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With contributions by Q. Al-Abdallah · M.S. Barber · M.A. van den Berg · R.A.L. Bovenberg · A.A. Brakhage · J. Casqueiro · H. von Döhren · A.J.M. Driessen · A. Eliasson · M.E. Evers · A. Gehrke · U. Giesecke · N. Gunnarsson · B. Hoff · U. Kück · J.F. Martín · W. Minas · J. Nielsen · H. Plattner · A. Reichert · E.K. Schmitt · P. Spröte · H. Trip · A. Tüncher · R.V. Ullán
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Prof. Dr. I. Endo
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Preface
Preface
The concept of one microorganism killing another was introduced by Pasteur who coined the term antibiosis in 1877, but it was much later that this concept was realised in the form of an actual antibiotic. In 1929, the microbiologist Alexander Fleming published his observation about the inhibition of the growth of Staphylococcus aureus on an agar plate contaminated with Penicillium notatum. Three years later, it was shown that the growth inhibition was due to penicillin. The work was taken up further at Oxford University by pathologist Howard Florey and biochemist Ernst Chain. The first clinical trials with penicillin were undertaken in 1941. During the late 1940s the fungus Cephalosporium acremonium (now renamed Acremonium chrysogenum) was isolated from the sea at Cagliari (Italy) by Guiseppi Brotzu. This fungus was found to produce a b-lactam compound designated cephalosporin. The discovery of antibiotics for clinical use started with a b-lactam compound and is perhaps the most important discovery in the history of therapeutic medicine. The application of antibiotics to the therapy of infectious diseases may conceivably have saved more lives than any other medical therapy. The success of b-lactams in the treatment of infectious disease is due to their high specificity and their low toxicity. Despite a growing number of antibiotics and the incidence of penicillin-resistant isolates, b-lactams are still by far the most frequently used antibiotic. In this volume, it was my aim to get together leading scientists in the area of research on fungal b-lactam antibiotics who cover the most recent developments in all areas of research on this important group of compounds. Both the economic aspects and the industrial production of fungal b-lactam antibiotics are summarised in the chapter by Barber et al. Because fungal b-lactam antibiotics are of great clinical importance, the biochemistry and genetics of their biosyntheses are well elucidated which is summarised in several chapters in this book. From an academic point of view the analysis of the regulation of b-lactam biosynthesis represents the most advanced system for elucidating the regulation of a fungal secondary metabolism gene cluster. Furthermore, with regard to applied aspects, this knowledge is of great value to strategies for increasing production levels by the use of gene regulators. Because penicillin and cephalosporin are produced by different fungi and differ in the later steps of the biosynthesis, the regulation of penicil-
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Preface
lin biosynthesis is described by Brakhage et al. and that of cephalosporin biosynthesis by Schmitt et al. Data presented in these chapters show that we are far from having a complete picture of the regulation of fungal b-lactam biosyntheses.Within the last few years, several studies have indicated that the fungal b-lactam biosynthesis genes are controlled by a complex regulatory network.A comparison with the regulatory mechanisms (regulatory proteins and DNA elements) involved in the regulation of genes of primary metabolism in lower eukaryotes is thus of great interest. Furthermore, such investigations have contributed to the elucidation of signals leading to the production of b-lactams, their physiological meaning for the producing fungi and can be expected to have a major impact on rational strain improvement programs. Recently, the knowledge of the whole cephalosporin biosynthesis was completed by cloning and characterisation of the missing isopenicillin N epimerase system which is reported by Martin et al. Investigations in recent years have shown that the various steps of b-lactam biosynthesis occur in different compartments.This finding is important not only for academic reasons but also for strategies to produce new compounds by metabolic engineering. Therefore, the current knowledge is reviewed by Evers et al. A major aspect of all biotechnological processes concerns their metabolic basis which, for antibiotics, includes the control of fluxes towards antibiotics and the role of primary metabolism in production of antibiotics. This important area is covered by the chapter by Gunnarsson et al. Among the constant challenges in managing bacterial infections are the outbreak of new infectious diseases and the evolution of known commensal and pathogenic bacteria to problem status by acquisition of new resistant determinants. Therefore, there is increasing pressure to provide more and superior antibiotics. A promising approach to identifying novel compounds is based on combinatorial biosynthesis. Because the biosynthesis of b-lactam antibiotics involves a non-ribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) which is rather well characterised, this NRPS represents a good starting point for combinatorial biosynthesis of fungal compounds. In addition to the biochemistry of b-lactam biosynthesis, this aspect is discussed in detail in the chapter by Hans von Döhren. Because this book covers the current knowledge of all main aspects of fungal b-lactam antibiotics, I hope it will be a useful reference source for both applied investigators and basic research scientists. I am deeply indebted to the authors of the chapters in this volume for their intelligent and diligent efforts which made this joint project possible. The care and energy with which they approached this work are gratefully acknowledged. I thank the series editor Thomas Scheper for his enthusiasm for preparing this volume and for his excellent scientific co-operation. The editorial and production staff of Springer Verlag are gratefully acknowledged for the fruitful and professional collaboration. Hannover, August 2004
Axel A. Brakhage
Contents
Regulation of Cephalosporin Biosynthesis E.K. Schmitt · B. Hoff · U. Kück . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1
Regulation of Penicillin Biosynthesis in Filamentous Fungi A.A. Brakhage · P. Spröte · Q. Al-Abdallah · A. Gehrke · H. Plattner · A. Tüncher . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Novel Genes Involved in Cephalosporin Biosynthesis: The Three-component Isopenicillin N Epimerase System J.F. Martín · R.V. Ullán · J. Casqueiro . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91 Compartmentalization and Transport in b -Lactam Antibiotics Biosynthesis M.E. Evers · H. Trip · M.A. van den Berg · R.A.L. Bovenberg · A.J.M. Driessen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111 Control of Fluxes Towards Antibiotics and the Role of Primary Metabolism in Production of Antibiotics N. Gunnarsson · A. Eliasson · J. Nielsen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137 Industrial Enzymatic Production of Cephalosporin-Based b -Lactams M.S. Barber · U. Giesecke · A. Reichert · W. Minas . . . . . . . . . . . . . 179 Biochemistry and General Genetics of Nonribosomal Peptide Synthetases in Fungi H. von Döhren . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 217 Author Index Volumes 51–88 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 265 Subject Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 281
Adv Biochem Engin/Biotechnol (2004) 88: 1– 43 DOI 10.1007/b99256 © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2004
Regulation of Cephalosporin Biosynthesis Esther K. Schmitt 1 · Birgit Hoff 2 · Ulrich Kück 2 (✉) 1 2
Novartis Pharma AG, NPU, 4002 Basel, Switzerland Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Lehrstuhl für Allgemeine und Molekulare Botanik, 44780 Bochum, Germany
[email protected]
1
Introduction
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2 2.1 2.2 2.3
Precursors and Competing Pathways . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Marks a Biosynthesis Branch Point . . . L-Valine as a Metabolic Signal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Non-Conventional Biosynthesis of L-Cysteine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3 3 5 5
3 3.1 3.1.1 3.2 3.2.1
Biosynthesis of Cephalosporin . . . . . . . . General b-Lactam Biosynthesis . . . . . . . Cellular Localization and Structure of IPNS . Cephalosporin Specific Biosynthesis . . . . . Final Reaction of Cephalosporin Biosynthesis
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7 8 10 11 12
4 4.1 4.2
Structural Genes of Cephalosporin Biosynthesis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . “Early” Cephalosporin Genes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . “Late” Cephalosporin Genes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
13 15 17
5 5.1 5.2 5.3
Multiple Layers of Control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Transcript Level . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Enzyme Activity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Correlation Between Secondary Metabolism and Morphogenesis
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18 18 20 20
6 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4
Transcription Factors as Activators and Repressors of Cephalosporin Biosynthesis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . PACC – pH-Dependent Transcriptional Control . . . . . . . . . . . . CRE1 – A Glucose Repressor Protein . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CPCR1 – Cephalosporin C Regulator 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Comparison of Cephalosporin and Penicillin Biosynthesis Regulation
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22 22 24 26 30
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Molecular Differences in Production Strains . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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8 8.1 8.2
Examples of Molecular Engineering of A. chrysogenum . . . . . . . . . . . Genetic Tools for Molecular Engineering . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Optimization of Cephalosporin C Biosynthesis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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Outlook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
37
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38
L-a-Aminoadipic Acid (L-a-AAA)
References
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E. K. Schmitt et al.
Abstract The filamentous fungus Acremonium chrysogenum is the natural producer of the b-lactam antibiotic cephalosporin C and is as such used worldwide in major biotechnical applications. Albeit its profound industrial importance, there is still a limited understanding about the molecular mechanisms regulating cephalosporin biosynthesis in this fungus. This review focuses on various regulatory levels of cephalosporin biosynthesis. In addition to precursor and antibiotic biosynthesis, molecular genetic characteristics of cephalosporin biosynthesis genes and the knowledge of multiple layers of their regulatory expressional control, as well as the function of activators or repressors on cephalosporin biosynthesis are jointly being surveyed. Furthermore, this review summarizes (i) molecular features, which distinguish strains with different production levels and (ii) examples of molecular engineering approaches to A. chrysogenum. Keywords Acremonium chrysogenum · Cephalosporin · Gene regulation · Transcription factors · Genetic engineering
1 Introduction Cephalosporin C and its semisynthetic derivatives are very potent and widely used b-lactam antibiotics of general and applied interest. However, the knowledge of the molecular regulation of b-lactam biosynthesis in the corresponding host is still limited. In the case of cephalosporin biosynthesis, even the total number of involved biosynthesis genes is not known and has yet to be identified. Cephalosporin is exclusively produced by Acremonium chrysogenum (syn. Cephalosporium acremonium), but compared to other filamentous fungi, genetic manipulation of this fungus is rather difficult. Acremonium chrysogenum belongs to the Deuteromycetes, which lack a sexual cycle and are thus not accessible for any conventional genetic analysis. In addition, this fungus produces only very few conidiospores, which in other biotechnically relevant fungi are the preferred cells for DNA-mediated transformations. In 1945, A. chrysogenum was first isolated from Sardinian coastal seawater by Prof. Brotzu. Brotzu was also the first to describe the antibiotic effect of extracts generated from this fungus and, some years later, the structure of the active compound was determined [1]. Cephalosporin C was shown to be active against Gram-positive as well as Gram-negative bacteria. Today, A. chrysogenum is cultured worldwide to yield approximately 2500 tons of cephalosporin derivatives. Semisynthetic derivatives are mainly used as broad-spectrum antibiotics for the treatment of bacterial infections. In biotechnical applications, intensive strain improvement programs resulted in production strains that yield a significantly higher titer of the antibiotic than wild-type strains. Approximately 40 years of mutation and selection cycles separate today’s industrial strains from the genetic potential of the original isolates. For basic as well as for applied research, the comparison of wild-type and production strains is of specific interest when differences of
Regulation of Cephalosporin Biosynthesis
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cephalosporin biosynthesis regulation are being investigated. A deeper knowledge of regulatory changes that occurred during strain improvement of cephalosporin production strains can be highly valuable for the directed improvement of novel, so far not optimized, fungal antibiotic producers by genetic engineering. Future work will show whether or not further significant improvements of cephalosporin production strains are feasible. One perspective is a combined approach, which uses genetic engineering techniques together with conventional strain improvement procedures. The following sections focus on molecular and genetic mechanisms of cephalosporin biosynthesis that were elucidated in recent years. This review starts with a summary of precursors of cephalosporin biosynthesis and their competing pathways, followed by an overview of the biosynthesis and the structural genes involved in the production of cephalosporin C. Then an outline of regulatory parameters and mechanisms is given, and the transcriptional control of the biosynthesis genes by transcription factors is detailed in section 6. The last two sections deal with the molecular differences that occurred during classical strain improvement of industrial strains and attempts to use a rational approach via molecular engineering.
2 Precursors and Competing Pathways The biosynthesis of all occurring b-lactams is primarily based on the three amino acids L-a-aminoadipic acid (L-a-AAA), L-cysteine and L-valine. These amino acids play also an important role in the regulation of the cephalosporin C biosynthesis. L-Cysteine and L-valine are ubiquitous amino acids, whereas the non-proteinogenic amino acid L-a-AAA is synthesized as an intermediate in the L-lysine biosynthesis pathway. 2.1 a -AAA) Marks a Biosynthesis Branch Point a -Aminoadipic Acid (L-a L-a In fungi, the non-proteinogenic amino acid L-a-AAA is synthesized by a specific aminoadipate pathway, which leads to the formation of lysine, whereas in b-lactam producing bacteria, a specific pathway for the formation of L-a-AAA has been identified (reviewed in [2, 3]). The L-lysine biosynthesis pathway in higher fungi, including A. chrysogenum, starts with the condensation of a-ketoglutarate and acetyl-CoA to form homocitrate, which is then subjected to isomerization, oxidative decarboxylation and amination to yield L-a-AAA. Subsequently, this precursor amino acid is converted into a-AA-d-semialdehyde by the action of the a-aminoadipate reductase (a-AAR) to finally form L-lysine [4–6]. Furthermore, L-a-AAA can also be obtained for b-lactam biosynthesis by reversal of the last steps of the L-ly-
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sine biosynthesis pathway; however, the influence of this catabolic pathway on cephalosporin production remains to be shown [7]. Since L-a-AAA marks the branch point between cephalosporin and the competing L-lysine biosynthesis pathway, its intracellular availability is an important parameter in the regulation of cephalosporin biosynthesis. Mehta et al. [8] showed that L-lysine concentrations reduce the synthesis of cephalosporin C in A. chrysogenum and that this inhibition is derepressed by L-a-AAA. Furthermore, recent studies demonstrated that L-lysine concentrations inhibit a-aminoadipate reductase (a-AAR) activity but do not repress its synthesis [9]. These results and the fact that L-lysine caused inhibition of the homocitrate synthase in Penicillium chrysogenum indicated that the L-aAAA pool available for b-lactam production is reduced by L-lysine through feedback inhibition or through repression of several L-lysine biosynthesis genes and enzymes [10]. The initiation of the ACV tripeptide formation depends not only on the availability of L-a-AAA but also on the affinity of the two enzymes for this intermediate. The a-aminoadipate reductase (a-AAR) encoded by the lys2 gene of A. chrysogenum acts as a key enzyme in the branched pathway for lysine and cephalosporin C biosynthesis, since it competes with ACVS for their common substrate L-a-AAA. a-AAR catalyzes the activation and reduction of L-a-AAA to its a-AA-d-semialdehyde using NADPH as cofactor [11, 12]. Hijarrubia et al. [9] revealed that a lower a-AAR activity could be detected in high cephalosporin producing strains of A. chrysogenum. It was suggested that this lower activity might lead to channeling of L-a-AAA towards the formation of cephalosporin. These results concur with the increased availability of the precursor amino acid L-a-AAA, suggesting that more L-a-AAA is shifted from the primary metabolism (lysine formation) to a higher cephalosporin yield in production strains [13]. Furthermore, the a-AAR activity peaked during the growth phase preceding the onset of cephalosporin production and then drastically decreased. At the end of the growth phase, a metabolic switch appears to occur that correlates with an increased availability of L-a-AAA for its use as precursor of cephalosporin production. This switch also coincides with the beginning of mycelium fragmentation into arthrospores in A. chrysogenum [9]. Immunoblotting analysis has shown a strong negative effect of nitrate on a-AAR formation. A possible explanation could be the requirement of large amounts of NADPH by the nitrate reductase [14]. Such activity would constitute a competitive inhibitor for the reduction of L-a-AAA to its semialdehyde. The possible reversal of the nitrate effect by lysine addition [9] can be explained by the well-known fact that lysine represses nitrate uptake as well as the metabolic route from nitrate to ammonium [15, 16]. Thus, the L-a-AAA biosynthesis pathway in A. chrysogenum is regulated by several control mechanisms such as the feedback inhibition at the a-AAR or homocitrate synthase. However, there is a decided lack of knowledge concerning the L-lysine pathway and its influence on the cephalosporin C production in A. chrysogenum.
Regulation of Cephalosporin Biosynthesis
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2.2 L-Valine as a Metabolic Signal Another crucial factor for the initiation of the ACV tripeptide formation is the availability of the precursor amino acid L-valine. The biosynthesis pathway of this ubiquitous amino acid is closely connected to the biosynthesis of leucine. Valine biosynthesis comprises four enzymatic steps with pyruvate as precursor metabolite. Two moles of pyruvate are converted to the intermediate a-acetolactate, which is then reduced to a, b-dihydroxyisovalerate and ketoisovalerate to finally form L-valine. In A. chrysogenum, high levels of L-valine result in a feedback inhibition of the first reaction step catalyzed by acetohydroxy acid synthase [17]. So far, no further data on the regulation of the L-valine biosynthesis pathway and its competing effect on the cephalosporin C biosynthesis have become available. 2.3 Non-Conventional Biosynthesis of L-Cysteine Another limiting step for cephalosporin C biosynthesis is the availability of the amino acid L-cysteine, which can generally be formed through four different biosynthesis pathways (reviewed in [18–20]). In the direct sulfhydrylation pathway, reduced sulfur is incorporated into the intermediate O-acetyl-L-serine to give L-cysteine, whereas in the transsulfuration pathway, sulfide incorporation is catalyzed by O-acetylhomoserine sulfhydrylase. The third possibility is the reverse transsulfuration in which the sulfur of L-methionine is transferred to L-cysteine via four intermediates [21] (see Fig. 1). The incorporated sulfur is known to be the efficient precursor of the sulfur atom contained in cephalosporin C [22]. In addition, L-cysteine is synthesized by the so-called autotrophic pathway, which leads to the assimilation of inorganic sulfur via serine O-acetyltransferase and O-acetylserine sulfhydrylase [23, 24]. All of these pathways seem to exist in A. chrysogenum [19]. However, results of mutant analysis showed that the fungus prefers to generate L-cysteine for optimal cephalosporin C biosynthesis via the reverse transsulfuration pathway, which has been detailed in Fig. 1 [25], and to a certain extent via the autotrophic pathway [26]. The relative contributions of the two pathways to the cephalosporin C biosynthesis are still to be determined. High levels of methionine, particularly the D-isomer, significantly stimulate the synthesis of b-lactam antibiotics. In methionine-supplemented cultures of A. chrysogenum, a two to threefold increase in cephalosporin C titers was determined [27].Additionally, a transient enlargement of the endogenous pool of methionine has been observed in advance of cephalosporin C formation, and the specific biosynthesis seemed to be proportional to the intracellular D-methionine concentration [28]. The addition of high levels of methionine is necessary to achieve optimum cephalosporin C biosynthesis, possibly due to methionine degradation by the intracellular amino acid oxidases [29, 30].
Fig. 1 Biosynthesis of L-cysteine in A. chrysogenum. ‘Reverse transsulfuration’ is the preferred pathway to generate L-cysteine in A. chrysogenum. Alternatively, sulfate assimilation is used, while ‘transsulfuration’ and ‘direct sulfhydrylation’ seem to exist in A. chrysogenum, but are not used for L-cysteine biosynthesis
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Early analyses have shown that the enzyme cystathionine-g-lyase, which catalyzes the conversion of cystathionine to L-cysteine in the reverse transsulfuration is crucial for the methionine induced titer-enhancing effect. This reaction was proposed to induce the transfer of L-cysteine from the primary metabolism to the cephalosporin C biosynthesis pathway [31]. In recent studies, the so-called mecB gene encoding cystathionine-g-lyase was cloned from A. chrysogenum. The encoded protein was shown to be functional by complementing the Aspergillus nidulans C47 mutant, which is defective in cystathionine-g-lyase activity. The expression of the mecB gene is not regulated by the addition of DL-methionine [32]. Targeted inactivation of the mecB gene indicated that the supply of L-cysteine through the reverse transsulfuration pathway is required for high-level cephalosporin C production but not for low-level biosynthesis proving that the essential L-cysteine is obtained from both the autotrophic and the reverse transsulfuration pathways [33]. The supply of methionine results in the complete repression of sulfate assimilation [34]. mecB-disruption did not affect the methionine induction of the cephalosporin C biosynthesis genes. Thus, their expression is not mediated by a putative regulatory mechanism exerted by cystathionine-g-lyase, but the induction may be triggered by methionine itself or by a catabolite derived from methionine [33]. Amplification of the mecB gene and the resulting overproduction of the cystathionine-g-lyase in moderate doses lead to an increased cephalosporin C formation, whereas high cystathionine-g-lyase activity is likely to produce high intracellular levels of L-cysteine, which are known to be toxic and inhibit b-lactam synthesizing enzymes [35]. Taken together, methionine presumably has a double effect on cephalosporin C biosynthesis in A. chrysogenum. On the one hand it seems to be the main supplier of L-cysteine via the reverse transsulfuration pathway and on the other hand it has an induction effect on cephalosporin biosynthesis genes (reviewed in [36, 37]).
3 Biosynthesis of Cephalosporin Cephalosporins are members of the large group of b-lactam antibiotics, which inhibit the growth of Gram-negative as well as Gram-positive microorganisms at already low concentrations. b-lactam antibiotics are specified by the typical cephem nucleus and are produced by a wide variety of microorganisms, including the filamentous fungus A. chrysogenum, Gram-positive streptomycetes and a small number of Gram-negative bacteria (reviewed in [38]). All of them produce b-lactams essentially through the same biosynthesis pathway, which is chemically and kinetically well characterized owing to the considerable industrial potential of these antibiotics [39].
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3.1 General b -Lactam Biosynthesis As shown in Fig. 2, the first step of cephalosporin biosynthesis results in the formation of the tripeptide d-(L-a-aminoadipyl)-L-cysteinyl-D-valine (ACV) from the amino acid precursors and is catalyzed by a single multifunctional enzyme designated d-(L-a-aminoadipyl)-L-cysteinyl-D-valine synthetase (ACVS). ACVS are monomers with a molecular mass of about 420 kDa, which function similarly to other peptide synthetases from bacterial or fungal sources. They mediate the non-ribosomal synthesis of peptides via a multiple carrier thiotemplate mechanism [40–42]. ACVS contains three repeated modules with conserved amino acid sequences [43]. Each module consists of functional domains for amino acid recognition, activation and thiolation. During condensation, peptide bond formation occurs from the amino to the carboxy terminus of the peptide. In addition, the last module of the ACVS contains an epimerization module, which is involved in the conversion of the activated intermediates ([41], reviewed [44]). A detailed analysis showed that ACVS catalyzes the activation of the carboxyl group of the first amino acid in the presence of Mg2+ and ATP by the formation of the corresponding aminoacyl adenylate and the release of pyrophosphate [45]. This step is followed by the transfer of the activated carboxyl group to the 4¢-phosphopanthetheine cofactor to generate the thioester bond between the enzyme and the amino acid. This thioesterified amino acid represents the target for nucleophilic attack by the amino group of the second amino acid, resulting in the formation of the first peptide bond between the Laminoadipic acid and L-cysteine. The resulting dipeptidyl intermediate remains bonded to the enzyme. After condensation of the dipeptide with the third
Table 1 Designation of genes, which have been isolated and characterized from Acremonium chrysogenum
Gene abbreviation
Product
pcb AB (syn. acvA) pcbC (syn. ipnA) cefD1 cefD2 cefEF cefG lys2 mecB cpcR1 cre1 pacC
δ-(L-α-aminoadipyl)-L-cysteinyl-D-valine synthetase isopenicillin N synthase acyl-CoA-synthetase acyl-CoA-racemase deacetoxycephalosporin C/deacetylcephalosporin C synthetase acetyl-CoA: deacetylcephalosporin C acetyltransferase α-aminoadipate reductase cystathionine-γ-lyase cephalosporin C regulator 1 carbon catabolite repressor CRE1 pH-dependent transcription factor PACC
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Fig. 2 Cephalosporin C biosynthesis, which exclusively occurs in A. chrysogenum. Biosynthesis genes as well as their products were framed.With the exception of the predicted gene encoding a thioesterase, all others have been cloned. For details see main text
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amino acid, L-valine is epimerized at the tripeptide stage to its D-enantiomer and is followed by the formation of the final ACV tripeptide. The selective release of the tripeptide with the correct LLD configuration is arranged via the integrated thioesterase domain in the C-terminal region of ACVS [41, 46, 47]. The second reaction is a key step in the cephalosporin biosynthesis pathway, which implies the cyclization of the linear ACV tripeptide to form the first bioactive intermediate isopenicillin N (IPN) (see also Fig. 2). This reaction is mediated by the isopenicillin N synthase (IPNS), a nonheme monoferrous-dependent oxidase of a molecular mass of about 38 kDa, which binds ferrous iron, uses dioxygen as co-substrate and ascorbate as electron donor to form the bicyclic nucleus [48, 49]. In a unique enzymatic reaction, IPNS catalyzes the transfer of four hydrogen atoms from the precursor ACV tripeptide to dioxygen associated with the desaturative ring closure and the formation of two water molecules [38, 49, 50]. X-ray crystallography determined that the four-membered b-lactam ring system is primarily formed in conjunction with a highly oxidized iron-oxo (ferryl) group, which then mediates the closure of the corresponding thiazolidine ring [51, 52]. 3.1.1 Cellular Localization and Structure of IPNS The IPNS enzyme is localized in the cytoplasm as a soluble protein [53]. It exists in two interconvertible forms, one is an oxidized state forming a disulfide linkage and the other exists in a reduced state [54]. IPNS consists of a catalytic center containing a highly conserved H-Xaa-D-(53–57 residues)-Xaa-H motif for iron coordination and of a specific substrate-binding pocket with a common R-X-S motif crucial for its catalytic activity [49, 55–57].A third amino acid residue tyrosine (189–191) is also involved in binding of the valine carboxylate moiety of the ACV tripeptide, but it is not as crucial as the R-X-S motif [58]. Analysis of the crystal structure has shown that the active site is unusually buried within an eight-stranded “jelly-roll” motif and lined by hydrophobic residues [49]. This structural characteristic of the IPNS proteins and many other keto-acid-dependent oxygenases is probably necessary for the isolation of the reactive complex and of subsequent intermediates from the external environment. Combined application of Mössbauer electron paramagnetic resonance as well as nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, has determined a mechanism for isopenicillin N formation. This involves direct ligation of ACV to the active iron site of the IPNS via the corresponding cysteinyl thiol, or more precisely, via the sulfur atom of the ACV [59, 60] and the creation of a vacant iron coordination site into which dioxygen may bind. The binding of ACV leads to the initiation of the reaction and the replacement of the amino acid residue Q 330 side chain, which coordinates the metal in absence of a substrate. Subsequently, iron-dioxygen and iron-oxo species remove the essential hydrogens from ACV [49, 55, 61]. Thus, in the generated Fe2+:ACV:IPNS complex, three of
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the five coordination sites are occupied with protein ligands. The remaining two sites are filled by a water molecule and the ACV thiolate resulting in a penta-coordinated iron active site (reviewed in [62]). In this reaction step, only the thiol form of the ACV tripeptide serves as a substrate, the spontaneously formed bis-disulfide state shows no binding activity [63]. Due to the broad substrate specificity of IPNS in particular with alterations in the L-AAA as well as with the valine residue of ACV tripeptide, it is possible to generate new penicillins/cephalosporins in vivo or to generally improve the enzyme activity [64]. 3.2 Cephalosporin Specific Biosynthesis The formation of isopenicillin N is the branch point of penicillin and cephalosporin biosynthesis. The reaction step to follow is shown in Fig. 2 and leads to the formation of penicillin N. This step establishes the pathway that is specific for the synthesis of cephalosporins. An epimerization reaction is involved that converts isopenicillin N to penicillin N, which, despite its industrial relevance, had remained uncharacterized for a long time. Konomi et al. [65] has first shown epimerase activity in cell-free extracts of the cephalosporin C producing fungus A. chrysogenum, but it was suggested that the epimerizing enzyme was extremely instable preventing purification of the protein [66–68]. Until recently, no further data on the fungal enzyme have been obtained. Since all known cephalosporin biosynthesis genes of A. chrysogenum are clustered in two separate loci, Ullán et al. [69] suggested that the gene encoding the enzyme involved in the conversion of isopenicillin N into penicillin N might be located in one of the cephalosporin gene clusters. A transcriptional analysis of a 9 kb region located downstream of the pcbC gene revealed the presence of two open reading frames that were cloned and sequenced on both strands. ORF1 corresponds to the gene designated cefD1 and encodes a protein with a molecular mass of about 71 kDa, which shows a high degree of similarity to long chain acyl-CoA synthetases, particularly to those from Homo sapiens (26.3% identity), Rattus norvecigus or Mus musculus (25.5% identity). The encoded protein contains all characteristic motifs of the acyl-CoA ligases involved in the activation of the carboxyl moiety of fatty acids or amino acids [70]. The second identified gene designated cefD2 encodes a protein with a deduced molecular mass of 41.4 kDa, which is similar to a-methyl-acyl-CoA racemases from H. sapiens (42.1% identity) or M. musculus (39.4% identity) [71–73]. Based on the identified homology of the CEFD1 and CEFD2 proteins with known eukaryotic enzymes, it seems feasible to establish a mechanism for the A. chrysogenum two-component epimerization system which is different from epimerizations found in prokaryotes. Such systems have been reported to be involved for example in the inversion of 2-arylpropionic acids (e.g. ibuprofen), which is an important group of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs in hu-
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mans [74–76]. Therefore, it was suggested that the epimerization reaction in the cephalosporin biosynthesis pathway begins with the activation of the substrate isopenicillin N to its CoA-thioester by the acyl-CoA-synthetase. The product of the cefD2 gene, the a-methylacyl-CoA racemase, catalyzes the epimerization of isopenicillinyl-CoA to D-enantiomer penicillinyl-CoA. Finally, the required hydrolysis of the CoA-thioesters seems to occur in a nonstereoselective manner by different thioesterases [75]. The resulting product, penicillin N, is the direct precursor of all cephalosporins and cephamycins and, thus, available as a substrate for further reactions in the biosynthesis pathway. The next committed step of the cephalosporin pathway leads to the conversion of penicillin N to deacetoxycephalosporin C (DAOC) by expanding the five-membered thiazolidine ring to the six-membered dihydrothiazine ring characteristic for the class of cephalosporins. This reaction is catalyzed by DAOC synthetase, which ensures the required expandase function [77]. In the following reaction of the biosynthesis pathway, DAOC hydroxylase, also designated deacetylcephalosporin C synthetase, catalyzes the incorporation of an oxygen atom from O2 into the exocyclic methyl moiety at the C-3 atom of DAOC thus forming deacetylcephalosporin C (DAC) (reviewed in [78–81]). The enzymatic expansion of the five-membered thiazolidine ring was first observed in cell-free extracts of the cephalosporin C producer A. chrysogenum [77, 82]. The enzyme involved is responsible for the two-step reaction in A. chrysogenum, which leads to the conversion of penicillin N to deacetylcephalosporin C, while in streptomycetes like Streptomyces clavuligerus [83, 84], the two enzymatic activities could be distinctly separated by anion-exchange chromatography [85]. Analysis of the amino acid sequence of the DAOC/DAC synthetase of A. chrysogenum revealed a ten amino acid region containing a cysteine residue at position 100, which is 50% identical to the corresponding region containing the cysteine residue at position 106 of isopenicillin N synthetase. This region is of special interest because the cysteine residue of the IPNS is important for substrate binding and specific activity [86]. Thus, it seems to be possible that the corresponding residue C-100 of the DAOC expandase/hydroxylase may either be directly or indirectly involved in substrate binding [87]. The existent sulfhydryl groups in the enzyme were apparently essential for both ring expansion and hydroxylation [80]. In addition to penicillin N, the DAOC/DAC synthetase exhibits a diverse substrate specificity, which differs in the efficiency of ring expansion [88]. 3.2.1 Final Reaction of Cephalosporin Biosynthesis In the last reaction of the cephalosporin biosynthesis pathway, the transfer of an acetyl moiety from the acetyl coenzyme A to the hydroxyl group on the sulfur-containing ring of deacetylcephalosporin C leads to the formation of the
Regulation of Cephalosporin Biosynthesis
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final product cephalosporin C, which possesses high antibiotic activity [89–92]. This acetylation reaction is catalyzed by the acetyl-coenzyme A (CoA):DAC acetyltransferase, which behaves like a soluble cytosolic enzyme without any known targeting signals or other indications for compartmentalization [93]. The pure enzyme shows a molecular mass of about 50 kDa and the Nterminal end possesses the sequence M-P-S-A-Q-V-A-R-L, which perfectly matches the deduced amino acid sequence starting at the first ATG codon. This enzyme seems to be a monomer, which shows no dissociation into subunits. The amino acid sequence of the A. chrysogenum acetyl-CoA:DAC acetyltransferase reveals significant similarity with sequences of several O-acetyltransferases, especially with homoserine-O-acetyltransferases of the fungi Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Ascobolus immersus (55.8% and 48.5% identity) [94, 95]. This is probably due to the structural similarity of the exocyclic CH2OH moiety in DAC and the homoserine molecules [96]. Even though this similarity results from mutant analysis, it suggests that there are two independent Oacetyltransferases for DAC and homoserine in A. chrysogenum [19]. The acetylation reaction of DAC to cephalosporin C seems to be very inefficient in most strains of A. chrysogenum. The cefG gene is expressed very poorly when compared with other genes of the pathway [96, 97] and it is well known that high levels of DAC accumulated in many cephalosporin C producing strains [90]. Consequently, the conversion of DAC to cephalosporin C seems to be the limiting step in the pathway.
4 Structural Genes of Cephalosporin Biosynthesis As shown in Fig. 3, the genes involved in cephalosporin biosynthesis are organized in at least two clusters in A. chrysogenum. The pcbAB and pcbC genes as well as the newly discovered cefD1 and cefD2 genes are linked in the socalled “early” cephalosporin cluster. The “late” cluster contains the cefEF and cefG genes, which are involved in the last two steps of the biosynthesis pathway (reviewed in [69, 98]). In most strains, the “early” cluster could be mapped to chromosome VI and the “late” cluster to chromosome II [99, 100]. Analysis of high cephalosporin producing strains, such as C10, has shown a different localization of the biosynthesis gene cluster on chromosomes I and VII [101], which indicates that significant chromosome rearrangements have occurred during strain improvement (reviewed in [98]). Both cephalosporin clusters are available as a single copy in the genome of all analyzed A. chrysogenum strains. The cluster formation of biosynthesis genes in many antibiotic producing organisms gives rise to the hypothesis that linkage has occurred during evolution conferring an ecological selective advantage [102]. Furthermore, the or-
Fig. 3 Gene organization of the ‘early’ and ‘late’ cephalosporin biosynthesis genes in A. chrysogenum. Intronic sequences are kept in white and the arrows indicate the direction of transcription
14 E. K. Schmitt et al.
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ganization of the biosynthesis genes into large operons controlled by a single promoter could allow a coordinated regulation of the biosynthesis genes [103]. However, in eukaryotic fungi like A. chrysogenum, b-lactam biosynthesis genes are transcribed separately and are expressed through different promoters (reviewed in [50]). In this light, gene expression does not seem to be coordinated as a result of genomic linkage and, hence, it seems more likely that cluster formation reflects only a common ancestral origin. 4.1 “Early” Cephalosporin Genes ACVS, the first acting enzyme of the cephalosporin C pathway in A. chrysogenum, is encoded by a single structural gene designated pcbAB (syn. acvA) with a size of about 11 kb. The pcbAB gene was first identified and cloned in P. chrysogenum by complementation of mutants blocked in penicillin biosynthesis and by transcriptional mapping of the genome [104]. For the cephalosporin C producer A. chrysogenum, a 32 kb DNA fragment was identified in several phages using the pcbAB and pcbC genes of P. chrysogenum as heterologous probes [43]. Complementation studies using the npe5 strain from P. chrysogenum carrying a defective pcbAB gene confirmed in vivo that the functional pcbAB gene is located on a 15.6 kb fragment. Northern analysis of total RNA using probes internal to the pcbAB gene identified a transcript of 11.4 kb. It has been shown that the pcbAB open reading frame of 11136 bp, which matched the 11.4 kb transcript initiation and termination regions, was located upstream of the pcbC gene. The ORF does not contain any intron sequences and the translational start codon of the gene is not yet clearly defined, because attempts to obtain the Nterminal amino acid sequence have been unsuccessful so far [105, 106]. In A. chrysogenum, the pcbAB gene is separated by an intergenic region of 1233 bp from the pcbC gene and is divergently orientated with respect to pcbC [43]. In industrial strains of A. chrysogenum, the expression of the pcbAB gene was much weaker compared to that of pcbC [107]. Furthermore, differences may even exist in the temporal expression among genes of the same cluster. In A. chrysogenum, the pcbAB gene seems to be coordinately regulated with the pcbC gene, whereas the later genes of the pathway appear to be sequentially induced [108–110]. Disruption of the pcbAB gene in A. chrysogenum resulted in loss of ACVS activity without affecting the other cephalosporin biosynthesis genes [110]. The corresponding pcbAB genes were cloned and sequenced from different prokaryotic and eukaryotic microbial b-lactam producers [2, 104, 111–114]. A comparison of the nucleotide sequences encoding the three repeated domains [115] demonstrated a high similarity among the fungal and bacterial pcbAB genes. The fungal domains showed on average 71% nucleotide sequence identity to each other, whereas fungal and bacterial domains revealed about 48% identity. Only little similarity was found between domain-
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separating regions. These results imply a close relationship between all pcbAB genes [116, 117]. The second structural gene of the “early” cephalosporin gene cluster in A. chrysogenum is the pcbC (syn. ipnA) gene, which encodes the IPNS enzyme. The pcbC gene is divergently linked by an intergenic promoter region to the pcbAB gene. The pcbC gene of A. chrysogenum was the first b-lactam biosynthesis gene to be cloned and sequenced [118]. This was achieved by purification of the IPNS enzyme, determination of the N-terminal amino acid sequence and the design of two pools of oligonucleotides, which contain all possible sequences encoded by two short peptides of the IPNS amino terminus. Using this DNA as probe for screening a cosmid library, it was possible to identify a clone possessing an ORF with a size of 1014 bp, which encodes a protein of 338 amino acids. Expression of this ORF in E. coli resulted in IPNS activity of the corresponding cell extracts [118]. The pcbC gene does not contain any introns and the corresponding transcript size was determined to lie between 1.15 and 1.5 kb. While primer extension established two major [–56 and –77] and at least two minor transcription start sites [–58 and –78], the corresponding values obtained from S1 endonuclease mapping were –51/–73 and –54/–80/–97, respectively [118, 119]. These transcription initiation sites appeared as major and minor pairs on either side of one of the pyrimidine-rich blocks, which characterize the promoter sequence. After identification of the pcbC gene in A. chrysogenum, the corresponding structural genes have been cloned and sequenced from several different fungi and bacteria, such as P. chrysogenum, A. nidulans or S. clavuligerus (reviewed in [3, 38]).Alignments using pcbC sequences from different prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms revealed a degree of identity greater than 60%. Most of the sequence identity is scattered throughout the protein, which makes it difficult to identify functionally important domains [57, 120, 121]. The “early” cephalosporin gene cluster was completed with the newly discovered genes cefD1 and cefD2, which encode two enzymes that act in a twoprotein system for formation of the cephalosporin C intermediate penicillin N. Identification of the two genes was obtained by transcriptional studies of a 9 kb region located downstream of the pcbC gene. Analysis was performed using RNA extracted from mycelia of A. chrysogenum strain C10 grown for 48 h, since at this time the expression of the other cephalosporin C biosynthesis genes is known to be high. A 5.8 kb subfragment containing two open reading frames was cloned and sequenced on both strands. ORF1 corresponded to the gene cefD1 with a size of 2193 nucleotides and was interrupted by the presence of five introns with sizes varying between 28 and 150 bp. The corresponding transcript revealed a size of 2 kb. This gene was also cloned from a previously constructed cDNA library [122] and the sequence confirmed the presence of five introns. The cefD2 gene consists of 1146 nucleotides and is interrupted by the presence of a single intron with a size of 92 bp. RT-PCR and sequence analysis have shown that the intron had been removed at the splicing sites corresponding to nucleotides 64–157 relative to the
Regulation of Cephalosporin Biosynthesis
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ATG translation initiation codon. The corresponding transcript could be detected in the 48 h cultures with a size of 1.2 kb. The cefD1 and cefD2 genes, which are located closely downstream the pcbC gene are expressed in opposite orientation from a bi-directional promoter region with a size of 1515 bp, which is characteristic for cephalosporin C biosynthesis genes. Functional analyses of the cefD1 and cefD2 genes have been performed by targeted inactivation of both genes using DNA-mediated transformation and resulting in strains lacking iso-penicillin epimerase activity [69]. 4.2 “Late” Cephalosporin Genes The cefEF gene of A. chrysogenum, which encodes DAOC/DAC synthetase is one of the two genes organized in the “late”cephalosporin cluster. Isolation and characterization of the gene was achieved by the design of oligonucleotide probes based on the amino acid sequence of the purified DAOC/DAC synthetase and a subsequent screen of a cosmid genomic library of A. chrysogenum. One ORF with a size of 996 bp coding for a protein of 332 amino acids matched the sequence predicted for the peptide fragments. After expression of this ORF in E. coli, cell extracts harbored both expandase and hydroxylase activities [87]. The cefEF gene does not possess any intron sequences suggesting a prokaryotic origin. In antibiotic producing streptomycetes, a clearly different system was detected. There are two different genes designated cefE and cefF encoding two different enzymes namely DAOC expandase and hydroxylase. Both genes are linked together with the cefD gene in a single cluster (reviewed in [38]). In A. chrysogenum, the cefEF gene is closely linked to the cefG gene, but it is transcribed in the opposite direction. The intergenic region with a size of 938 bp contains the promoters for both genes [96, 123]. The cefG gene of A. chrysogenum encoding the last enzyme of the cephalosporin C pathway, namely the acetyl-CoA:DAC acetyltransferase, was cloned and sequenced independently by three research groups [96, 97, 124, 125]. Mathison and co-workers [97] achieved the cefG gene isolation by sequencing the ambient region of the cefEF gene and identification of an open reading frame. An alternative for gene cloning was the screening of an A. chrysogenum lambda phage library with a probe specific for the cefEF gene. Northern blotting and DNA sequence analysis revealed the existence of the cefG gene close to the cefEF gene [96]. In both cases, the identity of the cefG gene was demonstrated by complementation of A. chrysogenum mutants, which are deficient in acetyl-CoA:DAC acetyltransferase activity. In addition, overexpression of the gene in Aspergillus niger, which lacks these genes, demonstrated such an activity. Matsuda et al. [124] used another strategy by screening a cDNA library with oligonucleotides based on the N-terminal sequence of the corresponding acetyl-CoA:DAC acetyltransferase enzyme. In this case, the identity of cefG has been proven by gene disruption experiments resulting in strains that failed to produce cephalosporin C but accumulated its precursor DAC.
