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Enhanced S-adenosylmethionine production by increasing ATP levels in baker´s yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) yawei chen, and Tianwei Tan J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.8b00819 • Publication Date (Web): 03 May 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on May 4, 2018
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Enhanced S-adenosylmethionine production by increasing ATP levels in baker´s yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) Yawei Chen1* and Tianwei Tan2 1. College of Chemical and Pharmaceutical Engineering, Henan University of Science and Technology, Luoyang 471023, PR China 2. National Energy R&D Center for Biorefinery, College of Life Science and Technology, Beijing University of Chemical Technology, Beijing 100029, PR China *
Corresponding Author: Yawei Chen
Email:
[email protected] Tel: +8637964231914
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ABSTRACT: In the biosynthesis of S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) in baker´s yeast
2
(Saccharomyces cerevisiae), ATP functions both as a precursor and a driving force.
3
However, few published reports have dealt with the control of ATP concentration
4
using genetic design. In this study we have adopted a new ATP regulation strategy in
5
yeast for enhancing SAM biosynthesis, including altering NADH availability and
6
regulating the oxygen supply. Different ATP regulation systems were designed based
7
on the introduction of water-forming NADH oxidase, Vitreoscilla hemoglobin and
8
phosphite dehydrogenase in combination with overexpression of the gene SAM2.
9
Applying this strategy, after 28 h cultivation, the SAM titer in the yeast strain
10
ABYSM-2 reached a maximum level of close to 55 mg/L, an increase of 67%
11
compared to the control strain. The results show that the ATP regulation strategy is a
12
valuable tool for SAM production and might further enhance the synthesis of other
13
ATP-driven metabolites in yeast.
14
KEYWORDS: ATP; S-adenosylmethionine (SAM); Saccharomyces cerevisiae;
15
Vitreoscilla hemoglobin (VHb)
16 17 18 19 20 21 22 2
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INTRODUCTION
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S-Adenosylmethionine (SAM) is a key component in various biological reactions. Its
25
major function is to serve as a methyl group donor for the modification of
26
biomolecules such as DNA, RNA, proteins and various small molecules1, 2. It is
27
widely used in the therapy of various diseases, such as osteoarthritis, affective
28
disorders and liver disease3-6. Therefore, SAM is of commercial interest as a research
29
reagent, a pharmaceutical and as a dietary supplement. In recent years, several studies
30
of the pharmacological effects of SAM have been reported7-9. To this end, attempts
31
have been made to achieve SAM production by fermentation utilizing various types of
32
microorganisms10-12.
33
In living organisms, SAM is synthesized from L-methionine and ATP with
34
methionine adenosyltransferase (MAT) as catalyst13. Thus the addition of
35
L-methionine is required for enhanced SAM production as L-methionine is the
36
limiting component for biosynthesis of SAM in yeast10, 12, 14. Strains of S. cerevisiae
37
have been genetically engineered using a variety of approaches to overproduce SAM,
38
as this yeast is recognized as GRAS (generally recognized as safe) by FDA15, 16. SAM
39
has also been produced on a large scale after optimizing the fermentation conditions,
40
including the supply level of L-methionine. However, ATP, which not only provides
41
the adenosyl moiety but also acts as an energy carrier, also becomes a limiting factor
42
for SAM production when L-methionine is in excess. To this end, chemicals such as
43
citrate (auxiliary energy substrate) and n-hexadecane (oxygen vector)17,
44
supplied as well. Attempts were made to control the intracellular ATP level by 3
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suppressing the metabolic pathways of by-products using a synthetic sRNA-based
46
regulation strategy, as reported in a previous study 19. However, this approach failed to
47
supply enough ATP to satisfy high SAM production.
48
Traditional metabolic engineering studies have focused on controlling enzyme
49
levels through the addition, overexpression, or deletion of enzymes in the particular
50
pathway. An alternative approach, cofactor regulation, has the potential to become a
51
powerful tool for metabolic engineering. Cofactors such as NADPH/NADP+,
52
ATP/ADP and NADH/NAD+ are the most powerful metabolites in metabolic
53
networks in all living organisms. They provide redox carriers for biosynthetic
54
reactions and act as principal agents in the energy transformation inside the cell. It has
55
been reported that control of the concentration and forms of these cofactors could
56
regulate the expression level of many genes and redirect the flux of the central carbon
57
metabolism20, 21. Expression of the gene adk1 (encoding adenylate kinase) led to
58
increased supply of ATP and enhanced SAM production with higher L-methionine
59
conversion efficiency in Pichia pastoris
60
vhb (encoding Vitreoscilla hemoglobin, VHb) could increase the synthesis rate of ATP
61
and thus enhance cell growth and SAM production in recombinant P. pastoris
62
has also been reported that increasing the availability of methionine and ATP by
63
co-expression of SAM2 and MET6, and the addition of sodium citrate, led to a 2.3-fold
64
increase in SAM accumulation in S. cerevisiae CGMCC 2842 (WT) 24. Although it is
65
generally known that cofactors play a major role in the production of metabolites, the
66
application of a genetically based ATP regulation strategy to promote SAM
22
. Some reports have shown that the gene
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. It
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production in S. cerevisiae has seldom been considered.
