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Heterologous biosynthesis of spinosad: an omics-guided large polyketide synthase gene cluster reconstitution in Streptomyces Gao-Yi Tan, Kunhua Deng, Xinhua Liu, Hui Tao, Yingying Chang, Jia Chen, Kai Chen, Zhi Sheng, Zixin Deng, and Tiangang Liu ACS Synth. Biol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.6b00330 • Publication Date (Web): 06 Mar 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on March 7, 2017
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ACS Synthetic Biology
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Submitted to ACS Synthetic Biology as research article
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Heterologous biosynthesis of spinosad: an omics-guided large
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polyketide synthase gene cluster reconstitution in Streptomyces
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Gao-Yi Tan a, c, Kunhua Deng a, b, Xinhua Liu a, b, Hui Tao a, b, Yingying Chang a, b, Jia
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Chen a, b, Kai Chen d, Zhi Sheng d, Zixin Deng a, b, e, Tiangang Liu a, b, *
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a
Key Laboratory of Combinatorial Biosynthesis and Drug Discovery (Wuhan
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University), Ministry of Education, and Wuhan University School of Pharmaceutical
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Sciences, Wuhan, 430071, China
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b
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Biotechnology, Wuhan, 430075, China
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c
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China University of Science and Technology, 130 Meilong Road, Shanghai 200237,
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China
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d
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Shengyang 110021, China
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e
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Biotechnology, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, 800 Dongchuan Road, Shanghai
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200240, China
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* Email:
[email protected]; Telephone: 086-27-68755086; Fax: 086-27-68755086
Hubei Engineering Laboratory for Synthetic Microbiology, Wuhan Institute of
State Key Laboratory of Bioreactor Engineering, School of Bioengineering, East
Shenyang Research Institute of Chemical Industry Ltd., Co., SINOCHEM Group,
State Key Laboratory of Microbial Metabolism, and School of Life Sciences &
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Abstract
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With the advent of the genomics era, heterologous gene expression has been used
25
extensively as a mean of accessing natural products (NPs) from environmental DNA
26
samples. However, the heterologous production of NPs often has very low efficiency
27
or is unable to produce targeted NPs. Moreover, due to the complicated transcriptional
28
and metabolic regulation of NP biosynthesis in native producers, especially in the
29
cases of genome mining, it is also difficult to rationally and systematically engineer
30
synthetic pathways to improved NPs biosynthetic efficiency. In this study, various
31
strategies ranging from heterologous production of a NP to subsequent application of
32
omics-guided synthetic modules optimization for efficient biosynthesis of NPs with
33
complex structure have been developed. Heterologous production of spinosyn in
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Streptomyces spp has been demonstrated as an example of the application of these
35
approaches. Combined with the targeted omics approach, several rate-limiting steps of
36
spinosyn heterologous production in Streptomyces spp have been revealed.
37
Subsequent engineering work overcame three of selected rate-limiting steps, the
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production of spinosad was increased step by step and finally reached 1460 µg/L,
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which is about 1,000-fold higher than the original strain S. albus J1074 (C4I6-M).
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These results indicated that the omics platform developed in this work was a powerful
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tool for guiding the rational refactoring of heterologous biosynthetic pathway in
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Streptomyces host. Additionally, this work lays the foundation for further studies
43
aimed at the more efficient production of spinosyn in a heterologous host. And the
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strategy developed in this study is expected to become readily adaptable to high
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efficient heterologous production of other NPs with complex structure.
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Keywords: Spinosyn, Streptomyces, Heterologous production, Metabolomics,
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Proteomics, Module optimization
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Introduction
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Natural products (NPs) or secondary metabolites, obtained from the microbial, plant
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and marine worlds, were important sources for the development of new
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pharmaceuticals
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number of NPs pathways were discovered in microbes, making it became one of the
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most promising sources for drug discovery 5. However, many biosynthetic genes are
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derived from microbes that are uncultivable or not amenable to genetic manipulation
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microbes 6. Accordingly, heterologous gene expression has been used extensively as a
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mean of accessing target NPs in genome mining. Streptomyces spp. is a rich source of
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NPs, in which different kinds of cellular intermediates, including sugars, amino acids,
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fatty acids, terpenes, shikimate, etc., could be used for the biosynthesis of
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pharmaceutical compounds with complex structure
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Streptomyces spp, including S. avermitilis, S. coelicolor, S. venezuelae, S. lividans, S.
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albus etc., have been developed as potential hosts and used widely for heterologous
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expression of NPs 9-16.
1-4
. Moreover, with the advent of the post-genomic era, a large
7, 8
. Consequently, many
63 64
To date, many kinds of NPs have been biosynthesized in heterologous Streptomyces
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hosts
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metabolites biosynthetic genes clusters (4 – 75 kb) have been introduced into the
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heterologous host S. avermitilis by protoplast transformation, and all the
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corresponding metabolites were produced 7. A 67 kb lipopeptide antibiotic taromycin
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A
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Saccharomonospora sp. CNQ-490 by transformation-associated recombination and
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efficiently expressed in S. coelicolor
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kb), such as type I polyketide compound, the bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC)
17
. For example, as reported by Komatsu et al, more than 20 secondary
biosynthetic gene cluster was cloned from the marine actinomycete
18
. For large gene clusters encoding NPs (> 80
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library could be used as an efficient approach for gene cluster cloning and subsequent
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heterologous expression 19, 20.
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However, it should be noted that occasionally possibly owing to the different genetic
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distances (native producer vs heterologous host) and complex native regulation, the
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heterologous production of NPs has very low efficiency or is even unable to produce
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targeted metabolites
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mining and heterologous expression. It is often difficult to rationally and
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systematically identify obstacles which hinder the production of NPs. The emergence
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of the innovative systems metabolic engineering concepts23, which integrate systems
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and synthetic biology with metabolic engineering24, has contribute to developing
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efficient strategies to improve NPs biosynthetic efficiency on a global scale.
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Therefore, as one of the main approaches in system biology, the omics approach such
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as transcriptomics, proteomics and metabolomics
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systematic analysis to identify the rate-liming steps or synthetic modules
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information provided by omics analysis could guide heterologous expression of NPs
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in several aspects, such as transcription regulation, module optimization, and host
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improvement, etc (Figure 1).