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Based on the identification of three different ATG translation-initiation codons in the cefG gene, different sizes for the open reading frame and the resulting proteins have been proposed [96, 97, 124]. This was elucidated by Velasco and co-workers [126], who synthesized all estimated proteins in E. coli and purified the native A. chrysogenum acetyl-CoA:DAC acetyltransferase using immunoaffinity chromatography. The cefG gene has a size of about 1.3 kb and contains two intronic sequences as demonstrated by sequencing of its cDNA [97, 124, 125].
5 Multiple Layers of Control The complexity of the biosynthesis of cephalosporin C and its precursors implicates different layers of regulation. In fact, evidence is available for regulatory mechanisms that act on the transcript level of biosynthesis genes and on the activity of the enzymes involved. Furthermore, cellular investigations suggest a correlation between cephalosporin C biosynthesis and mycelial morphology and differentiation. In addition, the uptake of precursors, the compartmentalization of biosynthesis and the export of cephalosporin are regulatory processes, which influence the overall production of cephalosporin C (see separate sections for details). 5.1 Transcript Level Until the early 1990s, almost all of our knowledge of the regulation of cephalosporin biosynthesis was derived from measurements of the product and intermediates. With cloning and sequencing of the cephalosporin biosynthesis genes, a new era started in as much as detailed analysis of the biosynthesis by monitoring transcript levels was facilitated. Smith et al. [119] mapped the transcription start points of the pcbC gene and analyzed the transcript level of pcbC during a seven day fermentation. The transcript level was not constitutive and found to be highest between day two and day four. Their results suggested a transcriptional regulation of the pcbC gene. This assumption was later confirmed and more refined analyses revealed several external parameters that act at the transcriptional level. Velasco et al. [27] used wild-type and two industrial strains from A. chrysogenum to establish the influence of methionine on the transcript levels of the four biosynthesis genes pcbAB, pcbC, cefEF and cefG. Previous reports indicated that methionine has a stimulatory effect on the production of cephalosporin C, and a higher enzyme activity in these cultures has been described before [127, 128]. The inhibition of de novo protein synthesis by addition of cycloheximide prevented increased antibiotic production that usually occurs in cultures supplemented with methionine only. It was concluded that methionine does not
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simply stimulate already present enzymatic activity, but rather acts on another, earlier level. The assumed transcriptional regulation could be confirmed in the wild-type strain for the pcbAB and pcbC genes, which exhibited increased transcript levels in the presence of methionine.Velasco et al. [27] also reported that in the two industrial strains C10 and CW19, the transcript level of the cefEF gene was increased by methionine supplementation. However, for all strains the highest induction rate could be detected for the pcbAB transcript. In this context, Velasco et al. [27] detected several consensus CANNTG sequences in the intergenic region of the A. chrysogenum biosynthesis genes pcbAB and pcbC, which are recognized by members of the basic region-helixloop-helix (bHLH) protein family. Some of these known transcription factors are involved in the transcriptional control of the sulfur network in S. cerevisiae [129–132]. Thus, the authors suggested that a member of the bHLH proteins might mediate these methionine-inducing effects. Besides methionine, the influence of other factors such as carbon source and ambient pH on the transcript levels of the biosynthesis genes was investigated. Jekosch and Kück [133] were able to show that the pcbC transcript in a wildtype strain of A. chrysogenum was completely repressed in the presence of 6.3% glucose. The amount of transcript correlated well with the amount of isopenicillin N synthase in a Western blot analysis indicating the importance of transcriptional regulation in biosynthesis. However, in the semi-producer strain A3/2, the transcription of the pcbC gene was not repressed by glucose. The higher transcript levels of all biosynthesis genes in the improved strain allowed the analysis of the cefEF gene in addition to the pcbC gene. A clear reduction of the cefEF transcript and protein level in the presence of 6.3% glucose was observed in strain A3/2. A pH-dependent transcription of the pcbC gene was reported for both industrial and wild-type strains. In the wild-type A. chrysogenum strain, highest transcript levels could be detected under neutral and mild alkaline conditions at pH 7 and 8, whereas in the semi-producer A3/2, the pH optimum was at pH 6 [123]. So far, no detailed analysis has yet been published, which might illustrate transcriptional regulation with respect to all parameters, also including different nitrogen sources, known to influence cephalosporin C production [134]. The expression of the cefG gene is limiting for cephalosporin C production in all studied strains of A. chrysogenum [135]. Only a very weak transcript of about 1.4 kb, which corresponds to the cefG gene, could be detected in A. chrysogenum cells grown in a defined production medium for 48 h and 96 h [96, 97]. The fact that the acetyl-CoA:DAC acetyltransferase showed high protein levels in cultures at 72 and 96 h, which decreased dramatically thereafter, corresponds with the late conversion of DAC to cephalosporin C during the fermentation process [126, 136]. Thus, cefG seems to be expressed at a later stage of fermentation and at a lower transcriptional level than the cefEF gene suggesting a different control mechanism for these genes, although they are expressed divergently from the same promoter region [96]. Furthermore, transcriptional analysis revealed that the cefG gene appears not to be the target of
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glucose-dependent regulation [137], and its expression is not significantly stimulated by the addition of methionine unlike that of other cephalosporin C biosynthesis genes [27]. All these examples indicate that the transcriptional regulation of the biosynthesis genes is an important aspect of the regulation of cephalosporin C production. Undoubtedly, major regulatory effects in the biosynthesis of cephalosporin C result from transcriptional changes. One striking observation is that all industrial producer strains of A. chrysogenum have increased transcript levels from all biosynthesis genes. Nevertheless, in addition to transcriptional control, other regulatory levels exist in the biosynthesis of cephalosporin C and the modification of enzyme activity will be described in the following section. 5.2 Enzyme Activity As described above, glucose has a significant impact on transcription of the pcbC and the cefEF gene. There is no negative effect of glucose on the activity of purified isopenicillin N synthase or resting cells (e.g. [138]). In contrast,ACV synthetase activity is directly inhibited by glucose in vitro [139]. Actually, the inhibitory effect on ACV synthetase, the first enzyme of the biosynthesis, results from glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate and not from glucose itself [140]. Another enzyme with relevance for cephalosporin biosynthesis that shows inhibited enzyme activity under certain circumstances is a-aminoadipate reductase encoded by the lys2 gene in A. chrysogenum. This enzyme is involved in lysine biosynthesis and competes with ACV synthetase for the precursor aaminoadipic acid. a-Aminoadipate reductase activity was quantified in the presence of 0 to 10 mmol/L lysine. A wild-type strain from A. chrysogenum showed 80% inhibition of a-aminoadipate reductase activity in extracts of 1 mmol/L lysine [9]. The inhibition of this enzyme of the lysine pathway is of relevance for cephalosporin C biosynthesis, because a high intracellular level of a-aminoadipic acid is required for efficient antibiotic production. It has been described that in vitro, the energy requirement for tripeptide formation through ACV synthetase is rather high under unfavorable conditions, which could be caused, e.g. through limited amino acid concentrations. At saturated conditions, the consumption amounts to 3 ATPs per ACV tripeptide, whereas under unfavorable conditions it can be more than 20 ATPs [141]. 5.3 Correlation Between Secondary Metabolism and Morphogenesis The biosynthesis of secondary metabolites in filamentous fungi is often associated with cell differentiation and development. In Aspergillus nidulans, there is a link between biosynthesis of secondary metabolites and asexual sporulation. In recent years, the involvement of a common G-protein-mediated growth
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pathway has been demonstrated (reviewed in [142]). The a-subunit FadA of the trimeric G-protein binds GTP in its active form and then favors vegetative growth by inhibiting conidiogenesis. Upon inactivation of the G-protein through intrinsic GTPase activity, the inhibitory effect on signaling cascades to sporulation and toxin biosynthesis is released. Interestingly, a dominant activating fadA allele stimulates the expression of the pcbC gene and penicillin biosynthesis in A. nidulans [143]. It cannot be excluded that an FadA homologue also influences b-lactam biosynthesis in A. chrysogenum, as such a G-protein-mediated regulation of secondary metabolite production has already been described for different fungi other than A. nidulans. Examples are cyclopiazonic acid and aflatoxin biosynthesis in Aspergillus flavus, trichothecene production in Fusarium sporotrichioides and pigment synthesis in Cryphonectria parasitica. The influence of an active G-protein can be both positive and negative depending on the respective biosynthesis (overview see [142]). In A. chrysogenum, sporulation is very weak and little is known about a possible coupling to cephalosporin biosynthesis. Bartoshevich et al. [144] describe three differentiation types for A. chrysogenum and their correlation with cephalosporin production. Type 1 is the transition from the vegetative stage into a reproductive one with the formation of conidia. In this reproductive stage, cephalosporin production is lowered. It should be noted that conidia are usually not formed by high titer strains of A. chrysogenum. Type 2 is described for the late stages of development and characterized by the formation of arthrospores with thick cell walls and probably retarded metabolism. These arthrospores may be considered as simplified reproductive spores serving the survival of the organism under stress conditions and are accompanied by a lowered production of cephalosporin C. Type 3 differentiation is a multi-stage transformation of the mycelial organization into swollen fragments or yeastlike cells, which are capable of periodical polycyclic development. This alternating mycelial and yeast-like organization is most pronounced under conditions of high cephalosporin production [144]. It has been known for a long time that the phase of hyphal differentiation coincides with the maximum rate of cephalosporin synthesis and that methionine enhances fragmentation and antibiotic production [22, 145, 146]. The stimulatory effect of methionine on the transcription of biosynthesis genes was mentioned earlier, and the pleiotropic action of methionine in A. chrysogenum has been reviewed by Martín and Demain [37]. Norleucine, a non-sulfur analogue of methionine, also stimulated cephalosporin C production and mimics the methionine’s effect on mycelial morphology [147]. The capability of yeast-like cells to produce high amounts of cephalosporin C might rely on the alternative respiration pathway in A. chrysogenum. This cytochrome-independent and cyanide-insensitive respiration seems to be an obligate feature of yeast-like, but not filamentous cells and is important when cytochrome-dependent respiration cannot completely regenerate the reduced coenzyme [148]. It was also reported that the alternative respiration exhibits a
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more than two-fold increase when A. chrysogenum was grown on sugars or soybean oil. The addition of soybean oil even doubled the specific production of cephalosporin C [149]. However, no strict correlation and interdependency exists between mycelial fragmentation and cephalosporin production rate.Allosamidin, a potent chitinases inhibitor, retarded the fragmentation of hyphae but did not affect cephalosporin C production [150]. An analysis of carbon source, growth rate and antibiotic synthesis revealed that the fragmentation has a causal relationship with growth rate. Low growth rates may weaken the hyphae and agitation could possibly cause breakages [151].
6 Transcription Factors as Activators and Repressors of Cephalosporin Biosynthesis The isolation and analysis of transcription factors from filamentous fungi began about 15 years ago. First examples came from two model organisms Aspergillus nidulans and Neurospora crassa. Transcription factors like CREA from A. nidulans, which acts as a major glucose repressor [152] and NIT2 from N. crassa that regulates structural genes of nitrogen metabolisms are involved in primary metabolism. A. nidulans is not only a model organism but also a penicillin producer and many investigations on the regulation of b-lactam biosynthesis were performed in this fungus over the last several years. Due to low titer, penicillin production in A. nidulans is not of any biotechnical interest and, therefore, other fungi such as Penicillium chrysogenum are used for penicillin production. The first transcription factor, which was isolated from this fungus is the PACC protein [153]. The pacC gene was cloned using the heterologous sequence from A. nidulans as hybridization probe. Transcription factors from A. chrysogenum have only recently been isolated and can be divided into two groups: the zinc finger proteins PACC and CRE1 already known from other fungal b-lactam producers, and the RFX transcription factor CPCR1 initially discovered in Acremonium chrysogenum. As shown in Fig. 4, a detailed sequence analysis revealed that all promoter sequences of cephalosporin biosynthesis genes contain potential DNA-binding sites for all of these transcription factors. 6.1 PACC – pH-Dependent Transcriptional Control Many filamentous fungi are capable of surviving and growing in a broad range of ambient pH, which might be as acidic as 2 or as alkaline as 10. Apart from their ability of homeostasis, they adapt the secretion of enzymes and secondary metabolites in response to the respective pH environment. Penicillins and
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Fig. 4 Transcription factor binding sites in the divergently orientated promoter sequences from the pcbAB-pcbC, cefD1-cefD2, and cefEF-cefG cephalosporin biosynthesis genes. Bars indicate recognition sites for the transcription factor CPCR1 (grey), CRE1 (black), and PACC (white). Those binding sites, which have been shown to exist experimentally, are marked by asterisks. The CPCR1 consensus binding site is highly complex. Therefore, it is not certain that all predicted sites show in vitro the expected binding activity
cephalosporins are produced in elevated amounts under alkaline ambient pH. The intensive study of mutants with defects in pH regulation led to the isolation of the pacC gene from A. nidulans by complementation of a mutant strain [154]. PACC is a zinc finger transcription factor of the C2H2-type with three zinc fingers. The success in A. nidulans was followed by the isolation of pacC genes from P. chrysogenum, A. niger and A. chrysogenum [123, 153, 155]. The pacC gene from A. chrysogenum (pacCAc) was isolated from a lambda genomic library using the P. chrysogenum pacC gene (pacCPc) as a heterologous DNA probe encompassing the highly conserved zinc finger region. Sequencing of a 3-kb fragment allowed the identification of a DNA fragment encoding an ORF of 621 amino acids. The ORF is interrupted by three introns of which two are located in the zinc finger region. PacCAc is 20 and 57 amino acids shorter than the corresponding genes from the penicillin producers A. nidulans and P. chrysogenum, respectively. PACCAc shows approximately 35% sequence identity to other PACC proteins, which are much more alike with about 60% identity. The observed differences are consistent with the taxonomic classification of the three fungi: Acremonium belongs to the Pyrenomycetes, whereas Aspergillus and Penicillium are Plectomycetes. Southern analysis revealed that pacC is a single copy gene and is located on identical restriction fragments in wild-type and semi-industrial strains of A. chrysogenum [123].
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PACC proteins are zinc finger transcription factors with highly conserved DNA recognition positions in the first two of the three zinc fingers [156]. They bind to a consensus binding site 5¢GCCAAG3¢ with high affinity in vitro. In A. chrysogenum the pcbAB-pcbC promoter region contains two binding sites for PACC (see Fig. 4). Both are recognized efficiently in vitro by an E. coli synthesized protein fragment of PACCAc encompassing the DNA-binding zinc finger region [123]. The promoter region between the cefEF and cefG genes, which is specific to cephalosporin C biosynthesis and A. chrysogenum also contains two PACC binding sites that are recognized in vitro (see Fig. 4). Experimental results from A. chrysogenum suggest that the PACCAc protein functions in the regulation of cephalosporin gene expression in a pH dependent manner. In wildtype strains of A. chrysogenum, the expression of cephalosporin biosynthesis genes is stronger under alkaline conditions, which probably results from an activated PACC protein [123]. The PACC protein is activated through proteolytic processing, which results in the mature, shorter polypeptide. In Aspergillus, a detailed study of the regulation of gene expression in a pH dependent manner resulted in the identification of the Pal signal transduction pathway (e.g. [157]). Each of the six pal gene products is required for the proteolytic processing of the PACC transcription factor in Aspergillus. Only the processed and shorter form of the protein can act as a transcriptional activator [158, 159]. The activated PACC protein is involved in the pH dependent regulation of many genes and probably also of the pacC gene itself. The existence of five putative PACC binding sites in the promoter of the pacC gene from A. chrysogenum suggests a strong autoregulation of the gene. A similar conclusion has been drawn for the pacC genes from P. chrysogenum and A. niger [153, 155]. As already stated, the regulation of gene expression in a pH-dependent manner is not restricted to b-lactam biosynthesis only. Many different genes and pathways in fungi and yeasts are regulated in response to ambient pH, and PACC is a key player in all of these processes. Although PACC is not a specific regulator of b-lactam antibiotics or cephalosporin biosynthesis, it has a general effect on gene expression of biosynthesis genes. 6.2 CRE1 – A Glucose Repressor Protein Another important parameter for fungal growth and the induction of secondary metabolism is the available carbon source. It has been described for all b-lactam producing fungi that growth is often promoted by glucose, but that higher concentrations of glucose have a negative effect on antibiotic production (reviewed in [160]). This negative effect is suspected to stem from transcriptional and post-transcriptional mechanisms. There are also a number of differences between the three b-lactam producers P. chrysogenum, A. nidulans and A. chrysogenum regarding the extent of glucose repression for certain biosynthesis genes and enzyme activities.
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In A. chrysogenum, it was reported that the enzyme activity of the gene products from pcbAB, pcbC and cefEF decreased in the presence of 6.3% glucose and cephalosporin production was reduced [138, 139, 161]. Jekosch and Kück [133] showed that in the wild-type strain, both the pcbC and the cefEF gene are transcriptional repressed in the presence of glucose. In A. nidulans and Trichoderma reesei, repression of gene transcription by glucose is regulated by the carbon catabolite repressors CREA (syn. CRE1) [152, 162].A PCR-based approach using degenerative primers derived from amino acid sequences of published CRE proteins led to the amplification of a partial cre1 gene from A. chrysogenum. The gene fragment was used to screen a lambda genomic library, and a 2.9 kb fragment carrying the complete cre1 gene could be isolated.An intronless ORF of 1218 bp codes for 406 amino acids. The deduced CRE1 protein sequence showed an overall similarity of 69% to the T. reesei CRE1 and 56% to the A. nidulans CREA [137]. CRE proteins contain two C2H2-type zinc fingers and recognize a consensus binding motif 5¢-SYGGRG-3¢ in a context-dependent manner. In addition to the zinc fingers, A. chrysogenum CRE1 carries all conserved domains, which were previously described for the T. reesei CRE1 [162]. These include in particular the acidic and regulatory regions, which have been shown to be involved in the regulation of the DNA-binding ability by phosphorylation [163]. The cre1 gene is a single copy gene in wild-type and producer strains of A. chrysogenum and comparison of both strains showed no chromosomal rearrangement within the cre1 gene region [137]. The promoters of the pcbC and the cefEF gene contain several putative binding sites for CRE1 through which the transcription factor might repress these genes. This idea is supported by results obtained with A. chrysogenum transformants that contain ectopically integrated multiple copies of the cre1 gene [133]. In the wild-type strain, the pcbC and the cefEF gene are repressed by glucose. This repression does not significantly differ in transformants carrying multiple copies of the cre1 gene. However, a similar approach using the semiproducer strain A3/2 yielded in changed transcript levels. In strain A3/2, the pcbC gene is no longer subject to glucose repression. However, in transformants with multiple cre1 gene copies, transcript levels of pcbC are lower in the presence of glucose indicating a restored glucose repression mechanism due to insertion of multiple copies of the cre1 gene. The cefEF gene is glucose-repressed in strain A3/2 and in the corresponding cre1-transformants with the repression being more pronounced in the transformants described above [133]. These experiments indicate that in A. chrysogenum, the CRE1 transcription factor acts as a carbon catabolite repressor on the biosynthesis genes of cephalosporin. Like PACC, CRE1 is also regulating its own gene expression via binding sites in the promoter region of cre1. This autoregulation is of special interest in A. chrysogenum since in contrast to A. nidulans and T. reesei, transcript levels of the cre1 gene increased in the wild-type strain in the presence of glucose. In the wild-type strain ATCC14553, the cre1 transcript level was increased about sixfold after two days of cultivation in the presence of glucose. In contrast, changes in the transcript levels in the semi-producer strain A3/2 could not be observed,
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thus indicating the absence of a glucose regulation of cre1 transcriptional expression [137]. 6.3 CPCR1 – Cephalosporin C Regulator 1 PACC and CRE1 are known to be involved in the transcriptional regulation of b-lactam biosynthesis in various filamentous fungi. These could also be isolated from and investigated in A. chrysogenum. A different approach led to the identification of the CPCR1 (Cephalosporin C Regulator 1) transcription factor in A. chrysogenum. A 24-bp sequence from the pcbAB-pcbC promoter was used in the yeast one-hybrid-system to isolate cDNAs from A. chrysogenum encoding DNA-binding proteins that interact with the promoter sequence. The sequence is located –441 to –418 relative to the translational start of the pcbC gene and contains a CCAAT-box and an imperfect palindrome. A cDNA was identified in the one-hybrid-screen that encodes a polypeptide of 788 amino acids. Analysis of the genomic DNA extended the ORF of the cpcR1 gene to 830 amino acids and revealed the position of two short introns. Southern analysis of genomic DNA from wild-type and semi-producer strains with a cpcR1 gene probe detected only a single hybridizing band of identical size. This indicates that cpcR1 is a single copy gene in A. chrysogenum [164]. CPCR1 is the first member of the RFX-family of transcription factors in filamentous fungi. RFX proteins form a subfamily of the winged-helix proteins that are characterized by a DNA-binding domain of the helix-turn-helix type [165, 166]. Another novel RFX gene was isolated from P. chrysogenum through sequence homology with cpcR1 [164]. PcRFX1 and CPCR1 share about 29% amino acid identity (Fig. 5).A data library search of completely sequenced fungal genomes showed that cpcR1 homologues are present in Neurospora crassa, Magnaporthe grisea, as well as in Aspergillus nidulans. From the amino acid sequence comparison in Fig. 5 can be concluded that all predicted polypeptides show highest homology with regard to the DNA-binding and dimerization domain. A similar degree of identity exists also to the yeast RFX proteins SAK1 from Schizosaccharomyces pombe and CRT1 from Saccharomyces cerevisiae [167, 168]. The yeast proteins are involved in DNA repair and meiotic divisions, whereas the human members of the RFX family function in a tissue and lineage specific manner. RFX5 is an interesting example as it is part of a protein complex that regulates the immune response. Therefore, mutation in RFX5 can lead to severe defects in the immune system (e.g. [169, 170]). CPCR1 is a typical member of the RFX/winged-helix family. Besides the RFXtype DNA-binding domain at amino acid positions 224 to 298, it contains a characteristic C-terminal dimerization domain. The C-terminus is necessary for homodimerization of CPCR1 (Fig. 5). Truncation of the dimerization domain results not only in the inability of CPCR1 to form homodimers but also in a loss of its DNA-binding activity. Thus, CPCR1 only binds DNA in a dimeric state [164]. Interestingly, cpcR1 homologues have been found in DNA sequence data
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Fig. 5 Alignment of primary amino acid sequences of predicted CPCR1 polypeptides from different fungal species. Using available sequences from data libraries, cpcR1 homologous genes have been identified in five different fungi. The DNA-binding domain and the dimerization domain are underlined with black or grey bars, respectively. Identical residues in all (black) or in four (grey) sequences are shaded.Abbreviations: Ac, Acremonium chrysogenum; An, Aspergillus nidulans; Mg, Magnaporthe grisea; Nc, Neurospora crassa; Pc, Penicillium chrysogenum. For Fig. 5 see also following pages
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Fig. 5 (continued)
from different fungal sources (Fig. 5) indicating that RFX proteins fulfill a different regulatory function which is not restricted to b-lactam biosynthesis. For the functional elucidation of CPCR1, several fungal transformants with varying cpcR1 gene copy numbers were generated [171]. A knockout strain showed changed pcbC transcript levels indicating a direct involvement of CPCR1 in transcriptional regulation of this cephalosporin biosynthesis gene. Reporter gene analysis of pcbC promoter derivatives with deleted CPCR1 binding sites revealed a clear dependence of reporter gene activity on functional binding sites. The deletion of two CPCR1 binding sites resulted in the total loss of reporter gene activity after cultivation of seven days. Interestingly, the levels for cephalosporin C were not significantly altered in the cpcR1 knockout strain. However, the amount of the biosynthesis intermediate penicillin N was drastically reduced. This underlines the assumption that CPCR1 is involved in the regulation of the early biosynthesis genes such as pcbC. The observed reduction of penicillin N was completely reverted in a strain with a complemented cpcR1 gene [171]. To summarize, CPCR1 is a transcription factor, which is involved in the regulation of cephalosporin C biosynthesis. The deletion of the cpcR1 gene does not prevent the production of cephalosporin C, but has significant effects on the level of antibiotic biosynthesis. CPCR1 probably binds to the promoter of the pcbC gene as a dimer with a molecular mass of nearly 200 kDa and it is most likely that one or several other regulatory proteins interact with CPCR1. Thus, the full function of CPCR1 and putative additional transcription factors or mediator proteins has first to be identified before the complete scenario of pcbC gene regulation can be pictured. So far, it has not been investigated whether PACC or CRE1 are protein interaction partners of CPCR1 under defined physiological conditions.
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6.4 Comparison of Cephalosporin and Penicillin Biosynthesis Regulation Penicillin and cephalosporin biosynthesis share the pcbAB and the pcbC genes encoding enzymes for the first catalytic steps resulting in the formation of isopenicillin N. Although differences between the b-lactam producers exist in promoter length and structure, and in the transcriptional response to environmental parameters, it is not unlikely that a basic set of similar transcription factors is involved in the regulation of b-lactam biosynthesis in other fungi as well. Even if a transcription factor and its target gene are conserved between two fungi, it still remains to be clarified if all regulatory details are identical. One good example is the PACC transcription factor. Differences have been observed between P. chrysogenum and A. nidulans with regard to the transcriptional response of b-lactam biosynthesis genes to the ambient pH [153]. Nevertheless, in A. chrysogenum are some additional transcription factor candidates with a role of regulating cephalosporin biosynthesis genes, which have not been described so far. Both candidates are not specific for penicillin biosynthesis but function in a more general way. General transcription factors can act on a broad range of promoters of target genes that are involved in unrelated pathways. One example is the AREA family of fungal transcription factors including NIT2 and NRE that regulate nitrogen control in A. nidulans, N. crassa and P. chrysogenum. It was shown that the NRE transcription factor binds to promoter sequences from penicillin biosynthesis genes [172]. The second example of a general transcription factor is the HAP-complex from A. nidulans. This multi-protein-complex, which has been designated PENR1 [173] is involved in the regulation of many genes, but also binds to the pcbC promoter of A. nidulans. Finally, there is the question of how much could be learnt from noncephalosporin producing fungi. Recently, we have discovered sequences with similarity to b-lactam biosynthesis genes in the genomic sequence of the human pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus [174]. This finding invites to speculate whether or not cephalosporin biosynthesis genes could be residual in genomes of anamorphs or teleomorphs of A. chrysogenum.Additionally, it remains to be determined whether or not these species have retained regulatory systems for b-lactam biosynthesis genes, similar to those of A. chrysogenum.
7 Molecular Differences in Production Strains All A. chrysogenum strains that are currently used for the production of cephalosporin C have been derived from the Brotzu isolate found in 1945. Repeating cycles of mutation and selection methods resulted in strains that produce under ideal fermentation conditions more than 20 g/L [39]. Selection was aimed at achieving highest possible production rates under conditions suitable
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for fermentation in a cost efficient way. Bearing this in mind, most changes inevitably occurred at the molecular level that have accumulated in these strains. In general, transcript levels of biosynthesis genes are significantly higher in producer strains, an observation, which has also been made for optimized P. chrysogenum strains. However, there are striking differences between penicillin and cephalosporin producer strains. For A. chrysogenum producer strains, no report is available stating that the gene copy number of biosynthesis genes has increased as it is the case for the penicillin biosynthesis cluster. This has been amplified by a factor of between 5 to greater than 10 in most production strains of P. chrysogenum (e.g. [175]). One explanation for this finding is that cephalosporin biosynthesis genes are not located in a single cluster, but rather are distributed over two different chromosomes. However, several investigations have shown that the transcript level of biosynthesis genes is increased and, thus, changes must have occurred at the level of transcriptional regulation of structural genes. There are two main explanations for these findings: mutations in the promoter region may be responsible for example for a different recruitment of transcriptional activator proteins and/or molecular changes occurred in the regulatory genes and, consequently, in the corresponding proteins. To date, no changes in the copy number of the identified regulatory genes of cephalosporin C biosynthesis have been observed. All transcription factor genes of A. chrysogenum described so far, namely cpcR1, cre1 and pacC, seem to be single copy genes in wild-type and producer strains. From hybridization analysis with restricted genomic DNA can be concluded that no major intrachromosomal DNA rearrangements have taken place when producer strains were generated from wild-type strains [123, 137, 164]. However, it is not known whether mutations occurred in the transcription factors, which might for example increase the transcriptional activation capacity or their interaction with other regulatory factors. Other relatively constant parameters are promoter sequences. It was described that no significant changes could be detected when the pcbC promoter DNA sequences of A. chrysogenum strains with different antibiotic production rates were compared [176]. A similar result was obtained for the promoter regions of penicillin biosynthesis genes from wild-type and producer strains [175]. Nevertheless, a number of changes have already been described. Relatively soon after the discovery of the biosynthesis genes, the chromosomal localization of the gene clusters was investigated using pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. This technique allows the separation of intact chromosomes with a size of up to 10 Mb. Walz and Kück [177] have reported that different A. chrysogenum strains were indistinguishable with respect to restriction fragment patterns, but six out of eight chromosomes differed in size. In addition, the rDNA gene cluster seemed to be relocated from its original site at chromosome II in wild-type strains to chromosome VII in an improved production strain. Another investigation revealed chromosome changes only in the minority of strains from a lineage with improved cephalosporin C production. In one strain, the size of the chromosome was altered on which the pcbC gene is
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located [101]. Until now, it could not be clarified whether these chromosomal rearrangements have occurred accidentally during industrial strain improvement programs and whether they are at least partially responsible for titer improvement through increased gene expression rates of the translocated biosynthesis genes. The increasing knowledge of transcription of biosynthesis genes and the regulatory proteins involved in this process has led to the discovery of some interesting differences in production strains.As already mentioned, the transcript levels in production strains are generally increased. Besides different transcript levels, improved strains often show an altered regulation in response to certain parameters. One example is provided by Velasco et al. [27]. They report that in production strain C10, the supplementation of methionine correlates with an increased transcription of the pcbAB, pcbC and cefEF genes. This is in contrast to the Brotzu strain, where only pcbAB and pcbC transcript levels are higher in the presence of methionine. This suggests that changes might have occurred in the regulation of the cefEF gene during strain improvement. Another example is related to the transcription factor PACC and the pH-dependent transcriptional control. In the semi-producer strain A3/2 of A. chrysogenum, transcript analysis revealed a pH optimum for pcbC and cefEF transcript levels at pH 6 [123]. This is in contrast to the general observation that higher yields of b-lactam antibiotics are obtained at pH 7 to 8. Indeed, in a nonoptimized strain, the highest level of the pcbC transcript could be detected at pH 7 to 8. The change of the optimum pH to pH 6 is justified for industrial fermentation of A. chrysogenum, as this process is usually run at a slightly acid pH to increase the stability of the product in the fermentation broth. Thus, classical strain improvement resulted in an adaptation of the transcriptional regulation towards an optimized antibiotic production under the employed fermentation conditions. Another interesting observation was that not only the transcript level was increased at pH 6, but that the transcription rate showed a real optimum curve and was lower at an alkaline pH. If this altered pH-dependent transcription still depends on PACC and the related PAL signal cascade, the pH sensing for the induction of the cascade must have changed in the production strain. The last example is derived from investigations of carbon source regulation and the transcription factor CRE1, a glucose repressor protein of the zinc finger type. One difference between the wild-type strain and strains with enhanced antibiotic production is the regulation of the cre1 gene itself. The transcript level of the gene encoding the repressor protein CRE1 is increased sixfold in the presence of glucose in a wild-type strain [137]. Interestingly, this glucosedependent transcriptional upregulation of cre1 does not take place in strain A3/2 with improved production of cephalosporin C. This deregulation of the glucose repressor gene might be related to the increased antibiotic production rate. cre1 promoter sequences of the two strains were determined and found to be completely identical, indicating that the deregulation of the cre1 gene does not result from mutations in its own promoter region. The idea of an altered
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glucose regulation in improved strains is supported by the finding that in the production strain, the pcbC gene is no longer repressed by glucose as it is the case in the wild-type strain [133]. Northern analysis revealed a complete reduction of the pcbC transcript level in the wild-type strain in the presence of 6.3% glucose and in the producer strain a reduction to less than 50% for the cefEF transcript.As already mentioned, the level of the pcbC transcript was not reduced in the producer strain. The involvement of CRE1 in the glucose effect was shown by the transfer of several copies of the repressor gene cre1 into the producer strain. The resulting transformants have a glucose-dependent regulation of the pcbC and the cefEF gene. This suggests that transcription factors are important targets, which have been directly or indirectly subjected to alterations during strain improvement.
