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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, September 2005, p. 5124-5128, Vol. 71, No. 9
0099-2240/05/$08.00+0     doi:10.1128/AEM.71.9.5124-5128.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Improvement of the Fatty Acid Composition of an Oil-Producing Filamentous Fungus, Mortierella alpina 1S-4, through RNA Interference with {Delta}12-Desaturase Gene Expression

Seiki Takeno,1 Eiji Sakuradani,1 Akiko Tomi,1 Misa Inohara-Ochiai,2 Hiroshi Kawashima,3 Toshihiko Ashikari,2 and Sakayu Shimizu1*

Laboratory of Fermentation Physiology and Applied Microbiology, Division of Applied Life Sciences, Graduate School of Agriculture, Kyoto University, Kyoto 606-8502, Japan,1 Institute for Advanced Technology, Suntory Ltd., Osaka 618-0001, Japan,2 Institute for Health Care Science, Suntory Ltd., Osaka 618-0001, Japan3

Received 12 October 2004/ Accepted 6 April 2005


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ABSTRACT
 
An oleaginous fungus, Mortierella alpina 1S-4, is used commercially for arachidonic acid production. {Delta}12-Desaturase, which desaturates oleic acid (18:1n-9) to linoleic acid (18:2n-6), is a key enzyme in the arachidonic acid biosynthetic pathway. To determine if RNA interference (RNAi) by double-stranded RNA occurs in M. alpina 1S-4, we silenced the {Delta}12-desaturase gene. The silenced strains accumulate 18:2n-9, 20:2n-9, and Mead acid (20:3n-9), which are not detected in either the control strain or wild type strain 1S-4. The fatty acid composition of stable transformants was similar to that of {Delta}12-desaturation-defective mutants previously identified. Thus, RNAi occurs in M. alpina and could be used to alter the types and relative amounts of fatty acids produced by commercial strains of this fungus without mutagenesis or other permanent changes in the genetic background of the producing strains.


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INTRODUCTION
 
An arachidonic acid (AA)-producing fungus, Mortierella alpina 1S-4, is used commercially to produce polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) such as dihomo-{gamma}-linolenic acid (DGLA) (n-6 PUFA; {Delta}8, {Delta}11, {Delta}14-20:3), AA (n-6 PUFA; {Delta}5, {Delta}8, {Delta}11, {Delta}14-20:4), and eicosapentaenoic acid (n-3 PUFA; {Delta}5, {Delta}8, {Delta}11, {Delta}14, {Delta}17-20:5) (25, 34). PUFAs play important roles as structural components of membrane phospholipids and as precursors of the eicosanoids of signaling molecules, including prostaglandins, thromboxanes, and leukotrienes (16, 26). All mammals synthesize eicosanoids that are involved in inflammatory responses, reproductive function, immune responses, and the regulation of blood pressure (7). Although these fatty acids are useful for both researchers and consumers, their high cost and relative scarcity limit their application, and more efficient production strains are needed (25).

We previously studied the fatty acid metabolism in M. alpina 1S-4 through comparative analyses of fatty acid composition or the accumulation of derivative mutations (9, 11, 12). For example, instead of n-6 fatty acids, {Delta}12-desaturase-defective mutants accumulate n-9 fatty acids (Fig. 1). We also cloned and sequenced the fatty acid desaturase and elongase genes and analyzed them functionally (21, 22, 23). Wynn et al. (32, 33) identified the rate-limiting step in AA production and the NADPH-producing step responsible for fatty acid synthesis through enzymatic analysis. A rudimentary transformation system is available for M. alpina 1S-4 (27), but this system needs further improvement, and direct gene disruption cannot be performed in this system at this time.



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FIG. 1. Biosynthetic pathway for polyunsaturated fatty aids in Mortierella alpina and its {Delta}12-desaturase-defective mutants. Mortierella alpina strains produce n-6 fatty acids. {Delta}12-Desaturase-defective mutants produce n-9 fatty acids by blocking of {Delta}12-desaturation. DES, desaturase; EL, elongase; 18:0, stearic acid; 18:1n-9, oleic acid; 18:2n-6, linoleic acid; 18:3n-6, {gamma}-linolenic acid; 20:3n-6, DGLA; 20:4n-6, AA; 18:2n-9, 6,9-octadecadienoic acid; 20:2n-9, 8,11-eicosadienoic acid; 20:3n-9, MA (5,8,11-eicosatrienoic acid).

RNA interference (RNAi) is a recent technological advance that reduces gene expression at the posttranscriptional level in various organisms, including trypanosomes (17), fruit flies (13), zebra fish (29), frogs (19), mammals (31), plants (30), and fungi (4, 18). RNAi allows researchers to obtain information about gene function relatively quickly and easily. In addition, if the genes involved in PUFA synthesis are analyzed, then the resulting transformants can be used to identify gene function and to produce novel and/or commercially important PUFAs. Creation of strains that can produce PUFAs currently in limited supply (e.g., Mead acid [MA] [20:3n-9], which has an important metabolic role in mammalian cells [3, 6, 8]), should provide new commercial opportunities.

