Orthogonal Engineering of Biosynthetic Pathway for Efficient

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Letter

Orthogonal Engineering of Biosynthetic Pathway for Efficient Production of Limonene in Saccharomyces cerevisiae Si Cheng, Xue Liu, Guozhen Jiang, Jihua Wu, Jin-lai Zhang, Dengwei Lei, Jianjun Qiao, Ying-Jin Yuan, and Guang-Rong Zhao ACS Synth. Biol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.9b00135 • Publication Date (Web): 07 May 2019 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on May 8, 2019

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Revised

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Letter

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Orthogonal Engineering of Biosynthetic Pathway for Efficient

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Production of Limonene in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

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Si Cheng†, Xue Liu†, Guozhen Jiang†, Jihua Wu†, Jin-lai Zhang†, Dengwei Lei†, Ying-

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Jin Yuan†,‡, Jianjun Qiao†,‡, and Guang-Rong Zhao*,†,‡

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†Frontier

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Bioengineering (Ministry of Education), School of Chemical Engineering and

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Technology, Tianjin University, Yaguan Road 135, Jinnan District, Tianjin, 300350,

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China

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‡SynBio

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Engineering (Tianjin), Tianjin University, Yaguan Road 135, Jinnan District, Tianjin,

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300350, China.

Science Center for Synthetic Biology and Key Laboratory of Systems

Research Platform, Collaborative Innovation Centre of Chemical Science and

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*Corresponding

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Tel: +86-22-85356580; Fax: +86-22-27403389

author: Guang-Rong Zhao ([email protected])

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ABSTRACT

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Limonene, a plant-derived natural cyclic monoterpene, is widely used in

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pharmaceutical, food and cosmetics industries. Conventional limonene biosynthetic

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(CLB) pathway in engineered Saccharomyces cerevisiae consists of heterologous

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limonene synthase (LS) using endogenous substrate geranyl diphosphate (GPP) and has

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been suffering from poor production of limonene. In this study, we report on an

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orthogonal engineering strategy in S. cerevisiae for improving the production of

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limonene. We reconstructed orthogonal limonene biosynthetic (OLB) pathway

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composed of SlNDPS1 that catalyzes IPP and DMAPP to NPP (cis-GPP) and plant LS

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that converts NPP to limonene. We find that the OLB pathway is more efficient for

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production of limonene than the CLB pathway. When expression of competing gene

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ERG20 was chromosomally regulated by glucose-sensing promoter HXT1, the OLB

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pathway harboring strain produced 917.7 mg/L of limonene in fed-batch fermentation,

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6-fold increase of the CLB pathway, representing the highest titer reported to date.

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Orthogonal engineering exhibits great potential for production of terpenoids in S.

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cerevisiae.

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KEYWORDS: limonene biosynthesis, orthogonal engineering, synthetic biology,

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pathway and metabolic engineering, Saccharomyces cerevisiae

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Plant terpenoids are valuable natural products, such as paclitaxel, artemisinin,

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lycopene, and limonene, which have been used in pharmaceutical and food industries.1

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Production of terpenoids from plants is always inefficient for seasonal cycles of slow

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growth with low content and environmental concerns for the solid waste discharge from

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the chemical extraction process. Metabolic engineering and synthetic biology of

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industrial microbes facilitates an alternative route for the effective production of

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terpenoids.2,3

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Saccharomyces cerevisiae is considered as a promising cell factory for inexpensive

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production of terpenoids. Yeast possesses potential mevalonate (MVA) pathway to

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provide the building blocks isopentenyl pyrophosphate (IPP) and dimethylallyl

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pyrophosphate (DMAPP) for heterologous biosynthesis of diverse terpenoids with

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cheap carbon sources.4 ERG20 catalyzes IPP and DMAPP to endogenous geranyl

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diphosphate (GPP) and farnesyl diphosphate (FPP) for biosynthesis of monoterpenes

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and sesquiterpenes, respectively. Over the last decades, numerous efforts have been

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paid for the production of terpenoids. The first excellent example was to engineer S.

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cerevisiae for production of artemisinic acid,5 the precursor for the antimalarial drug

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artemisinin. Bisabolene, another cyclic sesquiterpene with potential alternative to

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petroleum-derived diesel, achieved high titer in engineered S. cerevisiae.6 For

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monoterpene production, the GPP overproducing S. cerevisiae produced geraniol,7 an

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acyclic

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synthesized in yeast to expand the chemical space of terpenoids.8

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monoterpenol.

