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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, April 2003, p. 2094-2099, Vol. 69, No. 4
0099-2240/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.69.4.2094-2099.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Kluyver Laboratory of Biotechnology, Delft University of Technology, NL-2628 BC Delft,1 BIRD Engineering B.V., NL-3044 CK Rotterdam, The Netherlands2
Received 28 October 2002/ Accepted 17 January 2003
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At a low residual glucose concentration in aerobic glucose-limited chemostat cultures, the glucose repression of respiratory enzymes is alleviated (4, 37). When grown at low specific growth rates in such cultures, wild-type cells dissimilate glucose exclusively via respiration (4, 37). Nevertheless, under these conditions, Pdc- S. cerevisiae strains were unable to grow on glucose as the sole carbon source, but growth could be restored by addition of small amounts of ethanol or acetate to the medium (10, 12). The C2 compound requirement of Pdc- S. cerevisiae has been proposed to reflect an essential role of PDC in the synthesis of cytosolic acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA), which is required for the synthesis of lipids and lysine (10). PDC catalyzes the first reaction of a pathway for the cytosolic conversion of pyruvate into acetyl-CoA, which also involves acetaldehyde dehydrogenase and acetyl-CoA synthetase (17, 31, 32). Consistent with this proposed biosynthetic role of PDC, the experimentally determined minimum requirement of Pdc- mutants for C2 compounds matched the theoretical demand for cytosolic acetyl-CoA (10).
An essential role of PDC in the synthesis of cytosolic acetyl-CoA is to some extent surprising, since several yeast species are known to grow rapidly on glucose in the absence of PDC. For example, Pdc- strains of Kluyveromyces lactis grow rapidly on glucose as the sole carbon source (2, 14). Furthermore, the lipid-accumulating yeast Yarrowia lipolytica, which lacks PDC, uses ATP-citrate lyase for the export of acetyl-CoA units to the cytosol from the mitochondrial matrix, where acetyl-CoA is formed by the pyruvate-dehydrogenase complex (8). ATP-citrate lyase does not occur in S. cerevisiae, thus precluding the involvement of this enzyme in cytosolic acetyl-CoA synthesis (33).
It is generally assumed that in eukaryotic cells, including S. cerevisiae (19, 31), the carnitine shuttle plays a key role in the transport of acetyl-CoA across the mitochondrial inner membrane. Although S. cerevisiae contains the genetic information encoding carnitine transferases and acetyl-carnitine translocase (1, 7, 27, 36, 39), it has recently emerged that S. cerevisiae is unable to synthesize L-carnitine (39). Since it has not been investigated whether L-carnitine supplementation enables growth of Pdc- strains of S. cerevisiae on glucose, it remains unclear whether the carnitine shuttle can catalyze the export of acetyl-CoA from the mitochondrial matrix.
The C2 requirement of Pdc- S. cerevisiae is not only of fundamental scientific interest. The absence of alcoholic fermentation in Pdc- strains may be beneficial in biomass-directed applications. Another demonstrated application of such strains is the introduction of lactate dehydrogenase to utilize the glycolytic NADH to produce lactic acid (29), a chemical with commercial value. In all of these applications, elimination of the C2 compound requirement would facilitate process design.
The aims of the present study were to verify the hypothesis that PDC is essential for cytosolic acetyl-CoA synthesis in glucose-grown S. cerevisiae, to investigate a possible role of the carnitine shuttle in the export of acetyl-CoA from the mitochondrial matrix, and to eliminate the C2 requirement of Pdc- S. cerevisiae via metabolic engineering. The latter goal was pursued by overexpressing the GLY1 gene encoding threonine aldolase, which catalyzes the cleavage of threonine to glycine and acetaldehyde (21, 25), in a Pdc- strain.
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TABLE 1. S. cerevisiae strains used in this study
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The PCR mix was separated on an agarose gel, after which the desired fragment was isolated and digested with EcoRI and XhoI. The resulting fragment was ligated into pYX042-AatII, which was digested with EcoRI and XhoI. This pYX042-AatII plasmid is derived from pYX042 (R&D Systems, Minneapolis, Minn.) by digesting it with AatII and inserting a linker which destroys the AatII site and introduces four other restriction sites: XhoI, BamHI, SmaI, and NheI. The resulting plasmid, pRWGLY1, was then digested with NheI and SacI. The PTPI-GLY1 fragment thus obtained was ligated to YEplac181, which was cut with XbaI and SacI. The result of this procedure was YEpGLY1.
Strain construction.
