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Endocytosing Escherichia coli as a whole-cell biocatalyst of fatty acids Jonghyeok Shin, Jiwon Yu, Myungseo Park, Chakhee Kim, Hooyeon Kim, Yunjeong Park, Choongjin Ban, Seydametova Emine, Young-Ha Song, Chul-Soo Shin, Kyung Hwun Chung, Ji-Min Woo, Hyunwoo Chung, Jin-Byung Park, and Dae-Hyuk Kweon ACS Synth. Biol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.8b00519 • Publication Date (Web): 24 Apr 2019 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on April 25, 2019
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Endocytosing Escherichia coli as a whole-cell biocatalyst of fatty acids
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Jonghyeok Shin,† Jiwon Yu,† Myungseo Park,† Chakhee Kim,† Hooyeon Kim,† Yunjeong Park,†
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Choongjin Ban,†, ¶ Emine Seydametova,† Young-Ha Song,‡ Chul-Soo Shin,‡ Kyung Hwun
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Chung,§ Ji-Min Woo,‖ Hyunwoo Chung,‖ Jin-Byung Park,*,‖ Dae-Hyuk Kweon*, †, ¶, #
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†Department
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Bioengineering, Sungkyunkwan University, Suwon 16419, Republic of Korea
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‡AP
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§Electron
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South Korea
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‖Department
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Republic of Korea
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¶Biomedical
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Korea
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#Center
of Biotechnology and Bioengineering, College of Biotechnology and
Technology, 147 Gwanggyo-ro, Yeongtong-gu, Suwon 16229, Republic of Korea Microscope Facility, Dental Research Institute, Seoul National University, Seoul,
of Food Science and Engineering, Ewha Womans University, Seoul 03760,
Institute for Convergence, Sungkyunkwan University, Suwon 16419, Republic of
for Biologics, Sungkyunkwan University, Suwon 16419, Republic of Korea
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ABSTRACT: Whole cell biocatalysts
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can be used to convert fatty acids into
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various value-added products. However,
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fatty acid transport across cellular
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membranes into the cytosol of microbial
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cells limits substrate availability and
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impairs membrane integrity, which in
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turn decreases cell viability and
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bioconversion activity. Because these problems are associated with the mechanism of fatty acid
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transport through membranes, a whole-cell biocatalyst that can form caveolae-like structures was
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generated to promote substrate endocytosis. Caveolin-1 (CAV1) expression in Escherichia coli
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increased both the fatty acid transport rate and intracellular fatty acid concentrations via
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endocytosis of the supplemented substrate. Furthermore, fatty-acid endocytosis alleviated
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substrate cytotoxicity in E. coli. These traits attributed to bacterial endocytosis resulted in
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dramatically elevated biotransformation efficiencies in fed-batch and cell-recycle reaction
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systems when caveolae-forming E. coli was used for the bioconversion of ricinoleic acid (12-
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hydroxyoctadec-9-enoic acid) to (Z)-11-(heptanoyloxy) undec-9-enoic acid. We propose that
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CAV1-mediated endocytosing E. coli represents a versatile tool for the biotransformation of
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hydrophobic substrates.
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KEYWORDS: Caveolin-1, Heterologous caveolae, Endocytosis, Biotransformation, Fatty acid
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INTRODUCTION
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Plant oils and fatty acids are some of the most abundant natural resources. Most of them are used
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as cooking oils but only a small proportion is used for biodiesel and biochemical production.1-2
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Currently, genetically engineered microorganisms are being strategically utilized to create value-
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added products with diverse biological and chemical functions from plant oils and fatty acids.3-8
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Biotransformation of hydrophobic substrates by whole-cell biocatalysts tends to be limited by
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low productivity and yield due to various reasons. First, hydrophobic substrates are often toxic to
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microorganisms.9-13 In particular, fatty acids act as toxins by damaging cell membranes and
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decreasing intracellular pH. Several attempts have been made to improve membrane integrity for
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better bioconversion efficiency.14-17 The second inhibitory factor is limitation in transport of fatty
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acids.18-19 Substrates should be delivered to the cytoplasm to initiate biotransformation in a
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whole-cell catalyst across two intrinsic barriers in E. coli: the outer membrane and the inner
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membrane. Larger hydrophobic substrates are restrained by hydrophilic lipopolysaccharides on
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the outer membrane of gram-negative bacteria,20-25 whereas small hydrophobic substrates readily
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diffuse into the cell. Surfactants and organic solvents may be used to increase the membrane
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permeability, thereby facilitating intracellular uptake of hydrophobic substrates.22, 26-27 However,
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membrane-permeabilizing agents may adversely affect cell membrane integrity, leading to
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reduced cell viability and metabolic activity.28-31
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As cytotoxicity and reduced metabolic activity are closely associated with the mass transfer of
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substrates across cell membranes, an elegant solution to this problem involves the use of
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transporters. Long-chain fatty acids are transported to the periplasmic space via the transporter
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FadL in E. coli.32-35 As the periplasmic space is slightly acidic, long-chain fatty acids become
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protonated, enabling partitioning to the cytoplasmic face of the inner membrane via a flip-flop
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mechanism.36 FadD, an inner membrane-associated long-chain acyl-CoA synthetase, renders the
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transport unidirectional via fatty acid esterification.32 Indeed, fatty acid bioconversion increases
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when FadL is expressed in E. coli.35 However, FadL overexpression can be toxic to cells and
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thus lead to reduction of bioconversion activity.35 In addition, AlkL, the outer membrane protein
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of Pseudomonas putida GPo1, which improves hydrophobic substrate uptake in E. coli,37 enables
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efficient -oxyfunctionalization of fatty acid methyl esters only after fine-tuning the AlkL
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expression level.38 It is likely that although a specialized transporter can reduce the cytotoxicity
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derived from passive diffusion to a certain extent, there is a trade-off between substrate uptake
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and metabolic activity. Thus, a more desirable transport system for hydrophobic substrates
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should facilitate intracellular substrate uptake without sacrificing the biotransformation activity.