Additionally,

noncanonical 11-carbon

terpenes

were

Limonene is a well-famous cyclic monoterpene, and applied in pharmaceutical, 3

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pesticide, flavor, perfume, jet fuel, and other chemical industries.9,10 A few efforts have

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been made to improve the production of limonene in yeast. The conventional limonene

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biosynthetic (CLB) pathway of plants is composed of GPP synthase (GPPS) and

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limonene synthase (LS). Coexpression of GPPS mutated from yeast ERG20 and Citrus

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lemon LS (ClLS1) in S. cerevisiae resulted in minor limonene (0.12 mg/L) after

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headspace trapping of limonene, which is highly volatile and toxic to microbial

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growth.11 Enriched amino-nitrogen medium could increase biosynthesis of limonene to

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1.48 mg/L.12 Degradative regulation of ERG20 achieved 76 mg/L of limonene in

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engineered yeast strain.13 However, compared with other terpenoid pathways, the CLB

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pathway seems to be intractable in engineered S. cerevisiae. The reasons remain to be

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elucidated.

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Recently, alternative monoterpene biosynthetic pathway in tomato trichomes was

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reported.14 Several monoterpenes including limonene, α- and β-phellandrene, α- and γ-

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terpinene, and 2-carene in the glandular trichomes of tomato are synthesized from a

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neryl diphosphate (NPP) rather than GPP. NPP, the cis-isomer of GPP, is synthesized

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by NPP synthase (NPPS) from IPP and DMAPP. Considering the diverse effects of

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different configuration of substrate NPP from GPP on limonene biosynthesis, we

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proposed that engineering an orthogonal limonene biosynthetic (OLB) pathway

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composed of NPPS and corresponding LS using substrate NPP would open a possibility

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for efficient production of limonene in yeast.

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In this study, we firstly obtained the candidate limonene synthases by blast

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analysis using ClLS1 as the query sequence, and reconstructed the CLB pathway 4

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composed of yeast ERG20WW (ERG20F96W-N127W) and plant LS using substrate GPP, as

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well as the OLB pathway comprised of plant NPPS and plant LS using substrate NPP,

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respectively, in S. cerevisiae (Fig. 1). We then compared the capacity of the CLB and

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OLB pathways for limonene production by engineering glucose-sensing promoter

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HXT1 (PHXT1) of the competing gene ERG20, the branching node of precursors IPP and

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DMAPP fluxed to biomass and limonene biosynthesis. We find that the OLB pathway

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is competent to yeast cellular metabolism and more efficient for production of limonene

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with 917.7 mg/L in fed-batch shake-flask fermentation, 6-fold higher than that of the

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CLB pathway.

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Fig.1. Orthogonal strategy for production of limonene in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

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Two artificial synthetic pathways to limonene from IPP and DMAPP were

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reconstructed, respectively. The conventional limonene biosynthetic (CLB) pathway is

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composed of yeast ERG20WW and plant tLS (A), while the orthogonal biosynthetic (OLB)

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pathway is composed of plant NPPS and plant tLS (B). The native promoter of

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chromosomal ERG20 was replaced with the HXT1 promoter. The endogenous genes

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tHMG1 and IDI1 were chromosomally overexpressed to supply sufficient precursors 5

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IPP and DMAPP in the starting strain.

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A-CoA, Acetyl coenzyme A; HMG-CoA, 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A;

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MVA, mevalonate; IPP, isopentenyl pyrophosphate; DMAPP, dimethylallyl

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pyrophosphate; GPP, geranyl diphosphate; FPP, farnesyl diphosphate; NPP, neryl

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diphosphate; tHMG1, truncated HMG-CoA reductase; IDI1, IPP isomerase; ERG20WW,

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mutated farnesyl diphosphate synthase; LS, limonene synthase; ERG20, FPP synthase;

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NPPS, neryl diphosphate synthase; ERG9, squalene synthase; PGAL7, GAL7 promoter;

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PGAL10, GAL10 promoter; PHXT1, HXT1 promoter.

