Abstract
BackgroundFungi are treasure chests for yet unexplored natural products. However, exploitation of their real potential remains difficult as a significant proportion of biosynthetic gene clusters appears silent under standard laboratory conditions. Therefore, elucidation of novel products requires gene activation or heterologous expression. For heterologous gene expression, we previously developed an expression platform in Aspergillus niger that is based on the transcriptional regulator TerR and its target promoter PterA.ResultsIn this study, we extended this system by regulating expression of terR by the doxycycline inducible Tet-on system. Reporter genes cloned under the control of the target promoter PterA remained silent in the absence of doxycycline, but were strongly expressed when doxycycline was added. Reporter quantification revealed that the coupled system results in about five times higher expression rates compared to gene expression under direct control of the Tet-on system. As production of secondary metabolites generally requires the expression of several biosynthetic genes, the suitability of the self-cleaving viral peptide sequence P2A was tested in this optimised expression system. P2A allowed polycistronic expression of genes required for Asp-melanin formation in combination with the gene coding for the red fluorescent protein tdTomato. Gene expression and Asp-melanin formation was prevented in the absence of doxycycline and strongly induced by addition of doxycycline. Fluorescence studies confirmed the correct subcellular localisation of the respective enzymes.ConclusionThis tightly regulated but strongly inducible expression system enables high level production of secondary metabolites most likely even those with toxic potential. Furthermore, this system is compatible with polycistronic gene expression and, thus, suitable for the discovery of novel natural products.
Highlights
Fungi are treasure chests for yet unexplored natural products
We aimed to generate an optimised fungal heterologous expression system by combining the three latter aspects of heterologous secondary metabolite production in A. niger: (1) using the expression amplification system of TerR/pathway and its terA (PterA) under (2) fine-tuneable control of the Tet-on system for expression of (3) polycistronic mRNA of the Asp-melanin biosynthetic genes combined with a fluorescent reporter to study correct subcellular localisation of enzymes
Integration of Tet‐on control into the coupled TerR/PterA expression system We previously developed a heterologous expression system in A. niger that bases on the transcriptional activator TerR from the A. terreus terrein biosynthetic pathway and its terA (PterA) target promoter [18]
Summary
Fungi are treasure chests for yet unexplored natural products Exploitation of their real potential remains difficult as a significant proportion of biosynthetic gene clusters appears silent under standard laboratory conditions. Elucidation of novel products requires gene activation or heterologous expression. We previously developed an expression platform in Aspergillus niger that is based on the transcriptional regulator TerR and its target promoter PterA. Genome mining has revealed that fungal genomes contain a large number of yet unexplored secondary metabolite biosynthetic gene clusters [1]. As secondary metabolites are frequently produced in response to distinct biotic or abiotic stress factors [5], a large number of the respective biosynthetic gene clusters remains silent under laboratory conditions and, their products unexplored. To exploit the full potential of fungal secondary metabolite production different strategies have been applied [6, 7]
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have
Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.