|
Regulation and Metabolic
Engineering of Secondary Metabolite Biosynthesis

A large number of
industrially important pharmaceuticals, including antibiotics, anticancer
agents, and immunosuppressors, are products of secondary metabolism in
microbial or plant systems. Regulation of secondary metabolite biosynthesis
includes at least four layers of cellular control. At the first
level of the metabolic scheme is the influence of global and specific
regulators of secondary biosynthetic gene expression. These genetic elements
although poorly understood are capable of influencing biosynthetic rates
significantly in microorganisms that produce natural products. At the
second level of the biosynthetic scheme are the structural genes
and protein products that specify biosynthesis of a particular secondary
metabolite. At this level, individual enzymes that represent rate-limiting
steps can influence the rate of microbial metabolite production. Similarly,
enzyme co-factor and precursor supply represents a third level
of cellular control of biosynthesis in multistep biosynthetic pathways.
At the fourth level of the metabolic scheme, the degree to which
an individual cell can effectively transport (excrete) complex metabolites
represents yet another influence on production efficiency of natural products.
The long-term goal of our work in this area is to unveil the regulatory
hierarchy of secondary metabolism and to develop a rational approach for
metabolic engineering of secondary metabolite production using microbial
genomic technologies. The model system used is the b-lactam antibiotic
biosynthesis in Streptomyces clavuligerus. The project involves
both Prof. Hu's research group and Prof. Sherman's at the Department of
Microbiology at University of Minnesota.
Relaxing precursor
flux control by genetic engineering
Using
known enzyme kinetic data and physiological information we constructed
a kinetic model for biosynthesis of cephamycin C. By performing control
strength analysis we identified ACV synthetase and lysine e-aminotransferase
(LAT), the first enzymes in the biosynthetic pathway of cephamycin C,
as the rate-limiting steps in cephamycin production. Increasing LAT levels
by introducing an additional copy of the gene encoding for LAT in S.
clavuligerus chromosome (LHM100) increased cephamycin production
by two to five fold. To investigate the temporal profile of LAT activity
a fusion protein of LAT and green fluorescent protein (GFP) was constructed
and expressed in S. clavuligerus. The transformants exhibited
the characteristic green fluorescence of GFP. Laser scanning confocal
microscopy was used to examine the spatial distribution of LAT in the
mycelia. Unique spatial patterns of green fluorescence were observed in
mycelia during various stages of cultivation. The results suggest that
the genes for cephamycin C production be regulated both spatially and
temporally. The potential for use of GFP as a physiological and metabolic
probe in Streptomyces species was verified.
Precursor and cofactor
as a check valve for cephamycin biosynthesis
The
biosynthesis of secondary metabolites is closely linked to primary metabolism
via the supply of precursors, cofactors, and cellular energy. A combined
experimental and kinetic modeling approach was used to examine the regulation
of flux in the cephamycin biosynthetic pathway in S. clavuligerus.
The Km values for lysine and a-ketoglutarate were substantially higher
than their intracellular concentrations. Furthermore, their Km values
are much higher than that tRNAlys acyl transferase and for other enzymes
in primary and secondary metabolism which utilize as a-ketoglutarate a
substrate. This suggests that lysine and a-ketoglutarate play a key role
in regulating the flux of cephamycin biosynthesis ensuring that the flux
through LAT will not be a diversion of resources needed for primary metabolism.
Analysis of the spatio-temporal
gene expressions using GFP as a reporter
Secondary metabolite
synthesis is related to cellular differentiation. The expression of the
machinery for secondary metabolite biosynthesis occurs only in late exponential
growth and may be heterogeneous in mycelia. We investigated the temporal
and spatial distribution of the rate limiting biosynthetic enzyme Lysine
6 aminotransferase (LAT) by constructing green fluorescent protein (GFP)
and LAT fusion protein (LAT-GFP) in S. clavuligerus. Using
confocal microscopy we demonstrated that the expression of LAT quickly
diminishes after inoculation from seed culture into main culture. It reappears
only in some mycelia in early exponential phase. All mycelia became fluorescent
in late exponential phase and green fluorescence diminishes again in stationary