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The aim of this study is to increase the availability of ATP during SAM production
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by introducing three heterologous pathways coupled to the ATP synthesis (Fig.1). The
70
effects of ATP on production rate and energy metabolism during SAM biosynthesis
71
have been investigated as well. Differential metabolomics analysis by LC-MS
72
combined with transcriptional analysis have been applied to explore the overall
73
metabolic effects of the different strategies in S. cerevisiae.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Strains, media and cultivation conditions
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All strains used in this study are listed in Table 1. E. coli Trans 10 was used for
77
propagating the plasmids before transformation into the yeast strains. The transformed
78
E. coli was screened on LB (10 g/L tryptone, 5 g/L yeast extract, 10 g/L NaCl, 20 g/L
79
agar) plates supplemented with 100 µg/mL Ampicillin at 37℃. The recombinant
80
yeasts were selected in synthetic media containing 6.7 g/L yeast nitrogen base with
81
ammonium sulfate and without amino acids, 20 g/L glucose, and 20 g/L agar.
82
Modified S. cerevisiae BY4741 (BY4741-MH, MATa; leu2∆0; ura3∆0) was used as
83
the parent strain for the SAM production. The yeast strains were pre-cultured in 50
84
mL synthetic complete (SC) medium (6.7 g/L yeast nitrogen base with ammonium
85
sulfate and without amino acids, 1.4 g/L amino acids dropout mixture lacking leucine
86
and uracil) supplemented with amino acids as required and 20 g/L glucose at 30℃,
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220 rpm for 24 h. The main cultures were inoculated to an initial OD600 of 0.5 in 100
88
mL of SC medium or YPD medium (10 g/L yeast extract, 20 g/L peptone, 20 g/L 5
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glucose) supplemented with 2 g/L L-methionine in 250 mL flasks and grown at 30℃,
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220 rpm for 28 h. For strain ABYSM-3, 15 mM phosphite was added to the SC
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medium or YPD medium in the flask. All flask fermentations were carried out in
92
triplicates of both the recombinant and the control strain.
93
Table 1
94
Plasmid construction
95
All plasmids used and constructed in this study are listed in Table 1. Primers for PCR
96
are listed in Table 2. Standard genetic techniques were used for DNA manipulation.
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Cloning procedures were carried out in E.coli Trans10. Phusion High-Fidelity DNA
98
polymerase, restriction enzymes, T4 DNA ligase and other enzymes were all
99
purchased from New England Biolabs (USA), following the manufacturer’s
100 101
instructions. To complement the auxotrophic markers (met15∆0, his3∆1) in strain BY4741, the
102
expression cassettes of MET15 and HIS3 were both amplified from S. cerevisiae
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S288c genomic DNA25 and strain BY4741-MH was produced. Two rounds of overlap
104
PCR were applied to efficiently construct the recombinant plasmids. The overlap PCR
105
primers for promoters, genes of interest and terminators were all designed according
106
to the NEB Assembly Builder online tools (http://nebuilder.neb.com/). The SAM2
107
gene10 from S. cerevisiae BY4741was inserted into pRS425 using TEF1 promoter and
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PGI1 terminator to yield pRS425-PTEF1-SAM2-TPGI1. The genes of noxE (from
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Lactococcus lactis) 26, vhb (encoding Vitreoscilla hemoglobin) 35 and ptxD (S.
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cerevisiae codon-optimized from Pseudomonas stutzeri) 27 were assembled with 6
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HXT7 promoter and HXT7 terminator into YCPlac33 and yield the recombinant
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plasmids of YCplac33-PHXT7-noxE-THXT7, YCplac33-PHXT7-vhb-THXT7 and
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YCplac33-PHXT7-ptxD-THXT7, respectively (Fig.2). The recombinant vectors were
114
transformed into E. coli Trans 10 by a heat shock at 42℃ for 30 s. The expression
115
vector was transformed into yeast S.cerevisiae BY4741-MH using the LiAc/SS carrier
116
DNA/PEG method.
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Table 2
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SAM quantitation
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SAM was extracted from the fermentation broth after treatment with 10% (w/v)
120
perchloric acid by shaking (220 rpm) at 30℃ for 1 h. After centrifugation at 12000×g
121
for 10 min at 4℃, the supernatant was collected and filtered through a 0.22 µm
122
membrane. Subsequent analysis of the SAM concentration was carried out by HPLC
123
(Shimadzu, Japan) equipped with a C18 column (Agela Technologies, China) and a
124
UV detector at 260 nm. The mobile phase was 0.01 mol/L ammonium formate at pH
125
3.5 operated at a flow rate of 1.0 mL/min28.
