Controlled intracellular trafficking alleviates an expression bottleneck in S. cerevisiae ester biosynthesis

In metabolic engineering, most available pathway engineering strategies aim to control enzyme expression by making changes at the transcriptional level with an underlying assumption that translation and functional expression follow suit. In this work, we engineer expression of a key reaction step in...

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Main Authors: Jie Zhu, Cory Schwartz, Ian Wheeldon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-06-01
Series:Metabolic Engineering Communications
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221403011830035X
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spelling doaj-d4879a017bab4c60b9d161b7d60c57c12020-11-25T00:50:11ZengElsevierMetabolic Engineering Communications2214-03012019-06-018Controlled intracellular trafficking alleviates an expression bottleneck in S. cerevisiae ester biosynthesisJie Zhu0Cory Schwartz1Ian Wheeldon2Biochemistry, University of California Riverside, Riverside, CA 92521, USAChemical and Environmental Engineering, University of California Riverside, Riverside, CA 92521 USAChemical and Environmental Engineering, University of California Riverside, Riverside, CA 92521 USA; Center for Industrial Biotechnology, Bourns College of Engineering, University of California Riverside, Riverside, CA 92521, USA; Corresponding author.In metabolic engineering, most available pathway engineering strategies aim to control enzyme expression by making changes at the transcriptional level with an underlying assumption that translation and functional expression follow suit. In this work, we engineer expression of a key reaction step in medium chain ester biosynthesis that does not follow this common assumption. The native Saccharomyces cerevisiae alcohol acyltransferses Eeb1 and Eht1 condense acyl-CoAs with ethanol to produce the corresponding ester, a reaction that is rate limiting in engineering ester biosynthesis pathways. By changing the N- and C-termini of Eeb1 to those of Eht1, Eeb1 localization is changed from the mitochondria to lipid droplets. The change has no significant effect on transcription, but increases protein expression by 23-fold thus enabling a 3-fold increase in enzyme activity. This system demonstrates one example of the impact of protein trafficking on functional pathway expression, and will guide future metabolic engineering of ester biosynthesis and, potentially, other pathways with critical membrane-bound enzymes.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221403011830035X
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jie Zhu
Cory Schwartz
Ian Wheeldon
spellingShingle Jie Zhu
Cory Schwartz
Ian Wheeldon
Controlled intracellular trafficking alleviates an expression bottleneck in S. cerevisiae ester biosynthesis
Metabolic Engineering Communications
author_facet Jie Zhu
Cory Schwartz
Ian Wheeldon
author_sort Jie Zhu
title Controlled intracellular trafficking alleviates an expression bottleneck in S. cerevisiae ester biosynthesis
title_short Controlled intracellular trafficking alleviates an expression bottleneck in S. cerevisiae ester biosynthesis
title_full Controlled intracellular trafficking alleviates an expression bottleneck in S. cerevisiae ester biosynthesis
title_fullStr Controlled intracellular trafficking alleviates an expression bottleneck in S. cerevisiae ester biosynthesis
title_full_unstemmed Controlled intracellular trafficking alleviates an expression bottleneck in S. cerevisiae ester biosynthesis
title_sort controlled intracellular trafficking alleviates an expression bottleneck in s. cerevisiae ester biosynthesis
publisher Elsevier
series Metabolic Engineering Communications
issn 2214-0301
publishDate 2019-06-01
description In metabolic engineering, most available pathway engineering strategies aim to control enzyme expression by making changes at the transcriptional level with an underlying assumption that translation and functional expression follow suit. In this work, we engineer expression of a key reaction step in medium chain ester biosynthesis that does not follow this common assumption. The native Saccharomyces cerevisiae alcohol acyltransferses Eeb1 and Eht1 condense acyl-CoAs with ethanol to produce the corresponding ester, a reaction that is rate limiting in engineering ester biosynthesis pathways. By changing the N- and C-termini of Eeb1 to those of Eht1, Eeb1 localization is changed from the mitochondria to lipid droplets. The change has no significant effect on transcription, but increases protein expression by 23-fold thus enabling a 3-fold increase in enzyme activity. This system demonstrates one example of the impact of protein trafficking on functional pathway expression, and will guide future metabolic engineering of ester biosynthesis and, potentially, other pathways with critical membrane-bound enzymes.
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221403011830035X
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