1.Dynamic control of ERG20 expression to improve production of monoterpenes by engineering Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
Rong-Sheng LI ; Dong WANG ; Yu-Song SHI ; Li-Ping XU ; Xue-Li ZHANG ; Kou WANG ; Zhu-Bo DAI
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2022;47(4):897-905
Monoterpenes are widely used in cosmetics, food, medicine, agriculture and other fields. With the development of synthetic biology, it is considered as a potential way to create microbial cell factories to produce monoterpenes. Engineering Saccharomyces cerevisiae to produce monoterpenes has been a research hotspot in synthetic biology. In S. cerevisiae, the production of geranyl pyrophosphate(GPP) and farnesyl pyrophosphate(FPP) is catalyzed by a bifunctional enzyme farnesyl pyrophosphate synthetase(encoded by ERG20 gene) which is inclined to synthesize FPP essential for yeast growth. Therefore, reasonable control of FPP synthesis is the basis for efficient monoterpene synthesis in yeast cell factories. In order to achieve dynamic control from GPP to FPP biosynthesis in S. cerevisiae, we obtained a novel chassis strain HP001-pERG1-ERG20 by replacing the ERG20 promoter of the chassis strain HP001 with the promoter of cyclosqualene cyclase(ERG1) gene. Further, we reconstructed the metabolic pathway by using GPP and neryl diphosphate(NPP), cis-GPP as substrates in HP001-pERG1-ERG20. The yield of GPP-derived linalool increased by 42.5% to 7.6 mg·L~(-1), and that of NPP-derived nerol increased by 1 436.4% to 8.3 mg·L~(-1). This study provides a basis for the production of monoterpenes by microbial fermentation.
Fermentation
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Geranyltranstransferase/genetics*
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Monoterpenes/metabolism*
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Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolism*
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Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/metabolism*
2.Overexpression of a leucine transfer RNA gene tL(CAA)K improves the acetic acid tolerance of Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
Shuyi ZHAO ; Bing YUAN ; Xueqing WANG ; Hongqi CHEN ; Xinqing ZHAO ; Fengwu BAI
Chinese Journal of Biotechnology 2021;37(12):4293-4302
Acetic acid is a common inhibitor present in lignocellulosic hydrolysate. Development of acetic acid tolerant strains may improve the production of biofuels and bio-based chemicals using lignocellulosic biomass as raw materials. Current studies on stress tolerance of yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae have mainly focused on transcription control, but the role of transfer RNA (tRNA) was rarely investigated. We found that some tRNA genes showed elevated transcription levels in a stress tolerant yeast strain. In this study, we further investigated the effects of overexpressing an arginine transfer RNA gene tR(ACG)D and a leucine transfer RNA gene tL(CAA)K on cell growth and ethanol production of S. cerevisiae BY4741 under acetic acid stress. The tL(CAA)K overexpression strain showed a better growth and a 29.41% higher ethanol productivity than that of the control strain. However, overexpression of tR(ACG)D showed negative influence on cell growth and ethanol production. Further studies revealed that the transcriptional levels of HAA1, MSN2, and MSN4, which encode transcription regulators related to stress tolerance, were up-regulated in tL(CAA)K overexpressed strain. This study provides an alternative strategy to develop robust yeast strains for cellulosic biorefinery, and also provides a basis for investigating how yeast stress tolerance is regulated by tRNA genes.
Acetic Acid
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DNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism*
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Fermentation
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Leucine
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RNA, Transfer/genetics*
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Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolism*
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Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/metabolism*
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Transcription Factors
3.Expression of yeast acyl-delta9 desaturase for fatty acid biosynthesis in tobacco.
Jin'ai XUE ; Xue MAO ; Yongmei WU ; Zhirong YANG ; Xiaoyun JIA ; Li ZHANG ; Jiping WANG ; Aiqin YUE ; Xiping SUN ; Runzhi LI
Chinese Journal of Biotechnology 2013;29(5):630-645
Palmitoleic acid (16:1delta9), an unusual monounsaturated fatty acid, is highly valued for human nutrition, medication and industry. Plant oils containing large amounts of palmitoleic acid are the ideal resource for biodiesel production. To increase accumulation of palmitoleic acid in plant tissues, we used a yeast (Saccharomyees cerevisiae) acyl-CoA-delta9 desaturase (Scdelta9D) for cytosol- and plastid-targeting expression in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.). By doing this, we also studied the effects of the subcellular-targeted expression of this enzyme on lipid synthesis and metabolism in plant system. Compared to the wild type and vector control plants, the contents of monounsaturated palmitoleic (16:1delta9) and cis-vaccenic (18:1delta11) were significantly enhanced in the Scdelta9D-transgenic leaves whereas the levels of saturated palmitic acid (16:0) and polyunsaturated linoleic (18:2) and linolenic (18:3) acids were reduced in the transgenics. Notably, the contents of 16:1delta9 and 18:1delta11 in the Scdelta9D plastidal-expressed leaves were 2.7 and 1.9 folds of that in the cytosolic-expressed tissues. Statistical analysis appeared a negative correlation coefficient between 16:0 and 16:1delta9 levels. Our data indicate that yeast cytosolic acyl-CoA-delta9 desaturase can convert palmitic (16:0) into palmitoleic acid (16:1delta9) in high plant cells. Moreover, this effect of the enzyme is stronger with the plastid-targeted expression than the cytosol-target expression. The present study developed a new strategy for high accumulation of omega-7 fatty acids (16:1delta9 andl8:1delta11) in plant tissues by protein engineering of acyl-CoA-delta9 desaturase. The findings would particularly benefit the metabolic assembly of the lipid biosynthesis pathway in the large-biomass vegetative organs such as tobacco leaves for the production of high-quality biodiesel.
