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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, June 2003, p. 3421-3426, Vol. 69, No. 6
0099-2240/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.69.6.3421-3426.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Metabolic and Biomolecular Engineering National Research Laboratory, Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, BioProcess Engineering Research Center,1 Center for Ultramicrochemical Process Systems,2 Department of BioSystems, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon 305-701,3 ChiroBio Inc., Yuseong-gu, Daejeon 305-338, Korea4
Received 24 January 2003/ Accepted 13 March 2003
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The metabolism for the synthesis and degradation of PHB plays an important role in many bacteria for the reservation and reutilization of excess carbon and energy sources and reducing power (1). The metabolic pathway for the synthesis and degradation of PHB in Ralstonia eutropha was already proposed (1, 5, 11, 18, 22, 25). PHB is synthesized from acetyl-coenzyme A (CoA) by three sequential enzymatic reactions catalyzed by ß-ketothiolase, acetoacetyl-CoA reductase, and PHA synthase (18, 22, 25). When the conditions are met, PHB is depolymerized to R3HB by intracellular PHA depolymerase and oligomer hydrolase (1, 5, 11). Then the R3HB dehydrogenase converts R3HB to acetoacetate, which is further metabolized in the cell. By employing this cyclic nature of PHB synthesis and degradation, we recently demonstrated that R3HB could be efficiently produced in naturally PHA-producing bacteria by providing appropriate environmental conditions (lowering the pH, for example) that support high activity of intracellular PHA depolymerase and no activity of R3HB dehydrogenase (11).
It has previously been demonstrated that recombinant E. coli strains harboring the Ralstonia eutropha PHA biosynthesis genes (18, 22, 25) were able to accumulate a large amount of PHB, up to 90% of dry cell weight (4, 10, 25). Recently, Saegusa et al. (19) cloned the intracellular PHA depolymerase gene from R. eutropha. It was therefore reasoned that R3HB and other RHAs may be efficiently produced by establishing a heterologous PHA biosynthesis and degradation pathway in Escherichia coli, as depicted in Fig. 1.
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FIG. 1. Poly-(R)-(-)-3-hydroxybutyrate (PHB) metabolism and the metabolic engineering strategy for the production of (R)-(-)-3-hydroxybutyric acid in E. coli. Abbreviations: PhaA, ß-ketothiolase; PhaB, acetoacetyl-CoA reductase; PhaC, PHA synthase.
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TABLE 1. Strains, plasmids, and PCR primers
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Genetic manipulation.
Chromosomal DNA of R. eutropha was prepared by Marmur's method (15). PCR was carried out with an automatic thermal cycler (Takara Shuzo Co., Kyoto, Japan). Isolation and purification of plasmid DNA, restriction digestion, ligation, gel electrophoresis, and transformation were carried out as described by Sambrook et al. (20).
Integration of the R. eutropha PHA biosynthesis genes into the chromosome of E. coli B was carried out as previously reported (8, 29). The E. coli phosphotransacetylase (pta) gene was selected for the site of integration of the R. eutropha PHA biosynthesis genes. Plasmid pTrcEBG (8) containing the red operon of bacteriophage
was transformed into E. coli B. Transformants were prepared as electroporation-competent cells after induction with 1 mM isopropylthiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) for the expression of the red operon. The pta gene was amplified as two fragments from the chromosomal DNA of E. coli B by PCR with two pairs of primer sets, pta-P1 plus pta-P2 and pta-P3 plus pta-P4 (Table 1). Plasmid pUC19pta was prepared by inserting these two PCR products digested with EcoRI-KpnI and SphI-HindIII, respectively, into pUC19.
To prepare the R. eutropha PHA biosynthesis operon, pSYL105 (10) was digested with EcoRI, made blunt ended, and digested with BamHI. Plasmid pUC19pta-PHA was constructed by inserting the PHA biosynthesis operon into the SmaI and BamHI sites of pUC19pta. Finally, the DNA cassette containing the PHA biosynthesis operon and the homologous regions of the pta gene was prepared by digesting pUC19pta-PHA with DraI and mixed with electroporation-competent cells. After electroporation, the desired transformants were selected by identifying PHB-accumulating colonies on LB plates containing 20 g of glucose per liter at 37°C. From the selected transformants, pTrcEBG was removed by cultivating cells in the absence of ampicillin.