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RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

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Reconstruction of the CLB and OLB pathways

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In order to reconstruct artificial limonene biosynthetic pathway via metabolic

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engineering and synthetic biology, we searched the UniProt database to obtain

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annotated limonene synthases. Seven LSs from genus Citrus, ShLS from Solanum

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habrochaites that synthesizes limonene in vitro15 and ArLS from Agastache rugosa that

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functions for limonene production in Yarrowia lipolytica16 were chosen as candidate

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enzymes. The amino acid sequence identities among nine LSs were ranged from 17%

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to 96% (Fig. S1 and S2). All of those LSs have the conserved aspartate-rich DDXXD

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motif which is crucial for divalent cation (typically Mg2+ or Mn2+)-substrate complex

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binding.17 The presumptive N-terminal transit peptide of plant LSs targeting plastid

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membrane is detrimental to express in microbes and removed, generating the truncated

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LSs (tLSs). A rooted phylogenetic tree of the tLSs by using the neighbor-joining 6

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method was illustrated in Fig. 2A.

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To reconstructed the CLB pathway, we recruited a mutant variant of the yeast

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ERG20 enzyme ERG20WW which has the preferred activity to catalyze the formation

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of GPP7,18. The expression vectors of the ERG20WW and nine heterologous codon-

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optimized tLSs were constructed and introduced into the isoprene high-producing yeast

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strain yJGZ1,7 generating strains LimY1 to LimY9 (Table S1), respectively. After 48 h

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fermentation, as shown in Fig. 2B, the gas chromatography (GC) analysis exhibited that

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nine tLSs from six plant species were able to synthesize limonene in S. cerevisiae, and

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titers were quite divergent, in spite of no obvious difference in the cell growth (Fig.

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S3). CltLS1 exhibited the highest limonene production with titer of 15.5 mg/L, while

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the rest eight tLSs gave small amount of limonene (0.35-0.83 mg/L). Despite high

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identities between CltLS1 with CltLS2, CutLS1 and CstLS (Fig. 2A), respectively,

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none of CltLS2, CutLS1 and CstLS yielded better titer of limonene. Strain LimY3

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harboring the CLB pathway of ERG20WW and CltLS1 was used in following study.

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Analogously, we reconstructed the OLB pathway by employing SlNDPS1 gene14

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which encodes NPPS to convert yeast IPP and DMAPP to NPP. Nine tLSs genes were

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coexpressed with SlNDPS1 in strain yJGZ1, respectively, generating strains LimY10

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to LimY18. As shown in Fig. 2C, all of nine engineered strains produced limonene

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without difference of cell growth (Fig. S4). CutLS1, CutLS2 and CltLS3 gave the least

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effects on titers of limonene (from 1.37 to 2.52 mg/L), while ArtLS and ShtLS were

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better than CutLS1, CuLtS2 and CltLS3. CltLS2 did the best performance on

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production of limonene with titer of 28.9 mg/L, followed by CstLS with 26.4 mg/L of 7

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limonene. As expected, compared to the endogenous substrate GPP, all of the nine tLSs

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using NPP as designer substrate produced higher titers of limonene, 1.7- to 40-fold

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increase (Fig. 2D). These results illustrated that the OLB pathway is more efficient than

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the CLB pathway for limonene biosynthesis in S. cerevisiae. It is possible that the tLSs

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might have higher enzymatic activities towards NPP than GPP. Strain LimY13

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harboring the SlNDPS1 and CltLS2 was used in following study.

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Fig.2. Heterologous biosynthesis of limonene in engineered S. cerevisiae. (A)

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Phylogenetic analysis of nine tested tLSs proteins by using the neighbor-joining method.

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Analysis was conducted in MEGA7. (B) Biosynthesis of limonene in strains harboring

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the CLB pathway. (C) Biosynthesis of limonene in strains harboring the OLB pathway.

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(D) Comparison of limonene biosynthesis between the CLB and OLB pathways. The 8

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relative amount of limonene was calculated based on the unit of the titer of limonene in

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strain LimY8.