8 Examples of Molecular Engineering of A. chrysogenum The directed manipulation of genetic material of an organism with the aim to change its biosynthesis capabilities can be regarded as an alternative to classical strain improvement to complement current strain breeding strategies. Compared to classic approaches of titer improvement, molecular engineering of biosynthesis genes requires much more knowledge of the relevant molecular details. 8.1 Genetic Tools for Molecular Engineering One prerequisite for molecular engineering is an established set of genetic tools. For A. chrysogenum, the available tools are still very limited. There are few examples for strong or inducible promoters for the expression of homologous and heterologous genes, selection markers for transformation, plasmids and methods for efficient homologous integration of genes and gene disruptions. When the codon usage of A. chrysogenum was investigated in 1999, the DNA sequences of only 19 nuclear genes were accessible in public databases [178]. Today, the number of known genes from A. chrysogenum is approximately 30 of which 6 are cephalosporin C biosynthesis genes and 3 encode transcription factors that are involved in the regulation of the biosynthesis genes. In the 1980s, an efficient integrative transformation system was described for A. chrysogenum [179]. Transformation usually results in the ectopic integration of plasmid DNA at one or several genomic loci due to illegitimate recombination. So far, only three different selection markers have been used repeatedly: the bacterial genes for hygromycin B and phleomycin resistance (e.g. [171, 180]), and a mutated version of the b-tubulin gene from A. chrysogenum providing a homologous transformation system [181]. The substitution of phenylalanine by tyrosine at codon 167 results in a mutated b-tubulin gene, which conveys benomyl resistance as a dominant selection marker. The mu-
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tated b-tubulin gene can be expressed using its own promoter and flanking regions. Transformation of a gel-purified DNA fragment encompassing the btubulin selection marker, but no bacterial DNA sequences from cloning vectors, is feasible and results in A. chrysogenum transformants without integrated heterologous DNA [182]. This aspect of the homologous transformation system is important with respect to governmental restrictions concerning the use of recombinant strains in biotechnical production processes. It is also possible to integrate a DNA fragment or a plasmid without a suitable selection marker in the genomic DNA of A. chrysogenum when a co-transformation experiment is conducted together with a vector harboring a dominant selection marker [107, 182]. Further molecular tools that are important for studying the regulation of cephalosporin C biosynthesis genes include reporter genes. Menne et al. [107] fused the intergenic region between the pcbAB and the pcbC gene with the two reporter genes lacZ and gusA and compared the specific enzyme activity of A. chrysogenum transformants harboring the four different gene fusions. They could show that the specific activity of the b-galactosidase encoded by the lacZ gene is higher than the enzyme activity obtained with the gusA gene, making the lacZ gene more suitable for the analysis of weak promoters in A. chrysogenum. The ability to disrupt a gene is of high importance for molecular engineering. The disrupted gene can be for example a structural gene of the biosynthesis resulting in truncated biosynthesis, or a regulatory gene whose product is involved in the regulation of cephalosporin C biosynthesis. In the latter case, gene disruption can alter the transcription of one or several biosynthesis genes. So far, only a few examples of gene disruption in A. chrysogenum are available, because the required homologous recombination is a rare event in this filamentous fungus. The first investigation used the disruption of the pcbC gene to determine that 3 kb are the required length of homologous DNA sequences at both sides of the resistance cassette to yield knock-out transformants [183]. Velasco et al. [184] also used several kb of homologous DNA flanking the resistance cassette for their disruption of the cefEF gene in A. chrysogenum. The disruption of a gene encoding a biosynthesis enzyme results in the accumulation of pathway intermediates, which can often be detected using bioassays, allowing a fast identification of the desired gene disruption transformant [183, 184]. The disruption of a regulatory gene often lacks a phenotype, which in principle could be used to identify the desired knockout transformants. Therefore, a PCR strategy is applied in order to detect the knockout strain. This approach was followed for the transcription factor gene cpcR1 [171]. For the disruption of the mecB gene encoding cystathione-g-lyase, which is involved in cysteine synthesis, a doublemarker technique was used. Transformants with a correct double-crossover were hygromycin-resistant and phleomycin-sensitive, whereas ectopic integration led to transformants with resistance against both antibiotics [33]. The tools available for the investigation and alteration of cephalosporin C biosynthesis can also be utilized to establish the synthesis of other products in
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A. chrysogenum. So far, a few heterologous proteins were synthesized in different strains of A. chrysogenum, but no secondary metabolites besides cephalosporin derivatives. Examples are alkaline proteases from Fusarium sp., human lysozyme and recombinant hirudin [185–187]. 8.2 Optimization of Cephalosporin C Biosynthesis The determination of rate-limiting steps in the biosynthesis is the first goal of a rational approach to improve cephalosporin titer. This can be performed by looking for intermediates that accumulate in fermentation broth, measurements of specific enzyme activity and the comparison of wild-type and hightiter production strains [188]. Several biosynthesis genes have been transformed into A. chrysogenum to yield strains with a higher copy number of these genes. The amplification of the pcbC gene did not result in significantly increased cephalosporin C production indicating that the cyclase activity is not rate-limiting in b-lactam biosynthesis [100]. In contrast to the results with the pcbC gene, an increase in the copy number of the cefG gene had a positive effect on cephalosporin C titer. Mathison and co-workers [97] cloned the cefG gene encoding the acetyl transferase, which catalyzes the last step in the biosynthesis. By transforming the cefG gene in the A. chrysogenum cefG mutant M40, they restored the synthesis of cephalosporin C and observed a correlation between cefG copy number and cephalosporin C titer. The transformation of a wild-type strain with up to five additional copies of the cefG gene increased the cephalosporin C titer from 0.625 mg/mL to 1.9 mg/mL. Mathison et al. [97] concluded that at least in the wild-type strain, the acetyl transferase activity is a rate-limiting step. In another investigation, the cefG gene was expressed from the homologous promoter and from four heterologous promoters. This study used for example promoters from the gpd gene of A. nidulans as constitutive promoters and the pcbC promoter from P. chrysogenum as the non-constitutive one [135]. In general, a higher steady-state transcript level of the cefG gene was observed in all transformants. Transformants of the producer strain C10 showed a doubled acetyl transferase activity when the cefG gene was fused to the pcbC promoter of P. chrysogenum, and a better conversion of deacetylcephalosporin C to cephalosporin C.Again, it was concluded that the expression of the cefG gene is limiting for cephalosporin C biosynthesis. A similar amplification of gene copy number with the goal to increase the corresponding enzymatic activity was tried for a gene, which is involved in precursor synthesis. L-cysteine is a precursor of the ACV tripeptide in cephalosporin C biosynthesis and can be supplied through an autotrophic pathway and through the reverse transsulfuration pathway. In the latter case, it is produced from methionine via cystathionine, which is split into cysteine and a-ketobutyrate enzymatically by cystathionine-g-lyase. This enzyme is en-
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coded by the mecB gene and is required for high-level cephalosporin production [33]. Some transformants with multiple copies of the mecB gene showed higher cystathionine-g-lyase activity and one transformant produced higher amounts of cephalosporins [35]. It was concluded that moderately increased levels of cystathionine-g-lyase stimulate cephalosporin production, but very high levels are deleterious for growth and production. Titer improvement was also reached in transformants of A. chrysogenum with a bacterial hemoglobin gene. The oxygen-binding heme protein from the bacterium Vitreoscilla has been synthesized in fungal transformants to improve the oxygen supply during fermentation [189]. It is not known, whether oxygen supply directly affects the three oxidation reactions in cephalosporin biosynthesis or indirectly benefits the production by a more efficient overall metabolism. Several transformants expressed the heme gene under the control of the strong constitutive TR1 promoter from Trichoderma reesei and produced a higher cephalosporin titer than control strains in batch culture experiments. Ten out of 17 transformants with the Vitreoscilla heme gene produced 7–64% higher cephalosporin C levels than the non-transformed control strain C10 [189]. In principle, transcription factors are promising candidates for use in molecular engineering. Overexpression of a transcriptional activator gene or the disruption of a repressor gene are relatively simple scenarios. More sophisticated approaches could be in vitro optimized transcription factors, e.g. with stronger transactivation capacities or different DNA-binding specificities. Due to the limited knowledge of transcription factors from A. chrysogenum, the future will show whether this kind of experimentation can considerably contribute to cephalosporin titer improvement. First results obtained from A. chrysogenum transformants with altered transcription factor gene copies are listed above. Besides titer improvement, an objective of gene amplification in genetically engineered strains can be the reduction of an intermediate, which may be an undesirable by-product. The cefEF gene encodes a bifunctional expandase/hydroxylase that converts penicillin N to deacetoxycephalosporin C and then to deacetylcephalosporin. Deacetoxycephalosporin C accumulates in the fermentation broth to a concentration of 1–2% of the final cephalosporin C yield and is an undesired contaminant in the extraction process [190]. Genetically engineered strains with increased copy number of the cefEF gene resulted in the reduction of desacetoxycephalosporin C to 50% or less of the control. The cefEF gene was expressed from its own promoter and Southern analysis indicated the integration of only a single additional gene copy. The reduction of desacetoxycephalosporin content relative to the cephalosporin C production was verified in upscale fermentation of 30,000 L, but the total production of cephalosporin C was not increased significantly [190]. Another reason for the construction of genetically engineered strains is the attempt to produce cephalosporin derivatives that are more suitable for chemical modifications than cephalosporin C itself. Semisynthetic cephalosporins are made from 7-aminodeacetoxycephalosporanic acid (7-ADCA) or 7-
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aminocephalosporanic acid (7-ACA), which can be derived enzymatically or chemically from cephalosporin C or penicillin G. The direct conversion of cephalosporin C into 7-ACA in A. chrysogenum was performed by transforming two heterologous genes into one recipient strain. The genes encoding Damino acid oxidase from the fungus Fusarium solani and glutaryl acylase from the bacterium Pseudomonas diminuta expanded the biosynthesis potential in the engineered strain. However, the amounts of 7-ACA were detectable but not commercially significant [191]. Recently, a different approach was followed where desacetoxycephalosporin (DAOC) from the fermentation broth of A. chrysogenum was used as starting material for the production of 7-ADCA. In order to accumulate DAOC in A. chrysogenum, a two step approach was used. In the first step, the cefEF gene encoding the bifunctional expandase/hydroxylase was disrupted and subsequent transformants of A. chrysogenum accumulated penicillin N. In the following step, a gene fusion was integrated into the DcefEF strain, which consisted of the pcbC promoter from Penicillium chrysogenum and the cefE gene from S. clavuligerus [184]. The cefE gene from the bacterial cephem-producer encodes the expandase enzyme that catalyzes the ring-expansion step in cephalosporin biosynthesis. Resulting recombinant strains were tested for production of DAOC in bioassays analyzing penicillinase-resistant inhibition of E. coli growth. HPLC analysis of the most promising transformant revealed a DAOC production of 75–80% of the total b-lactams produced by the parental production strain that was used for genetic engineering. It is worth mentioning that about 20% of the b-lactams produced by engineered strains accumulate in the fermentation broth as penicillin N indicating that the heterologous expandase activity is a rate limiting step. The accumulation of penicillin N might be reduced by a higher expression rate of the cefE gene or a classical strain improvement program starting with the engineered strain [184]. The purified DAOC from the fermentation broth of A. chrysogenum was bioconverted into 7-ADCA in two enzymatic steps using D-amino acid oxidase from the basidiomyceteous fungus Rhodotorula gracilis and the bacterial glutaryl acylase originating from Acinetobacter spec.
9 Outlook After the development of different molecular tools for Acremonium chrysogenum, one of the major interests in this field was to elucidate molecular changes that have occurred in strains during production improvement programs. The simple idea in the beginning that gene copy number, DNA rearrangements or promoter sequence mutations are mainly responsible for different gene expression levels has not yet been confirmed. Instead, one of the more interesting lessons learned from extensive molecular investigations in recent years has been the realization that multiple layers of control exist in
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cephalosporin biosynthesis. Therefore, future efforts will focus on deciphering regulatory networks that control cephalosporin biosynthesis. Thus, the development of genomic tools including genome-wide location and expression analysis can be foreseen to allow the simultaneous interrogation of the expression of thousands of genes in a high-throughput fashion. Microarray analysis responds to physiological or genetic changes and will provide indispensable information that ultimately may lead to improved strain development programs. Knowledge of this kind seems to be the necessary prerequisite together with conventional procedures for the efficient generation of novel strains, which are constantly required in competitive production processes. Acknowledgements We thank E. Jung for the preparation of the manuscript, E. Szczypka for the artwork and D. Janus and J. Dreyer for help in preparing some of the figures. The authors’ work is supported by Sandoz GmbH, Kundl, Austria.
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170. Waldburger JM, Masternak K, Muhlethaler-Mottet A,Villard J, Peretti W, Landmann S, Reith W (2000) Immunol Rev 178:148 171. Schmitt EK, Bunse A, Janus D, Hoff B, Friedlin E, Kürnsteiner H, Kück U (2004) Eukaryotic Cell 3:121 172. Haas H, Marzluf GA (1995) Curr Genet 28:177 173. Litzka O, Papagiannopolous P, Davis MA, Hynes MJ, Brakhage AA (1998) Eur J Biochem 251:758 174. Kück U, Pöggeler S (unpublished) 175. Newbert RW, Barton B, Greaves P, Harper J, Turner G (1997) J Ind Microbiol Biotechnol 19:18 176. Jekosch K, Kück U (unpublished) 177. Walz M, Kück U (1991) Curr Genet 19:73 178. Jekosch K, Kück U (1999) Fungal Genet Newsl 46:11 179. Skatrud PL, Queener SW, Carr LG, Fischer DL (1987) Curr Genet 12:337 180. Kück U, Walz M, Mohr G, Mracek M (1989) Appl Microbiol Biotechnol 31:358 181. Nowak C, Kück U (1994) Curr Genet 25:34 182. Nowak C, Radzio R, Kück U (1995) Appl Microbiol Biotechnol 43:1077 183. Walz M, Kück U (1993) Curr Genet 24:421 184. Velasco J, Adrio JL, Moreno MA, Díez B, Soler G, Barredo JL (2000) Nature Biotech 18:857 185. Morita S, Kuriyama M, Nakatsu M, Kitano K (1994) Biosci Biotechnol Biochem 58:627 186. Morita S, Kuriyama M, Nakatsu M, Suzuki M, Kitano K (1995) J Biotechnol 42:1 187. Radzio R, Kück U (1997) Appl Microbiol Biotechnol 48:58 188. Usher JJ, Hughes DW, Lewis MA, Chiang SD (1992) J Ind Microbiol Biotechnol 10:157 189. DeModena AL, Gutíerrez S,Velasco J, Fernández FJ, Fachini RA, Galazzo JL, Hughes DE, Martín JF (1993) Bio Technol 11:926 190. Basch J, Chiang S-JD (1998) J Ind Microbiol Biotechnol 20:344 191. Isogai T, Fukagawa M,Armori I, Iwami M, Kojo H, Ono T, Ueda Y, Kohasaka M, Imanaka H (1991) BioTechnol 9:188
Received: February 2004
Adv Biochem Engin/Biotechnol (2004) 88: 45– 90 DOI 10.1007/b99257 © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2004
Regulation of Penicillin Biosynthesis in Filamentous Fungi Axel A. Brakhage 1, 2 (✉) · Petra Spröte 1 · Qusai Al-Abdallah 1 · Alexander Gehrke 1 · Hans Plattner 1 · André Tüncher 1 1
2
University of Hannover, Institute of Microbiology, Schneiderberg 50, 30167 Hannover, Germany
[email protected]
1 1.1 1.2 1.3
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Fungi as Producers of b-Lactam Antibiotics . . . . . Antibiotics as Secondary Metabolites . . . . . . . . General Aspects Concerning b-Lactam Biosyntheses
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47 47 47 48
2
Biosynthesis of Penicillins and Cephalosporins: An Outline . . . . . . . . .
49
3 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.3.1 3.3.2
Molecular Genetics of Penicillin and Cephalosporin Biosynthesis in Fungi Genetic Nomenclature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Clustering of Biosynthesis Genes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Structural Genes and Proteins . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Genes Common to Penicillin and Cephalosporin-Producing Fungi . . . . Gene Specific for Penicillin Biosynthesis: aatA (penDE) Encoding Acyl Coenzyme A:Isopenicillin N Acyltransferase . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Compartmentation of Gene Products and Transport of Penicillins . . . . Molecular Regulation of b-Lactam Biosynthesis Genes . . . . . . . . . . . General Aspects of the Elucidation of the Regulation of Secondary Metabolism Genes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Promoter Structures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Carbon Source Regulation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . pH Regulation Mediated by the Transcriptional Activator PACC . . . . . . Nitrogen Regulation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Amino Acids as Mediators of Regulation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Influence of Oxygen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The CCAAT-Box Binding Protein Complex AnCF . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The A. nidulans bHLH Protein AnBH1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Velvet A (veA) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Cephalosporin C Regulator CPCR1 Identified in A. chrysogenum Is very Likely also Present in Both A. nidulans and P. chrysogenum . . . . Recessive Trans-Acting Mutations Affecting the Expression of Penicillin Biosynthesis Genes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . G-Protein-Mediated Signal Transduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Post-Transcriptional Regulation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Regulation of Penicillin Biosynthesis in Fungal Production Strains . . . . Evolution of b-Lactam Biosynthesis Genes in Fungi . . . . . . . . . . . .
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52 52 52 53 53
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58 60 60
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60 61 62 63 67 68 69 69 71 72
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73 74 74 75 76
3.4 3.5 3.5.1 3.5.2 3.5.3 3.5.4 3.5.5 3.5.6 3.5.7 3.5.8 3.5.9 3.5.10 3.5.11 3.5.12 3.5.13 3.5.14 3.6 3.7
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4 4.1 4.2
Applied Implications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Increase of Expression of Penicillin Biosynthesis Genes . . . . . . . . . . . Genetic Engineering of b-Lactam Biosynthesis Pathways . . . . . . . . . .
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Future Prospects
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References
Abstract The b-lactam antibiotic penicillin is one of the mainly used antibiotics for the therapy of infectious diseases. It is produced as end product by some filamentous fungi only, most notably by Aspergillus (Emericella) nidulans and Penicillium chrysogenum. The penicillin biosynthesis is catalysed by three enzymes which are encoded by the following three genes: acvA (pcbAB), ipnA (pcbC) and aatA (penDE). The genes are organised into a gene cluster. Although the production of secondary metabolites as penicillin is not essential for the direct survival of the producing organisms, several studies indicated that the penicillin biosynthesis genes are controlled by a complex regulatory network, e.g. by the ambient pH, carbon source, amino acids, nitrogen etc. A comparison with the regulatory mechanisms (regulatory proteins and DNA elements) involved in the regulation of genes of primary metabolism in lower eukaryotes is thus of great interest. This has already led to the elucidation of new regulatory mechanisms. Positively acting regulators have been identified such as the pH dependent transcriptional regulator PACC, the CCAAT-binding complex AnCF and seem also to be represented by recessive trans-acting mutations of A. nidulans (prgA1, prgB1, npeE1) and P. chrysogenum (carried by mutants Npe2 and Npe3). In addition, repressors like AnBH1 and VeA are involved in the regulation. Furthermore, such investigations have contributed to the elucidation of signals leading to the production of penicillin and can be expected to have a major impact on rational strain improvement programs. Keywords Penicillin biosynthesis · Regulation of penicillin biosynthesis · Aspergillus nidulans · Penicillium chrysogenum List of Abbreviations 6-APA 6-Aminopenicillanic acid A Adenine Å Ångstrom AA Amino acids AAA Aminoadipic acid ACV d-(L-a-Aminoadipyl)-L-cysteine-D-valine AF Aflatoxin AMP Adenosine monophosphate Arg Arginine Asp Aspartic acid ATP Adenosine triphosphate b-GAL b-Galactosidase b-GLU b-Glucuronidase bp Base-pairs bHLH Basic-region helix-loop-helix C Carbon C Cytosine
Regulation of Penicillin Biosynthesis in Filamentous Fungi Cys D DAC DAOC DNA EMSA G Gln Gly h His IPN kbp kDa mg mL mmol mRNA nt ORF RT-PCR SDS-PAGE ST T Thr Val
47
Cysteine Deletion Deacetylcephalosporin C Deacetoxycephalosporin C Deoxyribose nucleic acid Electrophoretic mobility shift assay Guanine Glutamine Glycine Hours Histidine Isopenicillin N Kilo base-pairs Kilo Dalton Milligram Millilitre Millimolar Messenger ribonucleic acid Nucleotide Open reading frame Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction Sodium dodecylsulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis Sterigmatocystin Thymine Threonine Valine
1 Introduction 1.1 Fungi as Producers of b -Lactam Antibiotics A literature survey covering more than 23,000 microbial products possessing some biological activity, i.e. antifungal, antibacterial, antiviral, cytotoxic and immunosuppressive, shows that the producing strains are mainly from the fungal kingdom (ca. 42%), followed by strains belonging to the genus Streptomyces (32.1%) [1]. Hence, fungi are one of the most important sources of bioactive compounds. 1.2 Antibiotics as Secondary Metabolites The metabolism of fungi can be divided into two parts, the primary metabolism which provides the cells with energy and chemical precursors which are essential for growth and reproduction of the organisms, and the secondary metabolism which seems to possess no obvious function in cell growth [2]. Com-
48
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pounds with antibiotic activity mainly belong to the group of secondary metabolites. Fungi produce numerous secondary metabolites which show antibiotic activity against various microorganisms, antiviral or antitumour and/or fungicidal activity. Some of the secondary metabolites, however, are too toxic for therapeutic applications and are therefore classified as mycotoxins some of which show mutagenic or even carcinogenic potential [3]. 1.3 General Aspects Concerning b -Lactam Biosyntheses The discovery of antibiotics is perhaps the most important discovery in the history of therapeutic medicine. It may conceivably have saved more lives than any other medical therapy [4]. The modern antibiotic therapy started with the discovery of a b-lactam antibiotic in 1929, when Alexander Fleming published his observation about the inhibition of growth of Staphylococcus aureus on an agar plate contaminated with Penicillium notatum [5]. This discovery led to the development of the b-lactam penicillin, the first clinically used antibiotic. During the late 1940s the fungus Cephalosporium acremonium (renamed to Acremonium chrysogenum) was isolated from the sea at Cagliari (Italy) by Guiseppi Brotzu [6]. The discovery of cephalosporin C generated a whole new group of clinically significant b-lactams. The success of b-lactams in the treatment of infectious disease is due to their high specificity and their low toxicity. Despite a growing number of antibiotics and the incidence of penicillin-resistant isolates, b-lactams are still by far the most frequently used antibiotic [7, 8]. It is only in the past 20 years that the biosynthesis pathways leading to penicillins and cephalosporins have been elucidated. This is in part due to the fact that industrial production of penicillin and cephalosporin was achieved with Penicillium chrysogenum and Acremonium chrysogenum (syn. Cephalosporium acremonium), respectively. These fungi, however, belong to the deuteromycetes which are in general difficult to analyse genetically. Currently, the greatest progress in elucidation of the molecular regulation of biosyntheses of b-lactams in fungi has been made in the penicillin-producer Aspergillus (Emericella) nidulans, since this fungus is an ascomycete with a sexual cycle. Hence, classical genetic techniques can be applied to A. nidulans [9] and as the result, a detailed genetic map is available [10]. The genome sequence of A. nidulans is publicly available (www.broad.mit.edu/annotation/fungi/aspergillus/index.html). Together with molecular techniques, this facilitated a thorough analysis of the genetic regulation of metabolic pathways, including that of penicillin biosynthesis [11–14]. According to their chemical structures b-lactams can be classified into five groups (Fig. 1). All of these compounds have in common the four-membered b-lactam ring. Apart from the monolactams, which have a single ring only, blactams consist of a bicyclic ring system. The ability to synthesise b-lactams is wide-spread in nature. It was found in some fungi, but also in some Gram-pos-
Regulation of Penicillin Biosynthesis in Filamentous Fungi
49
itive and Gram-negative bacteria (Fig. 1). However, whereas for the production of the hydrophilic cephalosporins organisms belonging to all three groups were described, the hydrophobic penicillins are only produced as end-product by filamentous fungi (Fig. 1). For the remaining groups of b-lactams listed in Fig. 1, so far only bacterial producers have been reported. The number of prokaryotic and eukaryotic microorganisms able to synthesize b-lactam antibiotics is continuously increasing [13, 15]. The biosynthesis of b-lactam compounds and their molecular genetics was subject to several recent reviews [13–19]. In particular, the molecular biology of b-lactam biosynthesis in fungi has seen a tremendous increase in knowledge within the last few years. The regulation of the penicillin biosynthesis will be considered mainly in the remainder of this chapter. For regulatory aspects concerning the cephalosporin biosynthesis, the article of Schmitt et al. in this volume is recommended.
2 Biosynthesis of Penicillins and Cephalosporins: An Outline Penicillins and cephalosporins belong chemically to the group of b-lactam antibiotics. The biosynthesis of both penicillins and cephalosporins have the first two steps in common [13] (Fig. 2). All naturally occurring penicillins and cephalosporins produced by eukaryotic or prokaryotic microorganisms are synthesised from the same three amino acid, L-a-aminoadipic acid (L-a-AAA), L-cysteine and L-valine (Fig. 2). In fungi, the non-proteinogenic amino acid La-AAA is derived from the fungus specific aminoadipate pathway which leads to formation of lysine. It can also be provided by catabolic degradation of lysine although the contribution of this pathway to penicillin biosynthesis has not been clarified yet. In bacteria, a specific pathway for formation of L-a-AAA for b-lactam biosynthesis has been found [13]. In the first reaction of the cephalosporin and penicillin biosynthesis pathway, the amino acid precursors are condensed to the tripeptide d-(L-aaminoadipyl)-L-cysteine-D-valine (ACV). This reaction is catalysed by a single enzyme, d-(L-a-aminoadipyl)-L-cysteine-D-valine synthetase (ACVS) (see below). ACVS is encoded by a single structural gene designated acvA (pcbAB) (Fig. 2). In the second step, oxidative ring closure of the linear tripeptide leads to formation of a bicyclic ring, i.e., the four-membered b-lactam ring fused to the five-membered thiazolidine ring which is characteristic of all penicillins. The resulting compound isopenicillin N (IPN) possesses weak antibiotic activity and is thus the first bioactive intermediate of both penicillin and cephalosporin pathways. This reaction is catalysed by isopenicillin N synthase (IPNS) encoded by the ipnA (pcbC) gene (see below). IPN is the branch point of penicillin and cephalosporin biosyntheses (Fig. 2). In the third and final step of penicillin biosynthesis, the hydrophilic L-aAAA side chain of IPN is exchanged for a hydrophobic acyl group catalysed by
50
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Fig. 1 Naturally occurring classes of b-lactam antibiotics essentially according to O’Sullivan and Sykes [180] and as shown in Aharonowitz et al. [51] and Brakhage [13]
Fig. 2 Biosyntheses of penicillin, cephalosporin C and cephamycin C. Gene and organism names are printed in italics, names of enzymes in capital letters. L-a-AAA is an intermediate of the L-lysine biosynthetic pathway but can also be provided by catabolic degradation of L-lysine. The penicillin biosynthesis occurs in fungi only, whereas cephalosporins are synthesised in both fungi, e.g. cephalosporin C by A. chrysogenum, and bacteria, e.g. cephamycin C by S. clavuligerus. Abbreviations: ACV, d-(L-a-aminoadipyl)-L-cysteine-D-valine; DAC, deacetylcephalosporin C; DAOC, deacetoxycephalosporin C; IPN, isopenicillin N; L-a-AAA, L-a-aminoadipic acid
52
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acyl coenzyme A:isopenicillin N acyltransferase (IAT). The corresponding gene was designated aatA (penDE). In natural habitats penicillins such as penicillin F and K, which contain D3-hexenoic acid and octenoic acid as side chains, respectively, are synthesised. By supplying the cultivation medium with phenylacetic or phenoxyacetic acid, the synthesis can be directed mainly towards penicillin G and V, respectively [17] (Fig. 2). The side chain precursors have to be activated before they become substrates for the IAT. It is generally believed that the activated forms of the side chains consist of their CoA-thioesters, but the mechanism behind this activation is still not fully elucidated [20] (see below). The formation of hydrophobic penicillins has been reported in fungi only, notably P. chrysogenum and A. nidulans, whereas the hydrophilic cephalosporins are produced by both fungi and bacteria, e.g. A. chrysogenum and Streptomyces clavuligerus, respectively (Fig. 2).
3 Molecular Genetics of Penicillin and Cephalosporin Biosynthesis in Fungi 3.1 Genetic Nomenclature Before their identification, the putative genes encoding ACVS were designated pcbA (penicillin cephalosporin biosynthesis) and pcbB, because it was believed that two enzymes were involved in the formation of an AC dipeptide and the final ACV tripeptide, respectively (Fig. 2) [21, 22]. Cloning and sequencing of the corresponding gene revealed, however, that a single polypeptide encoded by a single gene is responsible for the formation of the ACV tripeptide. Publications reporting the DNA sequence of the P. chrysogenum, A. nidulans and A. chrysogenum genes named the gene acvA, which reflected the involvement of one genetic locus in the synthesis of ACVS [23–26] or, pcbAB derived from the combination of pcbA and pcbB [27, 28]. The gene encoding IAT was named penDE or aat. In this review the gene is designated aatA, reflecting both the correct genetic nomenclature and that one genetic locus encodes the enzyme. The IPNS gene was named ipnA [14]. The alternative names are shown in parentheses at the beginning of the relevant sections. 3.2 Clustering of Biosynthesis Genes So far as we know, in bacteria and fungi all structural genes of b-lactam biosyntheses are clustered (Fig. 3). The penicillin biosynthesis genes form a singe cluster, whereas in A. chrysogenum, two clusters containing the cephalosporin biosynthesis genes were identified. By contrast in cephamycin C producing bacteria the cephamycin biosynthesis genes are organised into a single cluster (Fig. 3) [23, 25, 28–31]. The linkage of antibiotic-biosynthesis genes is a well-
Regulation of Penicillin Biosynthesis in Filamentous Fungi
53
known phenomenon in many antibiotic-producing organisms. It has been speculated that linkage has occurred during evolution owing to an ecological selective advantage [32]. Seno and Baltz [33] have suggested that coordinated regulation of antibiotic-biosynthesis genes could be achieved by organising the genes into large operons controlled by a single promoter. For example, genes of the actinorhodin biosynthesis pathway in Streptomyces coelicolor are clustered and expressed in several polycistronic messages [34]. In eukaryotic fungi, however, b-lactam biosynthesis genes are transcribed separately, and are expressed from different promoters [14]. Hence, in fungi, there is no obvious need for clustering and it thus seems more likely that linkage reflects a common ancestral origin (see below). However, there is no evidence that the aatA gene has a close relative in modern prokaryotes, even though it is part of the cluster. This fact supports the hypothesis that linkage might also confer an ecological advantage to the eukaryotic fungi in their natural habitat, although the reason for this is not yet understood. 3.3 Structural Genes and Proteins 3.3.1 Genes Common to Penicillin and Cephalosporin-Producing Fungi 3.3.1.1 a -Aminoadipyl)-L-Cysteinyl-D-Valine Synthetase (ACVS) acvA (pcbAB) Encoding d (L-a The first reaction which has been shown for the biosyntheses of penicillin and cephalosporin/cephamycin is the formation of the d-(L-a-aminoadipyl)-L-cysteinyl-D-valine (ACV) tripeptide. All of the reactions required for synthesis of the tripeptide are catalysed by a single enzyme, d-(L-a-aminoadipyl)-L-cysteine-D-valine synthetase (ACVS) which is encoded by the acvA (pcbAB) gene (Fig. 2). Thus, the ACV tripeptide is formed via a non-ribosomal enzyme thiotemplate mechanism from its amino acid precursors. This is similar in many aspects to the synthesis of other microbial peptides [35–37] (see chapter von Döhren et al.). The first isolation of an ACVS protein was achieved by van Liempt et al. [38] who partially purified ACVS of A. nidulans 118-fold. Since then,ACVS enzymes have been purified from different organisms, including P. chrysogenum, S. clavuligerus, A. chrysogenum and N. lactamdurans [35, 36, 39].Although not entirely clarified, it is believed that ACVS multienzymes are monomers. They exhibit different catalytic activities such as the specific recognition of the three amino acid precursors and their activation, peptide bond formation, isomerisation of the L-valine moiety to the D-form etc.As in ribosomal peptide biosynthesis, the carboxyl function of the amino acid is activated by the formation of a mixed anhydride with the a-phosphate of ATP, resulting in the release of pyrophosphate [38]. After activation of an amino acid, the formed aminoacyl
54
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adenylate is cleaved by the action of an enzyme thiol, resulting in formation of a thioester bond between the enzyme (at an appropriate location on the enzyme) and the amino acid, and in the release of AMP. These thioesterified amino acids are high-energy intermediates which are the targets for a nucleophilic attack by the amino group of a second amino acid, resulting in the formation of a peptide bond. As in the ribosome, the nascent peptide grows from the amino-terminus to the carboxy-terminus and the intermediate peptides remain bound (as thioesters) to the enzyme. Substrate specificity is less strict than in protein synthesis, since a variety of tripeptide analogs are known [13, 35]. L-Valine is apparently epimerized to the D-form at the tripeptide stage since no D-valine intermediate has been detected (Fig. 2) [36, 40]. Each ACVS is encoded by a single structural gene (designated acvA or pcbAB) with a size of more than 11 kb (Table 1). The translational start codons of the acvA genes of all fungi are putative because attempts to obtain the N-terminal amino acid sequence proved to be unsuccessful [24, 41]. The genes were cloned and sequenced from P. chrysogenum, A. nidulans, A. chrysogenum and bacterial cephamycin producers such as N. lactamdurans, S. clavuligerus and Lysobacter lactamgenus [13, 15, 19, 26, 27, 42]. Even in fungi, the ORF is not interrupted by introns. Fungal acvA genes are divergently oriented to the ipnA genes (Fig. 3). The genes are separated by about 1 kbp. Sizes of the intergenic regions between both genes vary slightly among the different fungi (Table 1). The order of the biosynthesis of the AAA-Cys-Val tripeptide is believed to reflect the linear organisation of the ACVS in AAA-, Cys- and Val-activating domains [36]. Sequencing of the ACVS structural genes (Table 1) revealed that in the three repeated regions of about 600 amino acids of each ACVS some similarity to 4¢-phosphopantetheine attachment sites described for polyketide synthases (i.e. DSL) is evident [24]. This seems to reflect the attachment of multiple cofactors to ACVS. Because a single phosphopantetheine arm is sufficient for activity of fatty acid synthases, the finding of several phosphopantetheine attachment sites suggest a modified mechanism for the thiotemplate pathway to polypeptides (multiple cofactor model) [24, 43–45]. Although the relevance of all three pantetheine attachment sites of ACVSs has not been proved experimentally yet, it is currently believed that peptide assembly is accomplished by transfer of acyl intermediates between adjacent cofactors [44, 45]. Recently, a putative 4¢-phosphopantetheinyl transferase which is essential for penicillin biosynthesis in A. nidulans was characterised. It is encoded by the npgA/cfwA gene. Mutations in this gene led to defects in growth and pigmentation. Furthermore, the mutant did not produce penicillin [46, 47]. In the carboxyl-terminal region of ACVS enzymes, sequence similarities to the thioesterase active site region, GXSXG, have been found which would be required to release the generated tripeptide from the enzyme [24]. ACV synthetases are of special interest since they represent a route for peptide bond formation independent of the ribosome and allow the incorporation
Regulation of Penicillin Biosynthesis in Filamentous Fungi
55
Fig. 3 b-Lactam biosynthesis gene cluster in fungi and bacteria. The A. chrysogenum genes cefD1 and cefD2 are located next to the pcbAB and pcbC gene [181]. Bacterial genes with fungal homologs are boxed. The transcriptional orientation and the transcript units (Bacteria), as far as it has been determined, are indicated by arrows below the boxes. Arrows between boxes (Bacteria) and arrows with broken lines below boxes mark the orientation of genes. ORF specifies an open reading frame whose function is unknown. Abbreviations not mentioned in the text: cmcT, transmembrane protein; pbp, penicillin-binding protein; bla, b-lactamase; blp, showing similarity to the extracellular b-lactamase inhibitory protein BLIP; ORF, open reading frame [14]
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Table 1 acvA (pcbAB). d(L-a-aminoadipyl]-L-cysteinyl-D-valine synthetase
A. nidulans
DNA (bp)
No Mr of aa
11,310
3770
Transcript- Transcript- InDoRef. trons mains size (kb) starta
422,486 > 9.5
P. chrysogenum OLI13 11,328a 3776a 423,996a AS-P-78 11,376 3792 425,971 11.5
Major: –230 Minor: –317 –195 –188
–
3
[23, 24]
n.d. n.d.
– –
3 33
[25, 26] [27]
a Correction of
published sequence. Translation start moved upstream by 90 bps (Brakhage and Turner, 1995).
of many non-proteinogenic amino acids [48]. Furthermore, since different parts of peptide synthetases are specific for certain amino acids, this can be used to engineer genetically new peptide synthetases producing new compounds, possibly with new pharmacological activities [49] (see chapter von Döhren et al.). 3.3.1.2 ipnA (pcbC) Encoding Isopenicillin N Synthase (IPNS) The second step of the penicillin/cephalosporin biosynthesis, i.e., the cyclisation of the linear ACV tripeptide to the bicyclic isopenicillin N (IPN), is catalysed by isopenicillin N synthase (IPNS), a nonheme Fe(II)-dependent oxidase (Fig. 2) (Table 2). The enzyme formally catalyses the removal of four hydrogen equivalents of the ACV tripeptide in a desaturative ring closure with concomitant reduction of dioxygen to water [15, 50, 51]. The IPNS reaction requires ferrous iron, molecular oxygen as cosubstrate and ascorbate as electron donor to form the b-lactam and thiazolidine ring of IPN [22]. IPNS was purified to homogeneity from A. chrysogenum [52–54] and has subsequently been obtained from P. chrysogenum, A. nidulans, several actinomycetes such as S. clavuligerus, S. lipmanii, N. lactamdurans, and the Gramnegative bacterium Flavobacterium sp. [15]. Only the free thiol form of ACV serves as a substrate, the bis-disulfide dimer, which is spontaneously formed, being inactive [55]. In P. chrysogenum, a broad-range disulfide reductase belonging to the thioredoxin family of oxidoreductases was found which efficiently reduced bis-ACV to the thiol monomer.When coupled to IPNS in vitro, it converted bis-ACV to IPN and was therefore suggested to play a role in penicillin biosynthesis [56]. The crystal structure of the A. nidulans IPNS was solved at a resolution of 2.5 Å and 1.3 Å complexed with manganese [50], and with
Regulation of Penicillin Biosynthesis in Filamentous Fungi
57
Fe2+ and substrate [57], respectively. The active-structure shows the manganese ion attached to four protein ligands (His 214, Asp 216, His 270, Gln 330) and bears two water molecules occupying coordination sites directed into a hydrophobic cavity within the protein [50]. The Fe(II):ACV:IPNS structure has one protein molecule with ferrous ion and ACV bound at the active site. The side chain of Gln 330, which coordinates the metal in the absence of substrate, is replaced by the ACV thiolate [57]. In the substrate complex, three of the five coordination sites are filled with protein ligands: His214, His270 and Asp216 [58]. The remaining two sites are occupied by a water molecule (at position 398) and the ACV thiolate. Such a structural characteristic (an iron-binding site within an unreactive hydrophobic substrate binding cavity) is probably a requirement for this class of enzyme, as it results in the isolation of the reactive complex and subsequent intermediates from the external environment. Thus, the reaction can be channelled along a single path, avoiding the many side reactions potentially open to the highly reactive species resulting from the reduction of dioxygen at the metal [50]. Data on the mechanism of the IPNS reaction suggests that initial formation of the b-lactam ring is followed by closure of the thiazolidine ring [59]. The current model of the catalytic mechanism can be found in Roach et al. [50, 57]. IPNS shows broad substrate specificity in particular with alterations in the L-a-AAA moiety and the valine residue of ACV. This finding has an ingenious use in creating novel penicillins from ACV analogs although cyclisation of unnatural tripeptides occurs at lower efficiency [60, 61]. The genes encoding IPNS enzymes are designated ipnA (pcbC) (Table 2). ipnA (pcbC) genes have been isolated from different fungi and bacteria such as A. chrysogenum, A. nidulans, P. chrysogenum, S. clavuligerus, S. griseus, S. lipmanii, Flavobacterium sp., N. lactamdurans etc. [15, 62, 63]. The properties of the fungal genes and their corresponding deduced amino acid sequences are summarized in Table 2. In contrast to bacteria, in fungi ipnA and acvA are bidirectionally oriented (Fig. 3). Fungal IPNS genes identified until now do not possess introns (Table 2).