Our objectives in this study were: (i) to determine if RNAi occurs in Mortierella species, (ii) to determine if RNAi can be used to change the types and relative amounts of fatty acids produced by this fungus, and (iii) to determine if RNAi can be used to create strains that produce qualitatively different sets of fatty acids. If genes involved in fatty acid synthesis, e.g., the {Delta}12-desaturase gene, were silenced, then PUFAs not normally accumulated by the wild-type strain might be obtained. If novel fatty acids are produced, they could have useful pharmacological effects, and if strains can produce higher levels of one or more relatively scarce fatty acids, then they could be used to increase the commercial production of those fatty acids.


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MATERIALS AND METHODS
 
Strains, media, and growth conditions.
The Czapek-Dox and SC media were as previously described (28). SC medium was used as a uracil-free synthetic medium for cultivation of the ura5 strain and the transformants. The ura5 strain was from M. alpina 1S-4, which was maintained on potato dextrose agar (Difco, Detroit, MI) containing 5-fluoroorotic acid (0.5 mg/ml) and uracil (50 µg/ml) and sporulated on Czapek-Dox medium plus 50 µg/ml uracil. GY medium contains 2% (wt/vol) glucose and 1% yeast extract and was used for fatty acid composition analyses. Media were solidified with 1.5% agar and incubated at 28°C after inoculation. All liquid cultures were grown at 28°C with reciprocal shaking (120 strokes/min). Escherichia coli DH5{alpha} was used for DNA manipulation and was cultivated at 37°C with vigorous shaking (300 rpm).

Preparation of genomic DNA and construction of a cDNA library.
Genomic DNA from M. alpina was prepared as described previously (14). Purification of mRNA and cDNA synthesis also were conducted as described previously (2, 22).

Gene-silencing constructs and expression vector.
Gene-silencing constructs targeted the {Delta}12-desaturase gene. The entire {Delta}12-desaturase gene was amplified with forward primer D12FBspHI (5'-TCATCATGACACCTCCCAACACTA-3') and reverse primer D12RBamHI (5'-AAAGGATCCTTTACTTCTTGAAAAAGACC-3'), 62°C was the annealing temperature, and 1S-4 genomic DNA was the template. The D12FBspHI primer contains a BspHI restriction site (underlined) and anneals at positions –5 to +19 of the {Delta}12-desaturase gene (DDBJ accession number AB020033). The D12RBamHI primer contains a BamHI restriction site (underlined) and anneals at positions +1213 to +1185. The ~1.2-kb PCR product was cloned into the pT7Blue T vector (Novagen, Madison, WI), and designated pT7-{Delta}12. The BamHI restriction site on primer D12RBamHI is present on the same side as the BamHI restriction site in the multiple cloning sites of the pT7Blue T vector.

A partial {Delta}12-desaturase gene was amplified with forward primer RNAi{Delta}12innF (5'-TCAGGATCCCACCTCCCAACACTAT-3') and reverse primer RNAi{Delta}12innR2 (5'-CAGAGGCCTTCATAATAAGGTACGCA-3'), 62°C was the annealing temperature, and 1S-4 genomic DNA was the template. The RNAi{Delta}12innF primer contains a BamHI restriction site (underlined) and anneals at positions –5 to +20 of the {Delta}12-desaturase gene. The RNAi{Delta}12innR2 primer contains an StuI restriction site (underlined) and anneals at positions +642 to +667. The ~700-bp PCR product was cloned into the pT7Blue T vector and designated pT7-{Delta}12inn. The partial {Delta}12-desaturase gene obtained by digesting pT7-{Delta}12 with BamHI and StuI was ligated to pT7-{Delta}12 treated with BamHI and MscI. The MscI recognition site exists at positions +465 to +470 of the {Delta}12-desaturase gene. The gene constructs were under the control of the homologous histone H4 promoter, giving rise to a transformation vector for gene silencing designated pDura5{Delta}12RNAi (Fig. 2).



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FIG. 2. Construction of transformation vector for M. alpina 1S-4 ura5 mutants. Two primers, D12FBspHI/D12RBamHI and RNAi{Delta}12innF/RNAi{Delta}12innR2, were used to amplify the partial and whole sequences of the {Delta}12-desaturase gene, respectively. his H4.1p, Mortierella alpina histone H4.1 promoter; ura5, Mortierella alpina 1S-4 ura5 gene; trpCt, Aspergillus nidulans N-(5'-phosphoribosyl)anthranilate isomerase (trpC) transcription terminator; rDNA, M. alpina 1S-4 rRNA gene fragment; bla, ampicillin resistance gene.