7, 21, 22
. And such qualities are prevalent in the cases of genome
25-27
, which can be applied to 8, 28
. The
90 91
As a proof of concept, this study used the heterologous biosynthesis of spinosad (a
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mixture of spinosyn A and spinosyn D) in Streptomyces host as an example for
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several reasons. Firstly, as a typical large type I polyketide antibiotic produced by
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Saccharopolyspora spinosa NRRL 18395 29, spinosyn is a novel environment-friendly
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insecticide, which has been used widely for insect control in agriculture 30. Secondly,
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the biosynthesis of spinosyn was very complicated and needed many participating
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genes 31 (Figure S1). In the 80-kb spinosyn biosynthetic gene cluster, 14 of 19 genes
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are responsible for spinosyn post-modification, which include complicated
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intramolecular cycloaddition 35-39
32, 33
and cross-bridging
and methylation
34
, as well as multiple steps of
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glycosylation
. Lastly, but most importantly, probably due to
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such a complicated and delicate post-modification, previous attempts on heterologous
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production of spinosyn in Streptomyces were ended in failure 41.
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In this work, a set of strategies involved in BAC library construction, efficient
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conjugation and integration of a large plasmid into a Streptomyces host, identification
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of rate-limiting steps by omics analysis, and rational synthetic module optimization
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for production of targeted products in a heterologous host have been developed. This
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resulting approach is likewise expected to become adaptable to highly efficient
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heterologous production of valuable NPs with complex structures.
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Result and Discussion
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Construction of Sa. spinosa NRRL 18395 BAC library and screening of spinosyn
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biosynthesis gene cluster.
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With the emerging of synthetic biology, significant advances have been achieved in
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the heterologous biosynthesis of NPs 42. In order to clone the whole biosynthetic gene
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cluster of a targeted secondary metabolite, there are many available technologies and
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methodological
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Red/ET-mediated recombination 43-45, transformation-associated recombination 18 and
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the Gibson assembly method
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however, because they can accommodate large secondary metabolic pathways
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spanning at least 100 kb.
approaches,
including
cosmid/fosmid
library
construction,
46
. It appears BAC vectors are usually more versatile,
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To obtain the intact spinosyn biosynthetic gene cluster (≈ 80 kb), the genomic DNA
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of Sa. spinosa NRRL 18395 was used for BAC library construction (containing 2304
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clones: six plates × 384 clones/plate). In all, 39 clones were selected at random for
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BAC library characterization and evaluation; nearly all the insert sizes of BAC clones
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ranged from 97 – 145 kb (Figure S2A). PCR screening was used to identify the clone
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containing the intact spinosyns biosynthetic gene cluster. Three different primer pairs
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F/R; (lib-screen-up F/R, lib-screen-md F/R and lib-screen-dn Table S2) for regions in
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the middle and in the left/right boundary of the gene cluster were used in the assay.
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As a result, one BAC clone (C4I6) was obtained by library screening (Figure S2B).
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In addition, the three PCR products FI, FII and FIII were amplified by using C4I6
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plasmid as template, suggesting C4I6 contains the intact spinosyn biosynthetic gene
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cluster. In addition, plasmid C4I6 has been confirmed by end sequencing with primers
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pIndigoF/R (Table S2), and the size of the C4I6 insert was greater than 100 kb
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(Figure S3C). Here, using the pBeloBAC11-derived vector pIndigoBAC536-S,
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which can largely facilitate the construction and characterization of BAC libraries 47,
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the 80 kb spinosyn biosynthetic gene cluster was easily cloned and screened. In our
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experience, BAC library construction is a more straightforward and efficient approach
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to obtaining large DNA fragments, although it is marginally time-consuming for
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library construction.
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Introduction of spinosyn biosynthetic gene cluster into Streptomyces by
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triparental conjugation
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By introducing of the aac(3)IV-oriT-attP(ΦC31)-int(ΦC31) cassette into the BAC
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plasmid, we were able to efficiently integrate pIndigoBAC536-S and its inserts into
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the chromosome of the Streptomyces spp. via conjugation. In this study, plasmid
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C4I6-M was generated by replacing the chloramphenicol-resistance gene of the C4I6
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with the aac(3)IV-oriT-attP(ΦC31)-int(ΦC31) cassette (Figure S3A&B).
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It is well known that E.coli ET12567 (pUZ8002) has been widely used for biparental
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conjugation
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ET12567(pUZ8002) was initially applied for integration of the C4I6-M, nearly all the
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conjugant contains the incomplete spinosyn biosynthetic gene cluster (Table 1). As an
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alternative solution, E.coli ET12567(pUB307)-mediated triparental conjugation was
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used for integration of the C4I6-M into the chromosome of S. albus J1074 or S.
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lividans TK24 49. The exconjugant frequency was calculated by growing a number of
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conjugants on the ISP Medium 4 plate and counting the total conjugants on the plates,
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which yielded rough estimates of 10–5 – 10–6 (Table 1). Consequently, eleven random
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conjugants were selected for further verification. When the primer pair lib-screen-up
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F/R were used for PCR analysis, DNA fragment FI could be amplified in nine of the
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11 conjugants (Figure S5). These results indicated BAC plasmid C4I6-M could be
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introduced efficiently into chromosomes of the Streptomyces host. Subsequently, the
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second round of PCR verification showed all the 14 post-modification genes (spnF,
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spnG, spnH thru spnR and spnS) could be amplified from six randomly selected
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conjugants (date not shown). After two rounds of screening and verification, several
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conjugants were selected for additional analysis.
in
Streptomyces
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.
In
this
study,
however,
when
E.coli
168 169
It worth to be noted that, as an RK2 derivative, pUZ8002 is not self-transmissible but
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can mobilize other plasmids 48. Therefore, before conjugation with Streptomyces, the
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BAC plasmid should be introduced into ET12567(pUZ8002) by electroporation, and
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the ET12567 donor cell has to hold the > 50 kb helper plasmid pUZ8002 and the 110
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kb BAC plasmid C4I6-M. In contrast, pUB307 is an RPI-derived self-transmissible
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plasmid
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oriT-containing BAC plasmid, and DH10B(BAC) and ET12567(pUB307) could be
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used directly for conjugation. According to the results of this study, triparental
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conjugation was more suitable for the conjugation of a large BAC plasmid.