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ATP and ADP determination
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For ATP and ADP quantitation, the harvested cells (in SC medium) were
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re-suspended in 0.4 mol/L perchloric acid and treated by ultra-sonication in an
129
ice-water bath. After centrifugation at 12000×g (4℃) for 10 min, the supernatant was
130
neutralized with saturated potassium carbonate. The concentrations of ATP and ADP
131
were detected by HPLC equipped with a C18 column (Agela Technologies, China)
132
and a UV detector at 254 nm. The mobile phase used was phosphate buffer consisting 7
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of 0.06 M K2HPO4 and 0.04 M KH2PO4 at pH 7.0 with a flow rate of 1.0 mL/min.
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LC-MS analysis of intracellular metabolites
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An amount of 10 mL S. cerevisiae culture was collected and immediately quenched
136
with 20 mL methanol (HPLC grade, precooled to -40℃) at -40℃ The samples of the
137
intracellular metabolites were prepared as previously reported29. Before detection an
138
amount of 150 µL acetonitrile-water (v/v: 1/1) mixture was added to the dried samples
139
to dissolve the metabolites. The concentrations of the metabolites were measured by
140
LC-MS in the supernatants obtained after centrifugation.
141
All measurements were performed on a LC-20AD HPLC system (Shimadzu, Japan)
142
equipped with a QTRAP5500 mass spectrometer (AB SCIEX, USA). The HPLC
143
system was equipped with a BEHAmide column (Waters, USA) (oven temperature
144
40℃). The source was operated in ESI+ mode (CUR 40 psi, CXP 10, GS1 50 psi,
145
GS260 psi, IS 1500 V, CAD Medium, TEM 600℃, DP 40 and EP 10). The pump
146
supplied a gradient with the following settings: 0 min, 10% mobile phase A (0.1%
147
formic acid, 99.9% H2O), 90% mobile phase B (95% acetonitrile, 5% mixture of 1
148
mmoL ammonium formate and 0.01% formic acid), and maintained for 5 min. Then
149
the 20% mobile phase A and 80% mobile phase B were introduced and maintained for
150
3 min. Subsequently, mobile phase A was increased to 60% after 8 min and held
151
constant for 6 min. Then mobile phase B was increased to 90% after 6 s and held
152
constant for 5 min. The flow rate was set to 0.3 mL/min. All data obtained from the
153
LC-MS were calculated using the software Analyst1.6.1 (AB SCIEX, USA) and
154
further
analyzed
using
the
web-based
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(http://www.metaboanalyst.ca/)30 .
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Quantitative real-time PCR
157
All primers used for the qPCR are listed in Table 3. An amount of 1 mL S. cerevisiae
158
culture after 16 h cultivation was collected in order to extract the total RNA using
159
Yeast RNAiso kit (Takara, China). The concentration of the RNA samples was
160
measured using the NanoDrop K5500 (Beijing Kaiao Technology Development
161
Company, China). The extracted RNA was converted into cDNA using the Trans
162
Script First Strand cDNA Synthesis Supermix (Beijing TransGen Biotech Company,
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China). Quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) was performed on a Rotor-Gene Q system
164
(Analytikjena, Germany) using the Trans Start Top Green qPCR Supermix (Beijing
165
TransGen Biotech Company, China). Each qPCR reaction was performed with three
166
replicates.
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Table 3
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RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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Effect of the ATP regulation strategy on SAM production
170
Methionine adenosyltransferase (MAT) catalyzes the reaction that combines
171
L-methionine, ATP and water to produce the target metabolite SAM, pyrophosphate
172
and inorganic phosphate. Many experiments have shown that overexpression of MAT
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greatly increases SAM accumulation. Among the different kinds of MAT, SAM2
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encoding MAT from S. cerevisiae is not repressed in the presence of L-methionine 31,
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32
176
production SAM is the first choice. The constitutive promoters TEF1 and truncated
. Therefore, overexpressing SAM2 in S. cerevisiae BY4741-MH to facilitate the
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HXT7 from S. cerevisiae show strong transcription ability when glucose or ethanol
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serves as the carbon source, and were thus selected as the promoters for the
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expression of SAM2 and the genes involved in the ATP synthesis, respectively33.