Transformation of M. alpina 1S-4 ura5, screening of stable transformants, and confirmation of transformation.
M. alpina 1S-4 ura5 was transformed as described previously (27). A PDS-1000/He particle delivery system (Bio-Rad Laboratories Inc., Hercules, CA) was used for the transformation. Tungsten particles (1.1 µm in diameter) coated with pDura5{Delta}12RNAi were used according to the manufacture's instructions. Intact spores were harvested from the surface of Czapek-Dox agar medium containing uracil (4.0 x 108 spores/300 cm2). Each plate was bombarded twice. After the bombardment, plates were incubated statically at 28°C for 2 to 5 days. Mycelia appearing on the plates were regarded as putative transformants. Transformants were transferred to SC agar medium and maintained for further analyses.

Screening of stable transformants and confirmation of transformation were performed as previously described (27). A vector-specific forward primer, RDNA1 (5'-ACAGGTACACTTGTTTAGAG-3'), which anneals just upstream of the trpC terminator region, and reverse primer RDNA2 (5'-CGCTGCGTTCTTCATCGATG-3'), which anneals to the 5.8S rRNA gene located downstream of the 18S rRNA gene region but not in the vector, were used.

Fatty acid analysis.
Fatty acid analysis was performed as previously described (21, 22, 23). The mycelia of five M. alpina 1S-4-derived strains transformed with pDura5{Delta}12RNAi were inoculated into 500-ml Erlenmeyer flasks containing 100 ml of GY medium and then cultivated at 28°C with reciprocal shaking (120 strokes/min) for 4 days. Fungal mycelia were harvested by suction filtration, washed with distilled water, and then dried at 120°C for 3 h. The dried cells were directly transmethylated with 10% methanolic HCl at 50°C for 3 h, and the resultant fatty acid methyl esters were extracted with n-hexane, concentrated, and then analyzed by gas-liquid chromatography.


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RESULTS
 
Transformation of M. alpina 1S-4 ura5 with pDura5{Delta}12RNAi.
The {Delta}12-desaturase gene was the target for RNAi biosynthesis. {Delta}12-Desaturase-defective mutants are available (10, 24), and their existence suggests that it is possible to obtain transformants in which the {Delta}12-desaturase activity has been at least temporarily silenced.

The double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) of {Delta}12-desaturase from the gene-silencing construct in pDura5{Delta}12RNAi consists of a 467-bp stem and a 194-bp loop (Fig. 2). Sixty transformants were recovered following transformation with pDura5{Delta}12RNAi. The morphology and growth rate of the transformants were the same as those of the parent. Five stable transformants, i.e., no. 11, 30, 47, 52, and 56, retained the heterologous DNA for at least three transfers on GY medium (data not shown) and were used for further experiments.

Genomic DNA was prepared following growth in uracil-free SC medium and the transformation confirmed by PCR. A vector-specific primer, RDNA1, and a genomic DNA-specific primer, RDNA2 were used to confirm the transformation. The fragment was amplified by PCR with the two primers and genomic DNA as the template. The heterologous DNA in all of these transformants integrated into the rRNA gene locus (data not shown).

Fatty acid analysis of the transformants.
Stable transformants were cultured in 100 ml of GY medium at 28°C and their fatty acid compositions determined (Table 1). Mut48 strain is a {Delta}12-desaturase-defective mutant derived from wild type strain 1S-4 (10). The pDura5 transformant was used as a control strain and carries the homologous ura5 gene (27).


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TABLE 1. Comparison of the fatty acid compositions of M. alpina transformantsa

One apparent difference was that all of the pDura5{Delta}12RNAi transformants produced MA (20:3n-9). The levels of n-9 fatty acids, e.g., 18:1n-9 and 18:2n-9, increased relative to those in the control strain. The amount of n-6 fatty acids, e.g., 18:2n-6, 18:3n-6, DGLA, and AA, decreased. In particular, 18:1n-9, a substrate for {Delta}12-desaturase, accumulated to up to 60% of the total fatty acid. MA was synthesized through {Delta}6-desaturation, elongation, and {Delta}5-desaturation from the accumulated 18:1n-9. Transformant 56 had the lowest {Delta}12-desaturase activity and the highest MA and lowest AA contents. Thus, {Delta}12-desaturase gene silencing occurred in these transformants, as a result of RNAi.


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DISCUSSION
 
Previously, studies of RNAi in yeasts or filamentous fungi generally have had basic science objectives (15, 18, 20). However, RNAi also could enable biosynthesis of previously rare and economically valuable compounds. For example, by silencing the structural gene for an enzyme in the PUFA biosynthetic pathway, an unusual and commercially unavailable compound could be synthesized.