Table 2 ipnA (pcbC). Isopenicillin N synthase
DNA (bp)
No of aa
Mr
Transcript- Transcript size (kb) starta
A. nidulans
993
331
37,480
~1.7
Major: –106 –
P. chrysogenum
993
331
38,012
1.1
Major: –11
a
Introns Ref.
–
[88, 170, 182, 183] [86, 161, 162]
Values for transcript starts were determined by primer extension or by S1 mapping.
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3.3.2 Gene Specific for Penicillin Biosynthesis: aatA (penDE) Encoding Acyl Coenzyme A:Isopenicillin N Acyltransferase The third and final reaction of penicillin biosynthesis, which does not occur in cephalosporin biosynthesis and has been found in fungi only, is catalysed by acyl coenzyme A:isopenicillin N acyltransferase (IAT). The hydrophilic L-a-AAA side chain is exchanged for a hydrophobic acyl group, e.g. phenylacetyl in penicillin G (Fig. 2). IAT shows a broad substrate specificity [19, 64, 65]. By addition of appropriate precursor molecules, the fermentation can be directed towards a specific penicillin, e.g. for production of penicillin G, phenylacetic acid is added, for production of penicillin V, phenoxy acetic acid (Fig. 2). Once the precursor has been taken-up, it must be activated to its CoA thioester. A possible candidate to carry out this reaction is the acetyl-CoA synthetase (ACS) which was purified from P. chrysogenum and its structural gene acuA (=facA of A. nidulans) cloned. It was shown that the ACS enzymes of both P. chrysogenum and A. nidulans have the capability to catalyse in vitro the activation (to their CoA thioesters) of some of the side chain precursors required for the production of several penicillins by these fungi [65]. Putatively different ACS-like enzymes have been described as well [66, 67]. In addition, a specific phenylacetic acid-activating ACS-like enzyme designated phenylacetic acid-CoA ligase was isolated and its encoding gene cloned [20, International patent WO97/02349]. Phenylacetic acid activation by ACS appears to be poor [68], and disruption of the acuA gene does not affect penicillin biosynthesis [69, International patent WO92/07079]. Furthermore, overproduction of phenylacetic acid-CoA ligase, however, does not seem to result in a higher penicillin production, either. It is interesting to note, that overproduction of the pcl gene from Pseudomonas putida U encoding a phenylacetic acid-CoA ligase which most probably resides in the fungal cytosol, increased penicillin production two-fold indicating a possible role for a cytosolic enzyme [20, 70]. An efficient penicillin production is apparently hampered by the degradation of the precursors such as phenylacetic acid. A gene of A. nidulans was cloned designated phacA which encodes a cytochrome P450 monooxygenase. The enzyme catalyses the 2-hydroxylation of phenylacetate. It is involved in the degradation of phenylacetate to fumarate and acetoacetate. phacA disruption increased penicillin production three- to fivefold, indicating that catabolism competes with antibiotic biosynthesis for phenylacetate [71]. The corresponding gene of P. chrysogenum (pahA) was also cloned. In contrast to A. nidulans, P. chrysogenum is unable to use phenylacetic acid as sole carbon source. This block in phenylacetic acid catabolism could be originated by inactivation or strong reduction of PAHA activity. However, interestingly, PAHA activity displayed an inverse correlation with the penicillin productivity of the P. chrysogenum strains studied. Comparison of pahA genes of several strains revealed that an L181F mutation was responsible for the reduced function of PAHA in
Regulation of Penicillin Biosynthesis in Filamentous Fungi
59
present industrial strains compared with the wild-type NRRL1951. The mutation was tracked down to strain Wisconsin 49–133 [72]. A two step enzymatic process for conversion of IPN to penicillin G by IAT has been proposed [73]. In the first step, IPN is deacylated to 6-aminopenicillanic acid (6-APA), which in the second step is acylated to penicillin G through addition of a phenylacetyl group from its CoA derivative (Fig. 2). Thus, two enzymatic functions are required, an isopenicillin-N amidohydrolase and acyl-CoA:6-aminopenicillanic acid acyltransferase activity. The cloning and sequencing of the aatA (penDE) gene encoding IAT revealed that the P. chrysogenum enzyme has the required activities [64]. The properties of the P. chrysogenum and A. nidulans aatA (penDE) genes are summarised in Table 3. In contrast to the other penicillin biosynthesis genes (acvA and ipnA) the aatA genes contain three introns in both organisms at similar positions [74–76]. No DNA sequence homologous to the aatA gene of P. chrysogenum was found in the genome of three different strains of A. chrysogenum and actinomycetes [19]. This finding is consistent with the notion that 6-aminopenicillanic acid: acyltransferase activity which is also carried out by IAT is lacking in A. chrysogenum and other cephalosporin producers [77]. Therefore, these organisms do not produce penicillin G or any other penicillins with a hydrophobic side chain. The active form of the IAT enzyme results from processing of the 40 kDa monomeric precursor to a heterodimer containing subunits of 11 and 29 kDa [19, 65, 78]. Both subunits are required for activity [79]. In P. chrysogenum, it was shown that the processing event that generated the two subunits from the 40 kDa precursor polypeptide occurred between Gly102/Cys103 [80]. Additional investigations suggest that the formation of recombinant IAT involves cooperative folding events between the subunits and IAT hydrolysis is an autocatalytic event [79]. Site-directed mutagenesis of the aatA gene and production of the mutant enzyme in E. coli revealed that Cys103 is required for IAT proenzyme cleavage. Whether this requirement reflects a direct participation of Cys103 in cleavage or as part of a cleavage recognition site has not been clarified yet. However, it cannot be entirely excluded yet that Cys103 is involved in IAT enzyme activity because all of these experiments were based on the deTable 3 aatA (penDE). Acyl coenzyme A: isopenicillin N acyltransferase
DNA (bp)
No of aa
Mr
Transcript- Transcriptsize (kb) start
Introns Ref.
A. nidulans
1237
357
39,240
1.2
–61 (–60) –52, –82
3
[75, 76, 85, 184, 185]
P. chrysogenum
1274
357
39,943
1.15
n.d.
3
[74, 76, 186]
60
A. A. Brakhage et al.
tection of enzyme specific activity [81]. The encoded amino acid sequence in the cleavage site is identical in P. chrysogenum and A. nidulans (Arg-AspGly...Cys-Thr-Thr) [80–82]. 3.4 Compartmentation of Gene Products and Transport of Penicillins The penicillin biosynthesis pathway occurs in different compartments of the cell, as reviewed by Driessen and colleagues (see chapter Evers et al.). 3.5 Molecular Regulation of b -Lactam Biosynthesis Genes 3.5.1 General Aspects of the Elucidation of the Regulation of Secondary Metabolism Genes One of the problems in elucidating the transcriptional control of b-lactam biosynthesis genes is that the physiological meaning of the production of blactams for the producing fungi is not entirely understood. It is generally accepted that penicillin and cephalosporin act as antibiotics in the soil against competing bacteria but an experimental proof of this assumption is difficult to obtain. Hence, as long as the physiological meaning of b-lactams for the producing fungi is not fully understood it is not possible to predict the regulatory circuits involved in the regulation of b-lactam biosyntheses. Therefore, an alternative strategy is based on the identification of regulatory proteins and to elucidate to which regulatory circuits these proteins belong. By this means, it should be feasible to unravel the physiology behind the production of b-lactams in fungi. As for most genes, transcriptional control is a major determinant of the appearance of their products. In case of the b-lactam biosynthesis genes in fungi, there are some studies directly measuring steady state levels of mRNA and, in addition, studies using reporter gene fusions. In the latter case, the promoter regions of the b-lactam biosynthesis genes including codons encoding some of their N-terminal amino acids were fused in frame with the Escherichia coli reporter genes lacZ or uidA encoding b-galactosidase (b-GAL) and b-glucuronidase (b-GLU), respectively. The most sophisticated system offers A. nidulans. This fungus has no significant endogenous b-GLU activity and, in addition, there are mutants available which have no endogenous b-GAL activity. Furthermore, this fungus has, in contrast to the deuteromycetes P. chrysogenum and A. chrysogenum which are employed for industrial production of penicillin and cephalosporin, respectively, a well defined sexual cycle facilitating genetic analyses [14]. Although by using gene fusions it cannot be entirely excluded that also posttranscriptional regulation contributes to the overall measurement of the re-
Regulation of Penicillin Biosynthesis in Filamentous Fungi
61
porter enzymes, in this review the data is formally used as indicative for transcriptional regulation. Although penicillin is a secondary metabolite, in A. nidulans and P. chrysogenum with lactose as the carbon source its production occurs right from the beginning of the fermentation run.A strict separation of trophophase (growth phase) and idiophase (metabolite production phase), which has been observed in many antibiotic-producing bacterial cultures, was absent [83–85]. This is consistent with the notion that in fermentation medium, A. nidulans acvA and ipnA gene fusions were expressed for up to 68 h and 46 h, respectively [83]. In contrast, aatA expression was only detected for about 24 h [85]. However, in P. chrysogenum ipnA steady-state mRNA levels increased with the age of the culture, indicating preferential transcription of the gene at late growth times [86]. This is consistent with the observation that expression of an ipnA-uidA gene fusion was only detectable after 24 h in fermentation medium with lactose as the carbon source. In contrast, an acvA-uidA gene fusion seemed to be expressed from the beginning of a fermentation run [87]. Hence, there might even be differences in the temporal expression among genes of the same cluster as well as among genes of clusters in different fungi. 3.5.2 Promoter Structures Studies to analyse promoters of the penicillin biosynthesis genes have been reported of both fungi, i.e., A. nidulans and P. chrysogenum. Deletion analyses revealed that the intergenic region between acvA and ipnA of A. nidulans contains several regions containing cis-acting DNA elements. Furthermore, the promoters of both genes are, at least in part, physically overlapping and share common cis-acting elements [88, 89]. In P. chrysogenum, a deletion analysis of the acvA (pcbAB) promoter region showed that at least three regions are important for regulation under the conditions tested. Together with biochemical assays, such as EMSAs and uracil interference assays a TTAGTAA motif was identified. Point mutations and deletions of the entire TTAGTAA sequence which is a target site, e.g. for BAS2 (PHO2) in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, supported the involvement of this sequence in the binding of a transcriptional activator whose biochemical nature is unknown yet. Furthermore, it was shown that this sequence is required for high level expression of the acvA gene [90] (see below). The promoter strengths of b-lactam biosynthesis genes are rather different. On the basis of reporter gene fusions, it became evident that in all three fungi, i.e. P. chrysogenum, A. nidulans and A. chrysogenum expression of acvA was much weaker compared to that of ipnA [83, 85, 87, 91]. The low expression of acvA is, at least in wild-type strains of A. nidulans, rate-limiting for penicillin production because overexpression of acvA led to drastically increased production of penicillin [92], while similar overexpression of ipnA and aatA did not [75]. In A. nidulans, it was also shown that aatA had lower expression than ipnA [83, 85].
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3.5.3 Carbon Source Regulation Industrial production of penicillin was usually carried out by using lactose as the carbon source (C-source), which gave the highest penicillin titre. The use of excess glucose leads to a drastic reduction of the penicillin titre [83, 93, 94]. This problem is partially overcome by feeding subrepressing doses of glucose and by the use of lactose as C-source [95]. Since in general the fungus grows better with glucose than with lactose [83], the production of penicillin appears to be favoured by sub-optimal growth conditions. C-source regulation seems to act at several points of the penicillin biosynthesis: (i) in P. chrysogenum flux of L-a-AAA to d-(L-a-aminoadipyl)-L-cysteinyl-D-valine (ACV) [96]; (ii) both, transcriptional and post-transcriptional regulation of penicillin biosynthesis genes [13]. The expression of both the acvA (pcbAB) and ipnA (pcbC) gene of P. chrysogenum strain Q176, both measured by the use of the uidA reporter gene, was repressed by glucose [87]. In P. chrysogenum, a deletion analysis of the acvA gene promoter together with EMSAs using protein crude extract led to the suggestion of a putative region which could be responsible for glucose repression [90]. Renno et al. [84] claimed, however, that steady state mRNA levels of all three P. chrysogenum penicillin biosynthesis genes were highest during rapid growth when considerable levels of glucose were present. This shows that measurement of carbon regulation depends, at least in part, on the experimental approach used. In A. nidulans, results obtained with reporter gene fusions showed that the expression of the ipnA gene was repressed when glucose or sucrose was used instead of lactose as the C-source during fermentation [83, 93]. This was further supported by the finding that the IPNS specific activity was drastically reduced in glucose-grown mycelia [83]. The repression of ipnA expression by repressing C-sources occurs, at least in part, at the transcriptional level because the steady state level of ipnA mRNA decreased when mycelia were cultivated with repressing C-sources, such as sucrose [93]. Unexpectedly, in A. nidulans the expression of both acvA and aatA reporter gene fusions was only slightly, if at all, repressed by glucose in fermentation medium [83, 85]. However, the specific activity of the aatA gene product, IAT, was reduced in mycelia grown with glucose instead of lactose [83, 85]. This suggests that the glucose regulation of IAT takes place, at least in part, post-transcriptionally (see below). In contrast to the penicillin production strain AS-P-78 of P. chrysogenum investigated by Revilla et al. [97], the IAT specific activity of both A. nidulans and the P. chrysogenum wild-type strain NRRL1951 was clearly reduced in glucosegrown cultures [83]. To study the molecular basis of C-source regulation, several mutants of A. nidulans carrying previously characterized loci affecting glucose repression of several genes of the primary metabolism (creAd-1, creB304, creC302) [98, 99] were analysed. In these mutants, penicillin production was still reduced by glucose [83, 100]. However, in extreme loss-of-function mutations in creA slightly
Regulation of Penicillin Biosynthesis in Filamentous Fungi
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derepressed ipnA steady state transcript levels were observed [93]. This was consistent with a deletion analysis of the ipnA promoter, demonstrating that a cis-acting DNA region crucial to sucrose repression maps between –1334 and –966 relative to the transcriptional start site of the gene [88]. A single CREA binding site was detected in this region, which was protected in DNase I footprint analysis using a GST::CREA protein which contained amino acids 35–240 of CREA [101]. However, the analysis of the expression of an ipnA-lacZ gene fusion revealed that the identified putative CREA binding site is not functional in vivo [101], making it unlikely that CREA plays a role in C-source repression of penicillin biosynthesis. This also agrees with the finding that acetate and glycerol, which are repressing and derepressing C-sources, respectively, of some primary metabolism genes in the creA-mediated circuit of carbon catabolite repression, behaved opposite to what would be expected from creA control. The use of acetate led to increased steady state levels of ipnA transcript and penicillin titres and glycerol led to the opposite effects, i.e. decreased ipnA transcript levels and penicillin titres [101]. Additional experiments further excluded the possibility of a direct involvement of creB and creC mutations on C-source repression of ipnA transcription [83, 100, 102]. Thus, in A. nidulans the mechanism(s) of regulation of penicillin biosynthesis by repressing C-sources remains to be elucidated. (iii) activation of side chain precursors; glucose was also found to cause inactivation of P. chrysogenum acetyl-CoA synthetase which has the capability to catalyse the activation (to their CoA thioesters) of some of the side chain precursors required for the production of several penicillins in vitro [68] (see above). Previously, it was reported that the uptake of side chain precursors of phenylacetic acid was regulated by glucose [103]. Recently, it was shown, however, that phenylacetic acid passes the plasma membrane via passive diffusion of the protonated species [104], thus excluding that the uptake could be regulated by the available C-source. 3.5.4 pH Regulation Mediated by the Transcriptional Activator PACC Penicillin production is subject to regulation by ambient pH [101, 105]. Wildtype strains of A. nidulans can grow in media over the pH range of 2.5–10.5 [106]. There was markedly more penicillin in the culture broth when the pH value of the medium was kept constant at 8.1 than at 6.5 or 5.1 [105]. The analysis of the molecular basis of this phenomenon showed that the transcriptional regulator PACC is the key player of the pH regulation (Fig. 4). The DNA sequence of the pacC gene consists of 2172 bp interrupted by 2 introns of 85 and 53 bp, respectively. The 678 residue-derived protein (Mr 72,939) revealed that PACC contains three putative Cys2His2 zinc fingers. At alkaline ambient pH, PACC activates transcription of alkaline-expressed genes, e.g., of the alkaline phosphatase and protease genes palD and prtA, respectively, and also of the penicillin biosynthesis genes ipnA [107] and very likely of acvA [108]. The intergenic region between acvA and ipnA was found to contain 4 in vitro
64
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PACC binding sites designated ipnA1, ipnA2, ipnA3 and ipnA4AB, recognized by a GST::PACC(amino acids 31–195) fusion protein (Fig. 4). The fusion protein was demonstrated to bind to the core consensus GCCARG [107]. A mutation analysis of each of these sites using ipnA-lacZ gene fusions revealed that in vivo the binding site ipnA3 was most important for PACC dependent ipnA expression, whereas sites ipnA2 and ipnA4AB were less important, although site ipnA2 was bound with highest affinity by PACC in vitro. Binding site ipnA1 apparently was not required for PACC dependent ipnA expression [109]. As observed for expression of an ipnA-lacZ gene fusion [101], expression of an acvA-uidA gene fusion was increased in a PacC5 mutant strain [108]. pacC5 is an allele which is active irrespective of the ambient pH [107]. Furthermore, addition of amino acids histidine and valine to the culture medium led to acidification of ambient pH and to reduced acvA-uidA expression. This effect was not observed in a deletion strain (D183–312) carrying a deletion spanning PACC binding site ipnA3 (at nt 265–270) nor in the PacC5 mutant strain with a constitutively active PACC protein. Taken together, these data suggest that PACC also regulates acvA expression of A. nidulans predominantly from binding site ipnA3 [108]. At alkaline ambient pH, PACC prevents transcription of acid-expressed genes [107, 110, 111]. PACC must be specifically proteolysed to yield the functional (for both positive and negative roles) version containing the N-terminal 40% of the protein (Fig. 4). The processed form is functional as both activator and repressor. PACC proteolysis occurs in response to a signal provided by the six regulatory pal gene products in alkaline environments [107, 110–112]. In wild-type strains, the pal pathway is thought to introduce a modification of PACC at alkaline pH, disrupting intramolecular interactions to allow activating proteolysis [112] which leads to the removal of a negative-acting C-terminal domain. The mechanism how PACC can avoid its proteolytic activation in the absence of signal transduction has been studied [113]. The activation of PACC requires two sequential proteolytic steps. First, the ‘closed’ translation product is converted to an accessible, committed intermediate by proteolytic elimination of the C-terminus (Fig. 4). This ambient pH-regulated cleavage is required for the final, pH-independent processing reaction and is mediated by a distinct signalling protease (possibly PalB) [114]. Interestingly, ambient pH signalling also regulates nuclear localisation of PACC [115]. The P. chrysogenum pacC gene of strain NRRL1951 is encoded by 1979 bp interrupted by a single intron of 56 bp. The predicted 641-residue protein (Mr 68,681) exhibits most of the features described for the A. nidulans PACC protein, including three zinc fingers of the Cys2His2 class. A fusion protein of glutathione thiotransferase with amino acids 46–154 of P. chrysogenum PACC (GST::PACC (46–154)) overexpressed in E. coli and purified, bound in vitro to the intergenic region between P. chrysogenum acvA and ipnA. By computer analysis seven PACC binding consensus sites (5¢-GCCARG-3¢) were found in the intergenic region. This is consistent with the finding that steady state ipnA mRNA levels were increased at alkaline pH [86]. The upstream region of the P.
Regulation of Penicillin Biosynthesis in Filamentous Fungi
65
Fig. 4 Regulatory genes involved in the regulation of the penicillin biosynthesis genes of A. nidulans. The effects of the indicated amino acids are mediated by the ambient pH most likely via pal genes and the central regulatory protein PACC. The four PACC binding sites bound in vitro by PACC are marked by triangles in the intergenic region between acvA and ipnA. Site 3, which seems to be of major importance for both ipnA-lacZ [109] and acvA-uidA expression [108], is marked by a filled triangle. The model of nuclear import of PACC is adapted from Mingot et al. [71]. The two identified AnCF binding sites are marked with stippled boxes and with Roman numbers (I and II). The AnBH1 binding site is indicated by a dark grey box
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chrysogenum aatA (penDE) gene contains eight binding sites for PACC, whereas that of A. nidulans has just one such sequence, suggesting that these genes might be regulated by PACC as well [86]. In addition, Chu et al. [116] and Feng et al. [117] reported independently of each other that partially purified crude extracts of P. chrysogenum bound in vitro to the sequences TGCCAAG and GCCAAGCC, respectively. These binding sites identified almost certainly correspond to PACC binding sites [86]. Furthermore, the A. chrysogenum PACC homologue was found to activate transcription of the ipnA gene (see chapter Schmitt et al.). PacC genes are not confined to b-lactam producing fungi, as the cloning of the A. niger pacC gene showed [118]. Hence, PACC represents a wide-domain regulator which is involved in the regulation of expression of b-lactam biosynthesis genes. Because the use of glucose or sucrose as the C-source leads to acidification of the medium [83, 93, 101] it was conceivable that the glucose/sucrose effect was due to pH regulation [101]. This was further supported by the observation that external alkaline pH could bypass sucrose repression of steady state ipnA transcript levels and penicillin titres.Additional experiments confirmed that alkaline pH is the factor derepressing penicillin production in 3% sucrose broth [101]. Furthermore, the analysis of PacC mutants revealed that mutations in pacC bypassed C-source regulation of ipnA transcript levels, i.e. pacC mutations caused derepression of steady state levels of the ipnA mRNA in sucrose broth despite external acidic pH resulting from sucrose utilisation [101]. However, neither acidic external pH nor mutations palA1, palB7 and palF5 mimicking the effects of growth at acidic pH, prevented C-source derepression [101]. Furthermore, the PACC binding sites determined in vitro by the use of a fusion polypeptide containing the PACC DNA-binding domain are not located in the cis-acting region which was shown to mediate C-source repression of ipnA-lacZ expression [101, 107]. Taken together, these data support the model of independent regulatory mechanisms, one mediating C-source regulation and another mediating pH regulation through the pacC-encoded transcriptional regulator [101, 107]. Since alkaline pH values per se seem to derepress ipnA transcription, Espeso et al. [101] proposed that alkalinity represents a physiological signal which triggers penicillin biosynthesis. The authors concluded that carbon limitation, either by using less favourable C-sources or by reducing the concentration of favourable C-sources, results in external alkalinisation, whereas sufficient availability of a favourable C-source causes external acidification. Thus, carbon and pH regulation normally act in concert, although through different mechanisms [101]. In contrast to the situation in A. nidulans, alkaline ambient pH did not seem to override the negative effect of repressing C-source on ipnA transcription in P. chrysogenum because full ipnA expression was dependent on C-source derepression irrespective of the ambient pH value [86]. The reason for the pH mediated regulation of penicillin biosynthesis is unclear. It might be connected to the observation that b-lactams exhibit increased
Regulation of Penicillin Biosynthesis in Filamentous Fungi
67
toxicity on at least some bacterial species at alkaline pH. Furthermore, bacterial competition with fungi may be more intense at alkaline pH [110]. 3.5.5 Nitrogen Regulation The effect of the availability of nitrogen source on the penicillin biosynthesis has been discussed for a long time. Sanchez et al. [119] reported the inhibition of the penicillin biosynthesis in P. chrysogenum by high levels of ammonium. In A. chrysogenum, it was found that ammonium concentrations ((NH4)2SO4) higher than 100 mmol/L strongly interfered with cephalosporin C production [120]. It was demonstrated that in P. chrysogenum, ammonium directly influenced the expression of penicillin biosynthesis genes. By using gene fusions of both penicillin biosynthesis genes ipnA and acvA with the E. coli reporter gene uidA, it was shown that the expression of both genes was repressed by addition of 40 mmol/L (NH4)Cl to lactose-grown mycelia [87]. In A. nidulans and N. crassa, global nitrogen repression/derepression is mediated by the major positive control genes areA and nit-2, respectively [121, 122]. The homologous gene of P. chrysogenum, nre, was shown to complement Nit-2 mutants of N. crassa [123]. Each of these three genes encodes regulatory factors with a single Cys-X2-Cys-X17-Cys-X2-Cys-type zinc finger that in combination with an immediate downstream basic region constitutes a DNA-binding domain. The overall amino acid sequences of these three regulatory proteins show only 30% identity, but they have 98% identity in their DNA-binding domains. These transcription factors recognise the consensus sequence GATA and can be grouped together into a GATA protein family [124]. The optimal binding sites for NIT-2 were found to consist of at least two GATA elements, which can face in the same or opposite directions, with a spacing which can vary from 3 to 30 bp [125]. A protein consisting of 181 amino-acid residues of (the 835-residue) P. chrysogenum NRE [126], containing its zinc-finger domain, fused to the N-terminus of E. coli b-GAL bound with high affinity to a DNA fragment derived from the intergenic region between acvA and ipnA of P. chrysogenum.Although there are six GATA sequences found in the intergenic region, missing contact experiments using the b-GAL-NRE fusion protein revealed that NRE strongly interacts with a site that contains two of these GATA sequences [126]. In this binding site, the two GATA core sequences are arranged in a head-to-head fashion and separated by 27 bp. Therefore, it appears very likely that nitrogen metabolite regulation of penicillin biosynthesis genes is mediated through NRE, although in vivo studies are clearly needed to relate NRE binding to potential regulatory functions [126]. This suggests that the availability of favoured nitrogen sources and thus good growth conditions, leads to reduced penicillin synthesis by the fungus. In A. nidulans, however, no evidence for nitrogen dependent regulation of the penicillin biosynthesis has been reported so far. This is also consistent with
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the observation that the intergenic region between acvA and ipnA of A. nidulans only contains a single GATA motif, whereas six GATA sequences are found in the corresponding P. chrysogenum region [126]. Interestingly, the P. chrysogenum promoter was shown to respond to nitrogen control when transformed in A. nidulans indicating that the nitrogen repressing system of A. nidulans acted on the heterologous promoter [127]. Furthermore, it is worth to note that in the intergenic region of the corresponding A. chrysogenum genes [91], there are even 15 GATA motifs present. It is thus conceivable that these genes are also regulated by a GATA factor. 3.5.6 Amino Acids as Mediators of Regulation Because penicillin and cephalosporin are synthesised from the amino acid precursors L-a-AAA, L-cysteine and L-valine, it was conceivable that amino acids play a role in the regulation of their biosyntheses. This was supported by the observation that in both P. chrysogenum and A. nidulans the addition of L-lysine to fermentation medium led to reduced penicillin titres [83, 128]. Since La-AAA is a branch point between L-lysine and penicillin/cephalosporin biosynthesis pathways, L-lysine inhibition of penicillin biosynthesis was suggested to operate at one or more steps of the L-lysine pathway. This was based on the notion that L-lysine feedback inhibited several enzymes of the lysine biosynthesis pathway which might result in a reduced L-a-AAA pool available for penicillin production [13]. However, amino acids also directly affect the expression of b-lactam biosynthesis genes. In A. chrysogenum, it was reported that the addition of D,L-methionine to the medium led to a three- to fourfold increase in production of cephalosporin C. The increased production was paralleled by increased steady state levels of mRNAs of cephalosporin biosynthesis genes acvA, ipnA, cefEF and, to a slight extent cefG [129]. In A. nidulans, differential effects due to various amino acids in the medium on the expression of penicillin biosynthesis genes acvA and ipnA, and penicillin production were measured. L-Amino acids with a major negative effect on the expression of acvA-uidA and ipnA-lacZ gene fusions, i.e. histidine, valine, lysine and methionine (only at concentrations greater than 10 mmol/L), led to decreased penicillin titres and a decreased ambient pH during cultivation of the fungus. An analysis of deletion clones lacking binding sites of the pH dependent transcriptional factor PACC (see above) in the intergenic region between acvA-uidA and ipnA-lacZ gene fusions and in a PacC5 mutant strain suggested that the negative effects of L-histidine and L-valine on acvA-uidA expression were due to reduced activation by PACC under acidic ambient conditions caused by these amino acids (Fig. 4). The repressing effect caused by Llysine and L-methionine on acvA, however, was even enhanced in one of the deletion clones and the pacC5 mutant strain, suggesting that these amino acids act independently of PACC by so far unknown mechanisms on the gene expression [108].
Regulation of Penicillin Biosynthesis in Filamentous Fungi
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A specific effect of the cross-pathway control on the penicillin biosynthesis was excluded. However, a secondary effect was found. It was shown that amino acid limitation led to significantly increased transcription of lysA but not of lysF. The lysF-encoded homoaconitase acts upstream of the a-aminoadipate branch point, whereas the lysA gene product, saccharopine dehydrogenase, catalyses the ultimate step of the lysine-specific branch. Starvation-dependent changes in transcription levels of lysA were dependent on the presence of the central transcriptional activator of the cross-pathway control (CPCA) which is the homologue of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae GCN4. Overproduction of CPCA decreased expression of ipnA and acvA reporter gene fusions and even more drastically reduced penicillin production. This data suggests that, upon amino acid starvation, the cross-pathway control overrules secondary metabolite biosynthesis and favours the metabolic flux towards amino acids instead of penicillin in A. nidulans [130]. 3.5.7 Influence of Oxygen The availability of oxygen is important for penicillin production. Good aeration of mycelia with oxygen is a prerequisite for high b-lactam titres [95, 131]. Since several enzymes require oxygen for their activity, like IPNS and DAOC synthetase/DAC hydroxylase, it is conceivable that this is the reason for oxygen requirement. The importance of oxygen is also supported by the possibility of increasing cephalosporin production genetically by introducing a bacterial oxygen binding protein in A. chrysogenum [132]. However, there is a contradictory report which shows that reduction of oxygen led to increased acvA and ipnA expression of P. chrysogenum, possibly as part of a stress response [84]. 3.5.8 The CCAAT-Box Binding Protein Complex AnCF Based on results with a moving window analysis of the acvA-ipnA intergenic region of A. nidulans and together with band shift and methyl interference assays, a CCAAT-containing DNA motif (box I) located 409 bp upstream of the ATG initiation codon of the acvA gene was identified which is bound by a protein complex designated AnCF (syn. PENR1), for Aspergillus nidulans CCAAT binding factor [89, 133] (Fig. 4). This CCAAT box I is of major importance for the regulation of both genes, since a 4 bp-deletion within this site (DCCA-G) led to an eightfold increase of acvA expression and simultaneously, to a reduction of ipnA expression to about 30% [89]. Furthermore, the A. nidulans aatA promoter region also contains a functional CCAAT element (box II), located about 250 bp upstream of the transcriptional start sites of aatA. It was specifically bound by the same AnCF regulatory protein complex. Substitution of the CCAAT core sequence by GATCC led to a fourfold reduction of ex-
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pression of an aatA-lacZ gene fusion [134] indicating that the identified binding site was functional in vivo and positively influenced aatA expression (Fig. 4). The first CCAAT-box binding factor characterised in detail, was the S. cerevisiae HAP complex, which consists of at least four subunits: HAP2, HAP3 and HAP5 form a heterotrimeric complex that is essential for DNA binding, HAP4 is an acidic protein which acts as the transcriptional activation domain [135, 136]. AnCF of A. nidulans was found to consist at least of three subunits designated HapB, HapC and HapE, all of which are necessary and sufficient for binding of AnCF to the DNA [137, 138]. Deletion mutants of AnCF subunit-encoding genes in A. nidulans, i.e. hapB, hapC and hapE, show an identical phenotype of slow growth and poor conidiation. Band shift experiments and deletion analysis showed that AnCF is also involved in the regulation of the acetamidase gene amdS, which is required for the use of acetamide as the nitrogen and Csource [133, 139]. Consequently, hap mutant strains hardly grew on acetamide as the sole nitrogen and C-source indicating that AnCF plays a role in regulating amdS expression [137, 138]. In addition, the intergenic region of the bidirectionally transcribed genes lamA and lamB (needed for utilisation of lactams) as well as the promoter region of gatA (g-amino butyric acid transaminase) contain CCAAT boxes which were bound by DNA binding factors [140]. An additional CCAAT binding factor (AnCP) of A. nidulans had been proposed [141, 142] which bound in vitro to the Taka-amylase gene promoter of A. oryzae. It turned out that this complex is in fact AnCF [143, 144] although it is unclear whether AnCF always consists of the same subunits, apart from those essential for DNA binding. For AnCF, its binding consensus motif was determined by band shift assays as RRCCAATC/ARCR [13]. Deletion or mutagenesis of the AnCF binding sites in the promoters of the penicillin biosynthesis genes had opposite effects; the expression of acvA was increased eightfold, while the expression of ipnA [89] and aatA [134] was reduced. Consistent with data obtained by deletion of the AnCF binding site, in a DhapC background, expression of both an ipnA-lacZ gene fusion and an aatA-lacZ gene fusion was reduced to 10% compared to their expression in the wild type. Hence, AnCF is a positively acting factor of ipnA and aatA expression. Penicillin titres were reduced in a DhapC background as well, but only by about 30%. In addition, expression of an acvA-uidA gene fusion was hardly affected by the DhapC mutation [145]. The minor effect of lack of AnCF on penicillin production is consistent with the view that acvA expression is rate-limiting in A. nidulans wild-type strains [92]. Consistently, decreased expression of ipnA and aatA even by a factor of five as observed in the DhapC strain, only results in a reduction of penicillin production of about 30% when the expression of the acvA gene is only marginally affected. The observation that acvA expression was less affected in a DhapC strain was unexpected because it was shown that specific deletion of four nucleotides of the AnCF binding site between acvA and ipnA (box I) resulted in a strong in-
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crease of acvA expression [89]. Thus it appears likely that, in addition to AnCF, a repressor protein binds closely to or overlaps the AnCF binding site which would explain that the AnCF binding site exhibits a repressing effect on acvA expression in the wild type. Consistent with this view, lack of AnCF binding in the DhapC mutant did not prevent binding of this putative repressor protein and hence, acvA-uidA expression was not increased. Deletion of the AnCF binding site, however, prevented binding of both AnCF and the repressor causing the phenotype of increased acvA expression. However, the existence of such a putative repressor remains to be shown experimentally. Recently, negative regulation could be assigned to AnCF as well. The lysine biosynthesis gene lysF of A. nidulans is negatively regulated by AnCF [146]. Moreover, it was shown that AnCF is negatively autoregulated by repression of the hapB gene [147]. The physiological function of HAP-like regulatory factors in lower eukaryotes remains obscure. In yeast, the HAP complex activates the expression of genes whose products are required for respiration. Hence, HAP mutants are not able to grow on non-fermentable carbon sources [135, 136]. Because A. nidulans, however, is an aerobic growing fungus, S. cerevisiae may not be a good model for the role of HAP-like complexes in aerobic growing eukaryotes. Furthermore, lack of a functional HAP complex (Dhap strains) is not lethal for A. nidulans [137, 138]. In addition, in A. nidulans AnCF regulates secondary metabolism genes (penicillin biosynthesis genes). Hence, it will be interesting to elucidate whether this particular function of a HAP-like complex requires so far for HAP-complexes unknown accessory proteins, or, alternatively, which mechanism is involved allowing a HAP-like complex to regulate certain sets of genes (see next section). It seems very likely that AnCF is conserved among the industrially important b-lactam producing fungi. This assumption is supported by the observation that DNA fragments spanning the corresponding intergenic regions between acvA and ipnA of P. chrysogenum and A. chrysogenum, and the promoter region of the P. chrysogenum aatA gene were able to dilute the complexes of the corresponding A. nidulans probes and AnCF protein [89, 134]. Computer analysis showed that DNA elements with a high degree of sequence identity to the A. nidulans AnCF site reside within the intergenic regions of both P. chrysogenum and A. chrysogenum and the aatA promoter region of P. chrysogenum. These sites could be potential targets of homologous AnCF complexes in P. chrysogenum and A. chrysogenum. 3.5.9 The A. nidulans bHLH Protein AnBH1 AnCF was shown to bind to a single CCAAT box (box II) present in the promoter of the A. nidulans aatA gene.Attempts at purifying components of AnCF by DNA affinity chromatography using a DNA fragment encoding the region of the CCAAT box II of aatA led to the identification of several protein bands
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in an SDS-PAGE [145]. Some of these did not correspond to the known components of AnCF, i.e. HapB, HapC and HapE [138, 145]. This finding suggested that there might be additional proteins binding to the aatA promoter adjacent or overlapping to the CCAAT box. Using affinity chromatography and standard protein purification, a novel transcription factor designated AnBH1 was isolated. The corresponding anbH1 gene was cloned and found to be located on chromosome IV. The deduced AnBH1 protein belongs to the family of basic-region helix-loop-helix (bHLH) transcription factors. AnBH1 binds in vitro as a homodimer to a not previously described asymmetric E-box within the aatA promoter which overlaps with the AnCF binding site. Since deletion of anbH1 appeared to be lethal the anbH1 gene was replaced by a regulatable alcApanbH1 gene fusion. The analysis of aatAp-lacZ expression in such a strain indicated that AnBH1 acts as a repressor of aatA gene expression and therefore counteracts the positive action of AnCF [148] (Fig. 4). 3.5.10 Velvet A (veA) The velvet gene veA gene was previously shown to mediate a developmental light response [149]. In A. nidulans strains containing a wild-type allele of the velvet gene (veA+), light reduces and delays cleistothecial formation and the fungus develops asexually, whereas in the dark, fungal development is directed toward the sexual stage, forming cleistothecia. Under conditions inducing the sexual development, the veA deletion (DveA) strain is unable to develop sexual structures [150], indicating that veA is required for cleistothecium and ascospore formation. Kato et al. [151] demonstrated that veA regulates the expression of genes implicated in the synthesis of the mycotoxin sterigmatocystin and penicillin. In a DveA strain ipnA transcripts were abundant. However, surprisingly the veA deletion mutant produced less penicillin than the wild type. This contradiction might be explained by the finding that transcript of acvA analysed by RT-PCR was only detected in the veA+ strain, in both light and dark cultures [151]. Hence the authors concluded VeA repressed the transcription of the ipnA gene, and was necessary for the expression of the acvA gene. However, by contrast, previously it was shown that acvA transcript was present in veA mutant strains [24]. Consistently, acvA expression when measured via a gene fusion was clearly detectable in veA mutant strains because most of the laboratory strains of A. nidulans contain a veA mutation [83].