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To alleviate the redox imbalance and improve the fermentation performance of
181
SAM production in S. cerevisiae, the three genes noxE, vhb and ptxD were tested
182
separately. The noxE gene from Lactococcus lactis was used as control to examine the
183
effect of the NAD (H) on ATP and SAM synthesis. The noxE gene encoding
184
water-forming NADH oxidase provides an extra route for NAD+ regeneration. It
185
regenerates NAD+ from NADH using molecular oxygen 26. Vitreoscilla hemoglobin
186
as a membrane protein could enhance the respiration and energy metabolism by
187
promoting oxygen transfer to the intracellular terminal oxidases. The oxygen
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dissociation rate constant of VHb is hundreds of times higher than that of other
189
hemoglobins34, 35. However, it has been shown that VHb is predominantly localized in
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the cytoplasm when expressed in S. cerevisiae36. In order to regenerate NADH, a
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codon-optimized phosphite dehydrogenase PtxD (encoded by ptxD) from
192
Pseudomonas stutzeri, was selected because of its ability to catalyze the nearly
193
irreversible oxidation of phosphite to phosphate, with the concomitant reduction of
194
NAD+ to NADH37. VHb, PtxD and NoxE have been widely used in recombinant
195
strains to improve the production of target compounds21, 34. However, no published
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reports have so far been found regarding the application of these enzymes for SAM
197
production in S. cerevisiae.
198
The biomass and glucose consumption were shown in Fig.3A-Fig.3D. The biomass 10
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of recombinant strains in YPD medium was significantly higher than that in SC
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medium. The biomass of the recombinant strain ABYSM-1 in either medium was
201
lower than other recombinant strains, indicating that noxE might cause growth
202
retardation of the strain. In addition, the SAM titer of the strain ABYSM-1 was lower
203
at most of the time points tested than that of recombinant strains ABYSM-2 and
204
ABYSM-3 (Fig.3E and Fig.3F). Previous studies have demonstrated that NoxE is
205
mainly localized in the cytosol of S. cerevisiae and has a high affinity for NADH26, 38.
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The extra intracellular NADH cannot flow to the oxidative phosphorylation pathway
207
in strain ABYSM-1, thereby reducing the synthesis of intracellular ATP and disrupting
208
the cellular redox state, resulting in inhibition of cell growth.
209
The SAM titers obtained in flask experiments using recombinant strains in YPD
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medium and SC medium are shown in Fig.3E and Fig.3F. The titer gradually
211
increases during the fermentation process, and in the strain PBYSM-1 increases 2- to
212
3-fold compared to the control, the highest titer reaching 32.80 mg/L. In addition, the
213
transcription level of SAM2 in the strain PBYSM-1 was twice that of the strain
214
PBYSM-0 (Fig.S1). These results proved that the activity of MAT in a wild S.
215
cerevisiae strain is the limiting factor for the synthesis of SAM, and thus, promotion
216
of the SAM production could benefit a lot from the enhanced activity of MAT10, 24.
217
The intracellular SAM titers of strain ABYSM-2 and ABYSM-3 increased by 37%
218
(42.58 mg/L) and 24% (40.06 mg/L) after 28 h, compared to that of PBYSM-1 in SC
219
medium. The L-methionine conversion efficiency and the SAM productivity of the
220
strain ABYSM-2 was higher than other recombinant strains either in SC medium or in 11
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YPD medium (Table S1). The results obtained above imply that the expression of the
222
vhb gene would enhance oxygen supply and that introduction of the ptxD gene would
223
increase NADH availability, leading to promotion of the synthesis of SAM.
224
Regulating the oxidative phosphorylation seems to be a more efficient way to control
225
the intracellular ATP concentration, as most ATP production comes from an oxidative
226
phosphorylation pathway under aerobic conditions. Intracellular NADH, produced
227
from the central carbon metabolism and other metabolic pathways, can be converted
228
to NAD+ in different ways. Under aerobic growth, NADH oxidation occurs through
229
ETC (electron transfer chain), in which oxygen is used as the final electron acceptor,
230
producing a large amount of ATP. In addition, the transcription level of SAM2 in the
231
strain ABYSM-2 and ABYSM-3 was higher than that of the strain PBYSM-1 (Fig.S1).
232
The reason could be that the cofactor regulation strategies promoted the
233
transcriptional expression of SAM2. Overall, the results obtained showed that the
234
strategies of controlling NADH availability and regulation of oxygen supply could be
235
potential tools for enhancing SAM production.
236
Higher SAM titers were observed in all recombinant strains after 24 h fermentation,
237
indicating that the SAM concentration is correlated to cell growth. The SAM titer of
238
strain ABYSM-2 with the vhb gene increased by 19% in the SC medium and by 22%
239
in the YPD medium during the fermentation period 24 to 28 h. The possible reason
240
may be that the dissolved oxygen in the medium decreased in the late stages of the
241
fermentation process, enhancing the VHb’s ability to bind to oxygen to increase the
242
intracellular levels of ATP, and thus significantly increasing the production of 12
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intracellular SAM.