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In this study, we developed a recombinant E. coli strain that facilitates the biotransformation of
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fatty acids and plant oils (e.g., ricinoleic acid (Figure 1), 10-hydroxyoctadecanoic acid
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(Supporting Information, Figure S1), and castor oil (Figure S2)) by internalizing substrates via
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endocytosis. Owing to endocytosis in E. coli, fatty acid-induced cytotoxicity was alleviated,
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whereas intracellular fatty acid concentration was maintained rather high, resulting in efficient
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biocatalysis of the fatty acids and plant oils into value-added products.
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RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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Formation of caveolae in E. coli cytoplasm. Expression of human CAV1 in E. coli induces the
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formation of heterologous caveolae in the cytoplasmic membrane.39 The recombinant E. coli can
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incorporate the periplasmic medium and provide additional membranes for transmembrane
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protein incorporation.39-40 We hypothesized that endocytosis in E. coli may constitute a general
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uptake system for biotransformation of substrates, as eukaryotic endocytosis is a form of active
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transport for incorporating substances from the surrounding medium.
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To test the potential advantages of endocytosing E. coli as a whole-cell biocatalyst for fatty acid
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biotransformation (Figure 2a), heterologous caveolae formation was induced in E. coli by
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expressing CAV1. Two plasmids, pT7-His6-CAV1 and pT7-GST-CAV1, were constructed
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(Figure 2b), and CAV1 expression in E. coli was confirmed using western blot analysis with an
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anti-CAV1 antibody (Figure 2c). Although CAV1 is a membrane-bound protein, some CAV1 was
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present in the soluble fraction, suggesting that some caveolae were detached from the
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cytoplasmic membranes. When the E. coli cells were sectioned and observed using electron
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microscopy, a number of circular caveolae were detected near the cytoplasmic membrane
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(Figure 2d). Soluble caveolae were purified using Ni-NTA or GST-agarose affinity
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chromatography after cell lysis by mild sonication. The presence of CAV1 in the purified
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caveolae was confirmed again using western blotting with an anti-CAV1 antibody (Figure 2e).
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The average diameters of purified caveolae measured using dynamic light scattering
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spectroscopy were 120 nm and 200 nm for His6-caveolae and GST-caveolae, respectively
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(Figure 2f). The size variation between the two caveolae appeared to be due to dimerization of
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the GST protein 41-42. When purified caveolae were treated with Triton X-100 (TX-100), the
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caveola size decreased to 10–20 nm because the detergent disrupted the caveola membranes. It
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seems that some micelles were formed after the caveolae were broken by the detergent
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(Supporting Information, Figure S3a, b). Some aggregation and small disrupted particles were
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observed when proteinase K (PK) was added to degrade CAV1 on the caveolae (Supporting
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Information, Figure S3c, d). In conclusion, caveolae were successfully formed in E. coli
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expressing CAV1 fusion proteins, with a fraction of the caveolae separated from the cytoplasmic
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membrane (Figure 2a).
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Endocytosis of fatty acids. To investigate endocytosis during caveolae formation in E. coli,
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cells containing pT7-His6-CAV1 or pT7-GST-CAV1 were treated with 10 mM 5-6-
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carboxyfluorescein and 0.5 mM isopropyl -D-1-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG). After incubation
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at 25°C for 3 h, free dyes were washed with tris-buffered saline (TBS), and cellular uptake of the
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fluorescent dyes was analyzed using fluorescence microscopy (Figure 3a and Supporting
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Information, Figure S4) and flow cytometry (Figure 3b). Both experiments clearly showed that
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compared to the control cells, caveolae-forming cells readily incorporated the fluorescent dyes
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supplemented in the medium. To investigate whether the endocytosing E. coli could import
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extracellular fatty acids, cells expressing CAV1 fusion proteins were treated with various
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concentrations of ricinoleic acid (RA) (Figure 1, 1). After incubation at 37°C for 1 h with
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shaking at 250 rpm, extracellular ricinoleic acid was washed with phosphate-buffered saline
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(PBS) and intracellular RA was extracted using ethyl acetate. The extracted RA was analyzed
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using gas chromatography. The amount of RA transported into the cells was proportional to the
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RA concentration in the medium. Compared to control cells, the intracellular RA concentration
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was increased by 33–114% when caveola formation was induced (Figure 3c). For instance,
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CAV1-expressing cells incorporated 2-fold more intracellular RA than control cells when 30 mM
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RA was supplemented in the medium. Furthermore, endocytosing cells incorporated RA faster
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than wild type cells, with a 33–50% higher uptake rate (Figure 3d). Finally, cell-tolerance to the
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fatty acid RA was measured. After treating cells with 20 mM RA for 3 h, colony-forming units
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were determined to compare fatty acid tolerance among different cell types. Only 45% of control
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cells were viable after RA treatment, whereas cells expressing His6-CAV1 or GST-CAV1 were
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more viable than the control cells (Figure 3e), and cells expressing GST-CAV1 retained almost
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100% viability after RA treatment. In conclusion, the caveolae-forming E. coli incorporated
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more RA than the control cells at an increased uptake rate, and fatty acid toxicity was mitigated,
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leading to maintenance of cell viability.
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Constitutive expression of CAV1. Plasmids that constitutively express His6-CAV1 and GST-
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CAV1 were constructed using the J23100 promoter (Figure 4a). The 5'-untranslated region (5'-
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UTR) sequences were designed using UTR designer43-44 to generate variants with varying
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expression levels (Figure 4b). Four plasmids pCW-His6-CAV1, pCS-His6-CAV1, pCW-GST-
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CAV1, and pCS-GST-CAV1, were designed using the UTR designer to strongly (pCS) or weakly
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(pCW) express His6- or GST-tagged CAV1 (Figure 4a). Western blotting with an anti-CAV1-
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antibody showed that cells expressing pCW-His6-CAV1 and pCS-His6-CAV1 showed distinct
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weak and strong CAV1 expression, respectively, whereas cells expressing pCW-GST-CAV1 and
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pCS-GST-CAV1 showed similar expression levels (Figure 4c). Caveolae were formed even when
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CAV1 was constitutively and weakly expressed (Figure 4d).
