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Dissecting and engineering of the TetR family regulator SACE_7301 for enhanced erythromycin production in Saccharopolyspora erythraea.
- Source :
-
Microbial cell factories [Microb Cell Fact] 2014 Nov 13; Vol. 13, pp. 158. Date of Electronic Publication: 2014 Nov 13. - Publication Year :
- 2014
-
Abstract
- Background: Saccharopolyspora erythraea was extensively utilized for the industrial-scale production of erythromycin A (Er-A), a macrolide antibiotic commonly used in human medicine. Yet, S. erythraea lacks regulatory genes in the erythromycin biosynthetic gene (ery) cluster, hampering efforts to enhance Er-A production via the engineering of regulatory genes.<br />Results: By the chromosome gene inactivation technique based on homologous recombination with linearized DNA fragments, we have inactivated a number of candidate TetR family transcriptional regulators (TFRs) and identified one TFR (SACE&#95;7301) positively controlling erythromycin biosynthesis in S. erythraea A226. qRT-PCR and EMSA analyses demonstrated that SACE&#95;7301 activated the transcription of erythromycin biosynthetic gene eryAI and the resistance gene ermE by interacting with their promoter regions with low affinities, similar to BldD (SACE&#95;2077) previously identified to regulate erythromycin biosynthesis and morphological differentiation. Therefore, we designed a strategy for overexpressing SACE&#95;7301 with 1 to 3 extra copies under the control of PermE* in A226. Following up-regulated transcriptional expression of SACE&#95;7301, eryAI and ermE, the SACE&#95;7301-overexpressed strains all increased Er-A production over A226 proportional to the number of copies. Likewise, when SACE&#95;7301 was overexpressed in an industrial S. erythraea WB strain, Er-A yields of the mutants WB/7301, WB/2×7301 and WB/3×7301 were respectively increased by 17%, 29% and 42% relative to that of WB. In a 5 L fermentor, Er-A accumulation increased to 4,230 mg/L with the highest-yield strain WB/3×7301, an approximately 27% production improvement over WB (3,322 mg/L).<br />Conclusions: We have identified and characterized a TFR, SACE&#95;7301, in S. erythraea that positively regulated erythromycin biosynthesis, and overexpression of SACE&#95;7301 in wild-type and industrial S. erythraea strains enhanced Er-A yields. This study markedly improves our understanding of the unusual regulatory mechanism of erythromycin biosynthesis, and provides a novel strategy towards Er-A overproduction by engineering transcriptional regulators of S. erythraea.
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 1475-2859
- Volume :
- 13
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Microbial cell factories
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 25391994
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1186/s12934-014-0158-4