Abstract

BackgroundPichia pastoris is a popular yeast preferably employed for secretory protein production. Secretion is not always efficient and endoplasmic retention of proteins with aberrant folding properties, or when produced at exaggerated rates, can occur. In these cases production usually leads to an unfolded protein response (UPR) and the induction of the endoplasmic reticulum associated degradation (ERAD). P. pastoris is nowadays also an established host for secretory insulin precursor (IP) production, though little is known about the impact of IP production on the host cell physiology, in particular under industrially relevant production conditions. Here, we evaluate the cellular response to aox1 promoter-controlled, secretory IP production in controlled fed-batch processes using a proteome profiling approach.ResultsCells were first grown in a batch procedure using a defined medium with a high glycerol concentration. After glycerol depletion IP production was initiated by methanol addition which was kept constant through continuous methanol feeding. The most prominent changes of the intracellular proteome after the onset of methanol feeding were related to the enzymes of central carbon metabolism. In particular, the enzymes of the methanol dissimilatory pathway - virtually absent in the glycerol batch phase - dominated the proteome during the methanol fed-batch phase. Unexpectedly, a strong decrease of UPR and ERAD related proteins was also observed during methanol-induced IP production. Compared to non-producing control strains grown under identical conditions the UPR down-regulation was less pronounced indicating that IP production elicits a detectable but non prominent UPR response which is repressed by the general culture condition-dependent UPR down-regulation after the shift from glycerol to methanol.ConclusionsThe passage of IP through the secretory pathway using an optimized IP vector and growing the strain at fed-batch conditions with a high initial glycerol concentration does not impose a significant burden on the secretory machinery even under conditions leading to an extracellular accumulation of ~ 3 g L-1 IP. The glycerol batch pre-induction culture conditions are associated with a high constitutive - recombinant protein production independent - induction of the UPR and ERAD pathways probably preconditioning the cells for effective IP secretion in the methanol fed-batch phase.

Highlights

  • Pichia pastoris is a popular yeast preferably employed for secretory protein production

  • A proteome profiling approach was chosen to evaluate the cellular response of P. pastoris towards secretory insulin precursor (IP) production under industrially relevant production conditions

  • Secretory IP production was induced by methanol addition to a final concentration of 2 g L-1 which were kept constant by continuous methanol feeding leading to final extracellular IP concentrations of ~ 3 gram per liter of culture broth [25] with less than 10% IP remaining intracellular

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Summary

Introduction

Pichia pastoris is a popular yeast preferably employed for secretory protein production. Secretion is not always efficient and endoplasmic retention of proteins with aberrant folding properties, or when produced at exaggerated rates, can occur In these cases production usually leads to an unfolded protein response (UPR) and the induction of the endoplasmic reticulum associated degradation (ERAD). Aberrant folding properties of the target protein and/or high level production can lead to the accumulation of unfolded or even aggregated proteins in the ER [3,4,5,6] which can initiate the unfolded protein response (UPR) [5,6,7,8,9,10] and ER-associated degradation (ERAD) [5,6,7]. This leads to splicing of the IRE1 substrate, HAC1 mRNA, being transformed into the activated form encoding the transcriptional activator of UPR responsive genes, Hac1p [11,12,13]

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