Analytical procedures.
Cell concentration (grams of dry cell weight per liter of culture broth) and PHB concentration were determined as previously described (4). The PHB content was defined as the percentage of the ratio of PHB concentration to the cell concentration. Residual cell concentration was calculated by subtracting PHB concentration from the cell concentration. The RHA concentration was measured by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) as previously described (11). When PHB was degraded by an intracellular PHA depolymerase, mainly dimers of R3HB were produced and excreted into the medium along with R3HB monomers.
Dimers of R3HB were hydrolyzed to R3HB monomers by mild heat treatment under alkaline condition as follows. To a 1.5-ml microcentrifuge tube containing 500 µl of cell-free supernatant, 500 µl of 10 N NaOH was added. The tightly sealed tube was incubated at 95°C for 2 h. After cooling to room temperature, the reaction mixture was diluted with an appropriate amount (2- to 50-fold) of distilled water. The resulting solution was filtered and analyzed by HPLC. The monomer yield was defined as the percentage of the ratio of the amount of R3HB formed after heat treatment to the total amount of glucose consumed. The theoretical yield of R3HB from glucose is 57.8%.
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FIG. 2. Plasmids used in this study. Apr, ampicillin resistance gene; Cmr, chloramphenicol resistance gene; lacI, lactose operon repressor; ori, origin of replication; phaA, ß-ketothiolase; phaB, acetoacetyl-CoA reductase; phaC, PHA synthase; phaZi, intracellular PHA depolymerase; stb, the hok/sok locus of plasmid R1; Tcr, tetracycline resistance gene.
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The results obtained by batch culture of E. coli XL1-Blue (pSYL105Red) are shown in Fig. 3A. Rapid production of R3HB started at the beginning of culture when a chemically defined medium was used. During the exponential growth phase (6 to 15 h), R3HB was produced mainly as a monomer up to 5.2 g/liter. The R3HB concentration after alkaline digestion was 6.4 g/liter at 15 h. During the stationary phase (after 15 h), the R3HB concentration decreased while the total R3HB concentration (after alkaline heat treatment) continued to increase. This phenomenon is likely to be due to the formation R3HB dimers from the monomers by esterification. Generally, the carboxylic acid group of R3HB can be readily esterified with alcohol groups to form esters (17). Since R3HB molecules possess both alcohol and carboxylic acid functional groups, the R3HB monomers produced can serve as reactants for reversible intermolecular esterification to form dimers. When R3HB was excreted mainly as monomers by the depolymerization of PHB during the exponential growth phase, the ratio of R3HB monomers to dimers was high enough for the monomers to undergo the esterification reaction. Nonetheless, our desired R3HB product could be successfully obtained by alkaline heat treatment.
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FIG. 3. Time profiles of cell concentration (), PHB concentration ( ), pH ( ), and R3HB concentration before ( ) and after ( ) alkaline heat treatment during batch culture of recombinant E. coli harboring pSYL105Red (A) or p5184 and pUC19Red (B) in a chemically defined medium containing 20 g of glucose per liter.
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In the batch culture of recombinant E. coli harboring both p5184 and pUC19Red (Fig. 3B), cell growth was rather slow, and the final cell concentration was lower than that obtained with the single-plasmid system. This seemed to be due to the greater metabolic burden exerted by the presence of two plasmids compared with one plasmid. However, all PHB synthesized was immediately depolymerized to R3HB monomers and dimers without intracellular accumulation. Even though the copy number of the PHB biosynthesis genes was lower than that with the single-plasmid system, the maximum R3HB concentration after alkaline heat treatment obtained was 9.9 g/liter, which is slightly higher than that obtained with the single-plasmid system. The monomer yield was 49.5%, which is 85.6% of the maximum theoretical yield. It is notable that R3HB monomers were not dimerized, which is different from what was observed with the single-plasmid system. This seems to be because the R3HB concentration of less than 2 g/liter is not high enough to trigger the esterification reaction.
