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Integration of in vivo and in silico metabolic fluxes for improvement of recombinant protein production
Authors:Driouch Habib  Melzer Guido  Wittmann Christoph
Institution:1. Department of Microbial Biotechnology, School of Biology and Center of Excellence in Phylogeny of Living Organisms, College of Science, University of Tehran, Tehran, Iran;2. Microbial Technology and Products (MTP) Research Center, University of Tehran, Tehran, Iran;3. Department of Biotechnology, Faculty of Chemical Engineering, Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, Iran;1. School of Biochemical Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology (Banaras Hindu University), Varanasi 221005, India;2. Department of Biosciences and Bioengineering, Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati, India;3. Centre of Food Science and Technology, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi 221005, India;1. Department of Bioengineering, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, San Diego, CA 92093, USA;1. State Key Laboratory of Food Science and Technology, Jiangnan University, 1800 Lihu Road, Wuxi, Jiangsu 214122, China;2. The Key Laboratory of Industrial Biotechnology, Ministry of Education, Jiangnan University, 1800 Lihu Road, Wuxi, Jiangsu 214122, China;3. Jiangsu Jiangshan Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd., Jingjiang, Jiangsu 214500, China
Abstract:The filamentous fungus Aspergillus niger is an efficient host for the recombinant production of the glycosylated enzyme fructofuranosidase, a biocatalyst of commercial interest for the synthesis of pre-biotic sugars. In batch culture on a minimal glucose medium, the recombinant strain A. niger SKAn1015, expressing the fructofuranosidase encoding suc1 gene secreted 45U/mL of the target enzyme, whereas the parent wild type SKANip8 did not exhibit production. The production of the recombinant enzyme induced a significant change of in vivo fluxes in central carbon metabolism, as assessed by (13)C metabolic flux ratio analysis. Most notably, the flux redistribution enabled an elevated supply of NADPH via activation of the cytosolic pentose phosphate pathway (PPP) and mitochondrial malic enzyme, whereas the flux through energy generating TCA cycle was reduced. In addition, the overall possible flux space of fructofuranosidase producing A. niger was investigated in silico by elementary flux mode analysis. This provided theoretical flux distributions for multiple scenarios with differing production capacities. Subsequently, the measured flux changes linked to improved production performance were projected into the in silico flux space. This provided a quantitative evaluation of the achieved optimization and a priority ranked target list for further strain engineering. Interestingly, the metabolism was shifted largely towards the optimum flux pattern by sole expression of the recombinant enzyme, which seems an inherent attractive property of A. niger. Selected fluxes, however, changed contrary to the predicted optimum and thus revealed novel targets-including reactions linked to NADPH metabolism and gluconate formation.
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