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Constitutive expression of CAV1 did not inhibit cell growth regardless of expression level in rich
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medium (Supporting Information, Figure S5). However, constitutive and strong expression of
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CAV1 from pCS-His6-CAV1 in Riesenberg medium dramatically impeded cell growth, whereas
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expression of pCW-His6-CAV1 did not (Figure 4e). Constitutive expression systems increased
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the RA uptake rate by 10–45%, which is comparable to that in inducible expression systems
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(Figure 4f). Intracellular RA concentration increased proportionally to the supplemented RA
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concentration regardless of CAV1 expression (Figure 4g). Consistent with the results obtained
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using inducible systems, E. coli strains constitutively forming caveolae incorporated more RA
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inside cells than that observed in control cells. Specifically, the intracellular concentration of RA
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containing pCS-His6-CAV1 was almost four-fold higher than that of the control cells when 30
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mM RA was supplemented in the medium (Figure 4g).
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Fatty acid cytotoxicity was also relieved in the constitutive caveolae-forming E. coli. When
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colony-forming units were measured after the cells were treated with 5 mM nonanoic acid (NA)
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or 20 mM RA, the caveolae-forming cells were more tolerant to the toxic fatty acids, whereas
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~50% of the control cells were dead (Figure 4h). This was also confirmed by cell growth curves
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in the presence of NA or RA (Figure 4i). Cell growth was inhibited by NA and RA. However,
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this inhibition was dramatically mitigated by constitutive CAV1 expression (Figure 4i). As
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slowly growing or non-growing cells are less sensitive to toxic chemicals including antibiotics
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one of the possible scenarios is that the tolerance was simply a result of growth inhibition by the
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formation of micro-compartments. However, cells that constitutively express CAV1 grew well in
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rich media, similar to the WT cells (Supporting Information, Figure S5). Moreover, the cells
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containing pCW-His6-CAV1 showed increased tolerance (Figure 4h) to RA and NA although
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cell growth was not retarded in R medium (Figure 4e). The caveolae-forming cells not only
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survived the toxic fatty acid treatment (Figure 4h), but also grew better than WT cells in the
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presence of toxic fatty acids (Figure 4i). These results suggest that the caveolae-forming E. coli
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did not merely maintain cell viability due to slowed growth. In conclusion, E. coli that
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constitutively formed caveolae rapidly transported more fatty acids into the cells compared to
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control cells while alleviating fatty acid-induced cytotoxicity.
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Biotransformation of RA is enhanced by endocytosing E. coli. (Z)-11-(Heptanoyloxy) undec-
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9-enoic acid (Figure 1, 3), denoted as ‘Ester’ in this paper, is a versatile platform chemical that
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can be enzymatically converted into medium chain fatty acids (e.g., n-heptanoic acid and 11-
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hydroxyundec-9-enoic acid, 1,11-undecanedioic acid, and 11-aminoundecanoic acid3-6).
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Thereby, biotransformation of RA into the Ester (3) was used as a model reaction to demonstrate
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the versatility of endocytosing E. coli as a whole-cell biocatalyst.
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The plasmid pAPTm-E6BVMOopt/ADH, which constitutively expresses the ADH of
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Micrococcus luteus and the BVMO of Pseudomonas putida KT2440,4, 45 was introduced together
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with either of the CAV1-encoding plasmids. GST-CAV1 and His6-CAV1 were expressed in the
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presence of pAPTm-E6BVMOopt/ADH (Supporting Information, Figure S6). Endocytosing cells
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(containing pT7-His6-CAV1 or pT7-GST-CAV1) and control cells showed similar results in
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biotransformation efficiency when 15 mM RA was used as substrate (data not shown). Hence,
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the biotransformation activity of the endocytosing E. coli cells was investigated in a cell-recycle
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reaction system. The recombinant E. coli cells, which had been used for RA conversion, were
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used again for the next round of biotransformation (Figure 5a, b). The toxic reactants, including
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the Ester product (3), which may inhibit cofactor-dependent whole-cell biotransformation,3, 12, 46
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were extracted and removed from the reaction medium using adsorbent resins. The Ester
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formation profile in the first round of RA conversion was not significantly different between the
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control E. coli (Figure 5a) and the caveolae-forming E. coli (Figure 5b). However, the Ester
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formation rate of the caveolae-forming E. coli was maintained in the second round of
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biotransformation, whereas the rate was reduced by ~50% in the control cells. The final Ester
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concentration from the second biotransformation by the caveolae-forming E. coli reached 9.6
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mM in the reaction medium, which was approximately 2-fold higher than that with the control E.
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coli biotransformation. This result suggests that the caveolae-forming E. coli was more stable
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and active in terms of RA conversion than the control E. coli.
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Conversion of RA at high cell density. Next, biotransformations of RA at higher concentrations
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were investigated. When 30 mM RA was contained in the reaction medium, the control cells
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allowed to produce 7 mM Ester, whereas the caveolae-forming cells produced 13–17 mM target
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product (Supporting Information, Figure S7). Although the caveolae-forming cells showed
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approximately 2-fold greater biotransformation efficiency compared to that of the control cells,
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the conversion remained below 60% in all cases. The low value could be due to low cell density
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(OD600 nm of 8, where OD600 nm ~ 0.31 g DCW/L) in the reaction medium. Hence, we next
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performed biotransformation of RA in a fermenter after high cell density cultivation. RA
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biotransformation was initiated by adding 150 mM RA into the culture medium when the OD600
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nm
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the end of the reaction, the caveolae-forming E. coli produced approximately 50 mM Ester,
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which was almost 1.6-fold higher compared to the control cells. In addition, repeated fed-batch
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reaction type biotransformations were performed by feeding 100 mM RA every 6 h (Figure 6c
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and d). In the first reaction, 100 mM RA was converted to almost 90 mM Ester both in the
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control and caveolae-forming cells. However, the Ester production by the control cells was
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dramatically decreased when 100 mM RA was fed for the second reaction, whereas the Ester
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production by the caveolae-forming cells was rather maintained during the second reaction,
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resulting in a production of the Ester to 90 mM (Figure 6d). These results suggest that the
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caveolae-forming E. coli was able to maintain their biotransformation activities throughout the
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reactions at high cell density.
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Biotransformation of 10-hydroxyoctadecanoic acid and castor oil by the endocytosing E.
