Abstract

Photoautotrophic microalgae offer a great potential as novel hosts for efficient recombinant protein production. Nannochloropsis oceanica produces an extraordinarily high content of polyunsaturated fatty acids, and its robust growth characteristics, published genome sequence and efficient nuclear transformation make N. oceanica a promising candidate for biotechnological applications. To establish a robust and flexible system for recombinant protein production, we cloned six endogenous, potentially constitutive or inducible promoters from N. oceanica strain CCMP1779 and investigated their strength using monomeric Venus as reporter gene. Microscopic pre-screening of individual transformants revealed that the promoters of elongation factor (EF), tubulin (TUB) and nitrate reductase (NR) enabled high reporter gene expression. Comparative quantitative analyses of transformant populations by flow cytometry and qRT-PCR demonstrated the highest Venus expression from the EF promoter and the NR promoter if extended by an N-terminal 14-amino acid leader sequence. The kinetics of reporter gene expression were analysed during photobioreactor cultivation, achieving Venus yields of 0.3% (for EF) and 4.9% (for NR::LS) of total soluble protein. Since inducible expression systems enable the production of toxic proteins, we developed an auto-induction medium for the NR promoter transformants. By switching the N source from ammonium to nitrate in the presence of low ammonium concentrations, the starting point of Venus induction could be fine-tuned and shifted towards exponential growth phase while maintaining high recombinant protein yields. Taken together, we demonstrate that a model recombinant protein can be produced robustly and at very high levels in N. oceanica not only under constitutive but also under auto-inducible cultivation conditions.Key points• Nannochloropsis oceanica might serve as host for recombinant protein production.• Comparative promoter strength analyses were conducted for twelve different constructs.• Robust high-yield recombinant protein production was achieved under constitutive conditions.• The nitrate reductase promoter enabled protein production under auto-induction conditions.

Highlights

  • Microalgae are photosynthetic unicellular organisms that are highly diverse in size, shape and internal cell structures (Andersen 2013)

  • The genes coding for elongation factor (EF), α-tubulin (TUB), lipid droplet surface protein (LDSP) and two violaxanthin chlorophyll a binding proteins (VCP-1/-L) were chosen

  • Though nitrate is the common N source in f/2 medium, N. oceanica prefers the fully reduced ammonium, which can be directly incorporated into α-ketoglutarate and glutamate for amino acid biosynthesis

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Summary

Introduction

Microalgae are photosynthetic unicellular organisms that are highly diverse in size, shape and internal cell structures (Andersen 2013). Microalgae are natural producers of interesting biomolecules for commercial applications. Due to their high lipid content, they are promising sources for biofuels to replace fossil fuels. The commercial production of microalgal biofuels is currently not feasible due to the high costs for algae cultivation, harvesting and biomass processing (Odjadjare et al 2017). For this reason, the generation of alternative valuable compounds by microalgae, such as food and feed additives, pigments, cosmetics and pharmaceuticals is gaining increased attention (Borowitzka 2013)

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