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Constitutive expression of the global regulator AbrB restores the growth defect of a genome-reduced Bacillus subtilis strain and improves its metabolite production

Authors :
Junya Yamamoto
Onuma Chumsakul
Yoshihiro Toya
Takuya Morimoto
Shenghao Liu
Kenta Masuda
Yasushi Kageyama
Takashi Hirasawa
Fumio Matsuda
Naotake Ogasawara
Hiroshi Shimizu
Ken-ichi Yoshida
Taku Oshima
Shu Ishikawa
Source :
DNA Research. 29
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2022.

Abstract

Partial bacterial genome reduction by genome engineering can improve the productivity of various metabolites, possibly via deletion of non-essential genome regions involved in undesirable metabolic pathways competing with pathways for the desired end products. However, such reduction may cause growth defects. Genome reduction of Bacillus subtilis MGB874 increases the productivity of cellulases and proteases but reduces their growth rate. Here, we show that this growth defect could be restored by silencing redundant or less important genes affecting exponential growth by manipulating the global transcription factor AbrB. Comparative transcriptome analysis revealed that AbrB-regulated genes were upregulated and those involved in central metabolic pathway and synthetic pathways of amino acids and purine/pyrimidine nucleotides were downregulated in MGB874 compared with the wild-type strain, which we speculated were the cause of the growth defects. By constitutively expressing high levels of AbrB, AbrB regulon genes were repressed, while glycolytic flux increased, thereby restoring the growth rate to wild-type levels. This manipulation also enhanced the productivity of metabolites including γ-polyglutamic acid. This study provides the first evidence that undesired features induced by genome reduction can be relieved, at least partly, by manipulating a global transcription regulation system. A similar strategy could be applied to other genome engineering-based challenges aiming toward efficient material production in bacteria.

Details

ISSN :
17561663 and 13402838
Volume :
29
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
DNA Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c4c81a929a51e07c6faa5550a1e5e2f9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/dnares/dsac015