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Metabolic engineering of Saccharomyces cerevisiae for production of isobutanol and UV-absorbing chemical shinorine : Saccharomyces cerevisiae의 대사공학을 통한 이소부탄올과 자외선 차단 소재 시노린 생산

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dc.contributor.advisor한지숙-
dc.contributor.author박성희-
dc.date.accessioned2018-11-12T00:58:13Z-
dc.date.available2021-09-23T06:50:39Z-
dc.date.issued2018-08-
dc.identifier.other000000152907-
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10371/143184-
dc.description학위논문 (박사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 : 공과대학 화학생물공학부, 2018. 8. 한지숙.-
dc.description.abstractSaccharomyces cerevisiae is considered as promising host for production of biofuels and chemicals because it is a well-studied eukaryotic model system with high stress tolerance and robustness in harsh industrial conditions. In this dissertation, several strategies were developed and applied to produce isobutanol and shinorine in S. cerevisiae.

Firstly, S. cerevisiae CEN.PK2-1C, a leucine auxotrophic strain having a LEU2 gene mutation, was engineered for the production of isobutanol and 3-methyl-1-butanol. An ALD6 encoding aldehyde dehydrogenase and BAT1 involved in valine synthesis were deleted to eliminate competing pathways. Transcription of endogenous genes in the valine and leucine biosynthetic pathways was also increased by expressing Leu3Δ601, a constitutively active form of Leu3 transcriptional activator. For the production of isobutanol, genes involved in isobutanol production (ILV2, ILV3, ILV5, ARO10, and ADH2) were additionally overexpressed in ald6Δbat1Δ strain expressing LEU3Δ601, resulting in 376.9 mg/L isobutanol production from 100 g/L glucose. To increase 3-methyl-1-butanol production, leucine biosynthetic genes were additionally overexpressed in the final isobutanol-production strain. The resulting strain overexpressing LEU2 and LEU4D578Y, a feedback inhibition-insensitive mutant of LEU4, showed a 34-fold increase in 3-methyl-1-butanol synthesis compared with CEN.PK2-1C control strain, producing 765.7 mg/L 3-methyl-1-butanol.

Secondly, mitochondrial isobutanol production was improved by increasing mitochondrial pool of pyruvate, a key substrate for isobutanol production. Subcellular compartmentalization of the biosynthetic enzymes is one of the limiting factors for isobutanol production in S. cerevisiae. Previously, it has been shown that mitochondrial compartmentalization of the biosynthetic pathway through re-locating cytosolic Ehrlich pathway enzymes into the mitochondria can increase isobutanol production. Mitochondrial isobutanol biosynthetic pathway was introduced into bat1Δald6Δlpd1Δ strain, where genes involved in competing pathways were deleted, and MPC1, MPC2, and MPC3 genes encoding the subunits of mitochondrial pyruvate carrier (MPC) hetero-oligomeric complex were overexpressed with different combinations. Overexpression of Mpc1 and Mpc3 forming high-affinity MPCOX was more effective in improving isobutanol production than overexpression of Mpc1 and Mpc2 forming low-affinity MPCFERM. The final engineered strain overexpressing MPCOX produced 338.3 mg/L isobutanol from 20 g/L glucose, exhibiting about 22-fold increase in production compared with wild type. Furthermore, to increase in Ilv3 activity, Nfs1 and Isd11genes, encoding cysteine desulfurase involved in iron-sulfur cluster assembly, were overexpressed, resulting in improved isobutanol production up to 435.2 mg/L.