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Metabolic superiority of the OLB pathway to the CLB pathway

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The metabolite conversion at the node of IPP and DMAPP is the crossroad to

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generate and distribute substrates GPP and NPP. GPP is further used for limonene

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biosynthesis by LS or cell growth by ERG20, and NPP is solely used for limonene

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biosynthesis. Direct static downregulation of the competing gene ERG20 using

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conventional inducible or constitutive promoters seems unsuitable for heterologous

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production of monoterpene, which was demonstrated by the example that the

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expression of ERG20 driven by weak BTS1 promoter or the copper repressible CTR3

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promoter greatly decreased the final biomass and simultaneously impaired production

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of acyclic monoterpene.19 Applying the dynamic regulation could allow the engineered

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cell to flexibly control expression of heterologous pathway and reasonably distribute

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the metabolic flow. Degron tagging ERG20 paired with a sterol responsive promoter

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led to the accumulation of limonene with the CLB pathway after the stationary stage,

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but the lag stage was prolonged.13 The glucose-sensing promoter PHXT1 that is stronger

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in the presence of glucose and weaker in the absence of glucose would be a promising

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candidate to fit the diauxic yeast fermentation process,20 in which glucose is used in

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first stage of cell growth with simultaneous production of ethanol that is then used in

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second stage of cell growth and product biosynthesis of interest. Therefore, for the CLB

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pathway, the chromosomal native ERG20 promoter of strain LimY3 was replaced with 9

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promoter PHXT1, generating strain LimY26. Due to sufficient supply of glucose, the cell

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growth between strains LimY26 and LimY3 was not obviously different, strain

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LimY26 produced 43.3 mg/L of limonene (Fig. 3A). tHMG1 (truncated 3-hydroxy-3-

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methylglutaryl coenzyme reductase) is a rate-limiting enzyme in the MVA pathway.

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The overexpression of tHMG1 could result in the accumulation of squalene because of

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the high catalytic activities of ERG20 and ERG9 (squalene synthase) towards DMAPP

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to squalene,21 which is a competing product of limonene. We measured the content of

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squalene, representing the amount of carbon flux to the cell growth pathway. Surely,

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the large amounts of squalene were accumulated in the tHMG1 and IDI1 (encoding

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isopentenyl diphosphate isomerase) overexpressing strain yJGZ1 and strain LimY3,

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with 32.3 mg/g DCW and 28.1 mg/g DCW (Fig. 3C), respectively. Employing PHXT1

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decreased the squalene accumulation to 17.5 mg/g DCW in strain LimY26 (Fig. 3C). It

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indicated that the PHXT1 controlling ERG20 could reallocate the carbon flux from growth

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pathway to limonene synthetic pathway. In order to test the adaptability of the CLB

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pathway to the fermentation process, 13 g/L of glucose was fed to the culture at 20 h

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after initial glucose was exhausted. Unexpectedly, the production of limonene was not

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increased by feeding with glucose in strain LimY26, while the biomass and squalene

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were slightly increased to some extent (Fig. 3B). The combination of dynamic

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expression of ERG20 controlled by the PHXT1 and constitutive expression of ERG20WW

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in yeast strain could lead to promising production of monoterpene geraniol by geraniol

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synthase using substrate GPP,19 while it was less effective for the limonene production

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(Fig. 3C), implying that limonene synthase CltLS1 in the CLB pathway would not adapt 10

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to yeast cellular environment and become the limiting factor for limonene production.

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The similar phenomenon was observed in the production of taxadiene using taxadiene

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synthase in S. cerevisiae.22 In addition, expression of ERG20WW with remaining partial

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FPPS activity18 would allow the crosstalking of the CLB pathway to FPP pathway, and

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at least when LS was uncompetitive, lead to more GPP distribution for biosynthesis of

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squalene than that of limonene.

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Fig.3. Fermentation of strains LimY3 and LimY26 harboring the CLB pathway without 12

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glucose feeding (A) and with glucose feeding at 20 h (B). (C) Titer of limonene and

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amount of squalene at 48 h.

