Guan Wang

and 6 more

Limitations in mixing and mass transfer coupled with high hydrostatic pressures lead to significant spatial variations in dissolved oxygen (DO) concentrations in large-scale bioreactors. While traveling through different zones in the bioreactor, microbes are subjected to fluctuating DO conditions at the timescales of global circulation time. In this study, to mimic industrial-scale spatial DOT gradients, we present a scale-down model based on dynamic feast/famine regime (150 s) that leads to repetitive cycles with rapid changes in DO availability in glucose-limited chemostat cultures of Penicillium chrysogenum. The results revealed that the exposure time to the low DO level (less than 10%) imposed a significant impact on the biomass growth and penicillin productivity was considerably reduced by a factor of two, while the averaged substrate consumption rates were comparable under the DO oscillation condition compared to that of 60% DO steady-state condition. Quantitative metabolomics data showed that the DO feast/famine induced a stable and repetitive pattern with a reproducible metabolic response in time. The dynamic response of intracellular metabolites under such DO oscillating conditions showed specific differences in comparison to repetitive substrate pulse experiments. Due to invariable the specific glucose uptake rate ( q s ) during a cycle, the variation in the intracellular pools size of amino acids, sugar phosphates and organic acids was less pronounced in terms of both coverage and magnitude under DO fluctuations than under repetitive substrate pulses featured with a marked variation in the q s . Remarkably, intracellular sugar polyols were considerably increased as the hallmark metabolites to reserve carbon source and reducing equivalent, which likely provide short-term benefits in such changing environments. Furthermore, the calculated cytosolic NADH/NAD + ratio under the DO oscillating condition indicated a dynamic and higher redox state of the cytosol, which has been reported to negatively affect the maintenance of penicillin productivity. Despite the increased availability of NADPH for penicillin production under the oscillatory DO conditions, this positive effect may be counteracted by the decreased ATP supply. From an economical point of view, it is interesting to note that not only the penicillin productivity was reduced under such oscillating DO conditions, but also that of the unrecyclable byproduct ortho-hydroxyphenyl acetic acid (ο-OH-PAA) and degeneration of penicillin productivity induced by low extracellular glucose sensing. Furthermore, dynamic metabolic flux analysis based on constraining time-resolved metabolite data into genome-scale metabolic model showed that Penicillium chrysogenum metabolism shifted from penicillin production to maintaining biomass growth upon a reduction of oxygen supply. The relative decreasing fluxes of amino acid metabolic pathways and fatty acid biosynthetic pathways were assumed to relieve the energy demand for balanced cellular metabolism. Taken together, the metabolic responses of Penicillium chrysogenum to DOT gradients reported here are important for elucidating metabolic regulation mechanisms, improving bioreactor design and scale-up procedures as well as for constructing robust cell strains to cope with heterogenous industrial culture conditions.

Xiaobo Li

and 4 more

Omics approaches have been applied to understand the boosted productivity of natural products by industrial high-producing microorganisms. Here, with the updated genome sequence and transcriptomic profiles derived from high-throughput sequencing, we exploited comparative omics analysis to further enhance the biosynthesis of erythromycin in an industrial overproducer, Saccharopolyspora erythraea HL3168 E3. By comparing the genome of E3 with the wild type NRRL23338, we identified fragment deletions inside 56 coding sequences and 255 single nucleotide polymorphisms over the genome of E3. Substantial numbers of genomic variations were observed in genes responsible for pathways which were interconnected to the biosynthesis of erythromycin by supplying precursors/cofactors or by signal transduction. Through comparative transcriptomic analysis, L-glutamine/L-glutamate and 2-oxoglutarate were identified as reporter metabolites. Around the node of 2-oxoglutarate, genomic mutations were also observed. Furthermore, the transcriptomic data suggested that genes involved in the biosynthesis of erythromycin were significantly up-regulated constantly, whereas some genes in biosynthesis clusters of other secondary metabolites contained nonsense mutations and were expressed at extremely low levels. Based on the omics association analysis, readily available strategies were proposed to engineer E3 by simultaneously overexpressing sucB (coding for 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase E2 component) and sucA (coding for 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase E1 component), which increased the erythromycin titer by 71% compared to E3 in batch culture. This work provides more promising molecular targets to engineer for enhanced production of erythromycin by the overproducer.

Feng Xu

and 6 more

Propanol have been widely used as a precursor for erythromycin synthesis in industrial production. However, the knowledge on the exact metabolic fate of propanol was still unclear. In the present study, the metabolic fate of propanol in industrial erythromycin-producing strain S. erythraea E3 was explored via 13C labeling experiments. An unexpected pathway in which propanol was channeled into tricarboxylic acid cycle was uncovered, resulting in uneconomic catabolism of propanol. By deleting the sucC gene, which encodes succinyl-CoA synthetase that catalyse a reaction in the unexpected propanol utilization pathway, a novel strain E3-ΔsucC was constructed. The strain E3-ΔsucC showed a significant enhancement in erythromycin production in the chemically defined medium compared to E3 (786.61 vs 392.94 mg/L). Isotopic dilution mass spectrometry metabolomics and isotopically nonstationary 13C metabolic flux analysis were employed to characterize the metabolic differences between S. erythraea E3 and E3-ΔsucC. The results showed that compared with the starting strain E3, the fluxes of pentose phosphate pathway in E3-△sucC increased by almost 200%. The most significant difference located in the tricarboxylic acid cycle was also found. The flux of the metabolic reaction catalyzed by succinyl-CoA synthetase in E3-ΔsucC was almost zero, while the glyoxylate bypass flux significantly increased. These new insights into the precursor utilization of antibiotic biosynthesis by rational metabolic engineering in S. erythraea provide the new vision in increasing industrial production of secondary metabolites.