Thirdly, isobutanol production was improved via construction of artificial cytosolic biosynthetic pathway by multi-copy integration system in S. cerevisiae. α-acetolactate synthase (ALS) is the key enzyme redirecting pyruvate flux to isobutanol production by competing with pyruvate decarboxylase (PDC) involved in ethanol production. To improve isobutanol production using the major pyruvate pool in the cytosol, cytosolic isobutanol biosynthetic pathway was constructed by overexpressing heterologous ALS (alsS) from Bacillus subtilis and Lactococcus lactis, and N-terminally truncated ILV5 (ILV5ΔN48) and ILV3 (ILV3ΔN19) lacking mitochondrial targeting signal with kozak sequence. Since overexpression of alsS from B. subtilis under the control of strong promoter promoted cell death, copper-inducible promoter, PCUP1, was used to overexpress alsS. Cytosolic isobutanol biosynthetic pathway was constructed via delta- and rDNA-integration which are powerful tools for random multi-copy gene integration in S. cerevisiae, especially coupled with antibiotic selection. Multi-copy integration of alsS was screened by using antibiotic markers and also by selecting clones showing growth defects upon alsS induction by copper. The final engineered strain (JHY43D25-4) additionally overexpressing ILV5ΔN48, ILV3ΔN19, 2-ketoacid decarboxylase (kivd), and alcohol dehydrogenase (Adh2) produced 265.5 mg/L isobutanol, exhibiting about 4.3-fold increase in production compared to control strain JHY43.

Lastly, S. cerevisiae was used as a host for the heterologous production of a UV-absorbing sunscreen material shinorine. By introducing heterologous shinorine biosynthetic genes from cyanobacteria, Nostoc punctiforme and Anabaena variabilis, into S. cerevisiae, yeast strain capable of producing shinorine was successfully constructed. Furthermore, to increase the pool of sedoheptulose 7-phosphate (S7P), an intermediate in pentose phosphate pathway used for shinorine production, xylose assimilation genes, xylose reductase (XYL1), xylitol dehydrogenase (XYL2), and xylulokinase (XYL3) were introduced to use xylose as a carbon source. In a fed-batch fermentation, the engineered JHYS17-1 strain produced 64.2 mg/L shinorine with highest content (14.3 mg/gDCW) ever reported in microbes. In addition, deletion of competing pathway producing erythrose-4-phosphate and fructose-6-phosphate from S7P, and overexpression of transcriptional factor (Stb5) for genes involved in pentose phosphate pathway and transketolase (Tkl1), contributed to enhancing shinorine production.
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dc.description.tableofcontentsChapter 1. Research background and objective 1

Chapter 2. Literature review 5

2.1. Isobutanol production in microorganisms 6

2.1.1. Isobutanol 6

2.1.2. Ehrlich pathway 7

2.1.3. Isobutanol production in bacteria 12

2.1.4. Advantages of S. cerevisiae as a host strain in metabolic engineering 14

2.1.5. Isobutanol production in S. cerevisiae 15

2.2. Branched-chain amino acid biosynthesis in S. cerevisiae 19

2.2.1. Valine and leucine biosynthesis in S. cerevisiae 19

2.2.2. Transfcriptional factor Leu3 26

2.2.3. Iron-sulfur cluster assembly machinery in S. cerevisiae 27

2.3. Multi-copy integration in S. cerevisiae 29

2.3.1. Multi-copy delta-integration 32

2.3.2. rDNA-mediated integration 33

2.4. Microbial production of shinorine 34

2.4.1. Mycosporine-like amino acids 34

2.4.2. Biosynthetic pathways of mycosporine-like amino acids 37

2.4.3. Shinorine production in microorganisms 42

2.4.4. Xylose assimilation in S. cerevisiae 45

Chapter 3. Materials and methods 52

3.1. Strains and media 53

3.2. Plasmids 54

3.2.1. Metabolic engineering of S. cerevisiae for the production of isobutanol and 3-methyl-1-butanol 54

3.2.2. Improvement of isobutanol production in S. cerevisiae by increasing mitochondrial import of pyruvate through mitochondrial pyruvate carrier 61

3.2.3. Development of multi-copy genome integration system with overexpressing α-acetolactate synthase-inducible phenotypic screening for isobutanol production in S. cerevisiae 62

3.2.4. Metabolic engineering of S. cerevisiae for the production of shinorine a sunblock material from xylose 65

3.3. Culture conditions 67

3.3.1. Metabolic engineering of S. cerevisiae for the production of isobutanol and 3-methyl-1-butanol 67

3.3.2. Improvement of isobutanol production in S. cerevisiae by increasing mitochondrial import of pyruvate through mitochondrial pyruvate carrier 68