We improved the fatty acid content of M. alpina through RNAi. Dietary supplementation of MA inhibits leukotriene B4 synthesis in rats, probably through the inhibition of leukotriene A hydrolase (8). The human neutrophil leukotriene B4 synthesis was reduced by MA more than by eicosapentaenoic acid, which has a known anti-inflammatory effect (3). Previous, {Delta}12-desaturase-defective mutants, which accumulate MA, were obtained from wild-type strain 1S-4 by chemical mutagenesis with N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (10). There were no differences between the mutants and the wild type except in fatty acid composition and a slightly lower growth rate (Table 1). Instead of n-6 fatty acids, the {Delta}12-desaurase-defective mutants accumulated n-9 fatty acids, such as 18:2n-9, 20:2n-9, and MA (20:3n-9), that are not detected in the wild-type strain. The transformants we obtained could produce n-9 and n-6 fatty acids (Table 1). The simultaneous production of two different series of PUFAs is not thought to be commercially advantageous. The productivity of n-9 fatty acids must be reduced by carbon flow into the n-6 fatty acid synthetic pathway. The MA productivity of the RNAi transformants was comparable to that of the {Delta}12-desaturase-defective mutant. Sakuradani et al. (24) reported that increased production of MA could result from an increase in the {Delta}6- and {Delta}5-desaturase activities in a {Delta}12-desaturse-deficient mutant. Lipid accumulation by the ura5 recipient strain was lower than that by the wild-type strain even if the ura5 gene was complemented (Table 1). These differences in lipid accumulation may be due to mutations at several loci other than ura5. Therefore, the additional changes, e.g., increased PUFA biosynthetic enzyme activity or the creation of more desirable host cells that perform higher lipid accumulation, is needed before RNAi can be used in a commercial production strain.

If the strains were cultivated on GY medium without selective pressure to maintain the ura+ allele, then unstable transformants lost the plasmid and became uracil auxotrophs like the host strain within a one-time cultivation. The fatty acid composition of the unstable transformants was always similar to that of the original ura5 recipient strain (data not shown). Transformation of M. alpina usually results in the integration of multiple copies of the transforming vector. In our case, the vector was constructed so as to be integrated in tandem arrays in the rRNA gene coding region. Some transformants lost the integrated vector by homologous recombination of the sequences (1, 35), but stable transformants never lost the transforming DNA, even if sequentially subcultured on GY medium more than three times (27). Thus, production of n-6 fatty acids by the RNAi transformants was not a result of the excision of the RNAi vector.

Based on the production of n-6 fatty acids, {Delta}12-desaturase gene expression was not completely suppressed in the RNAi transformants. {Delta}12-desaturase is present as only a single-copy gene in this fungus, so the gene silencing is presumed to be incomplete. There are several possible explanations for these results. First, our gene-silencing construct, which results in a dsRNA of ~500 bp in length, may be too short. In other organisms (5, 17), a longer dsRNA is more effective for gene silencing. Thus, an analysis to determine the minimum effective dsRNA length required for complete gene silencing is needed. The regions of the {Delta}12-desaturase gene that are most effective as a dsRNA for gene silencing also need to be determined. Finally, the number of {Delta}12-desaturase gene transcripts might be larger than the number of dsRNA molecules, which means there might not be enough dsRNA molecules to interact with all of the {Delta}12-desaturase transcripts.

We have previously cloned and characterized genes involved in fatty acid synthesis and expressed them heterologously in Aspergillus oryzae (21, 22, 23). These experiments are difficult because insoluble PUFAs must be added to the cultures for incorporation into the transformed strains. In addition, a heterologous protein need not have the correct activity in the host cells, e.g., because a suitable electron donor is not present or the localization of the protein was inappropriate. RNA silencing is a considerable improvement over heterologous expression and allows the function of a protein encoded by an unidentified gene to be determined in situ. We think that gene silencing can be applied to strains used for PUFA production and to functional analysis of genes that encode proteins with unknown function in M. alpina 1S-4. For commercial purposes, the PUFA biosynthetic pathway may be modified by simultaneously silencing various genes in the pathway.


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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 
We thank David B. Archer (School of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom) for providing the Mortierella transformation vector.

This work was supported in part by the New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization (NEDO) and a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (no. 15658024 to S.S.) from the Ministry of Education, Science, Sports, and Culture, Japan.


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FOOTNOTES
 
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Laboratory of Fermentation Physiology and Applied Microbiology, Division of Applied Life Sciences, Graduate School of Agriculture, Kyoto University, Kyoto 606-8502, Japan. Phone: 81-75-753-6115. Fax: 81-75-753-6128. E-mail: sim{at}kais.kyoto-u.ac.jp. Back


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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, September 2005, p. 5124-5128, Vol. 71, No. 9
0099-2240/05/$08.00+0     doi:10.1128/AEM.71.9.5124-5128.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.




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