49
, which provides in trans the function for the mobilization of the
178 179
Transcriptional and translational analysis of biosynthetic genes in Streptomyces
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and identification of heterologous production of spinosyn
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The transcription of genes involved in biosynthesis served as the prerequisite for the
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heterologous production of spinosyn. In this study, the transcription of spinosyn
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biosynthetic genes in Streptomyces host was analyzed by RT-PCR using cDNA
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generated from RNA isolated after fermentation for 48 h. According to our results
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(data not shown), the 14 post-modification genes were located in different operons
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(Figure 2A). Genes from different operons have been selected for transcriptional
187
analysis, as shown in Figure 2B, which revealed that the transcription of all the
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selected genes could be detected. Under identical PCR conditions, the intensity of
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amplified products indicated transcription activity of genes. In this study, the
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transcription activity of spnI and spnP were lower compared to the others. Similar to
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the detection of the post-modification genes, all five PKS gene fragments were
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amplified using cDNA as template, which suggested that the spinosyn biosynthetic
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genes could be successfully transcribed in Streptomyces spp. However, transcription
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activity of spnE was lower compared to the others PKS genes.
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The translation of spinosyn biosynthetic genes in Streptomyces host was also analyzed
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by targeted proteomics approach. The 48 h fermentation broth was collected for
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targeted proteomics analysis of Sa. spinosa NRRL 18395, S. albus J1074 (C4I6-M)
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and S. lividans TK24 (C4I6-M). Nearly two thousand proteins were detected in this
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study (Table S3) and the 23 spinosyn biosynthetic proteins were analyzed. As given
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in Table 2, most of the spinosyn biosynthetic proteins were present in Sa. spinosa
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NRRL 18395 and S. albus J1074 (C4I6-M). However, approximately half of the
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targeted proteins were not detected in S. lividans TK24 (C4I6-M). In addition, likely
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because the expression levels of the proteins were below the detection limit of our
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method, all the NDP-L-rhamnose biosynthetic proteins (or homologues), some of the
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PKS proteins, methyltransferase SpnI and forosamine biosynthetic protein SpnO,
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SpnN were not found in S. albus J1074 (C4I6-M) or S. lividans TK24 (C4I6-M).
208 209
Anyway, the above results suggested the possibility of heterologous production of
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spinosyn in Streptomyces, especially in S. albus J1074. Therefore, the heterologous
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production of spinosyn was qualitatively analyzed by high-resolution MS. In Figure 3,
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as expected, the spinosyn A was detected in both S. albus J1074 (C4I6-M) and S.
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lividans TK24 (C4I6-M). LC-MS/MS analysis confirmed spinosyn A could be
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produced in Streptomyces spp. in a very tiny amount (a few microgram per liter)
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(Figure S6). As a complex polyketide compound, the heterologous production of
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spinosyn indicated both these Streptomyces hosts could provide all the essential
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"building blocks" for spinosyn synthesis. The whole spinosyn biosynthetic pathway
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was demonstrated in both Streptomyces hosts; however, as the last unsettled question
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in the biosynthesis of spinosyn, the auxiliary protein for SpnP is remain unknown 39.
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The lack of this protein hampers transformation of the forosamine moiety to spinosyn
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50
222
(C4I6-M) and S. lividans TK24 (C4I6-M) have counterparts of the unknown auxiliary
223
protein.
. Upon the basis of the present results, it is rational to believe both S. albus J1074
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Omics analysis revealed the rate-limiting steps in heterologous production of
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spinosyn
227
The precursor supply and cofactor availability for the biosynthesis of spinosyn, as
228
well as the biosynthetic intermediate of spinosyn (or kinds of spinosyn components or
229
intermediates, Figure S7), were analyzed quantitatively in the metabolomics analysis.
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As shown in Table 3, compared with Sa. spinosa NRRL 18395 and S. lividans TK24
231
(C4I6-M), S. albus J1074 (C4I6-M) has a more abundant supply of acyl-CoA
232
substrate, and has a very large accumulation of acetyl-CoA. Compared to Sa. spinosa
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NRRL 18395, S. lividans TK24 (C4I6-M) and S. albus J1074 (C4I6-M) have more
234
cellular SAM and UDP-glucose. In addition, the different redox potential of three
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kinds of bacterial cells have been investigated by relative quantitative analysis of
236
nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide hydrate (NADH), NAD+, nicotinamide adenine
237
dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) and NADP+. As indicated in Table 3, the ratio of
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NAD+NRRL18395/ NAD+J1074(C4I6-M)/NAD+TK24(C4I6-M) was 1:9:5, while the ratio of
239
NADHNRRL18395/ NADHJ1074(C4I6-M)/NADHTK24(C4I6-M) was 1:11:5. At the same time,
240
the
241
NADPHNRRL18395/ NADPHJ1074(C4I6-M)/NADPHTK24(C4I6-M) were 1:3:1 and 1:8:1,
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respectively. These results suggested that both the supply of NADH and NADPH in S.
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albus J1074(C4I6-M) was higher than Sa. spinosa NRRL 18395 and, S. lividans
244
TK24(C4I6-M). S. lividans TK24 and S. albus J1074 are universal Streptomyces hosts
245
used widely for heterologous expression of NPs. However, several prior studies
246
involved in the heterologous expression of NPs showed S. albus J1074 has a better
247
yield compared to S. lividans or other Streptomyces spp
248
naturally minimized size of 6.8 Mb, the genome of S. albus J1074 is the smallest
ratios
of
NADP+NRRL18395/NADP+J1074(C4I6-M)/NADP+TK24(C4I6-M)
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. In addition, with a
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among the completely sequenced species of the genus Streptomyces 15. In this study,
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about half of the targeted proteins have not been detected in S. lividans TK24 (Table
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2). As indicated by the results of metabolomics analysis, S. albus J1074 has
252
considerably larger precursors (acyl-CoA, UDP-glucose) and cofactors (NADPH,
253
SAM) compared to S. lividans TK24 (Table 3). This suggests S. albus J1074 might
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have better potential for the increased production of targeted products.
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Both the rhamnose and forosamine moieties are essential for the biosynthesis of
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spinosyn. It is suggested highly efficient biosynthesis of TDP-L-rhamnose could
258
dramatically improve production of spinosyns by duplication of gtt, gdh, epi and kre
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55-57
260
lividans TK24 (C4I6-M) are undetectable (Table 2). Therefore, the insufficient
261
catalytic activity (or low enzyme amount) of rhamnose biosynthesis likely indicated a
262
rate-limiting step for biosynthesis of spinosyn. Further, it was found that the PKS
263
protein SpnE, methyltransferase SpnI and the forosamine biosynthetic protein SpnO
264
and SpnN were not detectable by targeted proteomics analysis in S. albus J1074
265
(C4I6-M). Based on metabolomics analysis, it appeared that the accumulation of
266
spinosyn-CH2 also indicated an insufficient enzymatic activity of methyltransferase
267
SpnI
268
biosynthesis of spinosyn in S. albus J1074. In addition, the accumulation of other
269
intermediates or components, including spinosyn B, E, L3 and P-CH2, also indicated
270
an insufficient amount (or low activity) of the corresponding enzymes in S. albus
271
J1074 (C4I6-M) (Table 4). And the biosynthetic pathway of spinosyn requires
272
systematically refactoring to improve the synthetic efficiency in S. albus J1074.
