PGAL10-PGAL1-MCS2-TCYC1
This study
Yast-TS11
Yast-TS9, ΔTy4::TADH1-OcrtZM1-PGAL10-PGAL1-crtYB-TCYC1
This study
Yast-TS14
Yast-TS11, Δypl062w::TADH1-OcrtZM1-PGAL10-PGAL1-MCS2-TCYC1
This study
26
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Table 2 Primers used in this study primer name
sequence (5’- 3’)*
qtHMG1R1
ATAGGGACCTAGACTTCAGGTTG
PCYC1-BST1-R
GGTGATAATATTACAGCCAGTTCATTTGGCGAGCGTTG
PCYC1-BST1-F
ACGCTCGCCAAATGAACTGGCTGTAATATTATCACCTT
ADH1tR2
CAACCTTGATTGGAGACTTGAC
PBTS1R
GCGGAATTCAACGAAATGAAGATTTTTGTATG
PCYC1-R1
GCGGGATCCTATTAATTTAGTGTGTGTATTTGTG
Obkt-F1(BamHI)
CAGGGATCCATGCACGTTGCTTCTGCT
Obkt-R(SalI)
GGAAGTCGACTTAAGCCAAAGCTGGAACCA
OcrtZ-F1(EcoRI) GCGGAATTCATGTTGTCTAAGTTGCAATC OcrtZ-R1(BglII)
CCTTAGATCTTTATCTCTTAGACCAGTCCA
OBKTM(M1T)-F
CAGGGATCCACGCACGTTGCTTCTGCTTTGA
OBKTM(N188D) -F
CCCAGACTTCCACAAGGGTGACCCAGGTTTGGTTCCATGG
OBKTM(N188D) -R
CATGGAACCAAACCTGGGTCACCCTTGTGGAAGTCTGGGT
OBKTM(K271R) -F
ATGGCTTGGTTCAGAGCTAGGACTTCTGAAGCTAGTGACG
OBKTM(K271R) -R
GTCACTAGCTTCAGAAGTCCTAGCTCTGAACCAAGCCATA
MET15-F1
AAGTTCTCGTCGAATGCTAGGTC
MET15-R1
GGTGTTGACACCTTCTCCGC
GAL4-HisF1
GCCTTTTTCTGTTTTATGAGCTACTAGTACACTCTATATTTTT
GAL4-HisXF1
CTATCCGTAATCATGGTCGGCTACATAAGAACACCTTTGG
GAL4-CyF
AACCCAGAATCCCCTATACTAA
GAL4-HISR1
AAAATATAGAGTGTACTAGTAGCTCATAAAACAGAAAAAGGC
GAL4-His-XR1
CCAAAGGTGTTCTTATGTAGCCGACCATGATTACGGATAG
GAL4-XinF1
AATTGGATCTCCCAAGAGTA
YPL062WD-F
AAAGCTGGAGCTGGCCTTGTCACCGACCATGTGGGCAAAT
YPL062WD-R
TTAGGAGGTGCAGTGGTAGTGGCCTTTATGGCCGAGCTTTCATAAACT TGTTG
YPL062WUP-F
CAACAAGTTTATGAAAGCTCGGCCATAAAGGCCACTACCACTGCACC TCCTAA
YPL062WUP-R
TAATAGCGAAGAGGCCTACAGCCCTTACGTGAGGGGCAGT
PYPL062W-F
ATTTGCCCACATGGTCGGTGACAAGGCCAGCTCCAGCTTT
PYPL062W-R
ACTGCCCCTCACGTAAGGGCTGTAGGCCTCTTCGCTATTA
*The underlined bases represent the restriction site
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Table 3 Plasmids used in this study plasmid name
description
pUMRI-11
loxp-KanMX-URA3-pbr322ori-loxp, TADH1-MCS1-PGAL10-PGAL1-MCS2-TCYC1, DPP1
reference
NCBI: KM216413
homologous arm
pUMRI-16
loxp-KanMX-URA3-pbr322ori-loxp,
9
TADH1-MCS1-PGAL10-PGAL1-MCS2-TCYC1, Ty4 homologous arm loxp-KanMX-URA3-pbr322ori-loxp, PUMRI-PACT1-GAL4M9
31
TADH1-GAL4M9-PACT1-MCS2-TCYC1, LPP1 homologous arm
pUMRI-10-LYC01
TTPS1-tHMG1-PGAL7-PGAL2-crtYB11M-TPGK1-TCYC1-
33
crtI-PGAL1-PGAL10-crtE03M-TADH1, HO homologous arm pUMRI-13-crtYB-crtI
TADH1-crtYB-PGAL10-PGAL1-crtI-TCYC1, GAL1-7
9
homologous arm pUMRI-11-OcrtZ
TADH1- OcrtZ -PGAL10-PGAL1- MCS2-TCYC1