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In comparative parallel, the CLB pathway was replaced by the OLB pathway, and

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the production of limonene and squalene was different. Regulation of ERG20 by PHXT1

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was beneficial for the OLB pathway and led to 118.5 mg/L of limonene in strain

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LimY28 (Fig. 4A), a 1.7-fold increase of titer, compared to strain LimY26 harboring

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the CLB pathway. It suggested that NPP synthase SlNDPS1 and limonene synthase

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CltLS2 in the OLB pathway worked well together to biosynthesize limonene. Squalene

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in strain LimY28 was decreased to 4.1 mg/g DCW, one fourth of that in strain LimY26

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(Fig. 4C). When glucose feeding was carried out, strain LimY28 continuously produced

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limonene to 178.7 mg/L (Fig. 4B), a 3-fold increase than that of strain LimY26, and

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squalene further decreased to 2.3 mg/g DCW (Fig. 4C). The results confirmed that

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SlNDPS1 and CltLS2 of the OLB pathway were more adaptive to yeast cellular

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metabolic environment than ERG20WW and CltLS1 of the CLB pathway. Taking

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together, the OLB pathway would be independent of endogenous squalene pathway and

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benefits limonene biosynthesis.

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Fig.4. Fermentation of strains LimY13 and LimY28 harboring the OLB pathway

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without glucose feeding (A) and with glucose feeding at 20 h (B). (C) Titer of 14

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limonene and amount of squalene at 48 h.

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Efficiency of the OLB pathway in fed-batch fermentation

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To validate the long term effectiveness of the OLB pathway for limonene

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production, we performed the fed-batch fermentation in shake-flask using strain

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LimY28 with ethanol as the feeding carbon source, which was better than glucose used

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(Fig. S5). As shown in Fig. 5A, during the initial 12 h when glucose was present, the

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cells grew exponentially with the rate of 0.885 OD/h while limonene was scarcely

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produced. Entering the ethanol consumption stage, cell growth slowed down at lower

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rate of average 0.3 OD/h and reached to the stationary stage at 96 h. Accordingly,

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limonene was greatly accumulated from 12 h to 120 h at the production rate of 8.29

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mg/ (L·h) with the final titer of 917.7 mg/L, 12-fold improvement than the previous

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reported titer.13

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On the other hand, regardless of similar growth pattern of strain LimY26 with

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strain LimY28, a disparate production behavior of the CLB pathway was observed.

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Limonene staggered slowly to the final titer of 141.6 mg/L at 120 h (Fig.5 B). The

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inferior performance of the CLB pathway in fed-batch culture was consistent with batch

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fermentation (Fig.3), further confirming that the CLB pathway of ERG20WW and

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CltLS1 was inherently unsuitable to production of limonene in S. cerevisiae.

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Fig. 5. Ethanol fed-batch fermentation of strains LimY28 harboring the OLB pathway

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(A) and LimY26 harboring the CLB pathway (B) in shake-flask. Ethanol was fed at

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20 h and 40 h for limonene production.

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Conclusion

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We report for the first time that the orthogonal engineering for efficient production

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of limonene in S. cerevisiae. The OLB pathway composed of SlNDPS1 and CltLS2 was

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reconstructed and the competing gene ERG20 for consumption of precursors IPP and

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DMAPP was regulated by glucose-sensing PHXT1. This strategy achieved 917.7 mg/L

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limonene at shake-flask level, 6-fold increase than the CLB pathway composed of

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ERG20WW and CltLS1. We show the OLB pathway is robust to fermentation

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environment and compatible to the cellular metabolisms in S. cerevisiae, exhibiting

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great potential for efficient production of limonene. In contrast, the CLB pathway

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crosstalking squalene pathway at least partially contributed to biomass biosynthesis and

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impaired the limonene production. Moreover, the activity of GPP-specific limonene

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synthase fitting in with the cellular environment would be a key factor for limonene

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production using the CLB pathway in S. cerevisiae. 16

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The orthogonal biodevices have been used in metabolic engineering and synthetic

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biology, such as RNA switches23 and genetic circuits.24 Recently, orthogonality

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principles of metabolic pathway design was proposed25 and show significant

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advantages in production of desired chemicals including muconic acid,26 and fatty acid

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and its ester.27,28 Here, we showed that orthogonal secondary metabolic pathway for

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production of limonene is more sufficient and robust than the conventional pathway

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which crosstalks with biomass synthesis at node GPP. Like most of organisms in nature,

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yeast does not possess cis-GPP and derived terpenoids. Cis-prenyltransferases and cis-

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terpenoids have been discovered from plants29-31 and insects32,33. It would be the great

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potential of the orthogonal pathways for efficient production of heterologous valuable

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terpenoids such as artemisinin, taxol and nature rubber in S. cerevisiae in future.