273
Combined with the targeted metabolomics and the translational analysis of spinosyn
274
biosynthetic genes in Streptomyces host, it was clearly indicated that the biosynthesis
. However, the expression of these proteins in both S. albus J1074 (C4I6-M) and S.
40
. This is likely another important rate-limiting step in the heterologous
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of sugar ligands and the insufficient enzymatic activity of methyltransferase and
276
polyketide synthase were probably the rate-limiting steps of heterologous production
277
of spinosyn in S. albus J1074 (C4I6-M) (Table S4).
278 279
Overexpression of sugar biosynthetic module, methyltransferase and polyketide
280
synthase to promote spinosyn biosynthesis
281
Under the guidance of the above information, the subsequent synthetic modules
282
optimization were employed in attempt to overcome these rate-limiting steps in S.
283
albus J1074 (C4I6-M). The high-efficiency Streptomyces promoters, such as kasOp*
284
58
285
ermE promoter in S. albus (data not shown), were used to overexpress the rhamnose
286
biosynthetic genes and methyltransferase gene spnI (Figure 4A). Facilitated by the E.
287
coli-Streptomyces shuttle plasmid pJTU1278, the overexpression cassette was
288
introduced stably into the chromosome of S. albus J1074 (C4I6-M) by double
289
crossover (Figure 4B). The engineered strain S. albus J1074 (C4I6-M)-OE1 were
290
screened and verified by PCR (Figure 4C & Figure 5A). The engineered strain was
291
used in the fermentation study. As shown in Figure 5B, the ratio of spinosyn P-CH2
292
(relative abundance): spinosyn A (relative abundance) was decreased from 100% to
293
10% in S. albus J1074 (C4I6-M)-OE1. Consequently, compared to S. albus J1074
294
(C4I6-M), the production of spinosad could be easily detected (383µg/L) in S. albus
295
J1074 (C4I6-M)-OE1 (Figure 5C). By using the same strategy as described above,
296
the whole TDP-D-forosamine biosynthetic module has been subsequently
297
overexpressed in S. albus J1074 (C4I6-M)-OE2 (Figure S8 & Figure 5A). As shown
298
in Figure 5B, by overexpression of forosamine biosynthetic modules, the
299
heterologous efficiency of spinosad in S. albus J1074 (C4I6-M)-OE2 has been
rpsL-TP and rpsL-cf 59, of which the strengths are ten-fold higher compared to the
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significantly improved and the production reached 686µg/L. Lastly, the native
301
promoter of PKS gene spnE was also replaced with kasOp* in S. albus J1074
302
(C4I6-M)-OE3 (Figure S9 & Figure 5A), the production of spinosad finally reached
303
1460 µg/L in 48 hours (Figure S10), which is about 1,000-fold higher than the
304
original strain S. albus J1074 (C4I6-M) (Figure 5B). Accordingly, under the guidance
305
of omics analysis, the heterologous biosynthetic efficiency of spinosad could be
306
increased step by step after several rounds of synthetic pathway refactoring.
307 308
By the way, it also has to realize that, compared to Sa. spinosa NRRL 18395 and Sa.
309
erythraea
310
However, the heterologous production of spinosyn in this work has opened a new
311
route for future modification or production of targeted product in Streptomyces host,
312
due to their rapid proliferation and readily genetic manipulation. And in Streptomyces,
313
the spinosad could be efficiently produced in a very short period compared with
314
Saccharopolyspora (Figure S10). More importantly, in this study, various strategies
315
ranging from heterologous production of a NP to subsequent application of
316
“omics”-guided metabolic engineering for efficient biosynthesis of NPs with complex
317
structure have been developed. Heterologous production of spinosyn in Streptomyces
318
spp has been demonstrated as an example of the application of these approaches.
319
Although the biosynthetic efficiency of spinosyn in Streptomyces app. has been
320
increased dramatically, in this study, the current results should serve as the start point
321
for further studies aimed at the more efficient production of spinosyn in a
322
heterologous host. Importantly, this approach could be readily adaptable to highly
323
efficient heterologous production of other valuable NPs.
60
, the current production of spinosad in Streptomyces was relatively low.
324
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Methods
326
Microorganisms, fermentation and analysis
327
The plasmids and strains used in this study are given in Table S1. Streptomyces and
328
its derivatives were cultivated on soybean flour-mannitol agar plates (2% (w/v)
329
soybean flour, 2% (w/v) mannitol and 2% (w/v) agar) and International Streptomyces
330
Project (ISP) Medium 4 agar plates (BD Biosciences, San Jose, CA, USA) for
331
sporulation and conjugation, respectively. Spores were collected, suspended in 20%
332
(v/v) glycerol and stored at –80°C. In fermentation experiments, seeds were grown in
333
trypticase soy broth and the fermentation medium was 4% (w/v) glucose, 1% (w/v)
334
glycerol, 3% (w/v) soluble starch, 1.5% (w/v) Difco soytone, 1% (w/v) beef extract,
335
0.65% (w/v) peptone, 0.05% (w/v) yeast extract, 0.1% (w/v) MgSO4, 0.2% (w/v)
336
NaCl and 0.24% (w/v) CaCO3. Spinosyn was characterized and quantified using a
337
liquid chromatography (LCQ) Fleet™ ion-trap mass spectrometer or a high-resolution
338
Q-Exactive™ Hybrid Quadrupole- OrbitrapTM mass spectrometer (Thermo Scientific™,
339
Waltham, MA). Unless special instruction, all the spinosyn samples were analyzed at
340
the end of 5-day fermentation.
341 342
BAC library construction
343
Sa. spinosa NRRL 18395 was cultivated on trypticase soy broth supplemented with
344
0.5% (w/v) glycine for 48 h. The mycelium was collected and used for the preparation
345
of chromosomal DNA plugs. A pBeloBAC11-derived BAC vector pIndigoBAC536-S
346
was used for BAC library construction essentially as described 47, 61. The BAC library
347
was evaluated by measuring the migration of plasmid during pulsed-field gel
348
electrophoresis. The BAC plasmid that contained the intact spinosyns biosynthetic
349
gene cluster was screened and verified by polymerase chain reaction (PCR).
