Douma Rutger D, Batista Joana M, Touw Kai M, Kiel Jan A K W, Krikken Arjen M, Zhao Zheng, Veiga Tânia, Klaassen Paul, Bovenberg Roel A L, Daran Jean-Marc, Heijnen Joseph J, van Gulik Walter M
Department of Biotechnology, Delft University of Technology, Kluyver Centre for Genomics of Industrial Fermentation, BC Delft, The Netherlands.
BMC Syst Biol. 2011 Aug 19;5:132. doi: 10.1186/1752-0509-5-132.
In microbial production of non-catabolic products such as antibiotics a loss of production capacity upon long-term cultivation (for example chemostat), a phenomenon called strain degeneration, is often observed. In this study a systems biology approach, monitoring changes from gene to produced flux, was used to study degeneration of penicillin production in a high producing Penicillium chrysogenum strain during prolonged ethanol-limited chemostat cultivations.
During these cultivations, the biomass specific penicillin production rate decreased more than 10-fold in less than 22 generations. No evidence was obtained for a decrease of the copy number of the penicillin gene cluster, nor a significant down regulation of the expression of the penicillin biosynthesis genes. However, a strong down regulation of the biosynthesis pathway of cysteine, one of the precursors of penicillin, was observed. Furthermore the protein levels of the penicillin pathway enzymes L-α-(δ-aminoadipyl)-L-α-cystenyl-D-α-valine synthetase (ACVS) and isopenicillin-N synthase (IPNS), decreased significantly. Re-cultivation of fully degenerated cells in unlimited batch culture and subsequent C-limited chemostats did only result in a slight recovery of penicillin production.
Our findings indicate that the observed degeneration is attributed to a significant decrease of the levels of the first two enzymes of the penicillin biosynthesis pathway, ACVS and IPNS. This decrease is not caused by genetic instability of the penicillin amplicon, neither by down regulation of the penicillin biosynthesis pathway. Furthermore no indications were obtained for degradation of these enzymes as a result of autophagy. Possible causes for the decreased enzyme levels could be a decrease of the translation efficiency of ACVS and IPNS during degeneration, or the presence of a culture variant impaired in the biosynthesis of functional proteins of these enzymes, which outcompeted the high producing part of the population.
在微生物生产非分解代谢产物(如抗生素)时,长期培养(如恒化器培养)后生产能力的丧失,即所谓的菌株退化现象经常被观察到。在本研究中,采用了一种系统生物学方法,监测从基因到产物通量的变化,以研究高产产黄青霉菌株在延长的乙醇限制恒化器培养过程中青霉素生产的退化情况。
在这些培养过程中,生物量特异性青霉素生产率在不到22代的时间内下降了10倍以上。没有证据表明青霉素基因簇的拷贝数减少,也没有观察到青霉素生物合成基因表达的显著下调。然而,观察到青霉素前体之一的半胱氨酸生物合成途径受到强烈下调。此外,青霉素途径酶L-α-(δ-氨基己二酰基)-L-α-半胱氨酰-D-α-缬氨酸合成酶(ACVS)和异青霉素-N合成酶(IPNS)的蛋白质水平显著下降。在无限制分批培养和随后的碳限制恒化器中对完全退化的细胞进行再培养,仅导致青霉素产量略有恢复。
我们的研究结果表明,观察到的退化归因于青霉素生物合成途径前两种酶ACVS和IPNS水平的显著降低。这种降低不是由青霉素扩增子的遗传不稳定性引起的,也不是由青霉素生物合成途径的下调引起的。此外,没有迹象表明这些酶因自噬而降解。酶水平降低的可能原因可能是退化过程中ACVS和IPNS的翻译效率降低,或者是存在一种在这些酶的功能蛋白生物合成中受损的培养变体,其在种群中超过了高产部分。