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MATERIALS AND METHODS

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Strains and Media

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Escherichia coli trans-T1 (TransGen Biotech, Beijing, China) was used for plasmid

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construction and cultivated at 37 °C in Luria-Bertani (LB) medium (10 g/L tryptone, 5

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g/L yeast extract, and 10 g/L NaCl). When needed, 100 μg/mL of ampicillin was

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supplemented into the medium.

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Saccharomyces cerevisiae yJGZ17 was used as the starting strain for reconstruction

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of limonene-producing strains. S. cerevisiae strains without plasmid were cultivated in

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yeast extract-peptone-dextrose (YPD) medium (20 g/L glucose, 20 g/L tryptone, and

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10 g/L yeast extract) and strains with plasmid in synthetic complete (SC) drop-out 17

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medium (20 g/L glucose, 6.7 g/L yeast nitrogen base, and 2 g/L amino acid mixed

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powder), respectively.

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Construction of Plasmids and Strains

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The plasmids and yeast strains used in this study are listed in Table S1. DNA

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manipulating agents, including T4 DNA ligase and restriction endonucleases were

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purchased from Thermo Scientific (Beijing, China). The ClonExpress II One Step

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Cloning Kit, DNA Polymerase of Phanta Super Fidelity and Taq were obtained from

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Vazyme (Nanjing, China). The primers of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) used in this

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study were synthesized by GENEWIZ (Suzhou, China) and listed in Table S2.

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The ERG20WW gene encoding GPPS was obtained through PCR using plasmid

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pJGZ38 as the template.7 Nine LSs genes and SlNDPS1 from plants were synthesized

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by GenScript (Nanjing, China) with codon optimization for S. cerevisiae. The N-

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terminal sequences targeting the plastid of LSs and SlNDPS1 were removed through

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PCR. For CuLS1, CuLS2, ClLS1, ClLS2, ClLS3, CsLS, PtLS and ArLS, the N-terminal

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plastid-targeting sequences precede a tandem pair of arginines.34 For ShLS that lacks

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an obvious plastid-targeting sequence, the N-terminal plastid-targeting sequence was

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predicted by ChloroP (http://www.cbs.dtu.dk). SlNDPS1 was truncated according to

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previous report.16 The nucleic acid sequences of truncated versions of synthesized LSs

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(tLSs) and SlNDPS1 were listed in Table S3. TENO2-TGPD fragment was digested with

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NotI and inserted into plasmid pRS426, generating plasmid pCS. Nine different tLSs

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were digested with BsaI and inserted into the same site of pJGZ1, generating pCSL1 to

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pCSL9, respectively. ERG20WW and SlNDPS1 were digested with BsaI and inserted into 18

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the same site of pZJL1, generating pCSG1 and pCSN1, respectively. Then different

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ERG20 WW-tLS fragments were obtained through OE-PCR with corresponding primers

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and ligated into the pCS by ClonExpress II One Step Cloning Kit, generating pCS01 to

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pCS09, respectively. Similarly, different NPPS-tLS fragments were ligated into the pCS,

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generating pCS10 to pCS18, respectively. To replace native ERG20 promoter,

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synthesized PHXT1 promoter and TRP marker as well as the up and down 600 bp

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homologous arms of ERG20 promoter were amplified from the S. cerevisiae CEN.PK2-

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1C genome DNA and assembled by OE-PCR. All fragments and plasmids were verified

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by sequencing before yeast transformation.

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Limonene-producing strains were constructed by transforming expression

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plasmids or DNA fragment containing PHXT1 to yJGZ1 using the LiAc/PEG/ssDNA

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method.

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Fermentation Conditions

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For shake-flask fermentation, a single colony was picked from the SC plate and

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inoculated into 2 mL SC medium and cultivated at 30 ℃, 250 rpm for 20 h.

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Subsequently, the preculture was transferred into 6 mL SC medium with initial OD600

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of 0.2 and cultivated at 30 ℃, 250 rpm for 20 h. Then the seed culture was transferred

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into 250 mL flasks containing 50 mL YPD medium with an initial OD600 of 0.2. The

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two-phase shake-flask fermentation was started by adding 10% (v/v) isopropyl

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myristate as organic extractant phase into flasks, which could relieve the toxicity caused

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by limonene and then incubated at 30 ℃, 250 rpm for 2 days to produce limonene.