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Conjugation of BAC plasmid to Streptomyces
352
The aac(3)IV-oriT-attP(ΦC31)-int(ΦC31) cassette was amplified from plasmid
353
pSET152 using a primer (Table S2). The cassette was used to replace the
354
chloramphenicol-resistance gene of the BAC plasmid by Red/ET recombination
355
And aac(3)IV gene could be used as a selectable marker (apramycin resistance) in
356
subsequent study. The modified BAC plasmid was introduced into the Streptomyces
357
chromosome by triparental conjugation
358
Escherichia coli DH10b(C4I6-M) and E. coli ET12567(pUB307) were grown to an
359
absorbance at 600 nm (A600) of 0.4 – 0.6. Cells were pelleted by centrifugation at 4000
360
rpm for 4 min, washed twice in Luria–Bertani (LB) broth, and finally suspended in a
361
smaller volume of LB. The fresh or frozen (stored at –40°C) purified Streptomyces
362
spores (S. albus J1074 or S. lividans TK24) were washed twice in LB, suspended in
363
TES (2-[2-hydroxy-1,1-bis(hydroxymethyl)ethyl)amino] ethanesulfonic acid) buffer
364
(0.05 M, pH 8.0) and incubated at 50°C for 10 min to activate germination. Then an
365
equal volume of double-strength germination medium (1% (w/v) Oxoid yeast extract,
366
1% (w/v) Difco Casamino acids and 0.01 M CaCl2) was added and the mixture
367
incubated at 37°C with shaking (220 rpm) for 2 – 3 h. The germinated spores were
368
pelleted by centrifugation, collected and suspended in TES buffer. Approximately 108
369
E. coli cells (DH10b(C4I6-M) : ET12567(pUB307) ≈ 1 : 1) were added to the
370
prepared spores (not less than 108 spores/conjugation) and the mixture was spread
371
onto an ISP Medium 4 agar plate. The conjugation plates were incubated for 11 – 14 h
372
at 30°C and then the surface of the plates was overlaid with 1 mL of sterile water
373
(containing 600 µg trimethoprim and 1 mg apramycin). The plates were then
49
62
.
(Figure S4). Briefly, the plasmid donors
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incubated for an additional 3 – 5 days at 30°C, until the transconjugants could be
375
picked for subsequent assay.
376 377
RNA isolation and Reverse Transcription-PCR (RT-PCR)
378
Cells in fermentation broth were collected after incubation for 48 h. Total RNA
379
extraction and reverse transcription were perormed as described
380
performed with cDNA as template and primers designed in this study (Table S2) to
381
verify the transcription of spinosyn biosynthetic genes.
63
. PCR was
382 383
Targeted Proteomics analysis
384
Cells collected from fermentation broth were pelleted by centrifugation (12,000 rpm
385
for 5 min at 4ºC, collected and washed three times in cold wash buffer (100 mM NaCl,
386
25 mM Tris–HCl, pH 7.5). The washed pellet was ground thoroughly under liquid
387
nitrogen and 1 g of the cell powder was suspended in 2 mL pre-chilled lysis buffer (8
388
M
389
3-[(3-cholamido-propyl)-dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate (CHAPS), 75 mM
390
NaCl, 50 mM Tris–HCl (pH 8.0) and 1 complete EDTA-Free protease inhibitor
391
cocktail tablet (Roche, Indianapolis, IN) per 10 mL of buffer). The suspended sample
392
was vortex-mixed for 30 s at 20 min intervals for 2 h; the supernatant materials from
393
the lysed cells was collected by centrifugation (13,000 rpm for 50 min at 4°C).
394
Proteins from the cell lysates were measured using a non-interference protein assay
395
kit (Sangon Biotech, Shanghai, China) then adjusted to 3 µg/µL using lysis buffer. An
396
equal volume of 100 mM ammonium bicarbonate buffer (pH 8.0) was subsequently
397
added and the sample was reduced at 37°C for 1 h by adding 3 mM TCEP
398
(tris(2-carboxyethyl)-phosphine) then alkylated by adding 15 mM iodoacetamide and
urea,
2
M
thiourea,
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incubating the sample in darkness for 1 h. The excess iodoacetamide was quenched by
400
adding TCEP to 15 mM final concentration and incubating for 15 min. The sample
401
was diluted with ammonium bicarbonate buffer to 1 M urea final concentration before
402
the addition of trypsin (enzyme/substrate ratio 1:50, w/w) and incubation for 12 h at
403
37°C. The detergent and salt in the digested peptide sample were removed by passage
404
through a Pierce™ detergent removal spin column (Thermo Scientific, Rockford, IL)
405
and then a Sep-Pak™ C18 cartridge (Waters Corp., Milford, MA), respectively. The
406
purified peptides were freeze-dried (–80°C at reduced pressure) for subsequent liquid
407
chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) analysis.
408 409
The peptide samples were analyzed with a hybrid quadrupole-time-of-flight (TOF)
410
liquid chromatography (LC) tandem mass (MS/MS) spectrometer (TripleTOFTM
411
5600+, AB Sciex, Foster City, CA) equipped with a nanospray ion source. The
412
samples were firstly loaded onto a C18 trap column (5 µm, 5 × 0.3 mm, Agilent
413
Technologies) and eluted into a C18 analytical column (75 µm × 150 mm, 3 µm
414
particle size, 100 Å pore size, Eksigent). Elution of the peptides were conducted using
415
a stepwise gradient with mobile phase A (3% (v/v) dimethyl sulfoxide, 97% (v/v)
416
water and 0.1% (v/v) formic acid) and mobile phase B (3% (v/v) dimethyl sulfoxide,
417
97% (v/v) acetonitrile and 0.1% (v/v) formic acid). Peptides were identified via
418
database searching of raw data using ProteinPilotTM v4.5 software (AB SCIEX)
419
against the designated proteome database.
420 421
Targeted metabolomics analysis
422
For rapid sampling and quenching, 10 mL of fermentation broth was quenched
423
quickly by adding 40 mL of chilled (–80°C) 80% (v/v) methanol and the pellet was
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collected by centrifugation (8000 rpm for 5 min at 4°C)
. For metabolite
425
extraction, 5 mL of hot (95°C) ethanol was added, vortex-mixed for 30 s, incubated at
426
95°C for 3 min followed by freezing at –40°C for 15 min. The supernatant was
427
collected by centrifugation (5000 rpm for 5 min at 4°C) and freeze-dried at –80°C
428
under reduced pressure.