phase.
Most Streptomyces
spp. undergoes greater morphological change during the growth cycle
in solid culture as opposed to liquid culture. Time-lapsed experiments
using confocal microscopy were carried out to monitor expression of the
lat gene in solid media (agar plate). In solid phase analysis,
abundant LAT expression was evident in the substrate mycelia but was completely
absent in aerial hyphae.
It has been shown
that a positive regulator, an ccaR-encoded control element located
within the cephamycin gene cluster, regulates LAT expression. We have
constructed a recombinant clone carrying the positive regulator ccaR
fused to gfp coding for green fluorescent protein and another recombinant
clone carrying lat::gfp and ccaR::cfp (coding for cyan fluorescent
protein) in the chromosome. This either strain of S. clavuligerus
allows simultaneous detection of CcaR and LAT in situ. Their
behavior is similar to LAT-GFP. These findings may have implications for
process design as well as metabolic engineering of secondary metabolite
biosynthesis in Streptomyces.
Genome-wide probing
of the regulation of secondary metabolism
Antibiotic productions are precisely controlled by sets of regulators
in Streptomyces but most previous studies have been focused on
several individual regulatory genes. To develop a rational approach for
metabolic engineering of secondary metabolite production, both subset
and genome-wide microarray methods
are being used to analyze the regulation of secondary metabolism. Quantitative
physiological and mathematical modeling approaches will be combined to
obtain information on temporal and conditional expression of global and
pathway-specific regulatory factors, and rate-limiting enzymes for the
natural product pathways. Our research objectives encompass the following
aspect.
 |
Genome-wide
and subset microarray analysis to monitor expression of two-component
regulatory genes and pathway-specific regulators involved in secondary
metabolite biosynthesis in S. coelicolor.
|
 |
Microarray
analysis of metabolic regulation in wild type and isogenic mutants
of S. coelicolor involving two-component and secondary metabolite
pathway specific regulators.
|
 |
Development
of recombinant S. coelicolor strains with engineered regulatory
gene::gfp fusions to study temporal and spatial expression
patterns for secondary metabolism.
|
 |
Development
of recombinant S. coelicolor strains with disrupted regulatory
genes to study the regulatory circuits of secondary metabolism.
|
 |
To
establish and refine a mathematical modeling framework for regulation
of secondary metabolism in S. coelicolor as well as other model
secondary metabolite biosynthetic systems.
|
Selected
Recent Publications:
 |
Kyung,
Y. S., W.-S. Hu and D. H. Sherman. 2000. Analysis of temporal and
spatial expression of the CcaR regulatory element in the cephamycin
C biosynthetic pathway using green fluorescent protein. Submitted.
|
 |
Han,
L., A. Khetan, and W. -S. Hu. 1999. Time-lapsed confocal microscopy
reveals temporal and spatial expression of the lysine e-aminotransferase
gene in Streptomyces clavuligerus. Mol. Microbiol. 34:878-886
|
 |
Khetan,
A., L.-H. Malmberg, Y. S. Kyung, D. H. Sherman and W.-S. Hu. 1999.
Precursor and cofactor as a check valve for cephamycin biosynthesis
in Streptomyces clavuligerus. Biotechnol. Prog. 15:1020-1027
|
 |
Khetan,
A. and W. -S. Hu. 1999. Metabolic engineering of antibiotic biosynthesis
for process improvement. In: Metabolic Engineering, Eds: S. Y. Lee
and E. T. Papoutsakis. Marcel Dekker, New York.
|
 |
Khetan,
A., L.-H. Malmberg, D. H. Sherman and W.-S. Hu. 1996. Metabolic engineering
of cephalosporin biosynthesis in Streptomyces clavuligerus.
Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 782:17-24.
|
 |
Malmberg,
L.-H., W.-S. Hu and D.H. Sherman. 1995. Effects of enhanced lysine
e-aminotransferase activity on cephamycin biosynthesis in Streptomyces
clavuligerus. Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 44:198-205.
|
 |
Malmberg,
L.-H., W.-S. Hu and D.H. Sherman. 1993. Precursor flux control through
targeted chromosomal insertion of the lysine e-aminotransferase (lat)
gene in cephamycin C biosynthesis. J. Bacteriol. 175:6916-6924.
|
 |
Malmberg,
L.-H. and W.-S. Hu. 1991. Kinetic analysis of cephalosporin biosynthesis
in Streptomyces clavuligerus. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 38:941-947.
|

Collaborator:
Prof. David H.
Sherman, Ph.D.:
david-s@biosci.cbs.umn.edu
Department of Microbiology and Biological Process Technology Institute,
University of Minnesota
Current Graduate
Students:

Wei Lian:
lian@cems.umn.edu

Sarika Mehra:
mehra@cems.umn.edu
|