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The fed-batch fermentation in the shake-flask was conducted at 30 ℃, 250 rpm for 19

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5 days. Ethanol was added at 20 h and 40 h as the carbon source with the final

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concentration of 10 g/L for limonene production. All of the experiments were

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performed twice, and average data were shown.

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Biomass and Metabolite Analysis.

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Cell optical density (OD) was measured at 600 nm with TU-1810

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spectrophotometer. Residual glucose and residual ethanol of fermentation broth were

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measured by a biosensor SBA-90 (Biology Institute of Shandong Academy of Sciences,

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China). Squalene was extracted with ethyl acetate and quantified according to previous

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study.34

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For limonene analysis, the organic layer used was harvested by centrifugation of

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fermentation broth at 8000 rpm for 10 min. After dehydration with anhydrous

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magnesium sulfate, the isopropyl myristate phase was used for GC or GC-mass

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spectrometer (GC-MS) analysis directly. An Agilent Technologies 7820A GC system

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equipped with a HP-5 column (30 m × 0.25 mm × 0.25 µm). Sample (1 µl) was injected

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in split mode (1:20) and the GC oven temperature program was applied with 3 mL/min

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nitrogen as carrier gas: 100 °C for 1 min, 10 °C/min to 270 °C, an increase of 30 °C/min

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to 320 °C, hold for 15 min. The injector temperature was 250 °C. The structure of

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limonene was further analyzed using GC/MS-QP2010 Plus of Shimadzu (Japan) with

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a quadrupole mass analyzer (QMA), HP-5MS column (30 m × 0.25 mm × 0.25 µm).

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And the mass scan range was 50-900 m/z. Limonene standard (GC grade) was

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purchased from TCL biotech Co., Ltd. (Shanghai, China). All of the GC analysis were

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quantified using a seven-point calibration curve and the R2 coefficient for the 20

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calibration curve was higher than 0.99.

364 365

ASSOCIATED CONTENT

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The Supporting Information is available free of charge via the Internet at

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http://pubs.acs.org

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Tables S1–S3; Figures S1–S5.

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AUTHOR INFORMATION

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Corresponding Author

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*E-mail: [email protected]. Phone: +86-22-85356580. Fax: +86-22-27403389.

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Author Contributions

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S Cheng, X Liu, YJ Yuan, J Qiao and GR Zhao designed the experiments and analyzed

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the data. S Cheng performed the experiments. J Wu and D Lei assisted in experiments

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and analyzed the data. G Jiang and J Zhang provided strains and materials. S Cheng, X

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Liu and GR Zhao drafted the manuscript. All of the authors have read and approved the

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final manuscript.

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Notes

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The authors declare no competing financial interest.

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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

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This study was financially supported by the National Key R&D Program of China

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(2017YFD0201400).

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ABBREVIATIONS

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MVA, mevalonate; IPP, isopentenyl pyrophosphate; DMAPP, dimethylallyl 21

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pyrophosphate; GPP, geranyl diphosphate; FPP, farnesyl diphosphate; NPP, neryl

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diphosphate; LS, limonene synthase; CLB, conventional limonene biosynthesis; OLB,

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orthogonal limonene biosynthesis.

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For Table of Contents Use Only

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Orthogonal Engineering of Biosynthetic Pathway for Efficient Production of Limonene

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in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

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Si Cheng†, Xue Liu†, Guozhen Jiang†, Jihua Wu†, Jin-lai Zhang†, Dengwei Lei†, Ying-

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Jin Yuan†,‡, Jianjun Qiao†,‡, and Guang-Rong Zhao*,†,‡

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†Frontier

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Bioengineering (Ministry of Education), School of Chemical Engineering and

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Technology, Tianjin University, Yaguan Road 135, Jinnan District, Tianjin, 300350,

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China

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‡SynBio

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Engineering (Tianjin), Tianjin University, Yaguan Road 135, Jinnan District, Tianjin,

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300350, China.

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*Corresponding

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Tel: +86-22-85356580; Fax: +86-22-27403389

Science Center for Synthetic Biology and Key Laboratory of Systems

Research Platform, Collaborative Innovation Centre of Chemical Science and

author: Guang-Rong Zhao ([email protected])

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