429 430
The metabolite sample was analyzed using an ultra-high-performance liquid
431
chromatography (UHPLC) system (Shimadzu LC20ADXR) equipped with a hybrid
432
quadrupole-TOF LC/MS/MS mass spectrometer (TripleTOFTM 5600+, AB Sciex).
433
Samples
434
chromatography (HILIC) (Acquity UPLC BEH Amide column; mobile phase A
435
containing 10 mM ammonium formate and 0.1% formic acid in water and mobile
436
phase B containing 95% acetonitrile and 5% water) and a C18 reversed-phase
437
chromatography (Kinetex C18 column, mobile phase A containing 2 mM ammonium
438
formate and 0.05% formic acid in water and mobile phase B containing 50%
439
acetonitrile and 50% methanol) in both positive and negative ionization modes.
440
Conditions for the TOF survey scan were: scan range 100 – 1600 Da, accumulation
441
time 0.1 s. TOF MS was followed by an eight product ion scan, accumulation time 50
442
ms/scan (m/z 50 – 1250).
were
analyzed
separately
using
both
a
hydrophilic
interaction
443 444
Gene overexpression plasmid construction
445
Genes gtt, epi, gdh and kre were amplified from NRRL18395, promoter kasOp* was
446
amplified from pN1. Then, a 1.6 kb kasOp*-controlled gtt-epi DNA fragment and
447
other 2.0 kb kasOp*-controlled gdh-kre fragment were clone to pSET152 to generate
448
a 3.6 kb NDP-L-rhamnose biosynthetic gene overexpression cassette by restriction
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enzyme digestion and ligation. The rpsLp-cf –controlled spnI gene (promoter
450
rpsLp-cf was amplified from pN2, spnI was amplified from NRRL18395) and
451
selection marker (neo, amplified from pK18mob) were also ligated by restriction
452
enzyme digestion and ligation to generate a 3.0 kb fragment. This 3.0 kb fragment
453
was subsequently introduced into former pSET152 derivate by Red/ET to generate a
454
6.6 kb overexpression cassette (as shown in Figure 4A). Meanwhile, a 1.54 kb
455
HindIII-XbaI left arm containing the 5ʹ germinus of XNR_5867 (a biosynthetic gene
456
located in Candicidin gene cluster of S. albus J1074) and 1.54 kb EcoRV-HindIII
457
right arm containing the 3ʹ germinus of XNR_5867 were ligated with HindIII digested
458
pUC57ʹ (removed the multiple cloning sites) to generate pUC57ʹ-LR. The 6.6 kb
459
overexpression cassette was cut from the pSET152 derivate by XbaI and EcoRV, and
460
then ligated to XbaI-EcoRV digested pUC57ʹ-LR to generate pUC57ʹ-LR-gegk-I. The
461
9.6 kb DNA fragment was cut from pUC57ʹ-LR-gegk-I by HindIII and finally ligated
462
with HindIII digesged pJTU1278 to generate the Streptomyces overexpression
463
plasmid pJTU1278-gegk-I-OE.
464 465
The TDP-D-forosamine biosynthetic gene spnO, spnN, spnQ, spnR and spnS and PKS
466
gene spnE were overexpressed using kasOp*, rpsLp-cf and rpsLp-TP. And the
467
corresponding plasmid pJTU1278-ONQRS-OE and pJTU1278-spnE-OE were
468
constructed by DNA fragments assembly in yeast 67. All the primers used for plasmids
469
construction were shown in Table S2.
470 471
Statistical analysis
472
Statistical analyses were carried out using Microsoft Excel 2013. All the data were
473
expressed as mean ± standard error of mean (SEM) and analyzed by unpaired
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two-tailed Student’s t-test unless specified in the figure legend. P < 0.05 was used as a
475
standard criterion of statistical significance.
476 477
Supporting Information
478
Table S1, the strains and plasmids used in this study; Table S2, the sequences of PCR
479
primer pairs; Table S3, summary statistics of the proteins detected in S.albus J1074
480
(C4I6-M) and S. lividans TK24 (C4I6-M); Table S4, the transcriptional and
481
translational profiling of spinosyn biosynthetic genes and corresponding metabolites
482
in S. albus J1074(C4I6-M); Figure S1, spinosyn biosynthetic pathway; Figure S2,
483
screening of the intact spinosyn biosynthetic gene cluster from the Sa. spinosa NRRL
484
18395 BAC library; Figure S3, modification of the C4I6 plasmid; Figure S4,
485
flowchart of triparental and bioparental conjugation; Figure S5, triparental
486
conjugation and preliminary screening of conjugants by PCR; Figure S6, qualitative
487
analysis of spinosyn A in S. albus J1074 (C4I6-M) by LC-MS/MS; Figure S7,
488
chemical structures of spinosyn components and intermediates; Figure S8,
489
overexpression of the TDP-D-forosamine biosynthetic module in S. albus
490
J1074(C4I6-M)-E2; Figure S9,
491
J1074(C4I6-M)-OE3; Figure S10. time course of spinosad fermetation in the S. albus
492
J1074(C4I6-M)-OE3.
overexpression of the PKS gene spnE in S. albus
493 494
Acknowledgments
495
We thank Prof. Meizhong Luo (National Key Laboratory of Crop Genetic
496
Improvement, Huazhong Agricultural University) for his help in the construction of
497
the BAC library. We also thank Shuai Fu (J1 Biotech Co. Ltd, Wuhan, China) and Dr.
498
Xiaoyan Xu (AB Sciex Pte. Ltd) for her help in proteomics and metabolomics
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analysis, respectively. This study was supported by National 973 Program of China
500
(No. 2012CB721000), the Open Project of State Key Laboratory of Microbial
501
Metabolism funded this work (No. MMLKF15-13), the Science and Technology
502
Investment Program of SINOCHEM Group (No. 2015ADSW0039), and the Young
503
Talents Program of National High-level Personnel of Special Support Program (The
504
“Ten Thousand Talent Program”) to T. Liu. The authors also specially acknowledge
505
the support from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 31500072),
506
the Natural Science Foundation of HuBei Province (No. 2015CFB415), and China
507
Postdoctoral Science Foundation Grant (No. 2014M562052).
508 509
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characterization of the enzymes involved in TDP-D-forosamine biosynthesis
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rhamnosyltransferase by in vitro reconstitution of spinosyn biosynthetic
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synthesis of permethylated rhamnose and characterization of the functions of
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of the antibiotic biosynthetic gene clusters in linear plasmid SCP1 of
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recombineering of biosynthetic gene clusters, large operons or single genes for
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heterologous expression, Nature Protocols 11, 1175-1190.