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The ATP regulation strategy disturbed the ATP pool
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The intracellular ATP concentration, ADP concentration and ATP/ADP ratio of the
246
different strains in the SC medium were determined. As shown in Fig.4, the
247
intracellular ATP concentrations of ABYSM-2 and ABYSM-3 were higher than that
248
of the control strain PBYSM-1 at 28 h. And the ratio of ATP to ADP of ABYSM-2
249
and ABYSM-3 were higher than that of the control strain PBYSM-1 at 24 h. The
250
ATP/ADP ratio of strains ABYSM-2 and ABYSM-3 increased by 28% and 18%,
251
respectively, at 24 h. The absolute concentration of ATP in the ABYSM-3 strain with
252
the ptxD gene was higher than that of ABYSM-2. However, the SAM titer of the
253
ABYSM-3 strain was less than that of ABYSM-2. The possible reason could be that
254
the ATP concentration of ABYSM-3 strain was presumably improved by the change
255
of intracellular NADH. Also NADH, as an important cofactor, is not only involved in
256
the synthesis of ATP but also in the maintenance of the intracellular redox balance.
257
The cofactor NAD+ is utilized to produce the reducing equivalent in the form of
258
NADH. Meanwhile, the cell regenerates NAD+ from NADH to achieve a redox
259
balance. While the enhancement of NADH could improve the intracellular ATP level,
260
it might also disturb the redox micro-environment, changing the distribution of carbon,
261
and ultimately affect the synthesis of the target product39. Therefore, alterations in the
262
availability of NADH are expected to have a profound effect in the whole metabolic
263
network during the fermentation process.
264
Effects of ATP regulation on the distribution of intracellular metabolites 13
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The metabolomes of the strains ABYSM-2
266
(BY4741-MH/pRS425-SAM2/YCplac33-vhb) and ABYSM-3
267
(BY4741-MH/pRS425-SAM2/YCplac33-ptxD) which had a higher SAM titer were
268
chosen and tested by LC-MS. The data were imported and analyzed using the
269
MetaboAnalyst software according to the published protocol30, 40. Strain PBYSM-1
270
(BY4741-MH/pRS425-SAM2/ YCplac33) was used as the control. The results of the
271
statistical analysis and the metabolic pathway analysis are shown in Fig.5 and
272
Fig.S2-S3. There were 87 valid metabolites detected by LC-MS in all of the three
273
strains. The metabolic data were normalized before statistical analysis (Fig.S2). The
274
heatmap analysis showed that the quantitative results of the determined metabolites in
275
each strain were consistent between replicates and could be used for further analysis
276
(Fig.5A). The heatmap analysis and the principal component analysis (PCA) showed
277
that there were significant variations in the relative contents of metabolites in the
278
different strains, which indicates that the three strains have their own distinct
279
character after genetic manipulation (Fig.5A, Fig.S3-A and Fig.S3-B). However, no
280
separate metabolite could be identified that would individually account for the
281
differences among the three strains (Fig.S3-C). An over-representation analysis plot
282
reveals the most relevant pathways that are affected by the genetic changes (Fig.5B).
283
Several amino acid pathways, i.e. the arginine and proline metabolisms, methionine
284
metabolism and glycine metabolism and so on, were considered to be highly affected
285
which was confirmed by further amino acid analysis. The amino acid analysis (Table
286
S2) showed that the concentration of several amino acids in the recombinant strains 14
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increased to different degree compared to the control strain. In particular, the
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concentrations of glycine, glutamic acid, serine and valine increased by more than
289
50%. It has been reported that the synthesis of these amino acids is positively
290
correlated with the synthesis of SAM41. Changes in the concentrations of several
291
amino acids indicate that the levels of ATP and NADH in vivo were involved in the
292
changes of the intracellular metabolic network.
293
Analysis of transcriptional levels of key genes in the central carbon metabolism
294
In an attempt to shed light upon the mechanism of the ATP promotion of SAM
295
biosynthesis, qPCR was used to analyze the transcription level of the key genes in the
296
central carbon metabolism of strains PBYSM-1(control strain), ABYSM-3 and
297
ABYSM-2 (Fig.6). The gene S. cerevisiae act1 (encoding actin) was chosen as
298
reference for normalizing the cDNA samples during analysis. The normalized mRNA
299
level in the control was assumed to be 1.0. The qPCR primers for genes hxk1
300
(encoding hexokinase), tdh1 (encoding glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase),
301
tdh3 (encoding glyceraldehyde-3-dehydrogenase), pyk2 (encoding pyruvate kinase) in
302
the glycolytic pathway, cit1 (encoding citrate synthase), idh1 (encoding isocitrate
303
dehydrogenase) and mdh1 (encoding malate dehydrogenase) in the TCA cycle, and
304
zwf1 (encoding glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase) in the pentose phosphate
305
pathway (PPP) were designed and listed in Table 3.