Fatty Acid Desaturases
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genetics
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metabolism
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Fatty Acids, Monounsaturated
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metabolism
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Plants, Genetically Modified
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Recombinant Proteins
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genetics
;
metabolism
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Saccharomyces cerevisiae
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enzymology
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Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins
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genetics
;
metabolism
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Tobacco
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genetics
;
metabolism
4.Effects of overexpression of NADH kinase gene on ethanol fermentation by Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
Han WANG ; Liang ZHANG ; Guiyang SHI
Chinese Journal of Biotechnology 2014;30(9):1381-1389
Glycerol is the main byproduct in ethanol production by Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In order to improve ethanol yield and the substrate conversion, a cassette about 4.5 kb for gene homologous recombination, gpd2Δ::PGK1(PT)-POS5-HyBR, was constructed and transformed into the haploid strain S. cerevisiae S1 (MATa) to replace the GPD2 gene by POS5 gene. The NADH kinase gene POS5 was successfully over expressed in the recombinant strain S. cerevisiae S3. Comparing with the parent strain, the recombinant strain S. cerevisiae S3 exhibited an 8% increase in ethanol production and a 33.64% decrease in glycerol production in the conical flask fermentation with an initiatory glucose concentration of 150 g/L. Overexpression of NADH kinase gene seems effective in reducing glycerol production and increasing ethanol yield.
Ethanol
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chemistry
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Fermentation
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Glycerol
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chemistry
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Industrial Microbiology
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Mitochondrial Proteins
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genetics
;
metabolism
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Phosphotransferases (Alcohol Group Acceptor)
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genetics
;
metabolism
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Saccharomyces cerevisiae
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genetics
;
metabolism
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Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins
;
genetics
;
metabolism
6.Construction of Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutant with knockout of SNF4 gene.
Xiaohua LIN ; Chongrong KE ; Bisha WU ; Yongbiao ZHENG ; Li LI ; Youqiang CHEN ; Jianzhong HUANG
Chinese Journal of Biotechnology 2011;27(4):572-578
Construction and ethanol production effects of SNF4 gene knockout in Saccharomyces cerevisiae were described in this paper. For knockout of SNF4 gene in S. cerevisiae YS2, a PCR-amplified disruption cassette was used, encoding the short flanking homologous regions to the SNF4 gene and Kan(r) as selectable marker. The SNF4 gene disruption cassette was transformed into S. cerevisiae YS2 through LiAc/SS Carrier DNA/PEG. The positive transformants were grown on G418 plates and verified by PCR. The Kan(r) marker was rescued by transforming plasmid pSH65 into positive transformants and inducing expression of Cre recombinase in galactose-containing medium. Lastly, the YS2-deltaSNF4 strain, in which SNF4 allele gene were completely knocked out, was obtained by repeating the same procedure. The result of anaerobic fermentation showed that ethanol production of the SNF4 gene knockout strain had increased by 7.57 percent as compared with the original strain YS2. The experiment indicated ethanol production could be improved significantly with the approach ofSNF4 gene knockout by Cre-LoxP system.
AMP-Activated Protein Kinases
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genetics
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Ethanol
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metabolism
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Fermentation
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Gene Knockout Techniques
;
methods
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Mutation
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Saccharomyces cerevisiae
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genetics
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Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins
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genetics
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Transcription Factors
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genetics
7.Quantification of the curing effects of phenanthridine on yeast prion PSI+.
Zhengwei ZHONG ; Lijie WANG ; Hui XIE ; Hui LI ; Jianwei HE ; Youtao SONG
Chinese Journal of Biotechnology 2012;28(6):737-746
In order to quantify the curing effects of phenanthridine on yeast prion, we introduced semi-denaturing agarose gel electrophoresis and fluorescence recovery after photobleaching techniques to quantify the curing effects of phenanthridine on yeast prion at the protein and cellular levels with the [PSI+] yeast strain expressing GFP-Sup35p (NGMC). The results showed that these two approaches could precisely quantify the curing effects of phenanthridine on [PSI+] cells. After a treatment for 1 through 5 days with phenanthridine, the curing rates of [PSI+] cells were 0%, 0%, 51.7%, 87.5% and 94.4%, respectively. Meanwhile, we quantified the sizes of Sup35p polymers in phenanthridine induced pink phenotype cells. The aggregation status in 1-2 days phenanthridine treated cells were similar to those in [PSI+] cells, while the aggregation status in 3-5 days phenanthridine treated cells were similar to those in [psi(-)] cells.