3.3.3. Development of multi-copy genome integration system with overexpressing α-acetolactate synthase-inducible phenotypic screening for isobutanol production in S. cerevisiae 68

3.3.4. Metabolic engineering of S. cerevisiae for the production of shinorine a sunblock material from xylose 78

3.4. RNA preparation and quantitative reverse transcription PCR 78

3.5. Quantitative PCR (qPCR) 79

3.6. Analytic methods 80

Chapter 4. Metabolic engineering of S. cerevisiae for the production of isobutanol and 3-methyl-1-butanol 84

4.1. Introduction 85

4.2. Increase in isobutanol production by introducing a constitutively active Leu3 transcription factor 87

4.3. Enhancing isobutanol production by overexpression of genes in the biosynthetic pathway 92

4.4. Improvement of 3-methyl-1-butanol production in S. cerevisiae 94

4.5. Conclusions 98

Chapter 5. Improvement of isobutanol production in S. cerevisiae by increasing mitochondrial import of pyruvate through mitochondrial pyruvate carrier 101

5.1. Introduction 102

5.2. Disruption of competing pathways to increase isobutanol production 103

5.3. Overexpression of mitochondrially re-localized isobutanol biosynthetic pathways 107

5.4. Enhancing mitochondrial pyruvate uptake by overexpressing mitochondrial pyruvate carrier (MPC) 108

5.5. Enhancing isobutanol production in by overexpressing the basic elements of Iron-Sulfur cluster assembly 111

5.6. Conclusions 115

Chapter 6. Development of multi-copy genome integration system with overexpressing α-acetolactate synthase-inducible phenotypic screening for isobutanol production in S. cerevisiae 118

6.1. Introduction 119

6.2. Construction of cytosolic isobutanol biosynthetic pathway in S. cerevisiae 122

6.3. Increase in isobutanol production by introducing a kozak sequence into ketol-acid reductoisomerase and dihydroxy-acid dehydratase. 125

6.4. Enhancing isobutanol production by overexpression of alsS from B. subtilis using copper inducible promoter PCUP1 128

6.5. Integration of alsS derived from B. subtilis into S. cerevisiae chromosome via delta-integration and construction of strain screening methods using copper induction system 132

6.6. Assembly of cytosolic isobutanol biosynthetic pathway by multi-copy rDNA-integration of ILV5ΔN48 and ILV3ΔN19 genes. 138

6.7. Enhancing isobutanol production by overexpression of additional Ilv5ΔN48 and Ilv3ΔN19 2-ketoacid decarboxylase and alcohol dehydrogenase 142

6.8. Conclusions 146

Chapter 7. Metabolic engineering of S. cerevisiae for the production of shinorine a sunblock material from xylose 147

7.1. Introduction 148

7.2. Construction of shinorine biosynthetic pathway in S. cerevisiae 155

7.3. Generation of shinorine-producing S. cerevisiae strain by random multi-copy delta-integration 156

7.4. Using xylose as carbon source for shinorine production in S. cerevisiae by introducing xylose assimilation pathway 161

7.5. Construction of xylose-fermenting yeast strain by random multi-copy NTS-site integration 163

7.6. Overexpressing genes related to shinorine production from A. variabilis in S. cerevisiae 170

7.7. Disruption of competing pathway to enhance shinorine production 172

7.8. Enhancing carbon flux to pentose phosphate pathway by overexpressing transcriptional factor Stb5 and transketolase Tkl1 180

7.9. Conclusions 181

Chapter 8. Overall discussion and recommendations 184

Bibliography 193

Abstract in Korean 209
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dc.language.isoen-
dc.publisher서울대학교 대학원-
dc.subject.ddc660.6-
dc.titleMetabolic engineering of Saccharomyces cerevisiae for production of isobutanol and UV-absorbing chemical shinorine-
dc.title.alternativeSaccharomyces cerevisiae의 대사공학을 통한 이소부탄올과 자외선 차단 소재 시노린 생산-
dc.typeThesis-
dc.contributor.AlternativeAuthorSeong-Hee Park-
dc.description.degreeDoctor-
dc.contributor.affiliation공과대학 화학생물공학부-
dc.date.awarded2018-08-
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