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coli. Bioconversion of a saturated fatty acid and a plant oil was conducted to confirm whether the
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caveolae-forming E. coli-based biocatalyst can be applied to biotransformation of other
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substrates. First, castor oil biotransformation (Supporting Information, Figure S2) was carried
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out in the culture medium of recombinant E. coli cells by adding 5 g/L castor oil, 0.1% (v/v)
of cells reached 100 (Figure 6a and b). While the control E. coli has produced 30 mM Ester at
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Tween80, and 20 U/mL lipase from Thermomyces lanuginose. The castor oil was completely
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hydrolyzed within 1 h, generating glycerol and fatty acids (e.g., RA, octadecanoic acid,
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hexadecenoic acid). Glycerol was consumed as a carbon source whereas RA was converted to n-
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heptanoic acid (Figure S2, S9) and 11-hydroxyundec-9-enoic acid (S10) via the Ester (S8) by the
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recombinant cells and the added lipase (Figure S2 and Figure 7a, b). Notably, the toxic reaction
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intermediate (i.e., 12-ketooctadec-9-enoic acid (S7)) was accumulated to approximately 1.5 mM
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in the reaction medium when E. coli BL21 (DE3) pAPTm-E6BVMOopt/ADH was used as the
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biocatalyst (Figure 7a). On the other hand, the intermediate concentration remained below 0.5
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mM with the caveolae-forming E. coli-based biocatalysts (Figure 7b). The concentration of n-
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heptanoic acid and 11-hydroxyundec-9-enoic acid was increased up to 10.3 mM, which was
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approximately 60% higher as compared to the concentration reached by E. coli BL21 (DE3)
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pAPTm-E6BVMOopt/ADH.
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When 10-hydroxyoctadecanoic acid (S2), which had been produced from oleic acid (S1)
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(Supporting Information, Figure S1) as previously described 35, 47, was used as the reaction
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substrate instead of RA, the whole-cell biotransformation profiles appeared similar to each other
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(Figure 7c, d). However, the toxic reaction intermediate (i.e., 10-ketooctadecanoic acid (S3)) was
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accumulated in the culture medium and reached 0.8 mM after 9 h with E. coli BL21 (DE3)
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pAPTm-E6BVMOopt/ADH. In contrast, the reaction intermediate concentration remained below
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0.3 mM when the endocytosing E. coli was used as a biocatalyst (Figure 7d). Moreover, co-
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expression of CAV1 allowed the recombinant E. coli-based biocatalysts to produce the Ester (i.e.,
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9-(nonanoyloxy)nonanoic acid (S4)) to a concentration of up to 2.6 mM, which was
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approximately 30% greater compared to the concentration reached with E. coli BL21 (DE3)
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pAptm-E6-BVMOopt/ADH. All the results indicated that co-expression of CAV1 allowed the
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recombinant E. coli-based biocatalysts to better maintain the fatty acid biotransformation
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especially with BVMO reaction activities under the process conditions.
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Fatty acid uptake by E. coli expressing CAV1 and/or FadL. FadL is the fatty acid transporter
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of the E. coli outer membrane. Controlled expression of FadL improves fatty acid
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biotransformation.35 Fatty acid uptake by cells expressing FadL, CAV1, or both proteins was
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compared (Supporting Information, Figure S9). While the cells were incubated with 20 mM RA
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for 60 min, the changes in intracellular RA concentration was measured. Fatty acid uptake was
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increased about 2-fold by expression of FadL or CAV1. However, we could not observe an
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additional increase in the fatty acid uptake by expressing both proteins. Although it is difficult to
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determine the rate-limiting step at present, it is likely that co-expression of both CAV1 and FadL
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needs to be optimized for synergetic uptake because overexpression of FadL is toxic to cells. The
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relationship between mass transfer through the outer membrane by FadL followed by
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endocytosis by caveolae deserves further investigation for maximized substrate uptake and
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biotransformation.
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Bioconversion of a substrate to a value-added product by a whole cell catalyst requires substrate
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uptake into the cytosol. Sugar transport varies depending on the host cell type; however, host
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cells can be engineered with specialized transporters to facilitate specific sugar uptake.48 Small
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apolar substrates are easily transported into cells via passive diffusion even though this results in
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cytotoxicity. However, large hydrophobic substrates such as long-chain fatty acids are not easily
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transported into cells as they are restrained by hydrophilic lipopolysaccharides on the outer
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membrane of biocatalysts.20-25 Organic acids, ionic liquids, and surfactants have been used to
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improve the hydrophobic substrate uptake by reducing the outer membrane permeability
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barrier.22, 26-27 However, these strategies severely reduce cell viability and metabolic activity.28-31
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Biocatalysts engineered to exhibit improved outer membrane integrity may show increased cell
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viability and productivity.14-17 Recombinant transporters that traverse the lipopolysaccharide
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layer can also be employed to improve the transport efficiency of hydrophobic molecules inside
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E. coli without significantly affecting the outer membrane integrity. For example, AlkL, an
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alkane transporter from Pseudomonas putida Gpo1, can transport aliphatic alkanes (C7-C16) as
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well as fatty acid methyl esters into E. coli cells.37, 49 Expression of FadL, a fatty acid transporter
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of the E. coli outer membrane, improves the biotransformation of various fatty acids.35 However,
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facilitated influx of fatty acids into the periplasm via transporters improves substrate uptake and
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amplifies reactant-mediated cytotoxicity as passive diffusion across the inner membrane directly
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reduces cell viability. These transporters have been shown to increase the biotransformation
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efficiency only when their expression levels are optimal because of a trade-off between cell
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viability and substrate uptake. Passive diffusion of hydrophobic substrates including fatty acids
277
across cytoplasmic membranes is toxic to host cells as they damage the cell membrane and lower
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the pH inside the microorganism.9-13 Acidification of the cytosol promotes the beta-oxidation
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pathway of fatty acids,50 which reduces the product yield and the productivity of whole cell
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biocatalysts of fatty acids. However, the mechanism by which substrates are imported across the
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inner membrane without losing metabolic activity remains unknown. In the present study, we
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showed for the first time that an E. coli biocatalyst incorporates apolar substrates inside cells
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efficiently while maintaining biocatalytic activity when the cells are engineered to endocytose
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substrates.