Computer Simulation
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Models, Biological
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Peptide Termination Factors
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metabolism
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Phenanthridines
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pharmacology
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Prions
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drug effects
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genetics
;
metabolism
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Saccharomyces cerevisiae
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cytology
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drug effects
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metabolism
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Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins
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metabolism
8.Improvement of acetic acid tolerance and fermentation performance of industrial Saccharomyces cerevisiae by overexpression of flocculent gene FLO1 and FLO1c.
Zhaoli DU ; Yanfei CHENG ; Hui ZHU ; Xiuping HE ; Borun ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Biotechnology 2015;31(2):231-241
Flocculent gene FLO1 and its truncated form FLO1c with complete deletion of repeat unit C were expressed in a non-flocculent industrial strain Saccharomyces cerevisiae CE6 to generate recombinant flocculent strains 6-AF1 and 6-AF1c respectively. Both strains of 6-AF1 and 6-AF1c displayed strong flocculation and better cell growth than the control strain CE6-V carrying the empty vector under acetic acid stress. Moreover, the flocculent strains converted glucose to ethanol at much higher rates than the control strain CE6-V under acetic acid stress. In the presence of 0.6% (V/V) acetic acid, the average ethanol production rates of 6-AF1 and 6-AF1c were 1.56 and 1.62 times of that of strain CE6-V, while the ethanol production rates of 6-AF1 and 6-AF1c were 1.21 and 1.78 times of that of strain CE6-V under 1.0% acetic acid stress. Results in this study indicate that acetic acid tolerance and fermentation performance of industrial S. cerevisiae under acetic acid stress can be improved largely by flocculation endowed by expression of flocculent genes, especially FLO1c.
Acetic Acid
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chemistry
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Ethanol
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Fermentation
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Flocculation
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Glucose
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Industrial Microbiology
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Mannose-Binding Lectins
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genetics
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Saccharomyces cerevisiae
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genetics
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metabolism
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Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins
;
genetics
9.Ethanol tolerance in yeast: molecular mechanisms and genetic engineering.
Qiumei ZHANG ; Xinqing ZHAO ; Rujiao JIANG ; Qian LI ; Fengwu BAI
Chinese Journal of Biotechnology 2009;25(4):481-487
Improvement of stress tolerance to various adverse environmental conditions (such as toxic products, high temperature) of the industrial microorganisms is important for industrial applications. Ethanol produced by yeast fermentation is inhibitory to both yeast cell growth and metabolisms, and consequently is one of the key stress elements of brewer's yeast. Research on the biochemical and molecular mechanism of the tolerance of yeast can provide basis for breeding of yeast strain with improved ethanol tolerance. In recent years, employing global gene transcriptional analysis and functional analysis, new knowledge on the biochemical and molecular mechanisms of yeast ethanol tolerance has been accumulated, and novel genes and biochemical parameters related to ethanol tolerance have been revealed. Based on these studies, the overexpression and/or disruption of the related genes have successfully resulted in the breeding of new yeast strains with improved ethanol tolerance. This paper reviewed the recent research progress on the molecular mechanism of yeast ethanol tolerance, as well as the genetic engineering manipulations to improve yeast ethanol tolerance. The studies reviewed here not only deepened our knowledge on yeast ethanol tolerance, but also provided basis for more efficient bioconversion for bio-energy production.
Drug Tolerance
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genetics
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Ethanol
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metabolism
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pharmacology
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Fermentation
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Genetic Engineering
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methods
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Industrial Microbiology
;
methods
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Saccharomyces cerevisiae
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drug effects
;
genetics
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Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins
;
genetics
10.Mechanism and application of molecular self-assembly in Sup35 prion domain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
Wen YIN ; Jin HE ; Ziniu YU ; Jieping WANG
Chinese Journal of Biotechnology 2011;27(10):1401-1407
Sup35 in its native state is a translation termination factor in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The prion domain of Sup35p can form amyloid-like proteinaceous fibrils in vitro and in vivo. Furthermore, the in-register cross beta-sheet structure of Sup35p amyloid fibrils is similar to those formed in other species. Therefore, studies on mechanism of Sup35p self-assembly can be an appropriate model to study protein misfolding-related diseases and prion biology. Because of its ability to self-assemble into nanowires, the prion domain of Sup35p has been widely used in biotechnology and nanotechnology.
Amino Acid Sequence
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Amyloid
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chemistry
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metabolism
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Molecular Sequence Data
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Peptide Termination Factors
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chemistry
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Prions
;
chemistry
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Protein Conformation
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Saccharomyces cerevisiae
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genetics
;
metabolism
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Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins
;
chemistry