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stepwise increase in pristinamycin II biosynthesis by Streptomyces
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pristinaespiralis through combinatorial metabolic engineering, Metabolic
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47. Shi, X., Zeng, H., Xue, Y., and Luo, M. (2011) A pair of new BAC and BIBAC
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Evidence that the extracytoplasmic function sigma factor sigmaE is required
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heterologous expression of the fredericamycin biosynthetic gene cluster from
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Streptomyces griseus, Journal of the American Chemical Society 127,
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52. Chen, Y., Wendt-Pienkowski, E., and Shen, B. (2008) Identification and utility of
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FdmR1 as a Streptomyces antibiotic regulatory protein activator for
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fredericamycin production in Streptomyces griseus ATCC 49344 and
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55. Pan, H.-X., Li, J.-A., He, N.-J., Chen, J.-Y., Zhou, Y.-M., Shao, L., and Chen,
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D.-J. (2011) Improvement of spinosad production by overexpression of gtt and
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gdh controlled by promoter PermE* in Saccharopolyspora spinosa
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SIPI-A2090, Biotechnology letters 33, 733-739.
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56. Madduri, K., Waldron, C., and Merlo, D. J. (2001) Rhamnose biosynthesis
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pathway supplies precursors for primary and secondary metabolism in
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Saccharopolyspora spinosa, Journal of Bacteriology 183, 5632-5638.
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production in Saccharopolyspora spinosa by metabolic engineering,
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engineered strong promoter for streptomycetes, Applied and Environmental
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elements to unlock the microbial natural products in Streptomyces,
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 112, 12181-12186.
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Saccharopolyspora erythraea, Applied and Environmental Microbiology 82,
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61. Luo, M., Wang, Y.-H., Frisch, D., Joobeur, T., Wing, R. A., and Dean, R. A.
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conferring resistance to melon Fusarium wilt (Fom-2), Genome 44, 154-162.
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62. Zhang, Y., Muyrers, J. P., Testa, G., and Stewart, A. F. (2000) DNA cloning by
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homologous recombination in Escherichia coli, Nature Biotechnology 18,
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1314-1317.
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63. Tan, G. Y., Bai, L., and Zhong, J. J. (2013) Exogenous 1, 4‐butyrolactone
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64. Canelas, A. B., Ras, C., Ten Pierick, A., van Dam, J. C., Heijnen, J. J., and Van
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66. Zhao, F., Xue, C., Wang, M., Wang, X., and Lu, W. (2013) A comparative
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LU104 revealed metabolic mechanisms correlated with increases in spinosad
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67. Noskov, V. N., Karas, B. J., Young, L., Chuang, R.-Y., Gibson, D. G., Lin, Y.-C.,
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Stam, J., Yonemoto, I. T., Suzuki, Y., and Andrews-Pfannkoch, C. (2012)
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Synthetic Biology 1, 267-273.
733 734 735 736 737 738 739 740 741 742 743
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744 745 746 747 748 749 750
Table 1. Comparison of ET12567 (pUB307) and ET12567 (pUZ8002) as helpers in
751
intergeneric conjugation experiments with S.albus J1074 and S. lividans TK24.
Conjugation
S. albus J1074 True Exconjugant positive frequency rate *
S. lividans TK24 True Exconjugant positive frequency rate *
752
Biparental, < 2% 10-5 ~ 10-6 < 2% 10-5 ~ 10-6 ET12567(pUZ8002) Triparental, 10-5 ~ 10-6 > 70% 10-5 ~ 10-6 > 70% ET12567(pUB307) * True positive rate: the percentage of conjugants which contains the intact spinosyn
753
biosynthetic gene cluster. The right conjugants were preliminarily verified by PCR by
754
using the lib-screen-up F/R, lib-screen-mid F/R, or lib-screen-dn F/R primer pairs.
755 756 757 758 759 760 761 762 763 764 765 766 767 768
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769 770
Table 2. Analysis the expression of targeted proteins involved in spinosyns
771
biosynthesis in S. spinosa NRRL 18395, S. lividans TK24 (C4I6-M) and S. albus
772
J1074 (C4I6-M) by presenting the number of peptides hits.
773
S. spinosa NRRL S. lividans TK24 S. albus J1074 18395 (C4I6-M) (C4I6-M) Peptides % Cov Peptides % Cov Peptides Proteins % Cov (95) (95%) (95) (95%) (95) (95%) SpnA 0 0 ND ND 0.8 2 SpnB 4.6 5 ND ND 2.3 3 SpnC 1.1 2 ND ND 1.6 3 SpnD 3.2 7 2.9 6 3.1 8 SpnE 2.8 7 1.8 4 ND ND 9.5 2 21.5 4 SpnF 4.4 1 SpnG 3.1 1 3.3 1 25.1 7 SpnH 10.8 1 30 4 52 9 SpnI 10.6 3 ND ND ND ND SpnJ 3.3 1 17.6 5 27.6 9 SpnK 23.2 5 44.6 10 52.1 12 SpnL ND ND 3.2 1 14.5 3 SpnM ND ND 3.1 1 26.6 5 SpnN 3.3 1 ND ND ND ND SpnO ND ND ND ND 0 0 SpnP 5.7 2 ND ND 19.8 7 SpnQ 12.3 4 ND ND 8.4 3 SpnR 4.2 1 ND ND 4.2 1 SpnS 13.3 2 ND ND 32.5 6 Gtt 0 0 / / / / / / Epi 10.4 1 / / Gdh 6.4 1 / / / / Kre 3.0 1 / / / / % Cov(95): peptide coverage with 95% confidence; Peptides (95%): number of
774
identified specific peptides with 95% confidence; ND: NOT detected; /: NOT existed;
775
In S. albus J1074, the expression of XNR_0593, XNR_0594, XNR_0573 and
776
XNR_2077 (homologs of Gtt, Epi, Gdh and Kre, respectively) were too low to detect.
777 778 779 780 781
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782 783
Table 3. Relative quantitative analysis of precursors and cofactors involved in
784
spinosyn biosynthesis in Sa. spinosa NRRL 18395, S. lividans TK24 (C4I6-M) and S.
