Abstract

BackgroundHeterologous expression of biosynthetic gene clusters of natural microbial products has become an essential strategy for titer improvement and pathway engineering of various potentially-valuable natural products. A Streptomyces artificial chromosomal conjugation vector, pSBAC, was previously successfully applied for precise cloning and tandem integration of a large polyketide tautomycetin (TMC) biosynthetic gene cluster (Nah et al. in Microb Cell Fact 14(1):1, 2015), implying that this strategy could be employed to develop a custom overexpression scheme of natural product pathway clusters present in actinomycetes.ResultsTo validate the pSBAC system as a generally-applicable heterologous overexpression system for a large-sized polyketide biosynthetic gene cluster in Streptomyces, another model polyketide compound, the pikromycin biosynthetic gene cluster, was preciously cloned and heterologously expressed using the pSBAC system. A unique HindIII restriction site was precisely inserted at one of the border regions of the pikromycin biosynthetic gene cluster within the chromosome of Streptomyces venezuelae, followed by site-specific recombination of pSBAC into the flanking region of the pikromycin gene cluster. Unlike the previous cloning process, one HindIII site integration step was skipped through pSBAC modification. pPik001, a pSBAC containing the pikromycin biosynthetic gene cluster, was directly introduced into two heterologous hosts, Streptomyces lividans and Streptomyces coelicolor, resulting in the production of 10-deoxymethynolide, a major pikromycin derivative. When two entire pikromycin biosynthetic gene clusters were tandemly introduced into the S. lividans chromosome, overproduction of 10-deoxymethynolide and the presence of pikromycin, which was previously not detected, were both confirmed. Moreover, comparative qRT-PCR results confirmed that the transcription of pikromycin biosynthetic genes was significantly upregulated in S. lividans containing tandem clusters of pikromycin biosynthetic gene clusters.ConclusionsThe 60 kb pikromycin biosynthetic gene cluster was isolated in a single integration pSBAC vector. Introduction of the pikromycin biosynthetic gene cluster into the pikromycin non-producing strains resulted in higher pikromycin production. The utility of the pSBAC system as a precise cloning tool for large-sized biosynthetic gene clusters was verified through heterologous expression of the pikromycin biosynthetic gene cluster. Moreover, this pSBAC-driven heterologous expression strategy was confirmed to be an ideal approach for production of low and inconsistent natural products such as pikromycin in S. venezuelae, implying that this strategy could be employed for development of a custom overexpression scheme of natural product biosynthetic gene clusters in actinomycetes.

Highlights

  • Heterologous expression of biosynthetic gene clusters of natural microbial products has become an essential strategy for titer improvement and pathway engineering of various potentially-valuable natural products

  • At one side of the pikromycin biosynthetic gene cluster near pikRII, a HindIII restriction enzyme site was inserted into 150 bp upstream region from pikRII using PCR targeted gene insertion [17]

  • We previously demonstrated an efficient strategy for giant plasmid rescue and tandem overexpression of a large-sized TMC biosynthetic gene cluster both in homologous and heterologous hosts [13], another example of a natural product biosynthetic gene cluster with different restriction enzyme site cloning was needed to be accepted as a general heterologous expression system in Streptomyces

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Summary

Introduction

Heterologous expression of biosynthetic gene clusters of natural microbial products has become an essential strategy for titer improvement and pathway engineering of various potentially-valuable natural products. Identification of entire biosynthetic gene clusters has become relatively straightforward because of genome mining and generation sequencing, some of the biosynthetic genes are derived from nonculturable organisms or from microorganisms that are not amenable to genetic manipulation and are not expressed for target compound identification [2]. To overcome such intrinsic limitations and achieve functional expression of uncharacterized potentiallyvaluable natural product biosynthetic pathways, relatively well-characterized heterologous host expression strategies have been pursued. Both TAR and LLHR systems were mediated by homologous recombination, so undesired recombination could appear

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