RWB882 was derived from a cross between CEN.PK182 and CEN.PK111-61A (both provided by P. Kötter, Frankfurt, Germany). The resulting diploid was sporulated, and the spore mixture was heated for 15 min to 56°C. Subsequently, the mixture was plated on YP medium with 0.2% sodium acetate as the carbon source. The resulting colonies were checked for growth on glucose. Colonies that could not grow on glucose were tested by PCR for the presence of a disrupted PDC6 gene. Subsequent selection on synthetic medium for the presence of the desired auxotrophic marker(s), in this case leu2-112, resulted in RWB882. To eliminate the histidine auxotrophy, RWB882 was first transformed with pYX022-Aat to give RWB893. Transformation of this strain with the plasmids YEpGLY1 and YEplac181 (15) resulted in the GLY1-overexpressing strain RWB893(YEpGLY1) and the corresponding empty-vector strain RWB893(YEplac181), respectively.
PCR.
PCR was performed with Vent DNA polymerase (New England Biolabs) according to the manufacturer's specifications. The PCR was performed as follows: 30 cycles of denaturation for 1 min at 94°C, followed by annealing for 1 min at 65°C, followed by an extension period of 3.5 min at 75°C.
Media.
The synthetic medium for chemostat cultivation contained per liter of demineralized water 5 g of (NH4)2SO4, 3 g of KH2PO4, 0.5 g of MgSO4 · 7H2O, 0.05 ml of silicon antifoam (BDH), and trace element concentrations according to Verduyn et al. (41). After heat sterilization of the medium for 20 min at 120°C, a filter-sterilized vitamin solution, prepared as described by Verduyn et al. (41), was added. The concentration of substrate carbon in the reservoir medium was always 250 mM. The carbon substrate consisted either of a mixture of glucose (6.75 g liter-1) and acetate (0.75 g liter-1) or of glucose alone (7.5 g liter-1) as the sole carbon source. Glucose was added separately after heat sterilization at 110°C. Pure acetic acid was added to the autoclaved medium without prior sterilization. Synthetic media for batch cultivation and precultures contained 1.5% ethanol as the sole carbon source and were otherwise identical to the chemostat media. In cultures supplemented with L-carnitine, its final concentration was 0.4 g liter-1.
Chemostat cultivation.
Aerobic chemostat cultivation was performed at 30°C in 2-liter fermentors (Applikon, Schiedam, The Netherlands) with a working volume of 1 liter. The pH was controlled at 5.0 via automated addition of 2 M KOH (Applikon ADI 1030 biocontroller). A stirrer speed of 800 rpm and an airflow of 0.5 liter min-1 were applied to keep the dissolved-oxygen concentration higher than 60% of air saturation, as measured with an oxygen electrode, in all chemostat cultivations performed. The addition of medium was regulated by a peristaltic pump. The working volume of the cultures was kept constant by means of an electric level sensor. Cultures were assumed to be in steady state when, after at least five volume changes, the culture dry weight, glucose concentration, carbon dioxide production rate and oxygen consumption rate, changed by <2% during one volume change. Sustained oscillations of the dissolved-oxygen concentration (20) were not observed. There was no significant difference (<1%) between the biomass concentrations in effluent and in samples taken directly from the cultures.
Glucose-pulse experiments.
Glucose-pulse experiments were performed by adding glucose to steady-state glucose-limited chemostat cultures. Just before the start of the pulse experiment, the medium pump was switched off. To achieve a 50 mM glucose pulse, 18 ml of a 50% (wt/vol) glucose solution was injected aseptically through a rubber septum. During glucose consumption and the subsequent consumption of metabolites, the optical densities of the culture samples at 660 nm and the concentrations of glucose and metabolites in the supernatant samples were determined at appropriate intervals.
Determination of culture dry weight.
To determine the biomass dry weight, a known culture volume containing 0.01 to 0.03 g (dry weight) was filtrated over predried nitrocellulose filters of known weight (pore size, 0.45 mm; Gelman Sciences). The filters were washed with 20 ml of demineralized water and dried for 20 min in a microwave oven at 360 W, and the increase in the filter weight was measured. Duplicate samples varied by <1%.
Metabolite analysis.
Acetate, glucose, glycerol, and pyruvate concentrations in supernatants were determined by HPLC analysis with a Bio-Rad Aminex HPX-87H column at 60°C. The column was eluted with 5 mM sulfuric acid at a flow rate of 0.6 ml min-1. Pyruvate and acetate were detected by a Waters 2487 dual-wavelength absorbance detector at 214 nm. Glucose and glycerol were detected by a Waters 2410 refractive index detector. Glucose concentrations were confirmed enzymically with a commercial Roche diagnostics kit (no. 716251).
