Abstract

BackgroundA large range of genetic tools has been developed for the optimal design and regulation of complex metabolic pathways in bacteria. However, fewer tools exist in yeast that can precisely tune the expression of individual enzymes in novel metabolic pathways suitable for industrial-scale production of non-natural compounds. Tuning expression levels is critical for reducing the metabolic burden of over-expressed proteins, the accumulation of toxic intermediates, and for redirecting metabolic flux from native pathways involving essential enzymes without negatively affecting the viability of the host. We have developed a yeast membrane protein hyper-expression system with critical advantages over conventional, plasmid-based, expression systems. However, expression levels are sometimes so high that they adversely affect protein targeting/folding or the growth and/or phenotype of the host. Here we describe the use of small synthetic mRNA control modules that allowed us to predictably tune protein expression levels to any desired level. Down-regulation of expression was achieved by engineering small GC-rich mRNA stem-loops into the 5′ UTR that inhibited translation initiation of the yeast ribosomal 43S preinitiation complex (PIC).ResultsExploiting the fact that the yeast 43S PIC has great difficulty scanning through GC-rich mRNA stem-loops, we created yeast strains containing 17 different RNA stem-loop modules in the 5′ UTR that expressed varying amounts of the fungal multidrug efflux pump reporter Cdr1p from Candida albicans. Increasing the length of mRNA stem-loops (that contained only GC-pairs) near the AUG start-codon led to a surprisingly large decrease in Cdr1p expression; ~2.7-fold for every additional GC-pair added to the stem, while the mRNA levels remained largely unaffected. An mRNA stem-loop of seven GC-pairs (∆G = −15.8 kcal/mol) reduced Cdr1p expression levels by >99%, and even the smallest possible stem-loop of only three GC-pairs (∆G = −4.4 kcal/mol) inhibited Cdr1p expression by ~50%.ConclusionWe have developed a simple cloning strategy to fine-tune protein expression levels in yeast that has many potential applications in metabolic engineering and the optimization of protein expression in yeast. This study also highlights the importance of considering the use of multiple cloning-sites carefully to preclude unwanted effects on gene expression.

Highlights

  • A large range of genetic tools has been developed for the optimal design and regulation of complex metabolic pathways in bacteria

  • An SfiI cloning site 5′ proximal to the ATG start-codon severely affects gene expression levels in yeast We have created an efficient system for the heterologous over-expression of fully functional membrane proteins in the uniquely modified S. cerevisiae host AD1-8u- (AD) [14,15,17]

  • The inhibitory effects of individual mRNA stem-loops were comparable to some of our Cdr1p stem-loop constructs (Table 4): e.g. i) a −10.5 kcal/mol mRNA stem-loop (GAATTCCCATCTTGGGAATTC; stem nucleotides are in italics) positioned 21 nt upstream of the AUG start-codon of the GCN4-lacZ reporter plasmid reduced the β-galactosidase activity to 13% [20]; and ii) a −8.5 kcal/mol mRNA stem-loop (TGAATTCGTTAACG AATTCA) right next to the AUG start codon of the CYC1 gene reduced iso-1-cytochrome c expression to 10% [19]

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Summary

Introduction

A large range of genetic tools has been developed for the optimal design and regulation of complex metabolic pathways in bacteria. The list of non-natural biological compounds successfully produced by S. cerevisiae is diverse and ranges from protein drugs to fine and commodity chemicals [1], advanced biofuels [6], the large family of benzylisoquinoline alkaloids [7] and many other secondary metabolites with a wide range of pharmacological activities [2] including the successful production of high levels of artemisinin [8], a highly effective antimalarial. Despite these significant advances in synthetic biology major challenges in the design of optimal metabolic pathways remain. The lack of well-characterized promoters still provides a significant hurdle for pathway engineering in yeast

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