16
pUMRI-11-ObktM
TADH1- MCS1 -PGAL10-PGAL1-ObktM-TCYC1
9
pUMRI-11-OcrtZ-ObktM
TADH1- OcrtZ -PGAL10-PGAL1-ObktM-TCYC1
9
pUMRI-11-OcrtZM1-ObktM
TADH1-OcrtZM1-PGAL10-PGAL1-ObktM-TCYC1,
This study
DPP1 homologous arm pUMRI-11-OcrtZ-ObktM29
TADH1-OcrtZ-PGAL10-PGAL1-ObktM29-TCYC1,
This study
DPP1 homologous arm pUMRI-11-OcrtZM1-ObktM29
TADH1-OcrtZM1-PGAL10-PGAL1-ObktM29-TCYC1,
This study
DPP1 homologous arm pUMRI-16-OcrtZM1
TADH1-OcrtZM1-PGAL10-PGAL1-MCS2-TCYC1, Ty4
This study
homologous arm pUMRI-16-OcrtZM1-crtYB
TADH1-OcrtZM1-PGAL10-PGAL1-crtYB-TCYC1, Ty4
This study
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homologous arm pUMRI-20
loxp-KanMX-URA3-pbr322ori-loxp,
This study
TADH1-MCS1-PGAL10-PGAL1-MCS2-TCYC1, YPL062W homologous arm pUMRI-20-OcrtZM1
TADH1- OcrtZM1-PGAL10-PGAL1-MCS2-TCYC1,
This study
YPL062W homologous arm p416XWP-PGAL10-Obkt
CEN/ARS, URA3, PGAL10-Obkt-TADH1
p416XWP01-OcrtZ-ObktM
CEN/ARS, URA3,
9
This study
TCYC1-Obkt-PGAL1-PGAL10-OcrtZ-TADH1 p416XWP04-OcrtZ-ObktM
CEN/ARS, URA3,
This study
TCYC1-Obkt-PCYC1-PBTS1-OcrtZ-TADH1
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Table 4 Comparison of biomass and astaxanthin production with or without temperature shift. All strains were cultured in YPD medium with 0.52 mM of Fe2+ for 84 h constantly at 30°C or with temperature shift from 30°C to 24°C at 23 h. Data represent the average values calculated from triplicate experiments. strain
30°C
30°C /24°C
biomass
astaxanthin
astaxanthin
biomass
astaxanthin
astaxanthin
(g/L)
(mg/g
(mg/L)
(g/L)
(mg/g
(mg/L)
DCW)
DCW)
YPP-27
4.40±0.35
5.70±0.18
25.04±0.18
4.25±0.07
2.87±0.12
12.21±0.69
Yast-TS8
5.63±0.25
0.08±0.03
0.44±0.21
4.73±0.18
2.08±0.11
9.82±0.87
Yast-TS9
8.83±0.04
0.14±0.01
1.22±0.02
6.68±0.04
3.96±0.04
26.44±0.44
Yast-TS10
8.85±0.07
0.22±0.05
1.95±0.047
6.18±0.11
5.02±0.09
30.99±1.07
Yast-TS11
8.90±0.07
0.20±0.02
1.74±0.18
6.48±0.11
6.19±0.07
40.06±1.13
Yast-TS14
9.10±0.14
0.15±0.04
1.41±0.36
7.12±0.11
6.25±0.14
44.56±1.69
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Figure 1
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Figure 2
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Figure 3
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Figure 4
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Figure 5
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Table of Contents Graphics
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