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The endocytosing E. coli may find useful applications in addition to the biotransformation of
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various apolar substrates. First, hydrophobic products formed inside cells by metabolic
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engineering deserve further investigation. Value-added products such as terpenoids, which are
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versatile for cosmetics or pharmaceuticals 51, may damage the cell membrane causing leakage
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and reduced productivity 52-53 because they are incorporated into the cell membrane during
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formation. As caveolae-forming E. coli provide more space for membrane-anchoring products, it
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may be expected that the product-induced cytotoxicity may be alleviated resulting in elevated
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productivity. Second, the endocytosing E. coli may provide a chance to offer an efficient
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bioremediation system. Because the environmental problems of crude oil spills have become
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more serious, studies on the bioremediation of lipophilic hydrocarbons are being actively
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conducted 54. Bacterial bioremediation of hydrocarbons using bacteria has great potential
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compared to physical and chemical methods 55. However, microbial bioremediation is
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insufficient to for areas contaminated at high levels because of cellular toxicity 56. Because the
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caveolae-forming E. coli were more tolerant to toxic substrates and efficiently transported fatty
299
acids digested directly from oils into the cells (Figure 7), it is likely that the bacterial endocytosis
300
system may enlarge the toolbox available for the bioremediation of environmental pollution 56.
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A central hydrophobic domain of CAV1 forms a hairpin structure within the membrane, exposing
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both the N- and C-terminal domains to the cytoplasm. Both N- and C-terminal domains interact
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to form homo-oligomers of CAV1. Oligomerized CAV1 molecules generate the proteinaceous
304
coat of caveolae. Heterologous caveolae formed inside E. coli are likely to be generated through
305
the same mechanism as in mammalian cells. Fatty acids transported to the periplasm may diffuse
306
to the small invaginated area called caveolae during this step. Perhaps, the dynamin-like activity
307
of an unknown protein in E. coli mediates the final budding of vesicles from the plasma
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membrane, during which fatty acids in the periplasm are trapped in the endosome. Previous
309
analysis has shown that the formation of heterologous caveolae begins inside E. coli after only
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30 min of inducing CAV1 expression 39. The E. coli cytoplasm can be filled with circular
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caveolae after 90 min of induction with an approximate half-life of 12 h. Thus, fatty acids
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contained in the caveolae may move to the cytosol either (1) after breakdown of caveolae or (2)
313
via passive diffusion across the caveolae membrane. Although it is not clear which of the
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pathways is dominant, both pathways likely contribute to the increased uptake and tolerance.
315
Passive diffusion across the caveolae membrane will be less toxic to the cells because it happens
316
outside the plasma membrane. It is probable that recycling of fatty acid-containing vesicles is
317
faster than that of the empty vesicles. Thus, we expect that inclusion of fatty acids in the
318
endosome and movement of fatty acids to the cytosol independent of the plasma membrane
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constitutes the basic principles of increased tolerance at higher intracellular concentrations.
320 321
CONCLUSIONS
322
We used a eukaryotic transport system to induce bulk transport of fatty acids across the inner
323
membrane of E. coli and to overcome the cytotoxicity caused by passive diffusion. E. coli
324
expressing CAV1 formed caveola-like structures and endocytosed externally supplemented
325
substrates. The endocytosing cells rapidly incorporated more fatty acid substrates compared to
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the control cells. Fatty acid cytotoxicity was alleviated by endocytosing the substrate, resulting in
327
improved biocatalyst performance. Thus, we propose that the endocytosing E. coli described in
328
the present study represents a versatile tool for whole cell biocatalysis of hydrophobic substrates.
329 330
MATERIALS AND METHODS
331
Chemicals and materials. Ricinoleic acid (RA, 12-hydroxyactadec-9-enoic acid) and N-methyl-
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N-(trimethylsilyl) trifluoroacetamide (TMS) were purchased from Tokyo Chemical Company
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(Tokyo, Japan). Antibiotics, isopropyl β-D-1-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG), trace elements for
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culture medium, and ethyl acetate were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (ST. Louis, MO, USA).
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The anti-CAV1 antibody was purchased from Cell Signaling Technology (Danvers, MA, USA).
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Lipase from Thermomyces lanuginose was purchased from GenoFocus (Daejeon, Korea).
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Plasmid construction. All cloning was performed using a ligation-independent cloning method
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and T4 DNA polymerase (New England Biolabs, Ipswich, MA, USA). CAV1 was obtained from
339
Addgene (Genbank accession number 403980). The plasmid pT7-His6-CAV1 was constructed by
340
inserting CAV1 cDNA into pColAduet-1 (Merck Millipore, Billerica, MA, USA). The plasmid
341
pT7-GST-CAV1 was constructed by replacing the His6 tag of pT7-His6-CAV1 with glutathione S
342
transferase (GST). GST was amplified from pGex4T-1 (GE Life Sciences, Pittsburg, PA, USA).
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Plasmids (pCW-His6-CAV1 and pCS-His6-CAV1) for constitutive expression of CAV1 were
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constructed by replacing the T7 promoter of pT7-His6-CAV1 with the bacterial constitutive
345
promoter J23100 (5′-ttgacggctagctcagtcctaggtacagtgctagc-3′, identifier: BBa_J23100,
346
http://parts.igem.org/Promoters/Catalog/Anderson). Two types of 5′ UTRs were used to control
347
CAV1 expression: 5′-tactagggtaccagaaagaggagaaatactag-3′ for weak expression and 5′-
348
ttaactttaagaaggagatatacat-3′ for strong expression.