306
The glycolysis ability of recombinant strain ABYSM-3 might have been suppressed,
307
when the transcriptional levels of hxk1, tdh1 and pyk2 were reduced by 62%, 87% and
308
85% respectively. The transcription levels of some key enzymes in the TCA cycle 15
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were also severely inhibited, and the transcription levels of cit1 and idh1 decreased by
310
58% and 86%, respectively. This might be due to the presumably higher level of
311
NADH in strain ABYSM-3 that disturbed the TCA cycle and glycolysis, which is
312
consistent with literature reports26. The key enzyme in the PPP, glucose-6-phosphate
313
dehydrogenase encoded by gene zwf1, was also partially inhibited, indicating that the
314
glycolysis metabolism in PPP was suppressed in strains where intracellular NADH
315
was enhanced. The transcription level of the TCA cycle mitochondrial malate
316
dehydrogenase in strains ABYSM-2 and ABYSM-3 was increased by nearly 50%.
317
Regarding the key glycolysis enzymes of strain ABYSM-2, only the transcription
318
level of hexokinase was reduced by 48%. The levels of the other transcripts tested
319
were not significantly changed.
320
The central carbon flux is selectively regulated by the intracellular levels of NAD+,
321
NADH and ATP. In particular, these cofactors play an important role in glucose
322
metabolism through regulation of both the expression and activities of various key
323
enzymes in glycolysis and the TCA cycle20, 26, 39. Thus, re-distribution of the central
324
carbon flux potentially contributed to the increase in the SAM titer of S. cerevisiae.
325
However, the higher ATP concentration in this yeast could also cause allosteric
326
inhibition of the glycolytic pathway, which would eventually lead to a reduction of
327
SAM productivity. Although it is difficult to control the concentration of ATP in
328
order to achieve maximum metabolite production, it was still possible to increase the
329
synthesis of ATP-driven metabolites by applying optimized ATP regulation strategies.
330
ATP is an essential cofactor in many metabolic pathways, and is also an important 16
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precursor as well as the driving force for SAM biosynthesis in the yeast S. cerevisiae.
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In this work, different ATP regulation systems were designed on the basis of
333
overexpression of SAM2 to study the effect of intracellular ATP on SAM synthesis in
334
S. cerevisiae. The results showed that the activity of MAT is a major factor in SAM
335
biosynthesis, and the intracellular SAM titer doubled in strains where SAM2 was
336
overexpressed. The genes vhb and ptxD have a positive effect on promoting SAM
337
production. The intracellular SAM titer in the strain ABYSM-2 reached maximum
338
level at 28 h, a 67% (54.92 mg/L) increase compared to the control strain. The results
339
showed that the strategy of controlling NADH availability and regulation of oxygen
340
supply contributed to the enhancement of ATP and SAM synthesis in S. cerevisiae. In
341
particular the introduction of VHb can boost energy metabolism, resulting in
342
increased biomass and SAM titer. The metabolites were determined by LC-MS
343
combined with metabolomics analysis. The concentration variation of certain
344
metabolites and amino acids were significant between strains, which correlated with
345
the variation in SAM production. In addition, it was found that genetic perturbations
346
significantly inhibited transcription of key enzymes in glycolysis and the TCA cycle.
347
As a further development, these efficient ATP regulation systems and strategies will
348
be combined and applied to build high yield genetic engineering strain.
349
ASSOCIATED CONTENT
350
Supporting Information
351
Data normalization view; Principal component analysis; List of concentrations of
352
amino acids in S. cerevisiae 17
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AUTHOR INFORMATION
354
Corresponding Author
355
Tel.: +8637964231914. E-mail:
[email protected] 356
Funding
357
This work was supported by the National Nature Science Foundation of China
358
(21606073, 21390202, 21436002), the National Basic Research Program of China
359
(973 program) (2013CB733600, 2012CB725200) and the National Key Scientific
360
Instruments and Equipment Development Special Fund (2012YQ0401400302).
361
Notes
362
The authors declare no competing financial interest.
363
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
364
The authors thank Prof. Jan-Christer Janson (Uppsala University) for revising the
365
language of this manuscript.
366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382
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Figure captions Fig. 1 Schematic diagram of ATP regulation strategies in S. cerevisiae MAT: methionine adenosyltransferase; NoxE: water-forming NADH oxidase; VHb: Vitreoscilla hemoglobin; PtxD: phosphite dehydrogenase Fig. 2 Schematic overview of the plasmid construction in yeast Fig. 3 Flask fermentation results of recombinant strains. (A) biomass in SC medium; (B) biomass in YPD medium; (C) glucose consumption in SC medium; (D) glucose consumption in YPD medium; (E) SAM titer in SC medium; (F) SAM titer in YPD medium 482
PBYSM-0: control strain; PBYSM-1: PBYSM-0 strain with SAM2 overexpressed;
483
ABYSM-1: PBYSM-1strain with noxE expressed; ABYSM-2: PBYSM-1strain with
484
vhb expressed; ABYSM-3: PBYSM-1strain with ptxD expressed
485
Fig. 4 Intracellular ATP/ADP concentrations and the ratio of ATP to ADP in the
486
control and the recombinant S. cerevisiae
487
PBYSM-0: control strain; PBYSM-1: PBYSM-0 strain with SAM2 overexpressed;
488
ABYSM-1: PBYSM-1 strain with noxE expressed; ABYSM-2: PBYSM-1 strain with
489
vhb expressed; ABYSM-3: PBYSM-1strain with ptxD expressed
490
Fig. 5 The metabolic analysis. (A) Clustering result shown as heatmap; (B) Overview
491
of over representation analysis plot for metabolomic data, The P-value indicates the
492
probability of observing at least a particular number of metabolites from a certain
493
metabolite set in a given compound list.