Gas analysis.
The exhaust gas of chemostat cultures was cooled and dried with a Permapure dryer (Inacom Instruments) before analysis of the O2 and CO2 concentrations with a Rosemount NGA 2000 analyzer. The gas flow rate was determined with an Ion Science Saga digital flowmeter. Calculations of specific O2 consumption and CO2 production for chemostat cultures were performed according to the method of van Urk et al. (40).
Enzyme activity assays.
Cell extracts for enzyme activity assays were prepared as described previously (6). Subcellular fractionation was performed according to the method of Luttik et al. (23). The marker enzymes, cytochrome c oxidase (EC 1.9.3.1; Douma et al. [5]) and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.49; Postma et al. [30]), used for the localization study were assayed at 30°C in a Hitachi model 100-60 spectrophotometer according to previously published methods. PDC was measured as described by Flikweert et al. (12). The assay mixture for threonine aldolase contained 0.1 mM HEPES buffer (pH 7.0) 50 µM pyridoxal-5-phosphate, 88 U of alcohol dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.1.) ml-1, and 150 µM NADH in demineralized water. The reaction was started by the addition of 10 mM threonine. Oxidation of NADH was followed by monitoring its absorbance at 340 nm with a Hitachi 100-60 spectrophotometer. The protein concentration of cell extracts was estimated by the Lowry method with bovine serum albumin as the standard (22).
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TABLE 3. Physiology of the threonine aldolase-overproducing Pdc- S. cerevisiae strain RWB893(YEpGLY1) and the empty-vector reference Pdc- strain RWB893(YEplac181) in aerobic chemostat culturesa
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pdc5
pdc6
strain. To determine whether introduction of the GLY1 expression vector resulted in a higher activity of threonine aldolase, the activity of the enzyme was measured in cell extracts. The threonine aldolase activity of a Pdc- strain carrying the GLY1 expression vector was 0.75 ± 0.01 U mg of protein-1, whereas the activity in the corresponding empty-vector strain was below the detection limit of 0.005 U mg of protein-1.
To investigate the subcellular localization of the overproduced Gly1p, the threonine aldolase activity was determined in both the soluble and particulate fractions of the cell homogenate obtained from a glucose-limited chemostat culture. The cytosolic enzyme glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase was fully recovered in the soluble fraction of the homogenate. The activity of cytochrome c oxidase, a mitochondrial marker enzyme, was almost exclusively located in the particulate fraction. Threonine aldolase activity in the overproducing strain was almost exclusively found in the soluble fraction of cell homogenate (Table 2), indicating a cytosolic localization of Gly1p.
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TABLE 2. Recovery of threonine aldolase and marker enzymes in the particulate and soluble fractions of homogenates of the GLY1-overexpressing Pdc- strain RWB893(YEpGLY1) harvested from aerobic glucose-limited chemostat culturesa
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As expected, both strains were able to grow in chemostat cultures on a mixture of glucose and acetate (Table 3). Under these conditions, key physiological parameters of the cultures, such as biomass yields and respiratory quotient (RQ), were not significantly different for the two strains (Table 3). Consistent with a complete (>97%) recovery of substrate carbon in biomass and carbon dioxide, no significant accumulation of metabolites, such as ethanol, acetate, or glycerol, was observed in culture supernatants.
After a switch to a medium with glucose as the sole carbon source, the empty-vector Pdc- reference strain washed out of the chemostat cultures (Fig. 1). The exponential decrease of the biomass concentration, accompanied by the accumulation of glucose and pyruvate, was consistent with a low residual growth rate of 0.03 h-1. It has previously been shown that a nonisogenic Pdc- S. cerevisiae strain washed out of the chemostat cultures in a similar manner (12). Evidently, the reference strain was unable to sustain glucose-limited growth without acetate in the medium at a dilution rate of 0.10 h-1.
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FIG. 1. Concentrations of glucose, metabolites, and biomass after a switch to an aerobic chemostat culture (dilution rate = 0.10 h-1) of the pdc1 pdc5 pdc6 reference strain RWB893(YEplac181) from growth on synthetic medium containing a mixture of glucose and acetate (0.25 M substrate carbon and 10% acetate on a carbon basis) to growth on a synthetic medium containing glucose (0.25 M substrate carbon) as the sole carbon source. The graph shows the washout profile of a single representative culture. An independent replicate experiment yielded the same results.
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Byproduct formation upon exposure of glucose-limited cultures to excess glucose.