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3.5.11 The Cephalosporin C Regulator CPCR1 Identified in A. chrysogenum Is very Likely also Present in Both A. nidulans and P. chrysogenum CPCR1 was identified by Schmitt and Kück [152] as binding to a region in the promoter of the cephalosporin biosynthesis gene (ipnA) pcbC, located 418 nucleotides upstream of the translational start codon (see chapter Schmitt et al.). By using degenerate oligonucleotides and PCR a putative homologous gene was isolated from P. chrysogenum (PcRFX1) which consists of 855 amino acids. PcRFX1 and CPCR1 share an overall similarity of 29% identical amino acids. However, the similarity in the DNA binding domain to CPCR1 is 60% of identical amino acid residues. Also, a putative homologue was identified in the genome of A. nidulans (see chapter Schmitt et al.). 3.5.12 Recessive Trans-Acting Mutations Affecting the Expression of Penicillin Biosynthesis Genes In A. nidulans, a mutagenesis approach led to the identification of mutants carrying recessive mutations, designated prg (for penicillin regulation) [153] and npeE1 (impaired in penicillin biosynthesis) [154]. Segregation analysis led to the identification of two different complementation groups designated prgA1 and prgB1. For npeE1, genetic analysis showed that the gene is located on linkage group IV [154]. To date, it has not been clarified whether npeE1 differs from prgA1 and prgB1. The mutants exhibited both reduced ipnA-lacZ expression and reduced penicillin titres compared with the wild-type strain. For mutants PrgA1 and PrgB1, it was demonstrated that they also differed in acvA-uidA expression levels from the wild type and that these mutants contained reduced intracellular amounts of IPNS [153]. The results obtained by genetic and biochemical analyses indicated that the mutants most likely carry mutations in positively acting regulatory genes (Fig. 4). A gene was isolated designated suAprgA1 that complemented the prgA1 phenotype to the wild type, i.e. the expression of both gene fusions and the penicillin production nearly reached wild-type levels. Analysis of suAprgA1 in the prgA1 mutant strain did not reveal any mutation in the suAprgA1 gene or unusual transcription of the gene. This suggested that the gene is a suppressor of the prgA1 mutation. The suAprgA1 gene has a size of 1245 bp. Its five exons encode a deduced protein of 303 amino acids. The putative SUAPRGA1 protein showed similarity to both the human p32 protein and the Mam33p of S. cerevisiae. The suAprgA1 gene is located on chromosome VI. Deletion of the suAprgA1 gene led to a reduction of ipnA-lacZ expression to about 50% and to a slight reduction of the acvA-uidA expression. The DsuAprgA1 strain produced about 60% of the amount of penicillin compared with the wild-type strain [155]. SUAPRGA1 was localised in the mitochondria. It appears to bind Ca2+ ions (Gehrke A, Van den Brulle J, Bielen H, Read N, Brakhage AA, unpublished
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results). It is likely that SUAPRGA1 is involved in the generation of a physiological signal which is required for the full expression of the penicillin biosynthesis genes and thus the penicillin production [155]. This assumption is also supported by the observation that overexpression of the suAprgA1 gene in A. nidulans using the alcA promoter of A. nidulans did not result in an increase of penicillin production or expression of penicillin biosynthesis genes beyond the levels observed in wild-type strains (Van den Brulle et al. unpublished data). Using nitrosoguanidine, Cantoral et al. [156] isolated nine mutants of the P. chrysogenum Wis54-1255 strain impaired in penicillin production. Biochemical and genetic analyses suggested that two of these mutants (Npe2 and Npe3) carry mutations in regulatory genes affecting the expression of the entire penicillin biosynthesis gene cluster. 3.5.13 G Protein Mediated Signal Transduction Until now, only little information is available on the signal transduction cascades involved in the b-lactam biosynthesis. Previous work revealed that synthesis of the carcinogenic mycotoxins sterigmatocystin (ST) and aflatoxin (AT) in Aspergillus species is negatively controlled by FADA, the a-subunit of a heterotrimeric G-protein. FADA negatively regulated both asexual reproduction (conidiation) and AF/ST synthesis in these aspergilli [157]. In an A. nidulans strain containing a constitutively activated FADA (fadA G42R), both conidiation and sterigmatocystin production are repressed. Furthermore, the dominant activating fadA allele, fadAG42R, also led to an increased steady state mRNA level of the ipnA gene and concomitantly increased penicillin titres. Taken together, FADA appears to be a member of a signal transduction cascade activating the penicillin biosynthesis and, interestingly, has opposite roles in regulating the biosynthesis of penicillin and the mycotoxin ST in A. nidulans [158]. 3.5.14 Post-Transcriptional Regulation Discrepancies observed between expression of structural genes and enzyme specific activities of the corresponding proteins suggested that besides transcriptional regulation, post-transcriptional regulation of penicillin biosynthesis genes occurs [13]. It was proposed that the glucose effect on IAT specific activity was post-transcriptionally mediated [85]. Furthermore, some discrepancies between ipnA expression and detectable IPNS specific activity were observed by comparing a wild-type strain of A. nidulans with a strain carrying a disrupted acvA gene [159, 160].
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3.6 Regulation of Penicillin Biosynthesis in Fungal Production Strains Apart from the academic interest in elucidating the molecular regulation of biosynthesis of secondary metabolites in lower eukaryotes, there is a strong interest from an industrial point of view because b-lactam compounds are still among the most sold antibiotics in the world’s antibiotic market (see chapter Barber et al.). Hence, it is desirable to analyse high producing production strains which are highly mutated and have been derived from several different strain development programmes. This will help to elucidate both the molecular basis of deregulation and thus high production and also any remaining bottlenecks. Nowadays, industrial penicillin and cephalosporin production is mainly carried out with P. chrysogenum and A. chrysogenum, respectively. Most of these strains have been produced by mutagenesis followed by screening or selection. In 1972, the initial Panlabs Inc. P. chrysogenum strain made 20,000 units of penicillin per mL in seven days (an activity equivalent to 12 mg pure penicillin G, Na salt per mL [95]). In 1990, the improved strain made 70,000 units per mL in seven days. Penicillin titres in industry in 1993 were as high as 100,000 units per mL [19, 30]. Two important genetic features of P. chrysogenum production strains have been identified: (i) amplification of structural genes and (ii) their massively increased steady state mRNA levels. Between 8 and 16 copies are present in the high producer strain P. chrysogenum BW1890 [161]. The P. chrysogenum high titre producing strains P-2 and AS-P-78 (old production strain) carry approximately nine and six copies, respectively, of penicillin biosynthesis genes [162]. Fierro et al. [163] showed that in the high titre P. chrysogenum strains E1 and AS-P-78 the amplifications are organised in tandem repeats.A conserved TTTACA hexanucleotide sequence may be involved in their generation. This TTTACA sequence borders the 106.5-kb long penicillin biosynthesis gene cluster in the wild-type strain NRRL 1951 and also the P. notatum strain ATCC 9478 (Fleming’s isolate). In P. chrysogenum mutants independently isolated, it was shown that in all three mutants deletion of the penicillin biosynthesis gene cluster had occurred at a specific site within the conserved hexanucleotide sequence [164]. It was suggested that this site may represent a hot-spot for site specific recombination after mutation with nitrosoguanidine, the process possibly being part of a fungal SOS system similar to that found in E. coli [163, 164]. In other members of a strain improvement series, the length of the amplicon was found to be 57.5 kb. Furthermore, cDNA screening has failed to identify any further transcribed elements within the coamplified region apart from those derived from the structural penicillin biosynthesis genes [165]. Taken together, these data indicated the presence of recombinogenic regions flanking the penicillin biosynthesis gene cluster [163, 165]. Sequence analysis has shown that no mutations have been generated within the promoter regions of the penicillin biosynthesis structural genes [165]. In addition, data obtained from several production strains indicated that penicillin
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titres were not proportionally increased with copy number. Northern blot analysis established that the ipnA mRNA steady state level of strain BW 1890 was 32to 64-fold that of NRRL1951, an increase too great to be due to the amplification alone [161]. These findings suggest that the increased penicillin production in amplified strains may be due to altered regulation of the biosynthesis pathway through changes in trans-acting regulatory factors [165]. Therefore, it will be of considerable interest to compare regulatory genes already found in both A. nidulans and P. chrysogenum between P. chrysogenum wild-type and production strains. Several studies revealed interesting differences [166]. In contrast to the gene amplification of structural genes reported in P. chrysogenum production strains, in the cephalosporin C production strain A. chrysogenum LU4-79-6, the b-lactam biosynthesis genes seem to be present in single copy (see chapter Schmitt et al.). There are certainly numerous other mutations involved which lead to a high-producing phenotype. These also include factors such as stability of biosynthesis enzymes and deregulation of enzymes involved in amino acid biosynthesis pathways, and hence the amount of precursor amino acids produced [13]. Furthermore, the transport of intermediates of the penicillin biosynthesis between organelles, and the number of organelles can be predicted to be important for penicillin production strains. 3.7 Evolution of b -Lactam Biosynthesis Genes in Fungi b-Lactam biosynthesis genes were found in both some bacterial species and some fungi. Based on several observations, a horizontal transfer of b-lactam biosynthesis genes from bacteria to fungi during evolution was proposed by several authors [51, 167–170]. The arguments in favour of a horizontal gene transfer are as follows. (i) ipnA genes of fungi and bacteria show high sequence similarities. More than 60% of the nucleotide bases and 50% of the deduced amino acids are identical. (ii) Bacterial as well as fungal b-lactam genes are organized in clusters. In bacteria, the b-lactam biosynthesis genes are organized into a single cluster, as are the penicillin biosynthesis genes in fungi. The cephalosporin biosynthesis genes in A. chrysogenum are organized into two clusters located on different chromosomes (Fig. 3). This finding led to the assumption that the b-lactam biosynthesis genes were transferred as a single cluster from an ancestral prokaryote to a common ancestor of the b-lactam synthesising fungi. In the eukaryotic ancestor, the biosynthesis genes were split onto two chromosomes. One part encodes the early genes of b-lactam biosynthesis, the other the late genes. Later in the lineage an ancestor of A. nidulans and P. chrysogenum diverged from A. chrysogenum and has presumably lost the second cluster with the genes for the late stage of cephalosporin biosynthesis [7] (Fig. 3). (iii) The GC content in the third position of codons encoding the ipnA gene of A. nidulans and P. chrysogenum is unusually high and could indicate an evolutionary origin from streptomycetes which show GC contents of
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greater than 70% [51]. (iv) Fungal acvA and ipnA genes do not contain introns indicating a bacterial origin of the genes [13]. Based on the DNA sequences of ipnA genes from Gram-positive streptomycetes and fungi and a rate of nucleotide substitution of 10–9 nucleotide changes per site per year [171],Weigel et al. [170] proposed that the transfer occurred 370 million years ago. The cloning and sequencing of an ipnA gene from a Gram-negative bacterium, Flavobacterium sp., however, led to an extension/modification of the hypothesis of horizontal gene transfer. The ipnA gene of Flavobacterium sp. shares 69% sequence identity with the streptomycetes gene and 64–65% with the fungal genes (A. chrysogenum, P. chrysogenum) [172]. A recent reevaluation of the divergence times of organisms using a protein clock suggested that Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria split about 2 billion years ago, prokaryotes and a eukaryotic ancestor split about 3.2–3.8 billion years ago [173]. If the gene transfer had occurred only 370 million years ago from streptomycetes to fungi as proposed by Weigel et al. [170], it could be expected that the fungal and streptomycetes genes show a greater homology than the Gram-positive (streptomycetes) and Gram-negative genes (Flavobacterium sp.).As outlined above, this is not the case [172]. Hence,Aharonowitz et al. [51] suggested that multiple gene transfer events might have occurred from bacteria to fungi. It is difficult to imagine, however, why these multiple gene transfers then happened at about the same time what would be expected from the degree of similarity between the proteins of the various organisms. In addition, Smith et al. [174] argued against a horizontal transfer. The authors criticised that the hypothesis of a horizontal gene transfer, e.g. of the ipnA gene, was made with a very limited data set and was based solely on assumptions about rates of change. They rooted the tree with two distantly related b-lactam biosynthesis enzymes. They compared the similarity of both IPNS of A. nidulans, P. chrysogenum, A. chrysogenum, S. clavuligerus, S. anulatus and Flavobacterium sp., and DAOC synthase/synthetase of S. clavuligerus and A. chrysogenum. Based on these similarities, a tree arose with conventional evolutionary descent. The authors argued that the simplest interpretation is that the genes for the two enzymes are the result of a duplication that occurred before the prokaryote/eukaryote divergence. However, if the genes appeared very early in the evolution why have most of the eukaryotes and fungi lost the gene cluster? This question cannot be seriously answered at the moment. Thus, the evolutionary origin of b-lactam biosynthesis remains speculative.
4 Applied Implications The increasing knowledge of the molecular genetics of b-lactam biosynthesis has opened up new possibilities to rationally improve b-lactam production strains and to engineer new biosynthesis pathways. This leads to the question, however, whether an improvement of productivity is still possible. Cephalo-
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sporin C production with A. chrysogenum is well below the productivity reached with P. chrysogenum for penicillin. Therefore, there is much effort needed to increase cephalosporin C production. For penicillin, several theoretical models have been established based on the available experimental data [175]. By using detailed stoichiometric models, the theoretical yield was calculated to be 0.47–0.50 moles penicillin per mole glucose [176, 177]. Until today, the maximum theoretical yields calculated are eight to ten times higher than the overall yields observed in fed-batch cultures, and there is therefore a considerable potential for further improvement of the process. However, it seems unlikely that the maximum theoretical yields can be reached in a real process since the penicillin biosynthesis is indirectly coupled to other cellular reactions. Therefore, taking this into account it was estimated that it should still be possible to improve the current yields by a factor of four to five [175]. Several molecular strategies have been followed to improve or alter b-lactam production. (i) Introducing additional copies or overexpression using strong promoters of b-lactam biosynthesis genes. (ii) Metabolic engineering of b-lactam biosynthesis pathways by expression of heterologous genes, e.g. production of cephalosporin precursors in P. chrysogenum. (iii) Use of the increasing knowledge of peptide synthetase genes such as those for ACVS enzymes to produce novel compounds by genetic engineering [178]. (iv) Manipulation of regulatory genes which has not been reported yet because results on the identification of regulatory genes are just being accumulated. 4.1 Increase of Expression of Penicillin Biosynthesis Genes In an A. nidulans wild-type strain acvA expression is rate-limiting for penicillin production. The acvA gene promoter was replaced by the strong inducible ethanol dehydrogenase promoter (alcAp). The expression level of alcAp was determined using a strain in which the reporter gene, lacZ, is under the control of alcAp, and was found to be up to 100 times greater than that from the acvA promoter when induced in fermentation conditions with the artificial inducer cyclopentanone. Penicillin yields were found to be increased by as much as 30fold when the acvA gene was overexpressed by induction of the alcA promoter. Glucose, which strongly represses transcription from alcAp, also repressed penicillin biosynthesis in the overproducing strain [92]. Overexpression of both the ipnA and aatA gene of A. nidulans using the alcA promoter resulted in tenfold higher levels of ipnA or aatA transcripts than those resulting from transcription of the corresponding endogenous genes. This increase caused a 40-fold rise in IPNS activity or an 8-fold rise in IAT activity. Despite this rise in enzyme levels, forced expression of the ipnA gene resulted only in a modest increase in levels of exported penicillin (increase by about 25%), whereas forced expression of the aatA gene even reduced penicillin production (decrease by about 10–30%), showing that neither of these enzymes is rate-limiting for penicillin biosynthesis [75].
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Consistent with data obtained with A. nidulans, only transformants of the low-producing, single gene copy strain Wis54-1255 containing extra copies of the whole biosynthesis gene cluster produced more penicillin, whereas transformants carrying only extra copies of individual genes did not [179]. 4.2 Genetic Engineering of b -Lactam Biosynthesis Pathways Processes based on genetic engineering to produce novel cephalosporin derivatives biosynthetically have been introduced (see chapters of Schmitt et al. and Evers et al.).
5 Future Prospects Although considerable progress has been made in the understanding of the molecular regulation of penicillin/cephalosporin biosynthesis in fungi, our picture is far from being complete. Research on the regulation of biosyntheses of b-lactam antibiotics is heading towards the elucidation of (i) further regulatory circuits involved, (ii) inducing/repressing signals, (iii) signal transduction pathways (missing links between regulatory circuits and regulatory genes), (iv) additional regulators (transcriptional factors, co-activators/co-repressors) and (v) the mode of action of these regulatory proteins. Understanding these aspects will also help to explain the possible physiological and ecological functions of b-lactams for the producing fungi, the evolution of the pathways and also the recruitment of trans-acting factors to regulate the biosynthesis genes. The application of this knowledge will contribute not only to a further increase of blactam production and to the production of novel related compounds, but also to the identification of new b-lactam producing organisms by genetic means. Acknowledgements We gratefully acknowledge the former and current members of the laboratory for their dedicated work. Research in the authors’ laboratory was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Priority Programme SPP1152) and the European Union (EUROFUNGII).
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142. Nagata O, Takashima T, Tanaka M, Tsukagoshi N (1993) Aspergillus nidulans nuclear proteins bind to a CCAAT element and the adjacent upstream sequence in the promoter region of the starch-inducible Taka-amylase A gene. Mol Gen Genet 237:251–260 143. Kato M, Aoyama A, Naruse F, Tateyama Y, Hayashi K, Miyazaki M, Papagiannopoulos P, Davis MA, Hynes MJ, Kobayashi T, Tsukagoshi N (1998) The Aspergillus nidulans CCAAT-binding factor, AnCP/AnCF, is a heteromeric protein analogous to the HAP complex of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Mol Gen Genet 257:404–411 144. Kato M, Naruse F, Kobayashi T, Tsukagoshi N (2001) No factors except for the hap complex increase the Taka-amylase A gene expression by binding to the CCAAT sequence in the promoter region. Biosci Biotechnol Biochem 65:2340–2342 145. Litzka O, Papagiannopoulos P, Davis MA, Hynes MJ, Brakhage AA (1998) The penicillin regulator PENR1 of Aspergillus nidulans is a HAP-like transcriptional complex. Eur J Biochem 251:758–767 146. Weidner G, Steidl S, Brakhage AA (2001) The Aspergillus nidulans homoaconitase gene lysF is negatively regulated by the multimeric CCAAT-binding complex AnCF and positively regulated by GATA sites. Arch Microbiol 175:122–132 147. Steidl S, Hynes MJ, Brakhage AA (2001) The Aspergillus nidulans multimeric CCAAT binding complex AnCF is negatively autoregulated via its hapB subunit gene. J Mol Biol 306:643–653 148. Caruso ML, Litzka O, Martic G, Lottspeich F, Brakhage AA (2002) Novel basic-region helix-loop-helix transcription factor (AnBH1) of Aspergillus nidulans counteracts the CCAAT-binding complex AnCF in the promoter of a penicillin biosynthesis gene. J Mol Biol 323:425–439 149. Yager LN (1992) Early developmental events during asexual and sexual sporulation in Aspergillus nidulans. Bio/Technology 23:19–41 150. Kim H, Han K, Kim D, Han D, Jahng K, Chae K (2002) The veA gene activates sexual development in Aspergillus nidulans. Fungal Genet Biol 37:72–80 151. Kato N, Brooks W, Calvo AM (2003) The expression of sterigmatocystin and penicillin genes in Aspergillus nidulans is controlled by veA, a gene required for sexual development. Eukaryotic Cell 2:1178–1186 152. Schmitt EK, Kück U (2000) The fungal CPCR1 protein, which binds specifically to b-lactam biosynthesis genes, is related to human regulatory factor X transcription factors. J Biol Chem 275:9348–9357 153. Brakhage AA,Van den Brulle J (1995) Use of reporter genes to identify recessive transacting mutations specifically involved in the regulation of Aspergillus nidulans penicillin biosynthesis genes. J Bacteriol 177:2781–2788 154. Pérez-Esteban B, Gómez-Pardo E, Peñalva MA (1995) A lacZ reporter fusion method for the genetic analysis of regulatory mutations in pathways of fungal secondary metabolism and its application to the Aspergillus nidulans penicillin pathway.J Bacteriol 177:6069–6076 155. Van den Brulle J, Steidl S, Brakhage AA (1999) Cloning and characterization of an Aspergillus nidulans gene involved in the regulation of penicillin biosynthesis. Appl Environ Microbiol 65:5222–5228 156. Cantoral JM, Gutiérrez S, Fierro F, Gil-Espinosa S, van Liempt H, Martin JF (1993) Biochemical characterisation and molecular genetics of nine mutants of Penicillium chrysogenum impaired in penicillin biosynthesis. J Biol Chem 268:737–744 157. Hicks JK, Yu JH, Keller NP, Adams TH (1997) Aspergillus sporulation and mycotoxin production both require inactivation of the FadA G a protein-dependent signaling pathway. EMBO J 16:4916–4923 158. Tag A, Hicks J, Garifullina G,Ake C Jr, Phillips TD, Beremand M, Keller N (2000) G-protein signalling mediates differential production of toxic secondary metabolites. Mol Microbiol 38:658–665
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Adv Biochem Engin/Biotechnol (2004) 88: 91– 109 DOI 10.1007/b199258 © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2004
Novel Genes Involved in Cephalosporin Biosynthesis: The Three-component Isopenicillin N Epimerase System Juan F. Martín 1 (✉) · Ricardo V. Ullán 2 · Javier Casqueiro 2 1
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University of León, Area of Microbiology, Faculty of Biology and Environmental Sciences, 24071 León, Spain Institute of Biotechnology (INBIOTEC), Avda. del Real n°1, 24006 León, Spain
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Biosynthesis of Cephalosporins and Cephamycins . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Genes Encoding Enzymes Involved in Cephalosporin Biosynthesis . . . . . The Missing Gene: Where Is the Gene(s) Encoding the IPN Epimerization Step? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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Isomerases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Individual Amino Acid Racemases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Epimerization Domains in Non-Ribosomal Peptide Synthetases (NRPSs) D-Alanine Racemases in the Cyclosporin and HC-Toxin Biosynthesis Pathways . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Hydroxyproline 2-Epimerase of Pseudomonas putida . . . . . . . . . . Isomerization of Fatty Acids as Acyl-CoA Derivatives . . . . . . . . . .
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The Isopenicillin N Epimerase System . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A Transcriptional Map of the Region Located Downstream of pcbC Revealed Additional Genes Involved in Cephalosporin Biosynthesis . . . . The IPN Epimerase System Consists of Two Proteins with High Similarity to Acyl-CoA Synthetases and Acyl-CoA Racemases, Respectively . . . . . Targeted Inactivation of ORF1 and ORF2 Results in Mutants Blocked in Cephalosporin Production . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Disrupted Transformants Lack Isopenicillin N Epimerase Activity and Accumulate Isopenicillin N . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Complementation of Both cefD1 and cefD2 Mutations is Required for Restoration of Epimerase Activity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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Summary and Future Outlook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106
References
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Abstract Cephalosporin is one of the best b-lactam antibiotics, widely used in the treatment of infectious diseases. It is synthesized by Acremonium chrysogenum. The levels of cephalosporin produced by the improved strains obtained by classical mutation and selection procedures are still low compared to the penicillin titers obtained from the high-producing Penicillium chrysogenum strains. Most of the genes encoding the cephalosporin biosynthesis enzymes have been cloned, and some improvement of cephalosporin production has been achieved by removing bottlenecks in the pathway. One of the poorly-known steps involved in cephalosporin biosynthesis is the conversion of isopenicillin N into penicillin N catalyzed by the isopenicillin N epimerase system. This epimerization reaction is catalyzed by a two-component protein system encoded by the cefD1 and cefD2 genes that correspond, respectively, to an isopenicillinyl-CoA ligase and an isopenicillinyl-CoA epimerase. Comparative analysis of those proteins with others in the databanks provide evidence indicating that they are related to enzymes catalyzing the catabolism of toxic metabolites in animals. There are several biochemical mechanisms, reviewed in this article, for the biosynthesis of D-amino acids in secondary metabolites. The conversion of isopenicillin N to penicillin N in cephamycin-producing bacteria is mediated by a classical pyridoxal phosphate-dependent epimerase that is clearly different from the epimerization system existing in Acremonium chrysogenum. Modification of gene expression by directed manipulation of the cefD1-cefD2 bidirectional promoter region is a promising strategy for improving cephalosporin production. Improving our knowledge of the mechanism of epimerization systems is important if we wish to understand how microorganisms synthesize the high number of rare D-amino acids that are responsible, to a large extent, for the biological activities of many different secondary metabolites. Keywords Cephalosporin biosynthesis · Isopenicillin N · Penicillin N · Epimerization system · Coenzyme A activation · Thioesterase
1 Cephalosporins and Cephamycin-Producing Organisms b-lactam antibiotics are produced by a restricted number of microorganisms although they belong to a variety of unrelated taxons, including filamentous fungi, filamentous Gram-positive bacteria with high G+C content (Streptomyces and Amycolatopsis) [1] and unicellular Gram-negative bacteria Flavobacterium, Xanthomonas and Lysobacter [2]. This distribution of b-lactam antibiotics that does not conform to established phylogenetic patterns is the basis for the proposal of a horizontal transfer of the b-lactam biosynthesis genes among soil-inhabiting microorganisms [3, 4]. Several species of filamentous fungi belonging to the genera Acremonium (syn. Cephalosporium), Anixiopsis, Arachnomyces, Spiroidium, Scopulariopsis, Diheterospora, and Paecilomyces have been reported to produce cephalosporins [5, 6]. An early study revealed the presence of non-ribosomal peptide intermediates of cephalosporin biosynthesis in Paecilomyces persicinus [5]. Later we confirmed the presence of the pcbAB, pcbC and cefEF genes in this Paecilomyces species by hybridization (J.L. Barredo, S. Gutiérrez and J.F. Martín, unpublished results) but no further information is available on the molecular ge-
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netics of cephalosporin biosynthesis in this strain. Recently, an incomplete cephalosporin gene cluster has been found in the marine fungus Kallichroma tethys [7]. A comparative analysis of the K. tethys and an A. chrysogenum cephalosporin gene cluster is described at the end of this article.
2 Biosynthesis of Cephalosporins and Cephamycins The biosynthesis of cephalosporins is an excellent model for the study of secondary metabolism since considerable information on the enzymology (reviewed in [8–10]), molecular genetics and gene expression mechanisms [2, 11, 12] have accumulated in the last few years. The biosynthesis of cephalosporins by Acremonium chrysogenum (syn. Acremonium strictum) and cephamycins by Amycolatopsis (Nocardia) lactamdurans and Steptomyces clavuligerus (reviewed in [13, 14]) begins with the formation of the tripeptide d-(L-a-aminoadipyl)-L-cysteinyl-D-valine (ACV) by the ACV synthetase [15–17], followed by cyclization of ACV to isopenicillin N (IPN). IPN is later converted into penicillin N by an epimerase activity that has remained uncharacterized so far in A. chrysogenum. After the epimerization step, penicillin N is transformed by a deacetoxycephalosporin C synthase (expandase) into deacetoxycephalosporin C (DAOC), and finally, DAOC is converted into deacetylcephalosporin C (DAC) and cephalosporin C by DAC synthase (hydroxylase) and DAC acetyltransferase, respectively [9] (Fig. 1). 2.1 Genes Encoding Enzymes Involved in Cephalosporin Biosynthesis The genes pcbAB [18] and pcbC [19] encoding, respectively, ACV synthetase and IPN synthase are linked together in chromosome VII in the so-called “early cephalosporin gene cluster” [20]. There are two other genes linked to this cluster, ORF3 encoding a putative D-hydroxyacid dehydrogenase and cefT that encodes a transmembrane protein of the major facilitator superfamily (MFS) that may be involved in cephalosporin secretion [21) (Fig. 2). The genes cefEF encoding the bifunctional DAOC synthase (expandase)-hydroxylase [22] and cefG encoding the DAC acetyltransferase [23–25] are linked together in the so-called “late cephalosporin cluster” on chromosome I [20] (Fig. 2). 2.2 The Missing Gene: Where Is the Gene(s) Encoding the IPN Epimerization Step? The IPN epimerization step has remained unclear for decades. Demain and coworkers reported that isopenicillin N was converted into penicillin N by extracts of A. chrysogenum [26–28] although the epimerizing enzyme was extremely labile [29], preventing purification and, therefore, further characteri-
Fig. 1 Biosynthesis pathway of cephalosporin C in A. chrysogenum. The step(s) catalyzed by the isopenicillin N epimerase is indicated by a question mark
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Fig. 2 Cephalosporin gene clusters in A. chrysogenum. The cluster of “early” genes located on chromosome VII includes, in addition to pcbAB and pcbC, the epimerase genes cefD1 and cefD2 and the cefT gene encoding a transmembrane protein. The cluster of “late” genes located on chromosome I includes cefEF and cefG
zation of the protein. However, the IPN epimerase has been purified from S. clavuligerus [30, 31] and Amycolatopsis lactamdurans [32], and the cefD gene encoding this protein was cloned from both microorganisms [33, 34]. The bacterial IPN epimerases are pyridoxal-phosphate-dependent enzymes and do not appear to require ancillary proteins for their epimerization activity. Repeated attempts to clone the homologous cefD gene of A. chrysogenum using the bacterial cefD gene or oligonucleotides based on conserved amino acid sequences of bacterial epimerases with the A. chrysogenum preferred codon usage as probe were unsuccessful (S. Gutiérrez and J.F. Martín, unpublished data). These results suggested that the fungal IPN epimerization system was different to the bacterial one.
3 Isomerases The term “isomerases” designates a broad group of enzymes that are able to catalyze a variety of molecular transpositions resulting in the optical inversion of an asymmetric carbon atom. These molecular transpositions extend from simple optical inversions or racemization (epimerases and racemases) to more complex interconversions by tautomerization or intramolecular group transpositions (mutases). Isomerases are classified into five groups: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Racemases and epimerases Cis-trans isomerases Intramolecular oxidoreductases Intramolecular transferases Intramolecular lyases
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We refer in this article only to racemases and epimerases. The term racemase is used for enzymes that work on substrates with a single active site, whereas the term epimerase refers to enzymes acting on substrates with more than one active center. 3.1 Individual Amino Acid Racemases With the exception of glycine, all other amino acids are optically active and contain at least one asymmetric (optically active) carbon atom. An amino acid may have 2n optical isomers where n is the number of asymmetrically substituted carbon atoms in the molecule. Most amino acid racemases are of bacterial origin, although two different alanine racemases have been reported to be involved in fungal non-ribosomal peptide synthesis [35, 36]. The molecular mechanism of action of bacterial amino acid racemases is well known. Racemization of amino acids by these enzymes requires pyridoxal phosphate (PLP) (Fig. 3). The racemization process proceeds in four steps: 1. Formation of the initial imine (Schiff base). The amino group of the amino
acid forms an imino bond by a Schiff base mechanism with the aldehyde group of PLP. As a result of the Schiff base reaction, a system of conjugated double bonds is formed between the quaternary N+ atom of the PLP and the a carbon of the amino acid that leads to a debilitation of the C-H bond at the a carbon due to the tendency of an electron to migrate towards the quaternary N+. 2. Formation of the transitional imine. The weakening of the C-H bond at the a-carbon of the amino acid gives rise to a deprotonation forming the transitional imine.After deprotonation, the residual electron at carbon 2 confers a negative charge to this carbon atom (Fig. 3). 3. Protonation. Due to the excess negative charge at carbon 2 of the transitional imine, a protonation takes place in the opposite orientation at carbon 2, giving rise to the amino acid enantiomer. Following the protonation reaction there is a rearrangement of the double bonds in the transitional imine with the recovery of the positive charge at the quaternary nitrogen. 4. Hydrolysis. In the last step the racemases hydrolyze the double bond between the PLP and the amino group of the amino acid regenerating the PLP cofactor. The released amino acid is in the D-configuration. Bacterial racemases catalyze reversible reactions and, therefore, there is a final equilibrium of the two enantiomeric forms of the amino acid. Further reactions that consume the D-isomer for biosynthetic purposes displace the equilibrium reaction towards the D-form of the amino acid.
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Fig. 3 Proposed molecular mechanism of conversion of an L-amino acid to its D-form by PLP-dependent amino acid racemases. The L- and D-forms of the amino acids are in shaded circles. PLP is pyridoxal phosphate. B1, B2, B3 are aminoacid residues involved in proton donation and abstraction. A tyrosine residue in the protein (Tyr, shaded) has been proposed to be involved in proton abstraction from the PLP intermediate (based on the model of Watababe et al. [74])
3.2 Epimerization Domains in Non-Ribosomal Peptide Synthetases (NRPSs) Many non-ribosomally synthesized peptides contain D-amino acids [37–40]. Precursor studies revealed that the L-amino acids rather than the D-enantiomers are incorporated into the relevant D-amino acid positions. This has been shown for bacitracin, actinomycin, etamycin, and penicillins. In the actinomycins, position 2 of the cromophore-linked peptide contains D-valine (or Dalloisoleucine). In vivo studies on actinomycin D synthesis indicated that L-valine rather than D-valine is the precursor of peptide-bound D-valine and that the epimerization proceeds via loss of hydrogen at C-2 of valine [41]. The multifunctional enzyme actinomycin synthetase II (280 kDa) assembles the amino
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acids L-threonine and L-valine in positions 1 and 2 in the precursor peptide of actinomycin by activating them as enzyme-bound thioesters via their corresponding adenylates [42]. The C-terminal region of the ACV synthetases of Penicillium chrysogenum, Aspergillus nidulans, Acremonium chrysogenum and Amycolatopsis lactamdurans located at the end of the third module shows high similarity to the homologous regions of gramicidin synthetase I (GS1) and tyrocidine synthetase I (TY1) and the third module of the surfactin synthetase I. Since all peptide antibiotics synthesized by these peptide synthetases contain a D-amino acid in its carboxyl terminal region (D-Phe in gramicidin and tyrocidine; D-leu in surfactin) it was proposed that an epimerization region of about 365 amino acids is located in this region [43, 44]. Epimerization domains of several non-ribosomal peptide synthetases are now known and all contain characteristic signature sequences. These motifs have been found in the V domain of ACV synthetases [17] and in HC-toxin synthetase domain epimerizing L-Pro to D-Pro [35] (Fig. 4). However, very little is known about the molecular mechanism of epimerization. The involvement of a basic amino acid in these motifs as a proton donor/acceptor during racemization of phenylalanine has been proposed [44]. Epimerization of the amino acids in the epimerization domain of the nonribosomal peptide synthetases occurs while the amino acid residue is attached to the phosphopantetheine arm of the corresponding module. Similarly, the methylacyl-CoA racemase catalyzes the epimerization of the methylacyl group
Fig. 4 Conserved motifs E1 to E7 in the epimerization domain (E) of the third (Val) module of the ACV synthetases of P. chrysogenum, A. chrysogenum, A. lactamdurans and A. nidulans compared to the GrsA (GSI) and the SrfA modules of B. subtilis and the HC toxin synthetase of C. carbonum (from [40])
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while it is activated with CoA. Further biochemical analyses of these epimerization domains are required to confirm that these integrated domains of nonribosomal peptide synthetases constitute an authentic catalytic site for amino acid epimerization. 3.3 D-Alanine Racemases in the Cyclosporin and HC-Toxin Biosynthesis Pathways On the other hand, the D-alanine component of both cyclosporin and HC-toxin is provided by a distinct alanine racemase that may interact with the peptide synthetase [36]. Cyclosporin is an undecapeptide containing D-Ala produced by Tolypocladium niveum. Analysis of the primary sequence of the cyclosporin synthetase indicated that it lacks an epimerization signature motif in its D-Alaactivating domain [45, 46]. Hoffmann and coworkers [36] provided conclusive evidence showing that a separate alanine racemase catalyzes the synthesis of D-alanine. The structural properties and kinetics of the T. niveum D-alanine racemase indicate a close relationship with the procaryotic alanine-racemases involved in cell wall biosynthesis. The T. niveumD-alanine racemase has a molecular mass of 37 kDa, in the range of the bacterial alanine racemases (about 40 kDa). The activity of the T. niveum racemase also depends on PLP. This cofactor was found to be loosely bound to the enzyme and could be removed by gel filtration or dialysis. The activity of the enzyme was inhibited by hydroxylamine, an inhibitor of PLP-dependent enzymes and by L-(1-aminoethyl)-phosphonate (alo-P) [36]. These authors provided evidence that the D-alanine racemase is limiting for cyclosporin biosynthesis. The cyclic tetrapeptide HC-toxin is an essential virulence determinant for the plant pathogenic fungus Cochliobolus carbonum. The major form of HCtoxin contains the D-isomers of Ala and Pro. The source of D-Ala has been clarified by Cheng and Walton [35]. The central enzyme in HC toxin biosynthesis is HC-toxin synthetase (HTS), a 570-kDa NRPS with four amino acid-activating domains. The HTS has only one epimerase motif, in the L-Pro activating domain. The HC-toxin producer Cochliobolus carbonum contains an alanine racemase encoded by the toxG gene involved in the conversion of L- to D-alanine, separated from the HC-toxin synthetase [35]. Therefore, in this filamentous fungus there is an epimerization domain converting L- to D-proline integrated in the HC-toxin synthetase and a separate alanine racemase. The interaction of a non-ribosomal peptide synthetase with a separate low molecular weight amino acid racemase is another interesting example of the collaboration of different amino acids activating and isomerizing enzymes for the biosynthesis of secondary metabolites.