As described above, all PHB was immediately depolymerized when the two-plasmid system was used, while some PHB remained in the cell when the single-plasmid system was used. This phenomenon can be explained as follows. We have previously reported that the crystallinity of PHB produced in recombinant E. coli is much higher than that of PHB produced in a natural PHB producer (7). PHB produced with a single-plasmid system seems to become partially crystalline because of its rapid accumulation before depolymerization. The intracellular PHA depolymerase cannot depolymerize crystalline PHB (19). Therefore, if PHB once accumulates in E. coli due to the higher PHA biosynthetic capacity compared with depolymerization capacity, some old PHB would become more crystalline and would not be a good substrate of the intracellular PHB depolymerase. When the two-plasmid system was used, the intracellular R3HB depolymerase activity was high enough to immediately degrade PHB produced by PHA biosynthesis enzymes present in lower copy numbers.
Integration of PHA biosynthesis genes into E. coli chromosome.
One of the problems most frequently encountered during the industrial production of bioproducts by employing recombinant strains is plasmid instability. Addition of antibiotics to stabilize plasmids is not desirable, especially for the production of bulk products in a large-scale fermentor. The use of the hok/sok locus of plasmid R1 (6) is a good method to stabilize a plasmid by postsegregationally killing the plasmid-free cells, but it cannot be applied to the two-plasmid system. In the two-plasmid system that we used, only plasmid p5184 contains the hok/sok locus. In order to examine the stability of plasmids, E. coli XL1-Blue harboring p5184 and pUC19Red was serially subcultured for 30 generations without the addition of antibiotics. Plasmid p5184 containing the hok/sok locus was stably maintained for 30 generations. However, 85% of the cells lost pUC19Red after six generations (data not shown). Therefore, segregational instability of plasmid was found to be a problem in the absence of antibiotics.
To overcome this problem of plasmid instability, the PHA biosynthesis operon was integrated into the chromosome of E. coli B by homologous recombination (29) to make E. coli B-PHA+. The phosphotransacetylase (pta) gene was selected for the site of integration because this can increase the flux towards the PHB biosynthesis pathway by eliminating the competing pathway consuming acetyl-CoA to form acetic acid. E. coli B-PHA+ was transformed with pUCRed_stb, which was constructed by cloning the hok/sok locus into pUC19Red. By batch fermentation of E. coli B-PHA+ harboring pUCRed_stb in the absence of antibiotics, R3HB was produced to a high level even though there was only a single copy of the PHA biosynthesis operon (Fig. 4). The plasmid was stably maintained until the end of fermentation. The final R3HB concentration and the yield obtained were 7.7 g/liter and 38.5%, respectively, after alkaline heat treatment.
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FIG. 4. Time profiles of cell concentration (), PHB concentration ( ), pH ( ), and R3HB concentration before ( ) and after ( ) alkaline heat treatment during batch culture of recombinant E. coli B-PHA+ harboring pUCRed_stb in a chemically defined medium containing 20 g of glucose per liter.
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As demonstrated above, R3HB can be efficiently produced by employing metabolically engineered E. coli harboring the genes involved in the biosynthesis and degradation of PHA. By using a two-plasmid system, R3HB was most efficiently produced, with a yield of 49.5% from glucose. The problem of using antibiotics for the plasmid maintenance could be overcome by integrating the PHA biosynthesis operon into the E. coli chromosome and using the hok/sok locus of plasmid R1 in a plasmid harboring the PHA depolymerase gene. Various PHAs other than PHB can be produced in E. coli by engineering the metabolic pathways and by providing different substrates (2, 14, 16). More than 140 different monomer units can be incorporated into PHAs (28). Production of these RHAs will be possible by employing the strategy reported here and with the appropriate pairs of PHA biosynthesis and degradation genes having different substrate specificities. This was demonstrated by producing R3HB and R3HV by culturing a metabolically engineered E. coli in a medium containing glucose and propionic acid. This is a good example of "green chemistry" in that high-value fine chemicals are produced from renewable resources such as glucose and fatty acids.
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