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Purification of heterologous caveolae. E. coli cells containing pT7-His6-CAV1 or pT7-GST-
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CAV1 were cultured in Terrific broth. Protein expression was induced by adding 0.5 mM IPTG
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at 25°C. After overnight culture, E. coli cells were lysed by sonication (25% amplitude, cycles of
352
4 s ON and 4 s OFF for 90 s). Cell debris and the insoluble fraction were removed by
353
centrifugation at 10,000 g for 30 min. The supernatant was incubated with Ni-NTA agarose
354
(Qiagen, Valencia, CA, USA) or glutathione-agarose (Sigma-Aldrich, ST. Louis, MO, USA)
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with rotation at 4°C. The unbound fraction was washed with 10 column volumes of PBS (137
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mM NaCl, 2.7 mM KCl, 10 mM Na2SO4, 1.8 mM KH2PO4, pH 7.4). Caveolae were eluted with
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PBS containing 150 mM imidazole or PBS containing 300 mM reduced glutathione. Eluted
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caveolae were concentrated using Amicon ultra centrifugal filters with a 100 kDa molecular
359
weight cut-off (Merck Millipore, Billerica, MA, USA).
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Analysis of fluorescence dye transport. The dye transport assay was performed according to
361
published methods.39-40 CAV1-expressing cells were cultured in Terrific broth at 37°C overnight.
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Precultured cells (1%) were inoculated in Terrific broth and cultured at 37°C until the optical
363
density (OD) reached 0.3. Then, 5-6-carboxyfluorescein (10 mM) was added and cultured for an
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additional 1 h. Next, 0.3 mM IPTG was added and incubated for 3 h at 25°C. Unencapsulated
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residual dye was washed off with cold Tris-buffered saline (TBS, 50 mM Tris-HCl, 150 mM
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NaCl, pH 7.4) until a transparent supernatant was obtained, and the cells were then observed
367
using a fluorescence microscope and flow cytometer.
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Analysis of fatty acid transport. Cells were cultured in Riesenberg medium (4 g/L
369
(NH4)2HPO4, 13.5 g/L KH2PO4, 1.7 g/L citric acid, 1.4 g/L MgSO4, and 10 mL/L trace metal
370
solution [10 g/L FeSO4, 2.25 g/L ZnSO4, 1.0 g/L CuSO4, 0.5 g/L MnSO4, 0.23 g/L Na2B4O7, 2.0
371
g/L CaCl2, and 0.1 g/L (NH4)6Mo7O24])57. After 2 h of induction with 0.5 mM IPTG in the
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stationary phase, the solution was titrated to pH 8.0 with NaOH. After incubating the cells with
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RA, extracellular fatty acids were washed with PBS. Fatty acids transported into the cells were
374
extracted using ethyl acetate and analyzed using gas chromatography.
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Whole-cell biotransformation. Bioconversion of RA (Figure 1), 10-hydroxyoctadecanoic acid
376
(Supporting Information, Figure S1), and castor oil (Figure S2)) was performed following
377
previously published methods.45, 57-59 The pAptm-E6BVMOopt/ADH vector45 and one of the
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pACYC-based CAV1-encoding plasmids were used for simultaneously expressing ADH,
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BVMO, and CAV1. Cells transformed with both plasmids were pre-cultured in the presence of 50
380
µg/mL kanamycin and 34 µg/mL chloramphenicol in Luria-Bertani (LB) broth. Cells that were
381
pre-cultured overnight were cultivated at 37°C in Riesenberg medium60 with 10 g/L glucose as a
382
carbon source until they reached the early exponential phase, after which the temperature was
383
lowered to 25°C. The cells were then cultured at this temperature until they reached the
384
stationary phase. Cells in the early stationary phase were titrated with NaOH, pH 8.0. After
385
titration, bioconversion was performed by adding 15 mM RA, 5 mM 10-hydroxyoctadecanoic
386
acid, or 5 g/L castor oil and 0.1% (v/v) Tween80 to cells in the stationary phase at 35°C with
387
shaking at 200 rpm (cell density: 3 g dry cells/L). When bioconversion of RA was performed
388
using pT7-GST-CAV1 or pT7-His6-CAV1, 0.3 mM IPTG was added 2 h before the reaction with
389
RA.
390
High density cell cultivation. High density cell cultivation was performed based on previous
391
experiments.45 Cells were cultured in Riesenberg medium at 30C in a laboratory-scale (5 L)
392
bioreactor. Cells were grown batch-wise until the initial 20 g/L glucose was consumed. When the
393
initial glucose was consumed and the pH exceeded 6.9, a mixture of glucose (600 g/L) and
394
MgSO47H2O (20 g/L) was added as an acid in the pH stat mode. pH was maintained at 6.9 while
395
28% ammonia solution was added as a base. Dissolved oxygen tension (DOT) was maintained at
396
40% by adding pure oxygen into the bioreactor during fed-batch cultivation. Bioconversion was
397
launched by supplying 100150 mM RA into the culture broth. During the bioconversion
398
process, glucose and pure oxygen supply was stopped, and the pH and temperature of the
399
bioreactor was maintained at pH 8.0 and 35C, respectively.45
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Biotransformation in a cell-recycle system. RA biotransformation using recombinant E. coli
401
was performed according to the methods described above. After approximately 90% of the initial
402
reaction substrate was depleted, the reactants and the product (Z)-11-(heptanoyloxy) undec-9-
403
enoic acid (Ester), were recovered by mixing with Diaion HP-20 resin (5%, w/v) for 1 h at 20°C
404
and 80 rpm. After separation of the resin, the recombinant E. coli culture broth was reused for
405
the next round of RA biotransformation. The second biotransformation was initiated by adding
406
15 mM RA to the reaction medium.
407
Analytical method. Concentrations of RA, the intermediate 12-ketooctadec-9-enoic acid, and
408
the final product (Z)-11-(heptanoyloxy) undec-9-enoic acid (Ester) were analyzed following
409
previously published protocols.4, 45 Two volumes of ethyl acetate were added to the reaction
410
medium. Methyl palmitate (0.5 g/L) was used as the internal standard. After vortexing, the
411
organic solvent layer was separated by centrifugation and reacted with TMS. The TMS
412
derivatives of fatty acids were separated using a non-polar capillary column (length 30 m,
413
thickness 25 m, HP-5MS, Agilent Technologies, Palo Alto, CA, USA) and analyzed using gas
414
chromatography (Younglin, Ansan, Korea). The temperature of the column was changed from
415
90°C to 255°C at a rate of 5°C/min and was maintained at 255°C. The temperature of the injector
416
was 260°C, whereas that of the detector was 250°C.