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3.4 Hydroxyproline 2-Epimerase of Pseudomonas putida An entirely different isomerization mechanism is involved in the conversion of 4-hydroxy-L-proline to 4-hydroxy-D-proline in Pseudomonas putida catalyzed by the enzyme hydroxyproline-2-epimerase. The enzyme purified to homogeneity does not contain PLP [47] and resembles proline racemase of Clostridium sticklandii [48]. Kinetics and structural data suggested a model for hydroxyproline 2-epimerase in which two cysteine residues act as reciprocal donor/acceptor of the a-hydrogen of the substrate, thereby effecting racemization [49]. 3.5 Isomerization of Fatty Acids as Acyl-CoA Derivatives Some isomerases catalyze isomerization reactions on acyl-CoA derivatives that are required for modifications of the fatty acids that allow b-oxidation of these compounds in eukaryotic cells. The best known are the methylacyl-CoA racemase, the D3,5-D2,4 dienoyl-CoA isomerase and D3-D2-enoyl-CoA isomerase [50]. All of these isomerases act on substrates that are activated as CoA-derivatives. The formation of the CoA derivative requires ATP and is catalyzed by a different type of enzymes: the acyl-CoA synthetases that are classified into subclasses depending upon the length of the fatty acid used as substrate. These acyl-CoA synthetases are usually associated with the endoplasmic reticulum or the mitochondrial membrane [50]. In a first step, the fatty acid is activated with ATP, forming the corresponding acyladenylate and releasing pyrophosphate. In a second step of the reaction the sulfhydryl group of CoA displaces the AMP residue from the acyl-adenylate forming acyl-CoA. Methylacyl-CoA racemase. The methylacyl-CoA racemase catalyzes the reversible conversion of (2R)methyl-acyl-CoA into (2S)methylacyl-CoA. This reaction occurs in the racemization of (2R)pristanic acid into its 2S enantiomer acid that is involved in the catabolism of pristanic acid, a product formed during degradation of the chlorophyll [51, 52]. The 2S-pristanoyl (but not its 2R enantiomer) is later degraded by pristanoyl-CoA oxidase through the b-oxidation pathway [53]. ∆3,5-∆2,4 Dienoyl-CoA isomerase and ∆3-∆2 Enoyl-CoA isomerase. During boxidation of the unsaturated fatty acids, the presence of a double bond in some configurations prevents recognition and, therefore, further degradation of these fatty acids. The dienoyl-CoA isomerase has both isomerase and reductase activity and converts trans-3-cis-5 3,5-dienoyl-CoA into trans-2, trans-4 2,4dienoyl-CoA that is further degraded [54]. Similarly, in the degradation of even-numbered unsaturated fatty acids, the ∆3-∆2-enoyl-CoA isomerase isomerizes the trans-∆3-enoyl-CoA to trans-∆2enoyl-CoA that then may be degraded by hydratase activity present in the same proteins [55, 56].
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4 The Isopenicillin N Epimerase System 4.1 A Transcriptional Map of the Region Located Downstream of pcbC Revealed Additional Genes Involved in Cephalosporin Biosynthesis Genes encoding enzymes involved in the biosynthesis of secondary metabolites are usually clustered both in bacteria [57] and in filamentous fungi [58–60]. Since the genes encoding all other proteins involved in CPC biosynthesis are clustered in two separate loci, we hypothesized that the gene encoding the protein(s) involved in the conversion of isopenicillin N into penicillin N might be located in one of the two cephalosporin gene clusters. To search for genes located in the early cluster downstream from the pcbC gene, a transcript map of this region was made [61] using RNA extracted from mycelia of A. chrysogenum grown for 48 h in MDFA medium [62] and five probes covering 9 kb downstream of the pcbC gene. Hybridization results showed the presence in this region of two new genes cefD1 and cefD2 (Fig. 2). 4.2 The IPN Epimerase System Consists of Two Proteins with High Similarity to Acyl-CoA Synthetases and Acyl-CoA Racemases, Respectively Sequence analysis of the region downstream of pcbC, corresponding to the two new transcripts, revealed the presence of two open reading frames ORF1 and ORF2 (Fig. 2). ORF1 has 2193 nucleotides and it is interrupted by five introns. This gene was also cloned from a previously constructed cDNA library [63] and the sequence confirmed the presence of the five introns. ORF1 encodes a protein of 642 amino acids with a deduced molecular mass of 71 kDa that showed similarity to long chain acyl-CoA synthetases, particularly those from Homo sapiens and other eukaryotes [64]. The ORF1-encoded protein has all the characteristic motifs of the acyl-CoA ligases involved in the activation (usually through an adenylation step) of the carboxyl group of fatty acids or amino acids [65]. ORF2 consists of 1146 nucleotides and it is interrupted by one intron that was confirmed by RT-PCR. ORF2 encoded a protein of 383 amino acids with a deduced molecular weight of 41.4 kDa. The encoded protein showed high similarity to a-methylacyl-CoA racemases from eukaryotic cells [61]. 4.3 Targeted Inactivation of ORF1 and ORF2 Results in Mutants Blocked in Cephalosporin Production Targeted inactivation of both genes was performed with the double marker technique [66] developed for targeted inactivation in A. chrysogenum [67]. Nine
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transformants showed a drastic reduction in the cephalosporin production and seven additional transformants showed no cephalosporin production at all. Inactivation of cefD1-cefD2 in the seven non-producing transformants took place by a canonical double crossing-over at the right position, as shown by Southern blot analysis [61]. In two other mutants with drastic reduction in the cephalosporin production a non-canonical recombination process had occurred at the cefD1-cefD2 locus. By contrast, in the transformant showing no reduction in cephalosporin production, an ectopic integration of the plasmid had occurred. 4.4 The Disrupted Transformants Lack Isopenicillin N Epimerase Activity and Accumulate Isopenicillin N Enzyme analysis showed that the isopenicillin N epimerase activity was absent in the ORF1-ORF2 disrupted strains, both at 72 and 96 h, whereas the A. chrysogenum C10 showed a high level of IPN epimerase activity. These results clearly indicated that the proteins encoded by the ORF1 and ORF2 are involved in the epimerization step in cephalosporin C biosynthesis. Therefore, the corresponding genes have been named cefD1 and cefD2 according to standard b-lactam gene nomenclature since the designation cefD is used to describe the bacterial epimerase gene [68]. HPLC analysis showed that in A. chrysogenum C10 culture broth the peaks corresponding to both isopenicillin N and penicillin N were present. However, in the three disrupted strains tested, the peak corresponding to penicillin N was absent and at the same time there was an accumulation of isopenicillin N, confirming that the disrupted strains are blocked in isopenicillin N epimerase [61]. 4.5 Complementation of Both cefD1 and cefD2 Mutations is Required for Restoration of Epimerase Activity The IPN epimerase activity was measured in three representative transformants TCD1, TCD2 and TCD1+2 to study which of the two ORFs was responsible for the epimerization step. The epimerase activity was only restored in A. chrysogenum TCD1+2 transformants (in which cefD1 and cefD2 are present). In transformants TCD1 or TCD2 where just one of the genes was functional, no epimerase activity was detected. These results indicate that both cefD1 and cefD2 proteins are indeed required for the epimerization of isopenicillin N into penicillin N. Cephalosporin C production studies with three of the TCD1, TCD2 and TCD1+2 transformants showed that, in TCD1+2 transformants, the cephalosporin production was restored to levels similar to those of the parental strain A. chrysogenum C10. HPLC analysis confirmed that TCD1+2 transformants produced authentic cephalosporin C as in A. chrysogenum C10 [61].
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5 Mechanism of Action of the Fungal Isopenicillin N Epimerase A mechanism of action of the A. chrysogenum two-component IPN epimerase system has been proposed on the basis of homology of the CefD1 and CefD2 proteins with known eukaryotic epimerases (Fig. 5). Such epimerization systems that require previous activation of the substrate as CoA-derivatives have been reported to be involved in the racemization of phytanic acid and in the inversion of ibuprofen in humans. Phytanic acid occurs naturally as a mixture of the (3R) and the (3S)-diastereomers and is converted after a-oxidation into pristanic acid. The oxidases and dehydrogenases responsible for further b-oxidation of phytanic acid act only on (2S)-2-methylacyl-CoAs [51, 52, 69, 70] and a racemization step is required for complete degradation. In summary, a-methyl-branched fatty acids are racemized as CoA thioesters by a specific a-methylacyl-CoA racemase similar to the protein encoded by cefD2 . Another similar example is the epimerization of 2-arylpropionic acids (such as ibuprofen), an important group of non-steroidal antiinflamatory drugs.
Fig. 5 Proposed model for the conversion of the L-a-aminoadipyl side-chain of isopenicillin N into the D-a-aminoadipyl side-chain of penicillin N by the fungal three-protein system. For comparison, the direct epimerization by the bacterial isopenicillin N epimerase is shown (see text for details)
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A unique feature regarding 2-arylpropionic acid metabolism is the stereoselective conversion of the R-enantiomer to its S-diastereomer [71]. The pathway for this metabolic event begins with the activation of the 2-arylpropionic acids as an acylCoA ester by an acyl-CoA synthetase (that resembles the protein CefD1) that is later racemized by a 2-arylpropionyl-CoA epimerase (similar to CefD2), and finally the S-diastereomer is released by a thioesterase [72, 73]. The protein encoded by the cefD2 has high similarity to a-methylacyl-racemases and 2-arylpropionyl-CoA epimerases, suggesting that after activation of isopenicillin N to isopenicillinyl-CoA through an isopenicillin-adenylate, epimerization to penicillinyl-CoA occurs (Fig. 5). The product of both genes cefD1 and cefD2 are necessary for full epimerase activity and for cephalosporin biosynthesis which supports the proposed activation and epimerization model. Finally, the required hydrolysis of the CoA thioesters requires a thioesterase (CefD3 protein). It is not known if there is a specific thioesterase dedicated to the hydrolysis of penicillinyl-CoA. In animal cells, hydrolysis of the CoA thioesters has been reported to occur in a non-stereoselective manner by different thioesterases [72]. The 2-arylpropionyl-CoA epimerase has been purified from rat liver [73], showing that it is similar to a-methylacyl-CoA racemases [52]. Enzyme purification and studies on the catalysis exerted by the two CefD1 and CefD2 proteins are required to confirm this model.
6 Bacterial Isopenicillin N Epimerases The Streptomyces clavuligerus and Amycolatopsis lactamdurans IPN epimerases appear to work by an entirely different mechanism since they consist of a single protein with an estimated molecular weight of 59,000 (for the A. lactamdurans) and 63,000 (for the S. clavuligerus enzyme) that catalyze a pyridoxal phosphate-dependent removal of the proton at C2 of the a-aminoadipyl chain, followed by reintroduction in the D-configuration [30, 32].Another bacterial isopenicillin N epimerase has been reported in the Gram-negative bacterium Lysobacter lactamgenus with identities of 48.7 and 57.0% with the A. lactamdurans and S. clavuligerus enzymes, respectively. The conversion of IPN into penicillin N appears to follow the well-known mechanism of PLP-dependent bacterial amino acid racemases. The reactions catalyzed by the A. lactamdurans and S. clavuligerus enzymes have been shown to proceed reversibly, as occurs with other bacterial racemases. The generally accepted mechanism [74] proceeds through the steps of Fig. 3. PLP bound at the active-site lysyl residue reacts with the substrate to form an external Schiff base through transaldimination. The subsequent a-hydrogen abstraction results in the formation of a resonance-stable deprotonated intermediate.When reprotonation occurs at the a-carbon of the substrate moiety on the opposite face of the planar intermediate, then an antipodal aldimine is formed. The e-amino group
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of the enzyme’s lysine residue is substituted for the isomerized substrate amino acid through transaldimination, and the internal aldimine is regenerated. This mechanism has been shown to be involved in alanine racemization by Bacillus stearothermophilus alanine racemase [75, 76], an enzyme that occurs widely in bacteria and plays a central role in the biosynthesis of D-alanine, a component of peptidoglycan. On the basis of X-ray crystallography studies Shaw et al. [75] have proposed that Lys39 and Tyr265 of the B. subtilis alanine racemase serve as the basis to abstract the a-hydrogen from the alanyl-PLP aldimine and to protonate the carbanion intermediate. Both Lys39 and Tyr265 are also conserved in both DadB and Alr alanine racemases of Salmonella typhimurium [77, 78] suggesting that these two residues play a common role in this type of racemases. cefD-like genes encoding isopenicillin N epimerase-like enzymes have been reported in Bradyrhizobium japonicum (Accession number BAC46545), Caulobacter crescentus (NP419755), Pirellula sp. (CAD75434), Sulfolobus tokodaii (BAB67245), Synechocystis sp. (NP44105), Xanthomonas campestris (N636586) and Ralstonia solanacearum (NP522257). The last two Gram-negative bacteria show putative IPN epimerases with 69.2% identity among themselves but with only 15–20% identity with the IPN epimerases of the cephamycin producers. The IPN epimerases of A. lactamdurans, S. clavuligerus and L. lactamgenus contain a putative PLP consensus binding site SXHKXL (SGHKWL in A. lac-
A
B Fig. 6 Bacterial IPN epimerases. (A) Conserved amino acids (shaded) in the IPN epimerases of Amycolatopsis lactamdurans, Lysobacter lactamgenus and Streptomyces clavuligerus. (B). Conserved PLP-binding box in IPN epimerase-like proteins from different bacteria. The lysine proposed to be involved in formation of the Schiff base is indicated by an asterisk. The consensus PLP-binding motif is boxed in the lower line
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Fig. 7 Alignments of amino acids of the IPN-CoA epimerase (CefD2) of A. chrysogenum and the unknown protein encoded by ORF1 of K. tethys. The identical amino acids are shaded
tamdurans) internal to a long conserved amino acid stretch (boxed in Fig. 6A) that is also present in PLP-requiring lysine, histidine and alanine decarboxylases. This consensus sequence is also conserved in several IPN epimerase-like enzymes (Fig. 6B) but since this motif is common to a variety of PLP-requiring enzymes, the exact function of those IPN epimerase-like enzymes in different bacteria remains uncertain.
7 A Cephalosporin Gene Cluster in Kallichroma tethys Includes an Isopenicillin N Epimerase Kallichroma tethys is a wood-inhabiting marine fungus that occurs exclusively in tropical waters [79]. Two genes pcbAB and pcbC encoding the initial two steps of the cephalosporin biosynthesis pathway were cloned from this fungus [7]. A third uncharacterized open reading frame, located downstream of pcbC in this fungus, corresponds to the cefD2 gene encoding isopenicillinyl-CoA epimerase [61] (Fig. 7). This ORF is located in the same position with respect to the pcbAB-pcbC cluster as in A. chrysogenum, suggesting that the cluster has been conserved in K. tethys, a fungus that appears to be phylogenetically related to A. chrysogenum. However, K. tethys does not produce active antibiotic [7] and it remains unknown if it contains the cefD1 gene (isopencillinyl-CoA synthetase) that is strictly required for cephalosporin biosynthesis.
8 Summary and Future Outlook The epimerization system converting isopenicillin N into penicillin N has finally been elucidated at the genetic level. It consists of three components encoded by two linked cefD1 and cefD2 genes that activate isopenicillin N as isopenicillinylCoA and converts this compound to penicillinyl-CoA. A putative third component thioesterase, named CefD3, that later releases penicillin N has not been lo-
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cated so far. This novel mechanism provides another good example of the adaptation of enzyme systems used in eukaryotes for performing reactions required for isomerizations during the biosynthesis of secondary metabolites. This novel epimerization system may be considered as a system for late modification of amino acids in non-ribosomal peptides or their condensed derivatives (like isopenicillin N) similar to the D-alanine racemases involved in providing D-alanine for cyclosporin or HC-toxin biosynthesis. There is a functional similarity between the CoA-mediated activation and isomerization of isopenicillin N and the phosphopantetheine-linked conversion of L to D-amino acids by non-ribosomal peptide synthetases. In both cases the L-amino acid is activated by formation of a thioester of its carboxyl group with the SH group of phosphopantetheine. However, it is unclear if the complete isomerization reaction is performed by the integrated epimerization domains of non-ribosomal peptide synthetase, or whether (as yet unknown) additional enzymes similar to the CefD2 protein are involved in the peptide isomerization. It is likely that discrete epimerases may work in combination with the non-ribosomal peptide synthetases. Further biochemical work is, therefore, required to establish the exact mechanism of isomerization by the non-ribosomal peptide synthetases. Although the complexity of these large proteins makes molecular analysis complicated, the availability of the cloned genes will facilitate this work. The existence of a dedicated isopenicillinyl-CoA thioesterase (putative CefD3 protein) is unclear at this time. Cleavage of the isopenicillinyl-CoA may be catalyzed by a dedicated thioesterase or by non-specific thioesterases that occur in the cell. The first hypothesis is attractive because a number of discrete thioesterases or integrated thioesterase domains into the non-ribosomal peptide synthetases have been found. In particular, there is a thioesterase in the carbonyl-terminal region of the A. chrysogenum ACV synthetase that may be connected to the epimerase activity involved in the L- to D-valine conversion [80]. Further biochemical work is therefore required to elucidate this hypothesis.
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Adv Biochem Engin/Biotechnol (2004) 88: 111–135 DOI 10.1007/b99259 © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2004
Compartmentalization and Transport in b -Lactam Antibiotics Biosynthesis M. E. Evers 1 · H. Trip 1 · M. A. van den Berg 2 · R. A. L. Bovenberg 2 · A. J. M. Driessen 1 1
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University of Groningen, Department of Molecular Microbiology & Groningen Biomolecular Sciences and Biotechnology Institute, Kerklaan 30, 9751 NN Haren, The Netherlands
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[email protected] DSM Anti-infectives, A. Fleminglaan 1, 2611 XT Delft, The Netherlands
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Localization of Biosynthesis Enzymes of the Penicillin Biosynthesis Pathway . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . d-(L-a-Aminoadipyl)-L-cysteinyl-D-valine Synthetase (ACVS) . . . . . . . . Isopenicillin N Synthase (IPNS) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Acyl-Coenzyme A: Isopenicillin N Acyltransferase (IAT) . . . . . . . . . . . Side Chain Activation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Localization of Enzymes of Cephalosporin Biosynthesis and Other b-lactams
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Synthesis of b -lactam Precursors L-a-Aminoadipate Synthesis . . . Cyclization of L-a-Aminoadipate Cysteine Synthesis . . . . . . . . Valine Synthesis . . . . . . . . . .
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Uptake of b -Lactam Precursors from the Growth Medium Uptake of Amino Acids . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Uptake of Sulfate and Phosphate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Uptake of Nitrogen-Containing Compounds . . . . . . . Uptake of Side Chain Precursors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Uptake of Sugars . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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Abstract Classical strain improvement of b-lactam producing organisms by random mutagenesis has been a powerful tool during the last century. Current insights in the biochemistry and genetics of b-lactam production, in particular in the filamentous fungus Penicillium chrysogenum, however, make a more directed and rational approach of metabolic pathway engineering possible. Besides the need for efficient genetic methods, a thorough understanding is needed of the metabolic fluxes in primary, intermediary and secondary metabolism. Controlling metabolic fluxes can be achieved by adjusting enzyme activities and metabolite levels in such a way that the main flow is directed towards the desired product. In addition, compartmentalization of specific parts of the b-lactam biosynthesis pathways provides a way to control this pathway by clustering enzymes with their substrates inside specific membrane bound structures sequestered from the cytosol. This compartmentalization also requires specific membrane transport steps of which the details are currently uncovered. Keywords b-Lactam · Biochemical engineering · Compartmentalization · Penicillium chrysogenum · Transporter proteins
List of Abbreviations AAP Amino acid permease ABC ATP-binding-cassette ACS Acetylcoenzyme A synthetase ACVS d-(L-a-Aminoadipyl)-L-cysteinyl-D-valine synthetase ad-7-ACA Adipoyl-7-aminocephalosporanic acid ad-7-ADC A3-Aminodeacetoxycephalosporanic acid A. niger Aspergillus niger APS Adenosine-5-phosphosulfate A. nidulans Aspergillus nidulans C. acremonium Cephalosporium acremonium CoA Coenzyme A DAC Deacetylcephalosporin C DAOC Deacetoxycephalosporin C Gap General amino acid permease GFP Green fluorescent protein GST Glutathione S-transferase IAT Acyl-coenzyme A:isopenicillin N acyltransperase IPNS Isopenicillin N synthase MFS Major Facilitator Superfamily N. crassa Neurospora crassa N. lactamdurans Nocardia lactamdurans NBD Nucleotide binding domain OPC 6-Oxopiperidine-2-carboxylic acid PA Phenylacetic acid PAP S3-Phospho-adenosine-5-phosphosulfate P. chrysogenum Penicillium chrysogenum PCL Phenylacetyl-coenzyme A ligase pmf Proton motive force PMP Peroxisomal membrane protein POA Phenoxyacetic acid PTS Peroxisomal targeting signal
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Saccharomyces cerevisiae Streptomyces clavuligerus Sulfate transporter
1 Introduction Industrial penicillin and cephalosporin fermentation is performed using filamentous fungi. However, sequence analysis of one of the biosynthesis genes encoding isopenicillin N synthase (pcbC) of various organisms involved in the biosynthesis of these compounds, suggests that the origin of these genes stems from prokaryotic organisms. In bacteria apparently the production of b-lactams has evolved as a means of improving their ability to compete with other prokaryotes.Via horizontal gene transfer, biosynthetic genes may have been acquired by filamentous fungi some 370 million years ago [1–4]. The advantage for these fungi of possessing these genes is thought to be of ecological significance. Antibiotic production provides fungi with the possibility to protect released enzymes and released nutrients against bacteria competing for the same substrates. Other explanations are found in detoxification mechanisms, for instance, to prevent the accumulation of acids such as phenylacetic acid in the cell [5].After the discovery of the application of penicillin as an antimicrobial agent in humans in the early 1940s, classical strain improvement has been applied to obtain higher production yields. High production and secretion of the b-lactams, however, drains intracellular pools of primary metabolites. In addition, specific metabolic engineering of industrial strains has been applied; however, this requires extensive knowledge of control of the metabolic fluxes in order to obtain predictive models and the desired results. The importance of compartmentalization and transport processes in industrial penicillin biosynthesis has become clear and the different aspects of these topics are being studied in several laboratories. The aim of this chapter is to describe recent developments that are important towards the compartmentalization and transport in b-lactam antibiotics by filamentous fungi. The localization of biosynthesis enzymes and the compartmentalization of biosynthesis, precursors, intermediates and products will be discussed in relationship to their consequences for intra- and extracellular transport.
2 Localization of Biosynthesis Enzymes of the Penicillin Biosynthesis Pathway Figure 1 in brief depicts the major enzymatic steps involved in b-lactam biosynthesis. This section discusses the cellular localization of the key enzymes.
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Fig. 1 Localization of the penicillin biosynthesis; d-(L-a-aminoadipyl)-L-cysteinyl-D-valine synthetase (ACVS) and isopenicillin N synthase (IPNS) are present in the cytosol (C) whereas acyl-coenzyme A:isopenicillin N acyltransferase (IAT) and possibly also phenylacetyl-coenzyme A ligase (PCL) are localized in peroxisomes (P). In the mitochondria (M), part of the synthesis of precursor amino acids takes place
2.1 a -Aminoadipyl)-L-cysteinyl-D-valine Synthetase (ACVS) d -(L-a The first step in the biosynthesis of penicillins and cephalosporins is the condensation of three precursor amino acids, namely L-a-aminoadipate, L-cysteine and L-valine into the tripeptide d-(L-a-aminoadipyl)-L-cysteinyl-D-valine (LLD-ACV). This step is catalysed by a multi-enzyme complex of 424 kDa with non-ribosomal peptide synthetase activity termed ACV synthetase (ACVS) [6–10]. ACVS is encoded by the acvA gene that is part of a cluster which includes the other two key enzymes of the penicillin biosynthesis pathway. The localization of ACVS has been a matter of debate for some time. Initially, it was described as a membrane associated protein and found to co-sediment with vesicles of either Golgi or vacuolar origin [11–13]. However, the amino acid sequence of P. chrysogenum ACV synthetase contains no recognizable targeting information for the endoplasmic reticulum or the vacuole, and although the protein is hydrophobic of nature, it does not harbour any trans-membrane regions. Localization studies by traditional fractionation experiments were ob-
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scured by the fact that ACVS is a highly unstable enzyme and very sensitive to proteolytic degradation. For this purpose improved protocols of cell lysis were designed and used in combination with an immuno-gold electron microscopical analysis to determine the subcellular location of this protein. On the basis of these studies, ACVS turned out to be a cytosolic enzyme [11–14]. Likewise, an ACVS fusion with green fluorescent protein in Aspergillus nidulans also localizes to the cytosol [15]. The cytosolic localization is more in pair with the pH optimum of this enzyme, as the acidic vacuole would not support activity. Moreover, the vacuole is highly proteolytic which seems contradictory with the protease sensitivity of the multidomain ACVS and the release of a product tripeptide. ACVS consists of three major modules, one for each amino acid. These modules are divided into domains that are specialized for partial reactions of the total condensation reaction, hereby combining adenylation activity, peptide-bond formation, epimerization and product release by thioesterase activity, in one multi-enzyme [7]. The localization of ACVS in the cytosol bears consequences for the recruitment of the three precursor amino acids. In general, acquisition of L-a-aminoadipate, L-cysteine and L-valine can either proceed through de novo synthesis or uptake from the growth medium; see below. 2.2 Isopenicillin N Synthase (IPNS) The second step in b-lactam synthesis is the oxidative cyclisation of LLD-ACV into isopenicillin N (IPN). In this step, the bicyclic penam nucleus, consisting of the b-lactam and thiazolidine rings is generated [3, 7]. This step is mediated by IPN synthase (IPNS) a protein of 38 kDa that is encoded by the ipnA gene that is part of the penicillin biosynthesis gene cluster. From X-ray diffraction experiments using the substrate analogue d-(L-a-aminoadipoyl)-L-cysteinyl-L-Smethyl-cysteine in the crystal it was concluded that closure of the b-lactam ring precedes the closure of the five-membered thiazolidine ring [3, 16]. Based upon the results of fractionation experiments it became evident that IPNS behaves like a soluble, cytosolic enzyme [17]. This means that LLD-ACV produced by ACVS can directly be used as the substrate for IPNS. The question if these two enzymes are organized in a metabolon or large complex is not known. 2.3 Acyl-Coenzyme A: Isopenicillin N Acyltransferase (IAT) The third and final step in b-lactam synthesis is the exchange of the L-aaminoadipate for phenylacetyl- or phenoxyacetyl group by acyl-coenzyme A:isopenicillin N acyltransferase (IAT) resulting in the formation of respectively penicillin G and penicillin V [18–21]. IAT is a hetero-dimeric enzyme consisting of a 11 kDa a-subunit and a 28 kDa b-subunit. It is synthesized as a 40 kDa pre-protein from the aat gene and undergoes autocatalytic processing to form the heterodimer [22, 23]. Both subunits possess a C-terminal PTS1 signal that
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targets this enzyme to a microbody or peroxisome. Fractionation studies as well as immuno-gold labelling experiments indeed localized IAT to microbodies [17]. Consequently the substrate IPN has to enter the microbody before it can be converted. It is not known yet whether this occurs by diffusion over the membrane, or by facilitated or active transport. 2.4 Side Chain Activation Before the side chain can be used in the substitution reaction catalysed by IAT mentioned above, PA and POA, the side chain precursors, have to be activated to their CoA thioesters. Theoretically this activation can be carried out by an enzyme displaying either acetyl-coenzyme A synthetase (ACS) activity, phenylacetyl-coenzyme A ligase (PCL) activity, or alternatively via a glutathione-dependent pathway involving glutathione S-transferase (GST) activity. This phenomenon has not well been studied, but current view considers the last option unlikely. A gene encoding a cytosolic ACS of P. chrysogenum has been identified and isolated. Disruption of this gene did not result in a decrease in penicillin production, meaning that ACS cannot be solely responsible for activation of precursors [17, 24]. In another study a PCL of P. chrysogenum containing a C-terminal peroxisomal targeting signal (PTS1; SKI) was identified [25]. This suggests a peroxisomal location of the activating enzyme which would seem advantageous as it is then in the same compartment as IAT and the peroxisomal concentration of activated precursors would be higher than in the cytosol. In addition PA and POA are more likely to easily diffuse across the peroxisomal membrane than their activated counterparts thereby providing a means of retention. However, overproduction of a presumably cytosolic located heterologous PCL from Pseudomonas putida U increased the penicillin production by 100% whereas overproduction of the homologous peroxisomal PCL of P. chrysogenum did not affect penicillin production [25, 26]. Although these results give an ambiguous view on this step, a bias towards a role of the peroxisomal PCL is provided by additional observations that will be described below. 2.5 Localization of Enzymes of Cephalosporin Biosynthesis and Other b -lactams Cephalosporins and cephamycins are produced by the filamentous fungus Acremonium chrysogenum (syn. Cephalosporium acremonium) (cephalosporin C), and by Gram-positive actinomycetes such as Nocardia lactamdurans and Streptomyces clavuligerus (cephamycin C) [27, 28]. Cephalosporin and penicillin biosynthesis have the first two steps in common, i.e. the formation of ACV by ACV synthetase and the subsequent cyclization to isopenicillin N by IPN synthase. Here the penicillin and cephalosporin pathways diverge. Cephalosporin biosynthesis proceeds with the epimerisation of IPN into penicillin N by epimerase activity of the cefD1 and cefD2 gene products in C. acre-
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monium [29] and the completely different cefD gene product in N. lactamdurans and St. clavuligerus [27, 30]. After epimerisation, penicillin N undergoes expansion of the thiazolidine ring to a dihydrothiazine ring by deacetoxycephalosporin C synthetase, yielding deacetoxycephalosporin C (DAOC). DAOC is hydroxylated by DAC synthase to give deacetylcephalosporin C (DAC). In the cephamycin producers N. lactamdurans and St. clavuligerus, DAC is carbamoylated and methoxylated to form cephamycin C [31]. In C. acremonium, DAC is acetylated by the cefG-gene encoded enzyme DAC acetyltransferase [32, 33], yielding cephalosporin C. IPN epimerase, DAOC synthetase, DAC synthase and DAC acetyltransferase behave as soluble cytosolic proteins with pH optima above 7.0, reviewed in [34]. Currently, these enzymes are believed to be localized in the cytosol, but no direct studies have addressed the compartmentalization issue. Expression of the expandase gene of St. clavuligerus (cefE) or the C. acremonium expandase-hydroxylase gene and the acetyl transferase gene in P. chrysogenum and feeding adipic acid has led to efficient production of adipoyl-7-aminodeacetoxycephalosporanic acid (ad-7-ADCA) and adipoyl-7aminocephalosporanic acid (ad-7-ACA) respectively. Removal of the adipyl side chain gives 7-ADCA and 7-ACA, respectively, which are important intermediates in the production of semi-synthetic cephalosporins [35, 36].
3 Compartmentalization of Penicillin Biosynthesis As can be concluded from the above the first two steps of penicillin biosynthesis, the condensation into the tripeptide and the conversion into isopenicillin N, take place in the cytosol of filamentous fungi. The final step, side chain exchange and most probably the side chain precursor activation take place in the microbody. Microbodies (also termed peroxisomes, glyoxysomes, glycosomes depending on the organism and function) are indispensable organelles that can be found in practically all eukaryotic cells.Although their morphology is relatively simple (a proteinaceous matrix surrounded by a single membrane) their physiological properties are remarkably complex. The organelles are involved in pathways of primary, intermediary and secondary metabolism. They may be regarded as organelles in which specific metabolic conversions take place mostly by non-membrane bound enzymes. Various peroxisomal metabolic pathways function in the cytosol of peroxisome-deficient mutants, although in some cases with lower final cell yield compared to wild-type cells [26, 37]. For other peroxisomal pathways, the membrane needs to function as an intact boundary, otherwise metabolic pathways may be severely affected even though all the enzymes of the pathway are synthesized and active in the cytosol [38]. A general major advantage of the presence of a peroxisomal permeability barrier is that it permits the cells to precisely adjust the levels of different intermediates of primary metabolism required for specific metabolic pathways (metabolic flux control by a physical barrier). It was in 1991 that the importance
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of the microbody with respect to penicillin biosynthesis (secondary metabolism) became evident when IAT was shown to be located in this organelle [17]. When the putative targeting signal was removed the enzyme was not directed to the microbody but instead localized in the vacuole and surrounding cytosol. Under these conditions, production of penicillin was halted although the enzyme was expressed in vivo and active in vitro [39]. This might be explained by the possibility that another essential enzymatic step, the precursor activation by PCL might occur only inside microbodies and that these activated precursors are now sequestered from IAT inside the microbody. The other explanation, namely that IAT is not able to perform the catalytic reaction in the cytosol seems less likely, because in a mutant of A. nidulans lacking functional peroxisomes, penicillin production still occurred with the peroxisomal enzymes mislocalized to the cytosol [40].Although this suggests that peroxisomes are not essential for penicillin production per se, a positive correlation between penicillin yield and peroxisome numbers has been implicated [17]. The exact reason for this correlation is not known, but this may relate to an increase in the amount of enzymes of the biosynthesis pathway. For detailed information on import of peroxisomal proteins and biogenesis of peroxisomes see reviews by Purdue et al. [41] and van der Klei et al. [42] and references therein.
4 Synthesis of b -lactam Precursors 4.1 a -Aminoadipate Synthesis L-a L-a-Aminoadipate is an intermediate of the L-lysine biosynthesis pathway. The
intracellular level of L-a-aminoadipate can be a limiting factor in the overall penicillin synthesis rate, as shown by the observation that addition of L-aaminoadipate to the growth medium enhances the b-lactam production [43]. Therefore, the lysine biosynthsisc pathway is extremely important for, and interconnected with, the b-lactam biosynthesis pathway. Recent insights in the lysine biosynthesis route in yeast may alter the classical view on this pathway significantly. L-Lysine biosynthesis starts with the condensation of acetyl-CoA and a-ketoglutarate into homocitrate by homocitrate synthase. This enzymatic reaction was until recently believed to take place in the mitochondria of P. chrysogenum because of insights in this route in higher eukaryotes. However, a localization study using a GFP-fusion of homocitrate synthase indicates that in P. chrysogenum this protein is located in the cytosol, although it could not be excluded that minor amounts might be present in the nucleus and mitochondria [44]. Using an in silico approach by performing a Saccharomyces cerevisiae database context sensitive motif search to identify new peroxisomal proteins, it was established that both the LYS1 and LYS4 proteins that encode a homoaconitase and a saccharopine dehydrogenase, respectively, contain a C-terminal
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Fig. 2 Compartmentalization of lysine biosynthesis in relation to penicillin biosynthesis. aAminoadipate is a branch point intermediate at which the lysine and penicillin biosynthesis routes converge. In the last step of the penicillin biosynthesis, the a-aminoadipate moiety of isopenicillin N (IPN) is exchanged for phenylacetic acid and becomes available again for penicillin or lysine biosynthesis. Part of a-aminoadipate is lost by the cyclization into 6-oxopiperidine-2-carboxylic acid (OPC). OPC is excreted into the medium by an unknown mechanism. Main routes are depicted in bold arrows, hypothetical routes are in light grey. PM, plasma membrane
peroxisomal targeting signal (PTS1). GFP-fusions of these proteins localized to peroxisomes. This suggests that these proteins are peroxisomal localized [44, 45] (Fig. 2). Furthermore, examination of micro-array experiments to determine the role of peroxisomes under physiological conditions revealed that in a peroxisome-deficient mutant five genes of the lysine biosynthesis pathway are highly up-regulated, among them LYS1 and LYS4. The other three genes that are up-regulated are LYS20 (homocitrate synthase), LYS12 (homoisocitrate dehydrogenase) and LYS9 (another saccharopine dehydrogenase). LYS12 contains a putative PTS1 whereas LYS9 and LYS20 contain PTS2-like sequences. The observed expression pattern of the genes of a peroxisome-deficient mutant grown on rich medium surprisingly resembled a lysine starvation response even when sufficient lysine was present in the medium. The authors explain their findings by mislocalization of a-aminoadipate semialdehyde to the cytosol. When
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a-aminoadipate semialdehyde is not contained inside the peroxisome the level in the cytosol will increase and stimulate the Lys14p transcriptional activator [46]. In contrast, no peroxisomal PTS could be detected in Lys5p or in the amino acid aminotransferases that are thought to be a part of the lysine biosynthetic pathway. Therefore, it is believed that it is not very likely that all the lysine biosynthesis enzymes have an exclusively peroxisomal location, and that part of the pathway may be cytosolic [46]. The question arises if these proteins are also localized in the peroxisomes of P. chrysogenum, which is important for the question where the L-a-aminoadipate is formed? Consequently, a peroxisomal location poses some important questions about the mechanism of release of L-a-aminoadipate, as this charged amino acid is unlikely to pass the membrane passively. 4.2 a -Aminoadipate Cyclization of L-a During b-lactam biosynthesis, part of the a-aminoadipate is lost by the irreversible formation of 6-oxopiperidine-2-carboxylic acid (OPC), the cyclized d-lactam of a-aminoadipate. This compound is excreted into the medium. The extent of OPC formation ranges from 6 to 60% relative to the formation of penicillin (on a molar basis), depending on strain and cultivation conditions. The route leading to OPC is not understood [47] nor is it clear how this compound is excreted. 4.3 Cysteine Synthesis The synthesis of cysteine in P. chrysogenum is dependent on the active uptake of sulfate from the exterior of the cell. The sulfate assimilation pathway catalyses the reduction of sulfate via sulfite to sulfide and subsequently sulfide is converted into cysteine (Fig. 3). The reduction of sulfate into sulfite is catalysed by three enzymes: ATP sulfurase converts inorganic sulfate into adenosine-5phosphosulfate (APS) which is then activated into 3-phospho-adenosine-5phosphosulfate (PAPS) by APS-kinase and reduced to sulfite by PAPS reductase [48–50]. Sulfite is reduced to sulfide by sulfite reductase [51]. The location of enzymes involved in the reduction of sulfate has not been described. Sulfide is the basis for biosynthesis of L-cysteine, which occurs via two different pathways in b-lactam producing fungi: the transsulfuration and the sulfhydrylation pathway. L-Cysteine, synthesized via the transsulfuration pathway, is formed by cleavage of L-cystathionine derived from the intermediate Lhomocysteine, which is formed from L-methionine or O-acetyl-L-homoserine [52]. Otherwise, direct acetylation of L-serine yields O-acetyl-L-serine that, in the presence of sulphide, is converted to L-cysteine by action of the enzyme Oacetyl-L-serine sulfhydrylase (OASS). Theoretically, the yield of penicillin on glucose would be substantially higher when L-cysteine is synthesized exclusively via the direct sulfhydrylation pathway [53, 54]. In A. nidulans and C. acre-
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Fig. 3 Sulfate uptake and metabolism in P. chrysogenum. PM, plasma membrane
monium both pathways are described, although A. nidulans prefers the direct sulfhydrylation, while C. acremonium utilizes the transsulfuration pathway [55, 56]. For the industrial penicillin producer P. chrysogenum only the presence of the transsulfuration pathway was demonstrated as mutants, disturbed in this pathway, were unable to grow on inorganic sulfate [57], which is the main source of sulfate during industrial fermentations. Recently, Østergaard et al. [58] reported the purification of OASS from P. chrysogenum. This enzyme is localized in the mitochondria (van den Berg MA, Westerlaken I, Hillekens R and Bovenberg RAL, unpublished results) and the analogous enzyme of the transsulfuration pathway, O-acetyl-L-homoserine sulfhydrylase (OAHS), is located in the cytosol. Moreover, a cloned cDNA encoding OASS was fused to eGFP and shown to encode active OASS enzyme located in the mitochondria (van den Berg MA., Westerlaken I., Hillekens R. and Bovenberg RAL, unpublished results). Isolated UV mutants that were unable to grow on inorganic sulfate unless OAS, or a more reduced sulfate source like cysteine or methionine,
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was added to the medium are likely to be disturbed in serine transacetylase. These findings suggest a distinctive role of the direct sulfhydrylation pathway for growth. This in contrast to the cytosolic transsulfuration pathway, which seems to be used for penicillin production in P. chrysogenum, as an increase in detectable OAHS activity correlates with the onset of penicillin G biosynthesis in shake flask experiments (van den Berg MA, Westerlaken I, Hillekens R and Bovenberg RAL, unpublished results). 4.4 Valine Synthesis Valine synthesis starts with the condensation of pyruvate with hydroxyethyl thiamine pyrophosphate into a-acetolactate by Acetohydroxy acid synthase. The conversion of a-acetolactate into L-valine is catalysed by three enzymes. Acetohydroxy acid isomeroreductase converts a-acetolactate into dihydroxyisovalerate. Dihydroxy acid dehydrase converts dihydroxyisovalerate into a-ketoisovalerate which in turn is converted to L-valine by the branched chain amino acid Glutamate transaminase. All four enzymes are thought to be located inside the mitochondrial matrix [59]. Consequently valine has to be translocated to the cytosol to become available for ACVS. The mechanism by which amino acids that are synthesized inside the mitochondrial matrix are transported into the cytosol has not been investigated. The inner membranes of mitochondria contain a family of transporter proteins (the mitochondrial carrier family) of related sequence and structure that are involved in the uptake and excretion of various metabolites, nucleotides and cofactors [60, 61] (and references therein). A number of these transporters have been biochemically characterized by overexpression and functional reconstitution into liposomes, most notably the ATP/ADP translocase and the phosphate transporters. The mitochondrial transporters operate by various mechanisms, which include uniport, symport, and antiport mechanisms [62] (and references therein). As to amino acid transport, a few transporters have been biochemically characterized: two human aspartate-glutamate transporters, citrin and aralar1, mediate the antiport of aspartate for glutamate [63]; a human glutamate transporter, GC, catalyses the uptake of glutamate in symport with protons [60], and an ornithine transporter from rat liver mitochondria that catalyses the uptake of ornithine in an antiport reaction for citrulline or protons [64]. In S. cerevisiae, an ornithine transporter,ARG11, mediates the exchange of ornithine for protons, but transports also arginine and lysine with less affinity [65]. The genomic sequence of S. cerevisiae suggests presence of 35 putative members of the mitochondrial transporter family and an increasing number can now be associated with a particular transport reaction [60, 66] (and references therein). It is unknown how valine, cysteine and aaminoadipate are transported across the mitochondrial inner membrane. Interestingly, one member of the mitochondrial carrier family in S. cerevisiae turned out to be an adenine nucleotide transporter in peroxisomes [67].