494
PBYSM-1: control strain with SAM2 overexpressed; ABYSM-1: PBYSM-1 strain 22
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with noxE expressed; ABYSM-2: PBYSM-1 strain with vhb expressed
496
Fig. 6 Relative transcriptional levels of key genes in the central carbon metabolic
497
pathways
498 499 500 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 511 512 513 514 515 516 23
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Table 1 Strains and plasmids in this study
518
strains
description
source
E. coli Tans 10
cloning host
Beijing TransGen Biotech Company
BY4741
MATa his3∆1 leu2∆0 met15∆0 ura3∆0
10
BY4741-MH
BY4741 his3::HIS3, met15::MET15
this study
PBYSM-0
BY4741-MH/pRS425/YCplac33
this study
PBYSM-1
BY4741-MH/pRS425-SAM2/YCplac33
this study
ABYSM-1
BY4741-MH/pRS425-SAM2/YCplac33-noxE
this study
ABYSM-2
BY4741-MH/pRS425-SAM2/YCplac33-vhb
this study
ABYSM-3
BY4741-MH/pRS425-SAM2/YCplac33-ptxD
this study
URA3,CEN/ARS origin
42
Plamids YCplac33 pETDuet-SAM2-doc
Amp ,harboring SAM2 gene
10
pUC19-PTEF1-TPGI1
harboring PTEF1 promoter and TPGI1 terminator
43
pRS424-PHXT7-mcherry
harboring PHXT7 promoter and THXT7 terminator
43
R
-THXT7 pUC57-noxE
AmpR,synthetic gene noxE, optimized in S. cerevisiae codon
Institute
pRS425-SAM2
PTEF1-SAM2-TPGI1
this study
YCplac33-noxE
PHXT7-noxE-THXT7
this study
YCplac33-vhb
PHXT7-vhb-THXT7
this study
YCplac33-ptxD
PHXT7-ptxD-THXT7
this study
519 520 521 522 523 524 525 526
24
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Table 2 Primers used for PCR
528 constructs
oligo name
PTEF1(SAM2)
Pst I-PTEF1-F
oligonucleotides(5’-3) AACTGCAGAACCAATGCATTGGATAGCTTCAAA ATGTTTCTACTC
PTEF1(SAM2)-overlap-R
TCTTGGACATTTTGTAATTAAAACTTAGATTAGA TTGC
SAM2
(PTEF1)SAM2-overlap-F
TTAATTACAAAATGTCCAAGAGCAAAACTTTC
SAM2(TPGI1)-overlap-R
GCGATTTGTTTTAAAATTCCAATTTCTTTGGTTTT TC
TPGI1
(SAM2)TPGI1-overlap-F
GGAATTTTAAAACAAATCGCTCTTAAATATATA CC
Pst I-TPGI1-overlap-R
AACTGCAGAACCAATGCATTGGGGTATACTGGA GGCTTCATG
(YCplac33)-Sac PHXT7(vhb)
GGATCCCCGGGTACCGAGCTACCGAGCTCACTTC
I-PHXT7-F
TCGT
PHXT7-(vhb)-R
GGTCTAACATTTTTTGATTAAAATTAAAAAAACTT TTTGTTTTTGTG
vhb THXT7
(PHXT7)-vhb-F
TTAATCAAAAAATGTTAGACCAGCAAACC
vhb-(THXT7)-R
TGTTCGCAAATTATTCAACCGCTTGAGC
THXT7-(vhb)-F
GGTTGAATAATTTGCGAACACTTTTATTAATTCAT
Spe I-THXT7(YCplac33)-R
TATTAGGACTTCCACACCAAGGACTAGTATAACT
G GACTCATTAG PHXT7(ptxD)
PHXT7-(ptxD)-R
TAGGCAGCATTTTTTGATTAAAATTAAAAAAACT TTTTGTTTTTGTG
(PHXT7)-ptxD-F ptxD
TTAATCAAAAAATGCTGCCTAAACTGGTCATC
ptxD-(THXT7)-R
TGTTCGCAAATTAGCACGCCGCAGGTTC
THXT7-(ptxD)-F
GGCGTGCTAATTTGCGAACACTTTTATTAATTCAT G
PHXT7(noxE)
PHXT7-(noxE)-R
GATCTTCATTTTTTGATTAAAATTAAAAAAACTTT TTGTTTTTGTG
noxE
(PHXT7)-noxE-F
TTAATCAAAAAATGAAGATCGTTGTCATCG
noxE-(THXT7)-R
GTTCGCAAATCACTTGGCGTTCAAAGC
THXT7-(noxE)-F
CCAAGTGATTTGCGAACACTTTTATTAATTCATG
529 530 531 532 533 534 535 25
