Abstract
Backgroundβ-Lactams like penicillin and cephalosporin are among the oldest known antibiotics used against bacterial infections. Industrially, penicillin is produced by the filamentous fungus Penicillium chrysogenum. Our goal is to introduce the entire penicillin biosynthesis pathway into the methylotrophic yeast Hansenula polymorpha. Yeast species have the advantage of being versatile, easy to handle and cultivate, and possess superior fermentation properties relative to filamentous fungi. One of the fundamental challenges is to produce functionally active enzyme in H. polymorpha.ResultsThe P. chrysogenum pcbC gene encoding isopenicillin N synthase (IPNS) was successfully expressed in H. polymorpha, but the protein produced was unstable and inactive when the host was grown at its optimal growth temperature (37°C). Heterologously produced IPNS protein levels were enhanced when the cultivation temperature was lowered to either 25°C or 30°C. Furthermore, IPNS produced at these lower cultivation temperatures was functionally active. Localization experiments demonstrated that, like in P. chrysogenum, in H. polymorpha IPNS is located in the cytosol.ConclusionIn P. chrysogenum, the enzymes involved in penicillin production are compartmentalized in the cytosol and in microbodies. In this study, we focus on the cytosolic enzyme IPNS. Our data show that high amounts of functionally active IPNS enzyme can be produced in the heterologous host during cultivation at 25°C, the optimal growth temperature for P. chrysogenum. This is a new step forward in the metabolic reprogramming of H. polymorpha to produce penicillin.
Highlights
isopenicillin N synthase (IPNS) produced in H. polymorpha at 37°C is not stable The P. chrysogenum pcbC gene encoding IPNS was cloned downstream of the strong, inducible H. polymorpha alcohol oxidase promoter (PAOX) in pHIPX4 and was integrated at the PAOX locus in the H. polymorpha genome
To check the stability of IPNS protein produced in H. polymorpha, cells of strain IPNS 4.2 were grown on methanol medium to mid-exponential growth phase, and 0.5% glucose was added to the cultures, a treatment that results in complete repression of the PAOX
Western blot analysis showed that within 30 minutes after glucose addition the IPNS protein levels in the cells had decreased more than 50% (Fig. 2, Panel A), indicating that in H. polymorpha IPNS is not stable when produced at cultivation conditions physiological to the host
Summary
Our goal is to introduce the entire penicillin biosynthesis pathway into the methylotrophic yeast Hansenula polymorpha. Our objective is to introduce the penicillin biosynthesis pathway from P. chrysogenum into the methylotrophic yeast Hansenula polymorpha
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