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5 Uptake of b -Lactam Precursors from the Growth Medium 5.1 Uptake of Amino Acids Since penicillin and cephalosporin are synthesized from three amino acid precursors, amino acids might play an important role in the regulation of b-lactam synthesis. This may be either directly, e.g. precursor availability for ACV synthesis, or indirectly, e.g. by affecting expression of penicillin synthesis genes. All amino acids are synthesized by filamentous fungi, but can also be taken up from the extracellular medium and be used as nitrogen and carbon source. In industrial P. chrysogenum fermentations for penicillin production, corn steep liquor is often used as nitrogen source. This supplement is rich in amino acids, which are consumed in the exponential phase of a fed-batch cultivation, rather than ammonia.When the amino acids are depleted the cells start to utilize ammonia as the nitrogen source [68]. A number of effects of the addition of extracellular amino acids on b-lactam synthesis have been reported. The addition of the three amino acid precursors aaminoadipate, cysteine and valine to P. chrysogenum in nitrogen-less medium leads to efficient incorporation into ACV. Only a-aminoadipate increases the rate of ACV synthesis and the overall penicillin synthesis rate [43, 68]. Based on such studies, it was suggested that the intracellular a-aminoadipate concentration may be limiting for the penicillin biosynthesis [69]. The addition of lysine to P. chrysogenum and A. nidulans cultures leads to a reduction of penicillin biosynthesis [70]. L-Lysine inhibits homocitrate synthase, the first enzyme in the lysine biosynthesis pathway, thereby blocking the production of a-aminoadipate, which is the branch-point metabolite between the lysine and penicillin biosynthetic pathways [71]. Lara et al. reported a stimulating effect on penicillin synthesis by addition of L-glutamate in minimal media. Interestingly, this effect was also observed with non-metabolisable analogues of L-glutamate [72]. The effect of externally added amino acids on the expression of penicillin biosynthesis genes acvA and ipnA was investigated in A. nidulans. The negative effect of histidine and valine is due to a reduced activation of the transcriptional factor PACC under acidic conditions. The presence of these amino acids leads to a decreased ambient pH during cultivation of the fungus. The negative effect of lysine and methionine, that also cause an acidification of the medium, does not involve PACC. The mechanism by which these amino acids act is unclear [73]. In Acremonium chrysogenum, the addition of DL-methionine to the medium led to increased mRNA levels of cephalosporin biosynthesis genes pcbAB (acvA), pcbC (ipnA) and cefEF, encoding deacetylcephalosporin C synthetase/hydroxylase and a three- to fourfold increase in the production of cephalosporin C [74, 75]. Uptake of amino acids in filamentous fungi is mediated by active amino acid permeases. In general, fungi possess a multiplicity of amino acid permeases
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that are involved in the uptake of amino acids from the environment as nitrogen and/or carbon source or as building blocks for the synthesis of proteins and peptides [76]. Biochemical and genetic characterization of fungal amino acid transporters has been performed most extensively in S. cerevisiae. Most fungal amino acid permeases show significant sequence similarities and form a unique family referred to as the AAP family [77], a subfamily of the APC family [78]. The permeases have a common structural organization with 12 putative a-helical transmembrane segments and cytoplasmically located N- and Cterminal hydrophilic regions [79–81]. Uptake occurs as secondary transport, i.e. by proton symport, with the pmf as driving force in order to allow uptake against the concentration gradient [77, 78, 82]. An exception is an amino acid permease encoded by the mtr locus of Neurospora crassa [83, 84]. This permease is unrelated to the AAP family, but instead it belongs the amino acid/auxin permease (AAAP) family [85]. Recently, a functional and structural homologue of the mtr encoded permease was found in P. chrysogenum (unpublished results). Genome analysis of S. cerevisiae revealed 24 members of the AAP family, of which most have been functionally characterized [79]. Some of them are specific for one or a group of related L-amino acids, such as Dip5p (glutamate and aspartate), Put4p (proline), Can1p (arginine). Others have a broader specificity, like Agp1p, which transports most neutral amino acids [79, 86].The general amino acid permease Gap1p, transports all L-and D-amino acids and nonproteinogenic amino acids such as citrulline and ornithine [87]. In P. chrysogenum, so far three amino acid permeases have been cloned and characterized [88]; (Trip et al. unpublished results), and various other activities have been classified on the basis of transport and competition assays. Nine amino acid transport systems have been reported: system I for L-methionine [89]; II for L-cysteine [90]; III for all amino acids [91, 92], analogous to Gap1p of S. cerevisiae; IV for acidic amino acids; V for L-proline; VI for L-lysine and L-arginine, VII for L-arginine; VIII for L-lysine and IX for L-cysteine [92]. The first two systems are expressed under sulphur starvation, while systems III-V are expressed under nitrogen and carbon starvation (NCR and CCR). Systems VI-VIII appear constitutive [76]. System VI was studied by Hillenga et al., 1996 [93], using plasma membranes fused with liposomes containing cytochrome c. Factors that interfere with the analysis of the plasma membrane transport processes when performed with intact mycelium, like metabolism and compartmentalisation, were circumvented this way. Inhibition studies with analogues revealed a narrow substrate specificity for arginine and lysine and quantitative analysis of arginine uptake suggest a H+-arginine symport stoichiometry of one-to-one [93]. Uptake of a-aminoadipate, an acidic amino acid similar in structure to glutamate, might be mediated by both the acidic amino acid transport system [92], and general amino acid transport system [76]. The acidic amino acid permease gene, DipP, was cloned and biochemically characterized. This transporter is homologous to Dip5 of S. cerevisiae [79] and is capable of transporting a-aminoadipate, albeit with much lower affinity than the preferred substrates aspartate and glutamate (Km of 800 and 35 mmol/l, re-
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spectively) (H. Trip, unpublished results). Transport studies with penicillin producing mycelium show that a-aminoadipate uptake is strongly competed by leucine which is a substrate for the general amino acid permease, and not for DipP. This suggests that the general amino acid permease provides the main route for a-aminoadipate uptake into the cell. The expression of DipP is, like Dip5 in S. cerevisiae, under nitrogen catabolite repression and is strongly induced when glutamate is the only nitrogen source in the culture medium (H. Trip, unpublished results). ARLP encodes a permease specific for aromatic amino acids and leucine [88] and MTRP encodes a permease specific for neutral aliphatic and aromatic amino acids (H. Trip, unpublished results). MtrP is a structural and functional homologue of the mtr locus encoded protein of N. crassa and therefore not related to the AAP family, but a member of the AAAP family [88]. The physiological role of these permeases is unclear. It has been postulated that the ACV precursors a-aminoadipate, cysteine and valine are sequestered in the vacuole of P. chrysogenum. Cysteine and valine are produced in the vacuole due to proteolytic degradation of proteins. The presumed vacuolar localization of ACVS would then benefit from a direct withdrawal of these amino acids from the vacuolar pools [13]. The recent observation that ACVS is located in the cytosol [14] and the fact that in S. cerevisiae the acidic amino acids glutamate and aspartate are not accumulated in the vacuole, but instead, are located almost exclusively in the cytosol [94], do not support the vacuolar storage of the acidic amino acid a-aminoadipate. In S. cerevisiae, four vacuolar amino acid transporters have been identified, one of which,AVT6, mediates the efflux of the acidic amino acids glutamate and aspartate from the vacuole. These transporters do not show homology with amino acid permeases from the cellular membrane [95]. 5.2 Uptake of Sulfate and Phosphate The uptake of sulfate is an important step in the regulation of sulphur metabolism in P. chrysogenum. This uptake has been studied with mycelium and isolated plasma membrane vesicles. These experiments showed that uptake is mediated by a electroneutral sulfate/proton symport mechanism [96]. The P. chrysogenum membrane vesicles were fused with cytochrome-c oxidase containing liposomes to provide the system with a proton motive force. Sulfate uptake was solely dependent on the transmembrane pH gradient, and occurred with high affinity (Km~30 mmol/l). Apart from sulfate, the transporter also showed affinity for analogous divalent oxyanions like thiosulfate, selenate and molybdate. The genes of two putative sulfate transporters (designated SutA and SutB), and PAPS reductase (parA) have been cloned and sequenced [28]. SutB is the major sulfate transporter, while the exact function of SutA remains to be elucidated. This protein has been implicated in thiosulfate uptake or is possibly involved in an intracellular sulfate uptake activity. Expression studies were performed to determine if there is a relationship between penicillin biosyn-
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thesis and sulfate metabolism. Under sulphur starvation conditions the expression levels of both sulfate transporters are elevated. A positive correlation was observed between the levels of sutB mRNA and the penicillin biosynthesis, but such a correlation was not apparent for sutA and parA mRNAs. The parA mRNA levels are controlled by the sulphur content of the medium. It is generally believed that SutB is the main route for sulfate uptake during b-lactam biosynthesis [97]. Phosphate transport in P. chrysogenum has hardly been studied. In fungi uptake of phosphate occurs through proton and sodium phosphate symport. In fermentation media phosphate addition does not in itself inhibit penicillin production, but it strongly enhances the effect of glucose repression of transcription of the genes of the penicillin cluster [98]. In S. cerevisiae at least 5 transporters are involved in this process namely PHO84, 87, 89, 90 and 91. Deletion of all five genes is lethal [99]. Pho90 and Pho91 have the highest phosphate transporting capacity, whereas Pho84 and Pho87 are specific phosphate sensors. Pho89 has a very low transporting capacity and is not involved in phosphate signalling [99]. Pho84 is a phosphate proton symporter belonging to the Major Facilitator Superfamily (MFS) proteins and contains 12 membrane spanning segments. 5.3 Uptake of Nitrogen-Containing Compounds Ammonium, nitrate, urea and amino acids are possible nitrogen sources in blactam synthesis. The uptake and synthesis of amino acids has been described above. Although one of the earliest reports about an active ammonium transport system concerned the uptake of methylammonium by P. chrysogenum [100], no major new insights have been obtained since then. At high concentration, methylammonium is toxic to cells, and this was used to screen for mutants of S. cerevisiae and A. nidulans that are impaired in methylammonium uptake [101, 102]. This screen lead to the identification of several genes that encode (methyl)ammonium transporters (MEP/AMT). In A nidulans, two ammonium transporters have been described. These two proteins, MeaA and MepA are also involved in the retention of ammonium as determined by crossfeeding studies [103]. Although the molecular mechanism of transport is still unclear, studies using the LeAMT1 plasma membrane ammonium transporter of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) that was functionally expressed in Xenopus oocytes, indicate that ammonium ions are the substrates rather than ammonia. Uptake seems to take place by means of a uniport mechanism [104]. 5.4 Uptake of Side Chain Precursors Phenylacetic acid (PA) and phenoxyacetic acid are weak acids that rapidly enter P. chrysogenum cells through passive diffusion and distribute across the
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membrane according to the transmembrane pH gradient [105, 106]. However, various reports have implicated active transport in the acquisition of phenylacetic acid from the medium [107]. The major differences in these studies may relate to concentration of phenylacetic acid used, and eventually the type of strains (low- vs high-yielding strains). When high concentrations of PA (60–3000 mmol/l) are used, PA readily enters the cells through passive diffusion in both low- and high-yielding strains. However, at low concentrations (1.4–100 mmol/l) accumulation of PA in the low yielding strain exceeds the accumulation of PA in the high yielding by a factor 10 at the lowest concentrations, suggesting the involvement of a transporter protein [108]. However, the latter may also relate to side-chain activation. Instead of uptake, the activity of the CoA ligase may be responsible for the observed retention. However, during b-lactam biosynthesis, high concentrations (millimolar) of PA or phenoxyacetic acid are fed to the cells, which makes that passive diffusion will be the dominating route of entry into the cell. 5.5 Uptake of Sugars The supply of sugars as the major carbon in industrial fermentation of P. chrysogenum is of importance, as it accounts for more than 10% of the overall costs [109]. Moreover, sugar plays an important role in the regulation of penicillin biosynthesis. Glucose and sucrose impose a strong inhibitory effect on blactam production by repression of penicillin biosynthesis genes (acvA and ipnA in P. chrysogenum, ipnA in A. nidulans) as well as by post-transcriptional (down)regulation (IAT in A. nidulans) [110]. Lactose does not inhibit b-lactam biosynthesis, which, for P. chrysogenum, was suggested to be due to the slow hydrolysis into glucose and galactose resulting from very low b-galactosidase activity [98]. Lactose has been traditionally used for penicillin biosynthesis, but during industrial fermentation, a limiting glucose-feed is now regularly used, avoiding carbon source/catabolite regulation [68]. Glucose uptake in fungi has been best studied for S. cerevisiae. Glucose transport occurs by facilitated diffusion [111] which involves transporters that belong to the MFS family [112, 113]. A family of 20 different hexose transporters or related proteins (Hxtp) is thought to be involved in sugar transport and regulation [111, 114]. In a hxt1–7 disruption mutant strain, glucose uptake is abolished, whereas the expression of any one of the genes HXT1, 2, 3, 4, 6 or 7 can restore glucose uptake [115]. Hxt1p and Hxt3p are low affinity transporters (Km=50–100 mmol/l), Hxt2p and Hxt4p are equipped with a moderately low affinity (10 mmol/l) and Hxt6p and Hxt7p are high affinity glucose transporters (1–2 mmol/l). A galactose permease was also shown to transport glucose with high affinity (Km=1–2 mmol/l) [114]. In filamentous fungi, glucose uptake systems have been described for A. nidulans [114, 116], A. niger [117], and N. crassa [118–123]. In general, at least two systems appear to be present, a constitutive, passive, low-affinity system, and a glucose repressible, proton
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motive force-driven, high-affinity system. The high-affinity system generally has a much lower Km-value than found in S. cerevisiae. The Km for the highaffinity system in A. nidulans is 0.04–0.06 mmol/l [81, 124]; for P. chrysogenum a value of 0.2 mmol/l has been reported [125]. Like in S. cerevisiae, more than two transporter proteins might be involved in glucose transport, but since mutants disrupted in one or more glucose transporter genes are not yet available, individual characterization is complicated. Little information is available on lactose transport in fungi. The best characterized fungal lactose uptake system is the inducible LAC12 gene product of Kluyveromyces lactis [126, 127], which transports lactose in symport with protons. Proton symport seems to be a general mechanism for disaccharide transport in fungi [126–128]. In P. chrysogenum, lactose is taken up by an energy-dependent system, mostly likely proton motive force-driven system. The lactose transport activity is induced when cells are growth on lactose (van de Kamp et al., unpublished).
6 Transport Across the Microbody Membrane As mentioned previously, some of the enzymatic steps of the penicillin and lysine synthesis pathway take place inside the microbody. The exact reason why these steps are localized in this intracellular organelle is not clear, but it has been hypothesized that the microbody lumen provides an optimal environment for these enzymes for instance with respect to pH, metabolite concentration etc. The internal pH of peroxisomes in the yeast Hansenula polymorpha has been reported to be acidic (pH 5.8–6) [129]. However, the pH optimum of IAT is in the alkaline range, and the enzyme is inactive at pH values lower than 6 [130, 131]. The same has been reported for PCL which is likely localized in the microbody. The pH of P. chrysogenum microbodies has also been investigated with the enhanced yellow fluorescent protein (eYFP) that was targeted to the microbody by means of a C-terminal PTS1 signal SKL. Based on the fluorescence characteristics, it was concluded that the microbody is not acidic, but slightly alkaline (pH 7.0–7.5) [132]. This is more in accordance with the pH optimum of the abovementioned biosynthesis enzymes. Studies on microbodies in human fibroblasts even suggest that the luminal pH may be as alkaline as pH 8.2 [133]. Other possible advantages for compartmentalization of key enzymatic steps may relate to the higher concentrations of both enzymes and substrates, the prevention of draining catalytic intermediates into unwanted side reaction pathways, and/or regulation of the biosynthesis pathway. The subcellular distribution of the various enzymatic steps over different organelles poses, however, important problems towards the transport of the metabolites. For a long time it was believed that peroxisomes are permeable to small compounds. For instance, it was not possible to obtain peroxisomes while maintaining the permeability barrier of the membrane. Also, a porin-like protein has been found
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to be associated with the peroxisomal membrane [134–137]. However, the in vivo studies on the luminal pH and identification of various transporters now suggest that the peroxisomal membrane represents a permeability barrier. NAD(H), NADP(H), acetyl-CoA, ATP and protons cannot freely pass peroxisomal membranes of different organisms [67, 133, 138, 139]. The necessity for peroxisomal membrane proteins (PMPs) with a transport function is therefore obvious. Biochemical studies, however, have suffered from the fact that the organelles are very fragile, while PMPs appear of low abundance [140]. Of the known peroxisomal transporters only one has been studied in detail with respect to substrate specificity, namely the peroxisomal adenine nucleotide transporter Ant1p of S. cerevisiae. This system is very homologous to the mitochondrial transporter family. Ant1p has been overproduced, purified from the peroxisomal membrane fractions and reconstituted into liposomes [67]. The system has been suggested to function as an ATP/AMP antiporter, supply the microbody lumen with cytosolic ATP. So far, experimental evidence is lacking for the involvement of transporters in the uptake of IPN and PA or the extrusion of a-aminoadipate and penicillins.
7 Excretion of b -lactams into the Medium The mechanism of excretion of b-lactams into the medium has been a subject of speculation for a long time.Various options need to be considered, i.e., passive diffusion, vesicular transport and the involvement of transport proteins. Passive diffusion phenomena are strongly dependent on the physicochemical characteristics of the membrane, like fluidity, degree of saturation and the acyl chain length of the lipid fatty acids but also on the intrinsic properties of the compound, like charge, size and hydrophobicity. Penicillins V and G are amphiphatic, moderately hydrophobic molecules and negatively charged at the cytosolic pH. The diffusion of these molecules has been studied in model membranes, and it was suggested that they can permeate a membrane composed of phospholipids [106]. The permeability characteristics of the membrane were, however, greatly reduced when sterols were present in the membrane. Since plasma membranes of P. chrysogenum contain 30% ergosterol, a concentration that suffices to block most of the passive permeation, passive diffusion seems very unlikely [106]. During recent years it has become increasingly evident that all living cells are equipped with multidrug transporters that are capable of expelling unrelated, mostly hydrophobic compounds across the membrane. These transporters convey multidrug resistance to cells. Due to the physiochemical characteristics of penicillins, MDR transporters are likely candidates for b-lactam secretion. MDR transporters can be subdivided into six families (for a review see [141, 142]). Two of the transporter families have already been implicated in b-lactam extrusion and will be briefly discussed here; namely the ATP-binding-
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cassettes (ABC) transporter superfamily and the MFS of proteins. The ABCtransporters form a very large family of proteins with a very broad spectrum of substrate specificity, they translocate both small and large molecules across membranes. They are characterized by the presence of two cytosolic nucleotide binding domains (NBD’s) each containing the highly conserved Walker A and Walker B motifs that specify the nucleotide binding site, and two transmembrane domains consisting of six transmembrane spanning segments [141]. The MFS is also referred to as the uniporter-symporter-antiporter family. These proteins are secondary transporters that transport small molecules in a proton motive force-dependent manner. They can be classified into 17 families. This includes the drug:H+ antiporter families that specify membrane proteins with either 12 or 14 membrane spanning segments [142]. Recently, the first experimental evidence has been obtained that secretion of b-lactam in filamentous fungi may indeed involve active transport. This concerned a study on the involvement of ABC-transporters of A. nidulans in drug resistance. After identification of a number of ABC-transporter genes, a disruption mutant for the atrD gene displayed increased sensitivity towards the chemically unrelated compounds valinomycin, nigericin and cycloheximide. Moreover, in a halo size assay, used as a measure of the amount of penicillin produced, a reduced penicillin production was detected for an atrD deletion strain [143]. This suggests a role of the ATRDp in penicillin secretion, although this needs to be verified by direct transport assays. In another study, the region downstream of the acvS gene of Acremonium chrysogenum was examined which identified a gene encoding a membrane protein (CefT) belonging to the MFS. The deduced protein sequence revealed that this protein belongs to the family of drug: H+ antiporters with 12 transmembrane segments. Disruption of the gene showed that it was not required for cephalosporin synthesis and that growth of A. chrysogenum was not affected. However, amplification of the full length gene (2 to 4 copies) resulted in a twofold increase in the cephalosporin C production [29]. Both studies, however, await direct proof that the identified transporters (AtrD and CefT) mediate antibiotic transport. Also in P. chrysogenum, a series of ABC transporters have been identified that are expressed under penicillin producing conditions [144]. Some of these MDR-like ABC transporters are induced when cells are challenged with b-lactam, suggesting a role in b-lactam excretion. In various antibiotic producing organisms, genes have been identified that confer resistance to the produced antibiotic presumably by transporting the drug out of the cells. In the gene cluster for antibiotic biosynthesis of Streptomyces argillaceus the genes mtrA and mtrB are present that encode a putative ABCtransporter and render the organism resistant to mithramycin [145]. In b-lactam producing actinomycetes like Nocardia lactamdurans genes are found that code for transporter proteins either belonging to the ABC-transporter superfamily or the MFS [27].
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8 Concluding Remarks In recent years, major insights have been obtained in the compartmentalization of the b-lactam biosynthesis pathway in filamentous fungi. The exact molecular reasons for the localization of the last step of biosynthesis steps in a microbody are not known, although the specific pH in this organelle seems favourable for the catalytic activity of the key enzymes. Control of the cellular distribution of a-aminoadipate to direct it either into the lysine or penicillin biosynthesis pathway may be crucial now it appears that critical enzymatic steps take place in the microbody. However, many of the molecular details still need to be resolved (see chapter Brakhage et al.). Other questions concern if b-lactam synthesis is limited by transport process, as for instance, cellular secretion? Intrinsic to the approach of removing bottlenecks from a metabolic production process, new limiting factors are found one of which may related to transport, a process often ignored in metabolic pathway engineering programs. The antibiotic resistance of bacteria necessitates the discovery and production of new antibiotics. Genetic engineering enables us to intervene in metabolic and biosynthetic pathways thereby providing new opportunities of product formation. Such challenging metabolic reprogramming efforts also require insights in critical transport steps and possible limitation by exciting substrate specificities. Metabolic flux analyses of genetically altered strain, genome sequencing and transcriptome profiling, and directed evolution promise to be interesting tools for the near future. Acknowledgements This work was supported by grants from the European Union (BIOT CT 94-2100, and Eurofung cell factory RTD BIO4CT96-0535 and QLK3-CT-1999-00729), STW (Stichting Toegepaste Wetenschappen), the EET K20002 Cell Factory Project, and by DSM Anti-infectives (Delft, The Netherlands).
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123. Slayman CL, Slayman CW (1974) Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 71:1935 124. Mark CG, Romano AH (1971) Biochim Biophys Acta 249:216 125. Christensen LH, Henriksen CM, Nielsen J,Villadsen J, Egel-Mitani M (1995) J Biotechnol 42:95 126. Chang YD, Dickson RC (1988) J Biol Chem 263:16696 127. Dickson RC, Barr K (1983) J Bacteriol 154:1245 128. van der Rest ME, de Vries Y, Poolman B, Konings WN (1995) J Bacteriol 177:5440 129. Nicolay K, Veenhuis M, Douma AC, Harder W (1987) Arch Microbiol 147:37 130. Alvarez E, Cantoral JM, Barredo JL, Diez B, Martin JF (1987) Antimicrob Agents Chemother 31:1675 131. Alvarez E, Meesschaert B, Montenegro E, Gutierrez S, Diez B, Barredo JL, Martin JF (1993) Eur J Biochem 215:323 132. van der Lende TR, Breeuwer P,Abee T, Konings WN, Driessen AJM (2002) Biochim Biophys Acta 1589:104 133. Dansen TB, Wirtz KW, Wanders RJ, Pap EH (2000) Nat Cell Biol 2:51 134. Lemmens M, Verheyden K, Van Veldhoven P, Vereecke J, Mannaerts GP, Carmeliet E (1989) Biochim Biophys Acta 984:351 135. Reumann S, Maier E, Benz R, Heldt HW (1996) Biochem Soc Trans 24:754 136. Reumann S, Bettermann M, Benz R, Heldt HW (1997) Plant Physiol 115:891 137. Reumann S, Maier E, Heldt HW, Benz R (1998) Eur J Biochem 251:359 138. van Roermund CW, Elgersma Y, Singh N,Wanders RJ, Tabak HF (1995) EMBO J 14:3480 139. Visser WF, van Roermund CW,Waterham HR,Wanders RJ (2002) Biochem Biophys Res Commun 299:494 140. Schafer H, Nau K, Sickmann A, Erdmann R, Meyer HE (2001) Electrophoresis 22:2955 141. Saier MH Jr, Beatty JT, Goffeau A, Harley KT, Heijne WH, Huang SC, Jack DL, Jahn PS, Lew K, Liu J, Pao SS, Paulsen IT, Tseng TT, Virk PS (1999) J Mol Microbiol Biotechnol 1:257 142. Pao SS, Paulsen IT, Saier MH Jr (1998) Microbiol Mol Biol Rev 62:1 143. Andrade AC, Van Nistelrooy JG, Peery RB, Skatrud PL, De Waard MA (2000) Mol Gen Genet 263:966 144. Bovenberg RAL, Driessen AJM, Schuurs TA, Nieboer M, van den Berg MA, Konings WN, Westerlaken I (2001) International Patent WO0132904 145. Fernandez E, Lombo F, Mendez C, Salas JA (1996) Mol Gen Genet 251:692
Received: January 2004
Adv Biochem Engin/Biotechnol (2004) 88: 137– 178 DOI 10.1007/b99260 © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2004
Control of Fluxes Towards Antibiotics and the Role of Primary Metabolism in Production of Antibiotics Nina Gunnarsson 1 · Anna Eliasson · Jens Nielsen Biocentrum-DTU, Center for Microbial Biotechnology, Building 223, Søltofts plads, 2800 Lyngby, Denmark 1 Present address: Fluxome Sciences A/S, Søltofts plads, Building 223, 2800 Lyngby, Denmark
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Flux Control in Biosynthesis Pathways Towards Antibiotics . Principles of MCA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . MCA of the Penicillin V Pathway in Penicillium Chrysogenum Overexpression of Biosynthesis Genes . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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Abstract Yield improvements in antibiotic-producing strains have classically been obtained through random mutagenesis and screening. An attractive alternative to this strategy is the rational design of producer strains via metabolic engineering, an approach that offers the possibility to increase yields while avoiding the problems of by-product formation and altered morphological properties, which frequently arise in mutagenized strains. An important aspect in the design of strains with improved yields by metabolic engineering is the identification of rate-controlling enzymatic reactions in the metabolic network. Here we describe and discuss available methods for identification of these steps, both in antibiotic biosynthesis pathways and in the primary metabolism, which serves as the supplier of precursors and cofactors for the secondary metabolism. Finally, the importance of precursor and cofactor supply from primary metabolism in the biosynthesis of different types of antibiotics is discussed and recent developments in metabolic engineering towards increased product yields in antibiotic producing strains are reviewed.
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Keywords Metabolic flux analysis · Metabolic control analysis · Metabolic engineering · Polyketides · b-Lactams · Glycopeptides List of Abbreviations L-a-aa L-a-Amino adipic acid a-AAR L-a-Aminoadipic acid reductase ACP Acyl-carrier protein LLD-ACV d-(L-a-Aminoadipyl)-L-cysteinyl-D-valine ACVS ACV synthetase 7-ADC A7-Aminocephalosporanic acid 6-AP A6-Aminopenicillinic acid AT Acyl-CoA:isopenicillin N acyltransferase DAB 2,4-Diaminobutyric acid DAC Deacetylcephalosporin DAC-AT Acetyl CoA:DAC acetyltransferase DACS DAC synthase DAHP 3-Deoxy-D-arabino heptulosonate-7-phosphate DAOC Deacetoxycephalosporin DAOCS DAOC synthase ED pathway Entner-Doudoroff pathway EMP pathway Embden Meyerhof Parnas pathway E4P Erythrose-4-phosphate FCC Flux control coefficient F6P Fructose-6-phosphate G6P Glucose-6-phosphate HCS Homocitrate synthase IOA Isooctanic acid IPN Isopenicillin N IPNS Isopenicillin N synthase LAT Lysine 6-amino transferase MCA Metabolic control analysis MOA 6-Methyloctanic acid NRPS Non-ribosomal peptide synthases PenN Penicillin N PEP Phosphoenolpyruvate 3PGA 3-Phosphoglycerate 6PGA 6-Phosphogluconate PKS Polyketide synthase PP pathway Pentose phosphate pathway RIBU5P Ribulose-5-phosphate TCA cycle Tricarboxylic acid cycle tcm C Tetracenomycin C TR Thioredoxin-thioredoxin reductase system TREHAL Trehalose
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1 Introduction The penicillin production process was the first biotech process to be implemented in the pharmaceutical industry. It was introduced in the early 1940s and since its introduction there has been a continuous optimisation of the process, particularly focusing on improving the overall conversion yield of sugar to penicillin and the productivity, i.e. the amount of penicillin produced per unit time. Through classical strain improvement programs the productivity of industrial strains of Penicillium chrysogenum used for production of penicillin has been improved more than 1000-fold. Also for many other antibiotics the productivity has been improved substantially by classical mutagenesis and screening. Despite success in these strain improvement programs the antibiotic industry is, however, beginning to introduce a more rational approach to strain improvement – namely metabolic engineering where directed genetic modifications are introduced with the purpose of improving the performance of the applied strain [1, 2]. There are several reasons for introduction of metabolic engineering in the antibiotics industry: – Compared with mutagenesis and screening, directed genetic modifications generally do not result in appearance of undesirable side effects, e.g. formation of by-products and/or altered morphology. – Metabolic engineering allows for specific elimination of the formation of byproducts. – Through metabolic engineering one obtains a fundamental insight into the physiology of the applied microorganisms, and this may be applied to design improved fermentation processes. – Through metabolic engineering it is possible to apply the same microorganism (super-host or plug-bug) to produce different antibiotics. Hereby optimisation of the central carbon metabolism in the applied microorganism allows for improvement of production of two or more antibiotics. This is exemplified by the use of P. chrysogenum to produce both penicillin and 7-ADCA [3]. Improvement of antibiotic production through metabolic engineering often involves improving the flux through the biosynthesis pathway leading to the antibiotic of interest. There is therefore much focus on establishing the biosynthesis pathway and identifying the genes involved in the biosynthesis. Generally the flux through the biosynthesis pathway can be improved by overexpressing the genes encoding the biosynthesis genes, e.g. through insertion of multiple gene copies, promoter replacement and/or through overexpression of transcriptional activators. When the flux through the biosynthesis pathway has been improved flux-control will, however, often move to other parts of the metabolism. Thus, in high-yielding strains of P. chrysogenum, where there is a very high flux through the biosynthesis pathway, the supply of precursors for penicillin biosynthesis may become limiting for the overall production. Efficient strain improvement should therefore involve an evaluation of the precursor supply – particularly if the ap-
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Fig. 1 Simplified overview of precursor requirements in the biosynthesis of various antibiotics
plied microorganism is to be applied as a super-host system for the production of more than one antibiotic.A key element in this evaluation involves identification of the precursors for biosynthesis of the antibiotic of interest and subsequently mapping of the fluxes in the central carbon metabolism at different environmental conditions. Figure 1 gives an overview of how the central carbon metabolism is linked to the production of many different antibiotics. In this review we will discuss how the fluxes towards antibiotics are controlled. Our focus will be on how the production of antibiotics is linked to the primary metabolism, and how possible limitations in the primary metabolism may be identified. We will primarily focus on a few types of antibiotics, i.e. b-lactams, polyketides and glycopeptides, in order to illustrate some general principles rather than give a detailed account of the status for production of many different antibiotics.
2 Flux Control in Biosynthesis Pathways Towards Antibiotics A requirement for application of metabolic engineering in the improvement of flux through a pathway leading to a desirable product, e.g. a specific antibiotic, is to have a fundamental understanding of the biosynthesis pathway leading to the product. Specifically, it is attractive to have information concerning possible regulation in the pathway and kinetics of the individual enzymes. This information may be used to identify which enzymatic step that exerts the main control of flux through the pathway, a potentially crucial issue in the design of strains with increased flux towards the product of interest. Metabolic Control Analysis (MCA) is a useful tool for integration of knowledge at the level of regulation and kinetics of the individual enzymes, which enables quantitative analysis of flux control in metabolic pathways [4, 5]. The principles of MCA are extensively described elsewhere [6–8], but in the following we give a short summary of the theory of MCA and its applications in antibiotic biosynthesis.