417
Sample preparation for transmission electron microscopy (TEM) analyses. TEM analysis
418
was performed following a previously established procedure. 61-62 Briefly, samples were first
419
fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde, washed in PBS, and post-fixed in 1% osmium tetroxide in 0.1
420
M PBS. The specimens were dehydrated using a 70% to 100% graded ethanol series, exchanged
421
with propylene oxide, and embedded in a mixture of Epon 812 and araldite. Ultrathin sections
422
(70 nm) were cut using a Leica EM UC6 ultramicrotome. A ribbon of serial ultrathin sections
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from each sample was collected on copper grids and stained with uranyl acetate and lead citrate.
424
Serial fields were photographed at 30,000100,000× magnification using a ZEOL EM-
425
1200EX11 electron microscope operated at 80 kV.
426
Statistics. No statistical method was used to define the sample size in advance. The experiment
427
and analysis did not involve randomization or blinding. Error bars represent the standard error of
428
the mean from at least three independent replicates. Graph Pad Prism 5 (Graph Pad Software
429
Inc., San Diego, CA) was used for statistical analysis of the results. To determine the statistical
430
significance of comparisons, two-tailed t-tests were used. The p-value was considered significant
431
at less than 0.05.
432 433
ASSOCIATED CONTENT
434
Supporting Information
435
Table S1. Primers used in this study. Figure S1. Designed biotransformation pathway 2. Figure
436
S2. Designed biotransformation pathway 1. Figure S3. Dynamic light scattering analysis of
437
purified caveolae treated with 0.1% (w/v) Triton X-100 (TX-100) or 2 g/mL Proteinase K (PK).
438
Figure S4. Bright field images of cells (same as shown in Figure 3a) treated with 5-6-
439
carboxyfluorescein. Figure S5. Growth of the caveolae-forming cells in Terrific broth. Figure S6.
440
SDS-PAGE and western blot analysis of ADH, BVMO, and CAV1 co-expressed in E. coli BL21
441
(DE3) cells. Figure S7. Fatty acid biotransformation by caveolae-forming E. coli BL21 (DE3)
442
cells. Figure S8. EM image of E. coli BL21 (DE3). Figure S9. Fatty acid uptake by FadL and/or
443
CAV1 expression.
444
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AUTHOR INFORMATION
446
Corresponding Authors
447
*E-mail:
448
Author Contribution
449
J.S., J.-B.P., and D.-H.K. designed research. J.S., Y.-H.S., K.H.C., J.-M.W., and H.C. performed
450
the experiments. J.S., J.-B.P., D.-H.K., J.Y., M.P., C.K., H.K., Y.P., C.B, and E.S. analyzed the
451
data. J.S., J.-M.W., J.-B.P., and D.-H.K. wrote the manuscript.
452
Conflicts of Interest
453
The authors declare no competing financial interests.
[email protected] (J.-B.P.), E-mail:
[email protected] (D.-H.K.)
454 455
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
456
This research was supported by the Basic Science Research Program through the National
457
Research Foundation of Korea (NRF), funded by the Ministry of Education
458
(2017R1A6A1A03015642 and NRF-2017R1A2B2008211), the Advanced Biomass R & D
459
Center (ABC) of Korea (2011-0031359), and the R&D Program of MOTIE/KEIT (10044604).
460 461
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Table 1. Bacterial strains and plasmids used in this study Strain or plasmid
Relevant characteristic(s)
References or sources
BL21 (DE3)
F- ompT lon hsdSB(r-B,m-B) gal dcm
New England Biolabs
Top 10
F– mcrA Δ(mrr-hsdRMS-mcrBC) Φ80lacZΔM15 ΔlacX74 recA1 araD139 Δ(ara leu) 7697 galU galK rpsL (StrR) endA1 nupG
Invitrogen
pT7-His6-CAV1
T7 promoter/Express His6-Caveolin1
In this study
pT7-His6-CAV1
T7 promoter/Express GST-Caveolin1
In this study
pCW-His6-CAV1
J23100 constitutive promoter/Express His6Caveolin1/Weak RBS
In this study
pCS-His6-CAV1
J23100 constitutive promoter/Express His6Caveolin1/Strong RBS
In this study
pCW-GST-CAV1
J23100 constitutive promoter/Express GSTCaveolin1/Weak RBS
In this study
pCS-GST-CAV1
J23100 constitutive promoter/Express GSTCaveolin1/Strong RBS
In this study
pAptmE6BVMOopt/ADH
J23100 constitutive promoter/Express ADH (from M. luteus), E6BVMOopt (from P. putida KT2440)/Strong RBS
Seo et al.45
E. coli
Plasmids
635
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Figure legends
637
Figure 1. Designed biotransformation pathway. Ricinoleic acid (1) is converted into (Z)-11-
638
(heptanoyloxy)undec-9-enoic acid (3) by the multi-step enzyme cascade, which was constructed
639
according to our previous study. 4
640 641
Figure 2. Formation of caveolae in E. coli cytoplasm upon CAV1 expression. (a) Schematic of
642
an endocytosing E. coli. Long-chain fatty acids pass the outer membrane of E. coli through FadL
643
and cross the plasma membrane using a flip-flop mechanism. Fatty acids in the periplasm of E.
644
coli are transported into the cytoplasm by endocytosis in CAV1-expressing cells. (b) Plasmids for
645
CAV1 expression in E. coli. His6- and GST-tags were fused to the N-terminus of CAV1 for
646
purification and detection. (c) Expression of CAV1 in E. coli identified using an anti-CAV1
647
antibody. Arrows indicate CAV1 fusion proteins. T: total cell lysates; S: soluble fraction of cell
648
lysates. (d) EM images of caveolae-forming E. coli. Arrows indicate caveolae formed inside the
649
cells. Enlargement of a section is shown on the right. Scale bar: 100 nm. (e) Western blot
650
analysis of purified caveolae using an anti-CAV1 antibody. (f) Dynamic light scattering analysis
651
of purified caveolae.
652 653
Figure 3. Endocytosis of fatty acids. (a) Encapsulation of 5-6-carboxyfluorescein in E. coli.