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536 537 538
Table 3 Primers used for qPCR oligo name
oligonucleotides(5’-3)
0-act1-F
TGACCAAACTACTTACAACTCC
0-act1-R
AGAAGCCAAGATAGAACCA
1-hxk1-F
CAAAGATGGACCAAGGG
1-hxk1-R
CGCTACAATTTCAATAGGC
2-tdh1-F
TGAAGGTCCAATGAAGGGTGT
2-tdh1-R
CTCTGGCGGAGTAACCGTATT
3-pyk2-F
GAAGTATCGGATGTGGGTAA
3-pyk2-R
AGTGGAAGTAGGTTTGGGAG
4-mdh1-F
ATTAGAGCCGCCAGATTCAT
4-mdh1-R
CGACTTCGTCACCACCAAAC
5-cit1-F
GGTATTAGATTTAGGGGTCG
5-cit1R
TAACTTGAGCGTCAGTAGGT
6-idh1-F
AAGAAGTATGGCGGTCGTT
6-idh1-R
TGTTTGGTCAGCAGGAGTG
7-tdh3-F
TTTTGGGTTACACCGAAGACG
7-tdh3-R
ATTGGATACCAGCGGAAGCA
8-zwf1-F
CCCTGGTCTGTCAAATGCTAC
8-zwf1-R
CACCTCGTAAGCCTCTGGAA
539 540 541 542 543 544 545 546 547 548 549 26
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Fig. 1
551 552 553 554 555 556 557 558 559 560 27
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Fig. 2
562 563 564 565 566 567 568 569 570 571 572 28
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12 8
A
PBYSM-0 PBYSM-1 ABYSM-1 ABYSM-2 ABYSM-3
7 6
9 8
4
B
7
OD600
OD600
PBYSM-0 PBYSM-1 ABYSM-1 ABYSM-2 ABYSM-3
11 10
5
6 5
3
4
2
3 2
1
1 0
0 0
10
20
30
40
0
50
10
20
30
PBYSM-0 PBYSM-1 ABYSM-1 ABYSM-2 ABYSM-3
C
15
20
Glucose concentration(g/L)
Glucose concentration(g/L)
20
40
50
Time(h)
Time(h)
10
5
PBYSM-0 PBYSM-1 ABYSM-1 ABYSM-2 ABYSM-3
D
15
10
0
5
0 0
10
20
30
0
10
20
Time(h)
30
Time(h)
60
60
E
PBYSM-0 PBYSM-1 ABYSM-1 ABYSM-2 ABYSM-3
50 45 40
PBYSM-0 PBYSM-1 ABYSM-1 ABYSM-2 ABYSM-3
55 50 45
SAM titer(mg/L)
55
SAM titer(mg/L)
574 575 576 577 578 579 580 581 582 583 584 585 586 587 588 589 590 591 592 593 594 595 596 597 598 599 600 601 602 603 604 605 606 607 608 609 610 611 612 613 614 615
Fig. 3
35 30 25
40
F
35 30 25 20
20
15
15
10
10
5 0
5 16
18
20
22
24
26
28
16
18
20
22
Time(h)
Time(h)
29
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26
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1.4 1.2
0.30
1.0
0.25 0.8 0.20 0.6 0.15 0.4
0.10
0.2
0.05 0.00
0.0
PBYSM-0
ATP/ADP concentration(µg/mL/OD)
ATP ADP
0.35
0.40
24h 0.35
1.4
ATP ADP
28h 1.2
0.30
1.0
0.25 0.8 0.20 0.6 0.15 0.4
0.10
0.2
0.05 0.00
PBYSM-1 ABYSM-1 ABYSM-2 ABYSM-3 Strains
0.0
PBYSM-0
PBYSM-1 ABYSM-1 ABYSM-2 ABYSM-3 Strains
634 635 636 637 638 639 640 641 642 643 644 645 646 30
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0.40
Ratio of ATP to ADP
618 619 620 621 622 623 624 625 626 627 628 629 630 631 632 633
Fig. 4
ATP/ADP concentration(µg/mL/OD)
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Fig. 5
648 649 1:PBYSM-1;2:ABYSM-2;3:ABYSM-3 650 651 652 653 654 655 656 657 658 659 660 661 662 663 664
A 665 666 667
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Fig. 6
680
681 682 683 684 685 686 687 688 33
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graphical abstract
692 693 694 695 696 697 698 699
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