To investigate the short-term response of the threonine aldolase-overexpressing Pdc-strain to excess glucose, a glucose pulse was administered to a steady-state, aerobic, glucose-limited chemostat culture. After a 50 mM glucose pulse was administered, the prototrophic reference strain CEN.PK113-7D required 2 h to completely consume the added glucose. Glucose consumption was accompanied by the production of 50 mM ethanol and 10 mM acetate (Fig. 2). Under identical conditions, the GLY1-overproducing Pdc- strain required 4 h for complete consumption of the glucose pulse. No ethanol or acetate was produced but, in contrast to the wild-type strain and similar to a nonisogenic Pdc- strain (13), the engineered strain produced substantial amounts of pyruvate (up to 30 mM; Fig. 2).
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FIG. 2. Metabolic responses of aerobic, glucose-limited chemostat cultures (dilution rate = 0.10 h-1) to a 50 mM glucose pulse. (A) S. cerevisiae CEN.PK 113-7D (prototrophic wild-type strain). (B) GLY1-overproducing Pdc- strain RWB893(YEpGLY1). The graphs show single representative glucose pulse experiments for each strain. Independent replicate experiments yielded essentially the same results.
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The observation that, at low through moderate specific growth rates, threonine aldolase-overproducing Pdc- strains were capable of growth on glucose as the sole carbon source (Table 3) is consistent with the proposed essential role of PDC in cytosolic acetyl-CoA biosynthesis (10, 31). Synthesis of acetaldehyde via threonine aldolase overproduction is accompanied by the formation of equimolar amounts of glycine. The minimum cytosolic acetyl-CoA requirement for the lipid and lysine (3, 9) biosynthesis during glucose-limited growth has previously been estimated at 1.05 mmol gbiomass-1 (10). Therefore, at least 1.05 mmol of glycine gbiomass-1 will be produced if all cytosolic acetyl-CoA is produced via threonine aldolase. Multiple pathways may be involved in the metabolism of this glycine in the engineered Pdc-, GLY1-overexpressing strain. In addition to direct incorporation in cellular protein (the glycine content of yeast biomass is ca. 0.29 mmol gbiomass-1 [26]), glycine may be used for the synthesis of serine via serine hydroxymethyl transferase and the glycine cleavage system (18, 28). If all serine is produced in this way, consuming two molecules of glycine per serine produced, an additional 0.37 mmol of glycine gbiomass-1 can be incorporated in the biomass (26). Furthermore, additional glycine may be converted via the glycine cleavage system in conjunction with either methionine biosynthesis or one-carbon metabolism (18, 28).
The inability of Pdc- strains to grow on glucose as the sole carbon source indicates that regulatory properties of the GLY1 gene and/or the regulatory and kinetic properties of Gly1p prevent the native GLY1 gene from meeting the cellular demand for cytosolic acetyl-CoA. In terms of regulatory properties, it seems likely that regulation of the native GLY1 gene will be primarily based on its role in nitrogen metabolism. In terms of kinetic properties, the low affinity of threonine aldolase for threonine (Km = 55 mM [21]) may limit the flux through the enzyme at physiological intracellular threonine concentrations (5 to 10 mM [16, 24]). We cannot exclude the possibility that a low expression level of GLY1 may have contributed to the low residual specific growth rates observed upon switching chemostat cultures of a Pdc- reference strain to a medium containing glucose as the sole carbon source (Fig. 1). It will be of interest to investigate whether threonine aldolase is involved in cytosolic acetyl-CoA biosynthesis in eukaryotes that lack PDC.
The aerobic production of ethanol and acetate by wild-type S. cerevisiae is considered a substantial problem in biomass- and protein-directed industrial applications. The engineered Pdc-, GLY1-overexpressing strain combines the absence of this alcoholic fermentation with the ability to grow on glucose as the sole carbon source in aerobic carbon-limited chemostat cultures. However, several growth characteristics of this strain limit the industrial application as a host for the expression of heterologous proteins or as a strain platform for the production of L-lactate (29). First, similar to a strain with reduced expression of PDC (11), the engineered strain exhibited a reduced maximum specific growth rate of 0.20 h-1 in glucose-limited chemostat cultures compared to 0.38 h-1 of the wild type. Second, like other strains of S. cerevisiae with reduced or zero PDC activity (11, 13, 35), it produced substantial amounts of pyruvate during exposure to glucose excess (Fig. 2). Third, growth of this strain on glucose in batch culture was not possible.
Marino Marinkoviæ and Alexander Vermeulen contributed to this work as part of their M.Sc. studies. We thank Jeff C. Lievense for stimulating discussions and for critically reading the manuscript and our colleagues Matthijs Groothuizen, Mickel Jansen, Arjen van Tuijl, and Miranda Hartog for assistance with the experiments.
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