785
albus J1074 (C4I6-M). Relative abundance Metabolites
Mode / Adduction
NRRL 18395
J1074 (C4I6-M)
TK24 (C4I6-M)
HILIC- / [M-H]ˉ
Precursors #
Acetyl-CoA
Malonyl-CoA Methylmalonyl-CoA #
Propionyl-CoA
#
UDP-Glucose
45.4 ± 7.2
381.2 ± 21.1*
42.5 ± 3.3
C18+ / [M+H]
+
92.8 ± 55.3
375.3 ± 37.1*
362.0 ± 150.6*
C18+ / [M+H]
+
222.3 ± 39.7
817 ± 282*
438.5 ± 81.7*
HILIC+ / [M+H]+
8.7 ± 2.4
15.6 ± 0.6*
6.9 ± 1.7
HILIC- / [M-H]ˉ
1532.3 ± 337.5
3261.6 ± 464.7*
112.2 ± 10.9
HILIC+ / [M+H]+
4.0 ± 1.0
9527.9 ± 343.4*
20423.3 ±543.1*
79.4 ± 24.6
750.2 ± 75.6*
370.8 ± 17.6*
Cofactors # #
786 787
# # #
SAM
HILIC+ / [M+H]
+
NADH
HILIC+ / [M+H]
+
2.9 ± 0.8
32.8 ± 4.2*
14.0 ± 0.4*
NADP+
HILIC- [M-H]ˉ
15.3 ± 0.6
48.7 ± 5.1*
14.5 ± 0.5
NADPH
HILIC- [M-H]ˉ
1.2 ± 0.1
9.8 ± 0.9*
1.3 ± 0.3
NAD
+
HILIC-: HILIC column in negative ionization mode; HILIC+: HILIC column in
positive ionization mode; C18+: C18 column in positive ionization mode.
788
Due to the different orders of magnitude, the metabolites with the symbol
789
octothorpe (#) indicate the adjustment of the corresponding relative abundance. The
790
actual relative abundance was 1000-fold higher than presented in the table.
791 792
Values are mean ± SEM of 4 replications. * P < 0.05 compared to Sa. Spinose NRRL 18395.
793 794 795 796 797 798 799
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800
Table 4. Relative quantitative analysis of spinosyn components (or intermediates) in
801
Sa. spinosa NRRL 18395, S. lividans TK24 (C4I6-M) and S. albus J1074 (C4I6-M). Metabolites
Relative abundance
Mode /
#
Adduction
NRRL 18395
J1074 (C4I6-M)
TK24 (C4I6-M)
Spinosyn K
C18+ / [M+H]+
22.9 ± 7.0
ND
ND
Spinosyn J
C18+ / [M+H]
+
50.9 ± 11.4
ND
ND
C18+ / [M+H]
+
50.2 ± 13.2
ND
ND
C18+ / [M+H]
+
406.9 ± 99.1
104
35.0 ± 7.6
C18+ / [M+H]
+
2.1 ± 1.3
109.0 ± 16.6
ND
+
Spinosyn H Spinosyn B Spinosyn E Spinosyn L
C18+ / [M+H]
15.1 ± 2.7
ND
ND
Spinosyn A
C18+ / [M+H]+
5965.5 ± 1245.7
653.3 ± 518.3
145.0 ± 42.9
Spinosyn A-iso
C18+ / [M+H]+
213.2 ± 48.9
ND
ND
C18+ / [M+H]
+
3.8 ± 1.5
123.2 ± 19.4
ND
C18+ / [M+H]
+
2862.4 ± 677.9
197.8 ± 172.4
73.8 ± 18.9
C18+ / [M+H]
+
19.1 ± 2.6
ND
ND
Spinosyn P
C18+ / [M+H]
+
ND
249.0 ± 36.4
ND
Spinosyn P-CH2
C18+ / [M+H]+
1.4 ± 0.8
534.1 ± 154.8
ND
Spinosyn L3 Spinosyn D Spinosyn D2
802
C18+: C18 column in positive ionization mode;
803
The chemical structures of each spinosyn component (or intermediate) could be
804 805
found in Figure S7; Due to the different orders of magnitude, the sample with the symbol octothorpe
806
(#) indicate the adjustment of the corresponding relative abundance. The actual
807
relative abundance was 1000-fold higher than presented in the table.
808
Values are mean ± SEM of 4 replications; ND: NOT detected.
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Figure 1. The workflow of the omics analysis guided natural product heterologous production in genome mining. 184x141mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Figure 2. The transcription of spinosyn biosynthetic genes in S. albus J1074. (A) The spinosyn biosynthetic genes are located in different operons. Each red arrow indicates the gene(s) in the same operon. (B) Transcription analysis of spinosyn post-modification genes and PKS genes. These selected postmodification genes were located in different operons. PKS genes spnA, B, C, D and E belong to the same operon. C4I6 plasmid DNA and S. albus J1074 (C4I6-M) cDNA were used as templates for PCR. In negative control, randomly selected spnS gene could not be detected by using total RNA samples. From left to right, the templates used in PCR reactions are the RNA samples of J1074(C4I6) (1), TK24(C4I6) (2) and NRRL18395 (3), ddH2O (-) and C4I6 (+). Primer sequences are given in Table S2). 33x28mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Figure 3. High-resolution mass spectrum of spinosyn A. The 96 h fermentation broth (1liter) extracted twice with EtOAc (2 liters) and concentrated in vacuo, the extracts were redissolved in 0.5 mL HPLC methanol. After passage through a 0.45 µm filter, these concentrated EtOAc extracts were used for MS detection. In S. albus J1074 (C4I6-M) and S. lividans TK24 (C4I6-M), a mass of 754,4495 Da (or 754,4488 Da) is consistent with the sodium adduct of spinosyn A (Sigma standard, expected mass, 754,4500 Da). 101x61mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Figure 4. Overexpression of the rhamnose biosynthetic module and methyltransferase for spinosad overproduction in S. albus J1074. (A) Construction of the gene overexpression cassette. gtt, epi, gdh, kre and spnI were amplified from NRRL18395. (B) Schematic of gene overexpression strategy in S. albus J1074 (C4I6-M). (C) PCR verification of S. albus J1074 (C4I6-M)-OE. FIV and FV are the PCR products that were amplified using up-ck-F/R and dn-ck-F/R, respectively (primer sequences are given in Table S2). In S. albus J1074 (C4I6-M), FIV and FV cannot be amplified under the same conditions. 135x72mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Figure 5. Effects of gene overexpression on the spinosad biosynthesis in S. albus J1074. (A) Biosynthetic modules optimized strains. (B) The ratio (relative abundance) of spinosyn P-CH2 : spinosyn A in S. albus J1074 (C4I6-M) and S. albus J1074 (C4I6-M)-OE. (C) The production of spinosad in S. albus J1074 (C4I6-M)-OE1/2/3. 121x82mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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