TY - JOUR
T1 - Integration of yeast episomal/integrative plasmid causes genotypic and phenotypic diversity and improved sesquiterpene production in metabolically engineered Saccharomyces cerevisiae
AU - Peng, Bingyin
AU - Weintraub, Sarah J.
AU - Lu, Zeyu
AU - Evans, Samuel
AU - Shen, Qianyi
AU - McDonnell, Liam
AU - Plan, Manuel
AU - Collier, Thomas
AU - Cheah, Li Chen
AU - Ji, Lei
AU - Howard, Christopher B.
AU - Anderson, Will
AU - Trau, Matt
AU - Dumsday, Geoff
AU - Bredeweg, Erin L.
AU - Young, Eric M.
AU - Speight, Robert
AU - Vickers, Claudia E.
PY - 2024/1/19
Y1 - 2024/1/19
N2 - The variability in phenotypic outcomes among biological replicates in engineered microbial factories presents a captivating mystery. Establishing the association between phenotypic variability and genetic drivers is important to solve this intricate puzzle. We applied a previously developed auxin-inducible depletion of hexokinase 2 as a metabolic engineering strategy for improved nerolidol production in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and biological replicates exhibit a dichotomy in nerolidol production of either 3.5 or 2.5 g L–1 nerolidol. Harnessing Oxford Nanopore’s long-read genomic sequencing, we reveal a potential genetic cause─the chromosome integration of a 2μ sequence-based yeast episomal plasmid, encoding the expression cassettes for nerolidol synthetic enzymes. This finding was reinforced through chromosome integration revalidation, engineering nerolidol and valencene production strains, and generating a diverse pool of yeast clones, each uniquely fingerprinted by gene copy numbers, plasmid integrations, other genomic rearrangements, protein expression levels, growth rate, and target product productivities. Τhe best clone in two strains produced 3.5 g L–1 nerolidol and ∼0.96 g L–1 valencene. Comparable genotypic and phenotypic variations were also generated through the integration of a yeast integrative plasmid lacking 2μ sequences. Our work shows that multiple factors, including plasmid integration status, subchromosomal location, gene copy number, sesquiterpene synthase expression level, and genome rearrangement, together play a complicated determinant role on the productivities of sesquiterpene product. Integration of yeast episomal/integrative plasmids may be used as a versatile method for increasing the diversity and optimizing the efficiency of yeast cell factories, thereby uncovering metabolic control mechanisms.
AB - The variability in phenotypic outcomes among biological replicates in engineered microbial factories presents a captivating mystery. Establishing the association between phenotypic variability and genetic drivers is important to solve this intricate puzzle. We applied a previously developed auxin-inducible depletion of hexokinase 2 as a metabolic engineering strategy for improved nerolidol production in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and biological replicates exhibit a dichotomy in nerolidol production of either 3.5 or 2.5 g L–1 nerolidol. Harnessing Oxford Nanopore’s long-read genomic sequencing, we reveal a potential genetic cause─the chromosome integration of a 2μ sequence-based yeast episomal plasmid, encoding the expression cassettes for nerolidol synthetic enzymes. This finding was reinforced through chromosome integration revalidation, engineering nerolidol and valencene production strains, and generating a diverse pool of yeast clones, each uniquely fingerprinted by gene copy numbers, plasmid integrations, other genomic rearrangements, protein expression levels, growth rate, and target product productivities. Τhe best clone in two strains produced 3.5 g L–1 nerolidol and ∼0.96 g L–1 valencene. Comparable genotypic and phenotypic variations were also generated through the integration of a yeast integrative plasmid lacking 2μ sequences. Our work shows that multiple factors, including plasmid integration status, subchromosomal location, gene copy number, sesquiterpene synthase expression level, and genome rearrangement, together play a complicated determinant role on the productivities of sesquiterpene product. Integration of yeast episomal/integrative plasmids may be used as a versatile method for increasing the diversity and optimizing the efficiency of yeast cell factories, thereby uncovering metabolic control mechanisms.
KW - Geneticvariation
KW - Genome rearrangement
KW - Metabolic engineering
KW - Nanopore sequencing
KW - Yeast engineering
KW - nanopore sequencing
KW - genome rearrangement
KW - genetic variation
KW - metabolic engineering
KW - yeast engineering
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85180116050&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acssynbio.3c00363
DO - 10.1021/acssynbio.3c00363
M3 - Article
C2 - 38084917
SN - 2161-5063
VL - 13
SP - 141
EP - 156
JO - ACS Synthetic Biology
JF - ACS Synthetic Biology
IS - 1
ER -