Design
In the astaxanthin biosynthesis section, we need to construct six astaxanthin synthesis genes (see description) into one plasmid and transform the constructed plasmid into E. coli cells.
Escherichia coli BL21 (DE3), which is often used for prokaryotic expression of proteins, was selected as the chassis organism for this experiment, while Escherichia coli DH5$\alpha$ was used for plasmid preservation.
In the selection of plasmids, considering that plasmids with strong promoters and of high copies often cause metabolic pressure of strains. Besides, the accumulation of secondary metabolites may cause toxicity to cells, and plasmids of high copies often get lost unexpectedly in bacteria1. On the contrary, plasmids of low copies can optimize the level of products by alleviating metabolic pressure2. Therefore, we choose low copy number plasmids as the carriers of astaxanthin synthesis genes. The vectors selected in this experiment were pACYC184-M and ptrc99A-M, which were donated by Zhang Xueli, a researcher at Tianjin Institute of Industrial Biotechnology, Chinese Academy of Sciences.
In the selection of gene source, the strain provides the target gene should be easy to culture, and its genome sequence should be known. Moreover, considering that the chassis organism is E. coli, so the microorganism which provides the target gene should be prokaryotic. Based on the above reasons, we finally decided to obtain the first two genes CrtE and CrtB from Rhodobacter sphaeroides, the third gene CrtI from Rhodospirillum rubrum, and the fourth gene CrtY from Pantoea agglomerans. The CrtZ gene was derived from Pantoea ananatis, which was difficult to obtain, so we chose to synthesize it by the company. The BKT gene was derived from an Eukaryote, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, which has different codon preferences than E. coli, so the BKT gene was synthesized by the company and the codon was optimized.
In the process of constructing astaxanthin producing strain, considering the long gene pathway, we divided the construction of engineered strain into three steps: lycopene production, $\beta$-carotene production and astaxanthin production.
The selection of restriction enzyme sites should consider the cutting efficiency and the restriction enzyme sites should not exist on the target gene sequence. Based on these two requirements, we selected three efficient restriction enzyme sites in pACYC184-M and ptrc99A-M plasmids, named KpnI, BamHI and HindIII respectively. Six genes need to be transferred into our pathway, and the number of restriction enzyme sites is limited. Therefore, we considered to connect genes in each step with overlap PCR firstly, and then splicing them into the vector by restriction enzyme sites. Considering there is no RBS on pACYC184-M and ptrc99A-M plasmids, and the genes in E. coli are polycistronic, we added an RBS (BBa_B00344) before each gene to ensure the successful expression of each protein.
In the actual process of construction of lycopene producing strain, we successfully use overlap PCR to connect the first two genes (CrtE, CrtB), but the CrtI gene has been unable to overlap with the CrtE-CrtB junction product. Therefore, we use the seamless cloning kit to connect CrtE - CrtB junction product and CrtI, thus successfully build the lycopene production strains. Figure 1 shows the atlas of successfully constructed pACYC184-M-EBI plasmid.
Figure 1 Recombinant plasmid atlas for lycopene production
On the basis of pACYC184-M-EBI plasmid, we only need to insert the fourth gene CrtY between BamHI and HindIII, and then we obtained the constructed plasmid pACYC184-M-EBI-Y for $\beta$ -carotene production (see Figure 2 for plasmid atlas ).
Figure 2 Recombinant plasmid atlas for $\beta$-carotene production
Due to the lack of available cleavage sites on the plasmid, only HindIII remained for the construction of CrtZ and BKT. Considering that the cloning with single restriction enzyme sites will produce more false positives clonies, we consider to connect the last two genes CrtZ and BKT with overlap PCR, then use seamless cloning kit to clone them into the HindIII restriction enzyme site of plasmid pACYC184-M-EBI-Y. If the construction is successful, the strain used to produce astaxanthin can be obtained, and the atlas information is shown in figure 3.
Figure 3 Recombinant plasmid atlas for astaxanthin production
However, the efficiency of seamless cloning was low, so we also consider to insert the last two genes CrtZ and BKT into ptrc99A-M (see figure 4), and co-transforming E. coli BL21 with the recombinant plasmid pACYC184-M-EBI-Y.
Figure 4 Atlas for coconversion of astaxanthin production plasmid
In order to determine the activity of individual enzymes in the astaxanthin synthesis pathway, we induced individual enzymes separately. In this part of job, there is no need to consider the metabolic pressure of the strain, and the strong promoter contributes to the high expression of the target protein. Thus, we selected the plasmid pET-30a (+) as our vectors and the T7 promoter to activate the target gene expression. The restriction enzyme sites were BamHI and HindIII. In the experiment, we used gradient IPTG concentration and gradient temperature to induce each protein, exploring the optimal IPTG concentration and temperature of single protein expression and detected the enzyme activity of single enzyme. So that we can provide a more detailed description of our new parts. The recombinant plasmid profiles of each enzyme are shown in the table below.
CrtE
CrtI
CrtZ
CrtB
CrtY
BKT
References
- Jones KL, Kim SW, Keasling JD. Low-copy plasmids can perform as well as or better than high-copy plasmids for metabolic engineering of bacteria. Metab Eng, 2000, 2: 328-338.
- Optimization of isopentene isomerase (IDI) in recombinant lycopene engineering strain of Escherichia coli.
- Park, S. Y., Binkley, R. M., Kim, W. J., Lee, M. H. & Lee, S. Y. Metabolic engineering of Escherichia coli for high-level astaxanthin production with high productivity.Metabolic engineering 49, 105-115, doi:10.1016/j.ymben.2018.08.002 (2018)
- >BBa_B0034 Part-only sequence (12 bp) aaagaggagaaa http://parts.igem.org/wiki/index.php/Part:BBa_B0034