654
Scale bar: 50 µm. (b) Flow cytometry histogram of cells treated with the fluorescent dye. Black,
655
E. coli BL21 (DE3); gray, E. coli BL21 (DE3) pT7-His6-CAV1; white, E. coli BL21 (DE3) pT7-
656
GST-CAV1. (c) Relative intracellular ricinoleic acid (RA) concentration after supplementation
657
with indicated concentrations of RA in the medium. Intracellular RA concentration of BL21 31 Environment ACS Paragon Plus
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658
(DE3) after 15 mM RA supplementation was used to normalize other treatment groups. (d) RA
659
uptake rate at 15 mM RA concentration in the medium. Intracellular RA concentrations were
660
normalized to those of the control cells after 60 min of the reaction. (e) Mitigation of fatty acid
661
cytotoxicity. The survival fraction was calculated by dividing the number of colony forming
662
units after 20 mM RA treatment for 3 h by that in the untreated control. Data represent mean
663
values and error bars represent standard deviation. P values were calculated by two-tailed t tests.
664
*p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001.
665 666
Figure 4. Constitutive CAV1 expression in E. coli. (a) Plasmids constructed for constitutive
667
expression of CAV1. Designed 5′-untranslated region (5′-UTR) is indicated on the right side of
668
the plasmid maps. (b) Translation efficiency of CAV1 in E. coli estimated using UTR designer.
669
(c) Expression analysis of constitutively expressed CAV1 using an anti-CAV1 antibody. T: total
670
cell lysates; S: soluble fraction of cell lysates. (d) Formation of caveolae in E. coli constitutively
671
expressing CAV1. (e) Growth curves of constitutively caveolae-forming E. coli cells in synthetic
672
Riesenberg medium. (f) Ricinoleic acid (RA) uptake rate at 15 mM medium concentration.
673
Intracellular RA concentrations were normalized to those in the control cells after 60 min of
674
reaction. (g) Relative intracellular RA concentration after supplementing the medium with the
675
indicated concentrations of RA. Intracellular RA concentration of BL21 (DE3) after
676
supplementation with 15 mM RA was used to normalize other treatment groups. (h) Mitigation
677
of fatty acid cytotoxicity. Survival fraction was calculated by dividing the number of colony
678
forming units after 20 mM RA (or 5 mM NA) treatment for 3 h by that in the untreated control.
679
Survival fraction of the fatty acid-treated cells. (i) Growth inhibition by fatty acids (5 mM NA
680
and 20 mM RA) was partially rescued by caveolae formation. Data represent mean values and
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681
error bars represent standard deviation. P values were calculated by two-tailed t-tests. *p < 0.05,
682
**p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001.
683 684
Figure 5. Whole-cell biotransformation of RA 1. Cell-recycled biotransformation of 15 mM RA
685
by (a) E. coli pAptm-E6-BVMOopt/ADH and (b) endocytosing E. coli pAptm-E6-
686
BVMOopt/ADH/pCW-His6-CAV1. The cell density was 2.2 g dry cells/L. Symbols indicate
687
concentrations of RA (1, ●), 12-keooctadec-9-enoic acid (2, ■), and Ester (3, ▲).
688 689
Figure 6. Whole-cell biotransformation of RA 2. Time course of the biotransformation of RA to
690
the Ester at a high cell density by (a, c) E. coli BL21 (DE3) pAptm-E6-BVMOopt/ADH and (b, d)
691
endocytosing E. coli BL21 (DE3) pAptm-E6-BVMOopt/ADH/pCW-His6-CAV1. (a, b)
692
Biotransformation of 150 mM RA. (c, d) Three repeated biotransformations of 100 mM RA.
693
Symbols indicate concentrations of RA (1, ●), 12-keooctadec-9-enoic acid (2, ■), and Ester (3,
694
▲).
695 696
Figure 7. Whole-cell biotransformation of castor oil and 10-hydroxyoctadecanoic acid. Time
697
course of the biotransformation of (a, b) castor oil into n-heptanoic acid and 11-hydroxyundec-9-
698
enoic acid (Supporting Information, Figure S1) and of (c, d) 10-hydroxyoctadecanoic acid into 9-
699
(nonanoyloxy)nonanoic acid (Figure S1) by (a, c) E. coli BL21 (DE3) pAptm-E6-
700
BVMOopt/ADH and (b, d) endocytosing E. coli BL21 (DE3) pAptm-E6-BVMOopt/ADH/pCW-
701
His6-CAV1. Biotransformation was initiated by adding 5 g/L castor oil, 0.1% (v/v) Tween80,
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702
and 20 U/mL lipase or 5 mM 10-hydroxyoctadecanoic acid into the culture broth. Symbols in
703
Fig. 6a indicate the concentrations of castor oil (▽), RA (●), 12-keooctadec-9-enoic acid (■),
704
Ester (▲), and 11-hydroxyundec-9-enoic acid (▼). Symbols in Fig. 6b indicate the
705
concentrations of 10-hydroxyoctadecanoic acid (○), 10-ketooctadecanoic acid (□), 9-
706
(nonanoyloxy)nonanoic acid (◆).
707 708
ABBREVIATIONS
709
CAV1, caveolin-1; RA, ricinoleic acid, 12-hydroxyoctadec-9-enoic acid; Ester, (Z)-11-
710
(heptanoyloxy) undec-9-enoic acid; TMS, N-Methyl-N-(trimethylsilyl) trifluoroacetamide;
711
IPTG, isopropyl β-D-1-thiogalactopyranoside; ADH, alcohol dehydrogenase; BVMO, Baeyer-
712
Villiger-monooxygenases; GST, glutathione S-transferase; PK, proteinase K; UTR, untranslated
713
region; NA, nonanoic acid
714
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Figure 1 E. coli whole cell biocatalyst
OH
OH
O OH
5
O OH
5
1
1 Ricinoleic acid (RA)
NAD+
Alcohol dehydrogenase NADH
O
O OH
5
2 NADPH
O2
Baeyer-Villiger monooxygenase NADP+
H2O
O 5 O
O
O
O
OH
3
5 O
OH
3
(Z)-11-(heptanoyloxy)undec-9-enoic acid (Ester)
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