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2.1 Principles of MCA At steady state all enzymatic reactions in a linear pathway proceed at the same rate, which is identical to the steady state flux through the pathway (Fig. 2). Thus, in order to increase the flux through the pathway, all individual enzymatic reaction rates in the pathway must be increased to the same level. Alteration of an individual enzyme activity may affect the pathway flux to various degrees, depending on the level of control this specific enzymatic step exerts on the flux through the pathway. The degree of control of a specific enzymatic step is dependent on the properties of the enzyme in relation to the properties of the remaining enzymes in the pathway, and can be determined through MCA of the pathway. We consider the pathway in Fig. 2, consisting of L reactions and K metabolites. The rate of each reaction can be described by a kinetic expression, e.g. Michaelis-Menten kinetics with feedback inhibition by the product. When the
Fig. 2 Linear metabolic pathway leading from substrate (S) to product (P). The substrate is converted to the product via K intermediate metabolites (X1,2...i...K) and L reactions, each catalysed by an enzyme (denoted E1,2...j...L).At steady state the forward rates of these reactions will be identical to the steady-state flux J through the pathway (v1=v2=...vj...vL=J). In MCA, the elasticity coefficients are measures of the sensitivity of local enzymatic reaction rates towards changes in metabolite concentrations, while the flux control coefficients are global properties that quantify the sensitivity of the total flux J through the pathway in relation to changes in individual enzymatic activities
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enzyme kinetics is given the elasticity coefficients (Eq. 1) can be calculated for each reaction in the pathway: Xi ∂nj j eXi = 5 6 i Œ {1, 2…K}, j Œ {1, 2…L} nj ∂Xi
(1)
The elasticity coefficient quantifies the relative change in reaction rate j due to a relative change in concentration of metabolite i, and is thus a measure of the sensitivity of the reaction with respect to changes in metabolite concentrations. Elasticity coefficients can be calculated for each of the reactions in the pathway and are local properties, i.e. they are not dependent on properties of the complete pathway. Therefore, they provide information only for a single enzymatic step and not about the flux control exerted by the specific enzyme on the flux through the pathway. In contrast, the flux control coefficients (FCCs) (Eq. 2), are global properties that are dependent on properties of the complete pathway: Ej ∂J FCC = C jJ = 4 6 j Œ {1, 2…L} J ∂Ej
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The FCCs quantify the relative change in the steady state flux J through the pathway, caused by a relative change in the activity of the j-th enzyme. As a consequence of the normalization, the FCCs of a pathway sum up to 1 (the so-called flux-control summation theorem). Thus, in a linear pathway, a FCC of 0 implies that no flux control is exerted, while a FCC of 1 means that the reaction in question is the only flux-controlling step and, thus, is rate-limiting for the pathway. Normally, the flux control is distributed on several reactions in the pathway. The elasticity coefficients and control coefficients are connected by the flux-control connectivity theorem, a central theorem for MCA (Eq. 3): L
j
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The connectivity theorem allows the calculation of FCCs from in vitro obtained kinetic data of the enzymes in the pathway, in combination with suitable kinetic expressions for the individual enzymes in the pathway. Flux control coefficients can, however, also be determined by other, direct or indirect, methods [9]. 2.2 MCA of the Penicillin V Pathway in Penicillium Chrysogenum Biosynthesis pathways to secondary metabolites are often complex and in many cases only partially elucidated. As a consequence, kinetic parameters of enzymes involved in the pathways, as well as methods for analysing pathway intermediates, are often not available. However, as knowledge concerning these
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pathways accumulates, the application of MCA is rendered more feasible. One of the most extensively studied antibiotic biosynthesis pathways is the one leading to penicillin V in Penicillium chrysogenum (Fig. 3), and this information has been used to perform MCA of this pathway. In the first model presented for this pathway [10] only the two first steps of the pathway were considered, i.e. the condensation of L-a- aminoadipic acid, Lcysteine and L-valine to LLD-ACV by ACVS and the conversion of LLD-ACV to isopenicillin N (IPN) by IPNS (Fig. 3). The last step, i.e. conversion of IPN to penicillin V catalysed by the enzyme AT, was not included in the model, since in vitro activity assays of AT revealed an order of magnitudes higher activity than required to support the in vivo flux leading to penicillin. Furthermore, the
Fig. 3 The biosynthesis pathway to penicillin V in P. chrysogenum. L-a-Aminoadipic acid, L-cysteine and L-valine are converted to d-(L-a-aminoadipyl)-L-cysteinyl-D-valine (LLDACV) by ACV synthetase (ACVS). LLD-ACV is further converted to isopenicillin N by isopenicillin N synthase (IPNS), and finally the a-aminoadipic acid side chain of IPN is replaced by phenoxyacetic acid through the action of acyl-CoA:isopenicillin N acyltransferase (AT). Formation of bisACV is a spontaneous reaction, and reduction back to LLD-ACV takes place via the thioredoxin-thioredoxin reductase system (TR)
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intracellular concentration of IPN was lower than the Km value of AT for IPN, indicating that the enzyme was in excess. This led to the conclusion that this enzymatic step would not be flux controlling, a notion that was later supported by a model including the complete pathway [11]. The kinetics of ACVS and IPNS were assumed to be of Michaelis-Menten type with respect to the substrates, with non-competitive inhibition of ACVS by LLD-ACV and competitive inhibition of IPNS by glutathione. Moreover, the kinetics of IPNS was considered to be of first order with respect to the dissolved oxygen concentration. From the proposed kinetics for the two enzymes, the elasticity and flux control coefficients were calculated during fed-batch fermentation. The analysis revealed that there was a dramatic shift in flux control during the fed-batch fermentation, with the main flux control exerted by ACVS during the initial part of the fermentation and by IPNS during the final part of the fermentation. This was explained by accumulation of the intermediate LLD-ACV during the timecourse of the fermentation, which resulted in inhibition of the first enzyme, ACVS, and thereby a shift in flux control to the enzyme catalysing the conversion of the inhibitor. Due to the dramatic shift in the pathway a single flux controlling step could not be identified, but clearly it would be beneficial to increase the activity of IPNS in order to avoid LLD-ACV accumulation, and thereby feedback inhibition of ACVS. It was proposed that an increased activity of IPNS could be achieved by increasing the concentration of dissolved oxygen, since this enzyme is dependent on oxygen. The effect of dissolved oxygen concentration on the distribution of flux control was later investigated in continuous cultures of a high-yielding strain of P. chrysogenum [12]. It was found that IPNS exerted the largest part of the flux control at low dissolved oxygen concentrations, whereas at high dissolved oxygen concentrations the flux control was evenly distributed between ACVS and IPNS. Thus, an increased oxygen concentration could not completely shift the flux control to ACVS. The reason for this finding was shown by Theilgaard et al. [13] to be a consequence of a previously unknown inhibitory effect of bisLLD-ACV on ACVS. Formation of bis-LLD-ACV occurs via an oxygen-driven reaction where a sulfide bridge is formed between to molecules of LLD-ACV (Fig. 3). Although a specific thioredoxin system (a specific reductase) capable of converting bis-LLD-ACV back to LLD-ACV exists in P. chrysogenum [14], it is probable that an increased oxygen concentration leads to an increased level of bis-LLD-ACV and hereby strong inhibition of ACVS. This information was used to revise the kinetic model to comprise the oxidation of LLD-ACV to bisLLD-ACV, reduction of bis-LLD-ACV to LLD-ACV by the action of the thioredoxin system, and the non-competitive feedback inhibition of ACVS by LLDACV and bis-LLD-ACV [15]. From analysis of this model it was found that the main flux control of the biosynthesis pathway to penicillin V in P. chrysogenum is exerted by IPNS.
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2.3 Overexpression of Biosynthesis Genes The genes involved in antibiotic biosynthesis, i.e. structural genes, transport genes, resistance genes and pathway-specific regulators, are often grouped together in a cluster with coordinated expression. One can imagine that a tight regulation, ensuring a coordinated activity of the individual enzymes in a secondary metabolic pathway, is beneficial for the cell in order to avoid accumulation of intermediates, particularly if these are toxic compounds. To avoid accumulation of intermediates, the enzymatic activities of the pathway need to be adjusted so that the product of the initial reaction is rapidly converted into succeeding intermediates and finally into the product. This requires that the capacity of the initial reaction is lower than the capacity of remaining enzymes in the pathway, which means that the committed step controls the flux through the pathway to a large extent. The committed step in penicillin synthesis is the condensation of valine, cysteine and L-a-aminoadipic acid to form LLD-ACV by the action of ACVS and in Aspergillus nidulans, overexpression of this enzyme resulted in a large increase in penicillin production [16]. However, the situation in a high-yielding strain that has been developed through strain-improvement programs based on random mutagenesis may be entirely different to that in low-yielding natural strains. During the many rounds of mutations, properties that lead to higher antibiotic yields have been selected for, and this most probably includes alleviation of flux control at the committed step and consequently a more even distribution of control at the various steps of the pathway. In accordance with this, MCA of the penicillin biosynthesis pathway in a high-yielding strain of P. chrysogenum indicated that the flux control was distributed between ACVS and IPNS, and that IPNS exerted the main control of flux through the pathway. In a study by Theilgaard et al. [17], a single gene copy strain of P. chrysogenum was transformed with the structural genes of the penicillin pathway and strains with improved penicillin productivity were analysed with respect to the ACVS and IPNS activities, intracellular concentration of LLD-ACV, and penicillin productivity. It was found that an increase in either IPNS or ACVS activity led to increased penicillin productivity, and that the largest effect was obtained when the activity of both enzymes was increased. Thus, even though MCA of the pathway indicated IPNS as a prime target for amplification, an even better result was achieved by the amplification of both activities. In accordance with this, overproducing strains of P. chrysogenum obtained by classical strain-improvement techniques contain amplifications of the complete gene cluster, rather than any single gene in the cluster [18–20]. The effect of overexpression of biosynthesis genes has also been investigated in the polyketide producer Streptomyces glaucescens. The carbon skeleton of polyketide antibiotics is assembled by the action of polyketide synthases (PKSs). After the assembly of the carbon backbone, the polyketide is typically modified by other enzymes, encoded by genes in the biosynthesis cluster, to
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Fig. 4 Simplified pathway to cephalosporin C in A. chrysogenum. Abbreviations: L-a-aa, L-a-amino adipic acid; LLD-ACV, d-(L-a-aminoadipyl)-L-cysteinyl-D-valine; IPN, isopenicillin N; PenN, penicillin N; DAOC, deacetoxycephalosporin; DAC, deacetylcephalosporin; DAOCS, DAOC synthase; DACS, DAC synthase; DAC-AT, Acetyl CoA: DAC acetyltransferase
form the final product. In the biosynthesis of the aromatic polyketide tetracenomycin C (tcm C) by S. glaucescens, four PKSs are responsible for the synthesis of the initial polyketide intermediate [21]. In a study by Decker et al. [22], the genes encoding these enzymes were overexpressed and their influence on the production of tcm C and intermediates in the pathway to tcm C was examined. It was found that the introduction of a vector harbouring all four PKS genes led to an increased tcm C titre as compared to a control strain harbouring the vector without insert. Moreover, introducing the gene encoding the acyl-carrier protein (ACP) alone also resulted in increased tcm C titres. In both cases, the introduction of additional copies of PKS encoding genes resulted in pronounced accumulation of pathway intermediates, as well as increased tcm C titres. This indicates a shift of flux control towards later enzymatic steps in the pathway, and thus, it is likely that an even more increased tcm C productivity can be achieved through overexpression of all structural genes of the tcm C biosynthesis cluster. There are also examples of biosynthesis pathways where enzymatic steps late in the pathway exert a large degree of flux control on the pathway. In production of cephalosporin C by Acremonium chrysogenum, overexpression of cefEF (Fig. 4) resulted in 15% increased cephalosporin C production [23]. However, it was later found that the plasmid used for overexpression of these genes also contained the cefG gene, which encodes the acetyltransferase catalysing the last step of the pathway [24, 25]. Moreover, overexpression of cefG alone resulted in substantially increased cephalosporin C yields [25, 26].
3 Integrated Analysis Production of secondary metabolites normally occurs at a low level in naturally producing organisms, and the flux through the biosynthesis pathway is typi-
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cally orders of magnitude lower than the fluxes through many of the pathways of the central carbon metabolism. Supply of precursors for secondary metabolite production is therefore not an issue in naturally producing strains, and even in strains with a substantially improved production level. However, as the productivity is continuously increased, the drain of precursors and cofactors from the central carbon metabolism may become an issue. Particularly in situations where building blocks are drained from anabolic reactions or specifically synthesized precursors are required for antibiotic synthesis, redirection of carbon fluxes in the central carbon metabolism may be necessary (this will be further discussed later in this chapter). In order to evaluate the influence of drain of precursors and cofactors for secondary metabolite production it is not sufficient to consider the individual pathways leading to the precursors or supplying cofactors for antibiotic synthesis, but the complete primary metabolic network needs to be taken into consideration. Metabolic flux analysis allows the quantification of intracellular reaction rates or fluxes, which is a term used to emphasize that these are rates of metabolic pathways rather than single reactions. The result of this analysis gives a snapshot of cellular metabolism. Such a snapshot may not be particularly useful on its own, but valuable information can be obtained by comparing the metabolic flux distribution for a specific situation with the distributions found for other situations. For example, analysis of flux distributions in high- and low yielding strains or in a certain strain subjected to different cultivation conditions may provide important clues to the link between the primary and secondary metabolism through the supply of precursors and cofactors for secondary metabolism. Metabolic flux analysis is also a useful tool in determining the flexibility of metabolic branch points and calculating the maximum theoretical product yields. Below we will briefly review the concepts of metabolic flux analysis and its applications for analysis of antibiotic-producing strains. A detailed description of the principles and applications of metabolic flux analysis is given by Stephanopoulus et al. [8]. 3.1 Metabolite Balancing Intracellular fluxes can be quantified by combining experimental measurements, e.g. substrate uptake rates and the secretion rates of metabolic products, with mass balances applied around intracellular metabolites, so-called metabolite balances. The mass balances are based on the stoichiometry of the intracellular reactions that are included in the model. Normally, only the major intracellular reactions are included, in order to keep the model as simple as possible. In a metabolic model with K metabolites and J reactions, the stoichiometry of the j-th intracellular reaction can be specified as K
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Fig. 5a,b A metabolic model typically includes the main reactions of cellular metabolism. In the figure, some of the reactions around the glucose-6-phosphate (G6P) node are considered, i.e. the phosphorylation of glucose to form G6P, the further conversion of G6P to fructose-6-phosphate (F6P), conversion of G6P to the storage compound trehalose (TREHAL) and the oxidative branch of the PP-pathway, leading to ribulose-5-phosphate (RIBU5P) and carbon dioxide: a stoichiometry of reactions around G6P, defined according to Eq. (4); b the stoichiometric balances for all reactions can be written in matrix notation (Eq. 5). The J rows in the matrix G each represent one reaction, while each column represent one of the K metabolites. The stoichiometries of the reactions around the G6P branch point have been defined in the matrix, and the dots represent additional reactions and metabolites that may be included in the model
In Eq. (4), Xmet,i is the i-th pathway intermediate. The stoichiometric coefficient gji may be positive, negative or zero depending on if the metabolite referred to is formed, consumed or not participating in the reaction, respectively (see example in Fig. 5). The stoichiometry of all the J reactions in the metabolic model can be written in a compact form using matrix notation: GXmet = 0
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The matrix G then contains the stoichiometric information of all reactions and metabolites included in the metabolic model. In flux analysis, the intracellular reaction rates are in focus. The rate of a chemical reaction is defined as the forward rate v, and the formation rate of a metabolite with the stoichiometric coefficient g is then gv. The net synthesis rate of the i-th metabolite is the sum of its formation rate in all J reactions:
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rmet,i = Â gji n j
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In the example in Fig. 5, the net synthesis rate of G6P is then rmet,G6P= v1–v2–2v3–v4. The net synthesis rate of all metabolites included in the model can be written using matrix notation as rmet = GTv
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Inside the cell the net formation and consumption of metabolites will generally be balanced, i.e. the net formation of a given metabolite will equal its net consumption. This will hold for most conditions, except when the system is perturbed drastically. However, since the turnover of intracellular metabolites is high, the concentration of intracellular metabolites generally adjusts rapidly to new levels after environmental perturbations.A pseudo-steady state assumption [27] can therefore be made for the intracellular metabolite concentrations even after a drastic change in the environmental conditions. Balancing of all intracellular metabolites corresponds to a situation where there is no accumulation of these and their net formation rates are consequently zero: rmet = GTv = 0
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A consequence of the steady state assumption is that the reactions in a linear pathway can be lumped into overall reactions, i.e. a linear pathway segment can be lumped into a single overall reaction (exemplified in Fig. 6). Accordingly, only balances over branch-point metabolites need to be included in Eq. (8). From this vector equation the pathway fluxes in the rate vector v can be determined. The equation represents K linear algebraic balances
Fig. 6 Glucose-6-phosphate is converted to ribulose-5-phosphate through a sequence of reactions in a linear pathway, i.e. the oxidative branch of the pentose phosphate pathway. During steady state, the rates of the reactions in a linear pathway are clearly identical to the flux through the pathway (r1=r2=r3=v4) and these reactions can be lumped into an overall reaction in the metabolic model. Abbreviations: G6P, glucose-6-phosphate; TREHAL, trehalose; F6P, fructose-6-phosphate; 6PGA, 6-phosphogluconate; RIBU5P, ribulose-5-phosphate
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with J unknowns, and the degrees of freedom in this set of algebraic equations is therefore F=J–K. If F fluxes can be experimentally determined, e.g. by measuring uptake and secretion rates of substrates and products, a unique solution to the system can be obtained. In secondary metabolite producers it is often not possible to determine F fluxes experimentally, since they typically do not secrete metabolic products that are directly representative of primary metabolic fluxes. Therefore, additional constraints must be added to the model in order to determine the fluxes in the primary metabolism. These can be balances over cofactors, i.e. NADH, NADPH and FADH2, and over ATP. Alternatively, one may apply a concept of linear programming where an overall optimisation criterion, e.g. maximization of the specific growth rate, is used to find a solution [28–31]. Jørgensen et al. [32] constructed a stoichiometric model of P. chrysogenum including 61 internal fluxes and 49 intracellular metabolites. The model included the main primary metabolic pathways, i.e. the Embden Meyerhof Parnas (EMP) pathway, the pentose phosphate (PP) pathway and the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle, as well as the biosynthesis pathway to penicillin V and the drain of central metabolites to biomass. Since a complex medium was used in the cultivations, the model also considered the uptake of 21 amino acids, lactate and g-aminobutyrate, in addition to glucose. In order to solve the system, balances over NADPH, NADH, FADH2 and ATP had to be included in the model. The degrees of freedom after including these cofactors were 33, and since exactly 33 fluxes could be measured experimentally, a unique solution could be obtained. The experimentally determined fluxes included uptake rates of glucose, lactate, g-aminobutyrate and 21 amino acids, formation rates of penicillin V and intermediates in the penicillin V pathway; and the formation rates of biomass components such as cellular RNA/DNA, protein, lipid, carbohydrate and amino carbohydrate. From the flux analysis it was found that there was a correlation between the flux towards penicillin biosynthesis and the flux through the PP pathway, and flux analysis hereby provided information about complex correlations between different parts of the metabolism that would have been difficult to identify by other means. The correlation between PP pathway flux and penicillin synthesis will be further discussed later. Stoichiometric models have also been developed for antibiotic producing actinomycetes, e.g. Streptomyces coelicolor and Streptomyces lividans. Daae and Ison [33] constructed a stoichiometric model for S. lividans, including 57 reactions and 53 balances over metabolites including ATP, NADH, NADPH and FADH2. The model was used for a theoretical analysis of the sensitivity of flux estimations towards perturbations in measured fluxes and biomass composition. Later, Rossa et al. [34] used a simplified version of this model, including 36 reactions and 46 metabolites, in the analysis of an actinorhodin and undecylprodigiosin producing S. lividans strain. Also here, interesting correlations between primary metabolic fluxes and antibiotic production were observed, and the information obtained in this way was subsequently used in the design of an improved producer strain (further discussed later in this chapter).
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In the construction of a metabolic model like the ones described above, several difficulties may arise. A detailed knowledge of the primary metabolism is required in order to set up balances over cofactors, and therefore this is not possible in poorly characterized species. Even in the cases where the metabolism is well characterized, assumptions have to be made concerning the cofactor specificity of enzymes and the possible existence of transhydrogenases, i.e. enzymes capable of reversibly converting NADH to NADPH. Likewise, assumptions have to be made for the balance over ATP, e.g. concerning the P/O ratios for NADH and FADH2. In order to circumvent these problems it is necessary to identify other possible constraints on the fluxes in the system. One approach to this is to combine metabolite balancing with feeding labelled tracers to the cells and measuring the distribution of labelling in the different intracellular metabolites as described further in the following. 3.2 The Use of Labelled Substrates By combining metabolite balances with the use of 13C-labelled glucose and measurements of 13C-enrichment patterns in metabolites, a robust estimation of flux distribution can be achieved [35–37]. When [1-13C]-glucose is used as the carbon-source for growth, the 13C-labelling will be distributed in metabolites and cell constituents in a manner dependent on which metabolic pathways are active and to which extent they are active. Using this approach, it is possible to set up labelling balances over branch-point metabolites much in the same way as metabolite balances. However, whereas the output of metabolite balancing is absolute fluxes, the use of labelling balances enables estimation of relative fluxes.As is illustrated in Fig. 7, the combination of labelling and metabolite balancing may provide information that cannot be accessed through either of the approaches.
Fig. 7a,b The principle of: a metabolite; b labelling balancing (modified from Christensen and Nielsen [38]). Two reactions with fluxes x and y result in the same metabolite, which is produced with the flux z. If only the outgoing flux z is known (z=80), the fluxes x and y cannot be calculated using metabolite balancing. However, from the fractional labelling of the metabolites it can be deduced that the reactions are equally active, and by combining labelling and metabolite balancing their fluxes can be quantified (x=y=40)
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The additional constraints provided by labelling balances eliminate the need for including cofactor and energy balances in the metabolic model and allows a more detailed analysis of the metabolic network. An iterative method combining labelling balancing and metabolite balancing can be used for estimations of the flux distribution in metabolic networks [39].Alternatively, labelling data may be used for estimation of individual fluxes of special interest. In particular, it is possible to estimate the flux through the PP pathway using a few GC-MS measurements and a simple algebraic expression [40]. Since the flux through the PP pathway is often important in antibiotic production due to its function as the main NADPH-generating pathway in the primary metabolism, a simple and accurate method for estimating this flux is very useful. Due to the low intracellular concentrations of central metabolites it is impractical to directly use these compounds for analysis of labelling patterns. However, since central metabolites are converted to amino acids through conserved biosynthesis pathways in which the carbon transitions are well known, the positional labelling of central metabolites may be obtained through labelling analysis of the amino acids. The amino acids in total cell protein can be made available for analysis by NMR or GC-MS by hydrolysis of the cell material [35, 41]. A consequence of the use of proteinogenic amino acids for analysis is that steady state cultivation is required for flux quantification through the 13C-tracer approach. However, 13C-labelling methods can be applied in batch cultivation for a qualitative assessment of flux distribution. Thus, the distribution of labelling in the amino acids in batch cultivation reflects the relative contribution of different pathways, although it is not possible to obtain the absolute value of the fluxes.A batch experiment could for example be used to give initial information concerning the relative activity of different pathways in a poorly characterized species. It is also possible to use labelling data from a batch cultivation to follow changes in the primary metabolism during the timecourse of the growth and production phases. In this case, changes in positional labelling of central metabolites will be reflected in the amino acid labelling patterns, but with a delayed effect. Quantitative changes in fluxes can therefore not be estimated during batch fermentation, but through measurement of the labelling patterns of amino acids it is possible to obtain qualitative assessment of the fluxes and perhaps even identify trends in the flux changes. This has been illustrated by analysis of nystatin production by Streptomyces noursei [42], where changes in central metabolic fluxes were observed during the timecourse of batch fermentation (see also later). 3.3 Identification of Pathways Metabolic flux analysis through metabolite balancing requires that the main reactions in the network are known. However, it is also possible to use a metabolite balancing for assessment of which pathways are likely to be active, i.e. by examining which metabolic models fit best to a given set of experimental data. A
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more powerful approach for pathway identification is, however, the use of labelled substrates in combination with NMR or GC-MS analysis of intracellular metabolites, e.g. amino acids, as this approach provides direct information concerning which metabolic pathways are active in the cell. An illustrative example of this is the distinction between the EMP and Entner-Doudoroff (ED) pathways for glucose catabolism. Catabolism of [1–13C] glucose through the EMP pathway results in labelling in position 3 of pyruvate, while catabolism via the ED pathway leads to labelling in position 1 of pyruvate (Fig. 8), a difference which is easily detected in the labelling patterns of the pyruvate-derived amino acids alanine and valine. Recently, the ED pathway was unexpectedly identified as the main catabolic route in the glycopeptide producing actinomycete Nonomuraea ATCC 39727 using a 13C-labelling approach [43]. The presence of the pathway was later confirmed by identification, sequencing and expression analysis of the genes encoding the enzymes of the pathway. The degradation of compounds that are not commercially available in a 13Clabelled version can be investigated through a reciprocal labelling approach, where [U-13C6] is used as the carbon-source. Co-catabolism of the unlabelled compound can then be traced in the labelling patterns of central metabolites, allowing identification of the degradative pathway. This approach was used in the elucidation of adipate degradation in a 7-aminocephalosporanic acid (adipoyl-7-ADCA) producing P. chrysogenum strain [44]. Production of adipoyl-7-ADCA in this strain has been achieved by the introduction of an expandase gene from Streptomyces clavuligerus in combination with feeding of adipate [3]. Adipate is cleaved off adipoyl 7-ADCA in a post-fermentation ena)
b)
Fig. 8a,b Catabolism of [1-13C]-glucose via: a the EMP pathway; b the ED pathway lead to 13C-labelling in position 3 and 1 of pyruvate, respectively
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zymatic process, yielding the desired product 7-aminocephalosporanic acid (7ADCA), and adipate can hereby be reused in the fermentation process (Fig. 9). Metabolism of adipate by P. chrysogenum is therefore undesirable in terms of overall process economy. In the study by Thykær et al. [44], degradation of unlabelled adipate was followed in P. chrysogenum during growth on [U-13C6]. It was found that unlabelled carbon made its way into intermediates of the TCA-cycle, supporting an earlier hypothesis that adipate is degraded to succinyl CoA and acetyl CoA by b-oxidation. Furthermore, degradation of unlabelled adipate did not affect the labelling of acetyl CoA either in the cytosol or in the mitochondria, and therefore it was likely that adipate metabolism took place in the microbodies, with further metabolism of acetyl CoA via the glyoxylate shunt resulting in formation of a C-4 compound that was subsequently transferred to the mitochondria. Presence of the key enzyme of the glyoxylate shunt was shown by an enzymatic assay, and flux analysis of chemostat cultivations with and without the addition
Fig. 9 Pathway to 7-ADCA in P. chrysogenum carrying the expandase gene of S. clavuligerus. The acyl chain of isopenicillin N is substituted by adipate, which is supplied in the growth medium, to form adipoyl-6-APA. This compound is further converted to adipoyl-7-ADCA through the action of the expandase, and to obtain the desired product 7-ADCA, adipate is enzymatically cleaved off adipoyl-7-ADCA in a post-fermentation process. The adipate thus released can be reused in the feed medium, allowing an economic production process. Abbreviations: 7-ADCA, 7-aminocephalosporanic acid, 6-APA, 6-aminopenicillinic acid
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of adipate demonstrated that catabolism of adipate via this pathway could ensure net synthesis of C-4 compounds and hereby replace the anaplerotic flux from pyruvate to oxaloacetate via pyruvate carboxylase. 3.4 Node Flexibility In order to improve the overall yield in a given process it is obviously desirable to redirect the carbon flux towards the pathway leading to the product of interest, while reducing the flux through pathways leading to byproducts. The relative fluxes through the various branches of a metabolic network are dependent on the flux-split ratios at the metabolic branch points, and in order to modify these ratios, it is important to gain insight into the regulation of flux around the branch points. In the branched pathway in Fig. 10, the yield of the product P1 on the substrate S is a function of the fluxes through the pathways, i.e. YSP1=JP1/JS. A straightforward approach to increase the yield of P1 would be to enhance the enzyme activities in the pathway leading from the branch point to P1, e.g. by overexpression of the structural genes encoding these enzymes. However, the effectiveness of such a change depends on the regulation of the flux distribution at the branch-point, i.e. the flexibility of the node [45]. In a flexible node, the flux-split ratio will change rapidly in response to the need of the cell, and the competing enzymes around the node typically have similar substrate affinities and reaction velocities. Thus, if the branch point in the above scheme is flexible, an increase in the enzyme activities in the pathway leading to P1 will serve its purpose and increase the flux through this pathway in relation to the flux leading to P2. In contrast, in a rigid node the competing enzymes are tightly controlled by feedback regulation or enzyme transactivation by metabolites from the competing branch. In this case, it may not be possible to alter the fluxsplit ratio by changing the enzyme activities around the node. It may not be straightforward to spot which branch points in a metabolic network are crucial to product and byproduct formation. These crucial branch points, i.e. the principal nodes, can be identified experimentally by systematic variation of the product yield and analysis of the flux-split ratios at various nodes. Once the principal nodes have been identified, their flexibility can be as-
Fig. 10 Branched pathway, leading from the substrate S to an intermediate (I), which can be further converted to two different products (P1 and P2). The yield of the respective products is determined by the flux-split ratio at the branch point
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sessed by introducing perturbations in the metabolic network and analysing the effects of these on the flux partitioning at the principal nodes [46, 47]. In a study by van Gulik et al. [48], the rigidity of the principal nodes for penicillin production in a high-yielding strain of P. chrysogenum was investigated. The principal nodes were identified through comparison of the flux distributions in the primary metabolic network during different penicillin production rates, i.e. during a fermentation where no production occurred and during high-productivity fermentations. Since significant flux partitioning changes occurred at the glucose-6-phosphate, 3-phosphoglycerate, mitochondrial pyruvate and mitochondrial isocitrate nodes when penicillin productivity increased, these were assigned as the principal nodes. The flux partitioning changes at the 3-phosphoglycerate and mitochondrial pyruvate nodes were explained by the increased synthesis of cysteine and valine, respectively, for penicillin biosynthesis.Accordingly, the changes at the glucose-6-phosphate and mitochondrial isocitrate nodes were considered to be due to the demand for NADPH in the synthesis of these precursors. In order to assess the rigidity of the principal nodes, perturbations of the flux distribution were introduced by growing the cells on alternative carbon sources, i.e. ethanol and acetate. Surprisingly, the use of ethanol or acetate as the carbon source in chemostat cultivations of P. chrysogenum resulted in approximately as high specific penicillin productivities as was the case when glucose was the carbon source.Accordingly, the fluxes towards cysteine and valine synthesis, as well as the flux through isocitrate dehydrogenase, were largely unchanged during growth on the three different carbon-sources. The flux through the oxidative branch of the PP pathway was approximately constant whether the cells were using glucose or acetate as the carbon-source. During growth on ethanol this flux was largely decreased, as NADPH was amply supplied through the action of acetaldehyde dehydrogenase, and the function of the PP pathway therefore became mainly anabolic. In conclusion, the principal nodes in penicillin production appeared to be highly flexible and thus, flux partitioning at these nodes was not expected to present a problem in a potential further increase of penicillin yield. 3.5 Maximum Theoretical Yield Using a stoichiometric model for P. chrysogenum, Jørgensen et al. [32] calculated the maximum theoretical yield of penicillin to 0.43 mol penicillin/mol glucose. At conditions of maximum yield, no cell growth occurs and all citrate is drained from the TCA cycle to form L-a-aminoadipic acid for penicillin synthesis. Moreover, the upper part of glycolysis and the PP pathway must operate in a cyclic mode in order to supply sufficient NADPH for penicillin synthesis. In filamentous fungi, synthesis of cysteine may occur either through a transsulfuration pathway where homocysteine reacts with serine to form cystathionine, which subsequently is converted to cysteine and a-ketobutyrate, or
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through direct sulfhydrylation of serine. At the time of the study by Jørgensen et al. [32], it was believed that P. chrysogenum only used the transsulfuration pathway and this pathway was therefore used in the stoichiometric model. However, the direct sulfhydrylation pathway to cysteine is energetically more favourable than the transsulfuration pathway [49], and when this pathway was included in the model the maximal theoretical yield could be increased to 0.50 mol/mol. Thus, it was suggested that the introduction of such a pathway in P. chrysogenum could be an approach to increased penicillin yield. In a later study it was, however, shown that the direct sulfhydrylation pathway is present in P. chrysogenum along with the transsulfuration pathway [50], but so far the relative activities of the two pathways have not been resolved.
4 Linking the Primary and Secondary Metabolism Microbial production of secondary metabolites typically takes place through complex pathways, involving specialized enzymes that play no role in the central carbon metabolism of the cell. Nevertheless, secondary metabolism is intrinsically linked to the central part of the metabolism via the supply of precursors and cofactors. As mentioned earlier, the amount of precursors and cofactors required for antibiotic synthesis is usually sufficiently low to be easily accommodated by the central carbon metabolism of the cell. However, in high-yielding producer strains the requirements for precursors and cofactors eventually become limiting for the antibiotic yield. Another issue is the source of precursors for secondary metabolism, i.e. the possible role of specifically synthesized precursors in the overall flux control towards secondary metabolites. In the following sections, we will discuss interactions between the primary and secondary metabolites for two classes of antibiotics that are produced at high yields, i.e. polyketide and b-lactam antibiotics, and antibiotics that require specifically synthesized precursors, i.e. glycopeptide and polypeptide antibiotics. The precursor and cofactor requirements for synthesis of these compounds are summarized in Table 1. 4.1 Precursor Supply When considering the supply of precursors for antibiotic synthesis, it is informative to examine the source of these precursors in the microbial metabolism. Thus, precursors for secondary metabolism can be central metabolites, but they may also be cellular building blocks that are drained from the anabolic reactions of the cell or specifically synthesized precursors. These situations are depicted in a simplified manner in Fig. 11. The ability of a secondary metabolic pathway to drain metabolites from the central carbon metabolism depends on the intracellular concentration of
Anthracyclines Tetracyclines Actinorhodin
Erythromycin Rapamycin Ascomycin Rifamycins Nystatin
Vancomycin Teichoplanin Dalbavancin
Polymyxin
Aromatic polyketides (type II PKS)
Complex polyketides (type I PKS)
Glycopeptides
Polypeptides Oxaloactetate Pyruvate Acetyl CoA PEP E4P
PEP E4P Acetyl CoA Othersa
Acetyl CoA Buturyl CoA Propionyl CoA Methylmalonyl CoA
2,4-Diaminobutyric acid Phenylalanine Leucine Other amino acids Lipidsb
Tyrosine b-Hydroxytyrosine p-Hydroxyphenylglycine 3,5-Dihydroxyphenylglycine Other amino acids Sugarsa Lipidsb
NADPH
NADPH
L-a-Aminoadipic acid Valine Cysteine
NADPH
NADPH
NADPH
Cofactor requirements
Precursors (intermediate metabolism)
Glycopeptide antibiotics include sugar residues, which typically differ from one glycopeptide to another; these sugars may be natural or specifically synthesized. b Some glycopeptide and polypeptide antibiotics include a fatty acid chain. Abbreviations: PEP, phosphoenolpyruvate; E4P, erythrose-4-phosphate.
a
Acetyl CoA a-Ketoglutarate Pyruvate 3-Phosphoglycerate
Penicillins Cephalosporins
b-Lactams
Acetyl CoA Malonyl CoA
Precursors (central metabolism)
Antibiotics of this type
Type of antibiotic
Table 1 Summary of precursor and cofactor requirements in b-lactam, polyketide, glycopeptide and polypeptide antibiotics
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Fig. 11a–c Overview of the drain of precursors in the production of different types of antibiotics: a the antibiotic precursors are central metabolites; b the antibiotic is synthesized from cellular building blocks such as amino acids and amino acid precursors; c the antibiotic is synthesized from specifically synthesized precursors
the intermediate and the kinetics of the first enzyme in the pathway leading to the secondary metabolite. Since the flux through the central carbon metabolism, in the final end leading to CO2 and ATP, is typically much higher than the fluxes leading to biomass and antibiotic formation, a small increase in the flux towards the antibiotic will not alter the intracellular pool of the central metabolite to any great extent. It is only when the flux towards the antibiotic is substantially increased that it will significantly influence the intracellular pool of the central metabolite, and thereby the ability of the first enzyme of the pathway to convert the precursor. Therefore, the supply of precursors is generally not a problem when these are drained directly from the central carbon metabolism (i.e. Fig. 11a). In this case an increased flux towards the secondary metabolite may often be obtained simply by increasing the expression of the biosynthesis genes, e.g. by the manipulation of pathwayspecific regulators. When the precursors for antibiotic synthesis are cellular building blocks such as amino acids, carbon is drained from the anabolic routes rather than the central carbon metabolism (Fig. 11b). In such a situation, it may not be sufficient to increase expression of the biosynthesis genes, but also the activity of the anabolic pathway may need to be increased in order to obtain a high yield of the product. Examples of this will be discussed later in connection with penicillin biosynthesis.
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Finally, the situation is generally more complex when there is a requirement for specific precursors that are synthesized by enzymes encoded by genes in the biosynthesis gene cluster (Fig. 11c). Possible implications of this type of complex biosynthesis pathways on the metabolic engineering strategy towards increasing the product yield will be discussed later. 4.1.1 Precursor Requirements in Polyketide Production The carbon skeletons of polyketide antibiotics are assembled from the coenzyme A esters of short chain fatty acids by the action of polyketide synthase (PKS) enzymes. After assembly by the PKS, other enzymes may modify the polyketide backbone by amination, hydroxylation, methylation, oxidation, reduction or attachment of sugars. This, together with the variations introduced by the PKS enzymes, makes the polyketides an extremely diverse group of antibiotics. Structurally, polyketide antibiotics can be divided into two classes: aromatic and complex [51]. Aromatic polyketides are in bacteria synthesized by type II polyketide synthases, i.e. mono- or bifunctional enzymes that operate in a multienzyme complex, which carries out the condensation and reduction steps in sequence [52]. The starter unit in aromatic polyketides is most often acetyl CoA, and the polyketide chain is elongated by addition of malonyl CoA units [51]. A high yield of the aromatic polyketide actinorhodin has been achieved in Streptomyces lividans through the introduction of multiple copies of the gene encoding the pathway-specific regulator act II-ORF4 [53]. The protein encoded by act II-ORF4 mediates expression of the actinorhodin biosynthesis genes in Streptomyces coelicolor [54], and heterologous expression of this activator in S. lividans resulted in expression of the otherwise inactive actinorhodin biosynthesis gene cluster of S. lividans. The high actinorhodin titres in fed-batch fermentations of S. lividans overexpressing act II-ORF4 demonstrate that precursor supply is not a problem in production of aromatic polyketides in the gram per litre range. However, a later study has shown that even higher actinorhodin productivities could be achieved by altering primary metabolic pathways of S. lividans [55]. This will be further discussed later. In contrast to the aromatic polyketides, complex polyketides like macrolides and polyethers are synthesised from various acyl-units such as acetyl CoA, buturyl CoA, propionyl CoA and methylmalonyl CoA. Complex polyketides are synthesized by the action of type I PKSs, which are multifunctional enzymes containing domains for the condensation and reduction steps and functional domains for b-carbonyl processing.While the precursors for aromatic polyketides, i.e. acetyl and malonyl CoA, are drained from glycolysis and fatty acid biosynthesis, the origin of the precursors for complex polyketides is less clear. Thus, propionyl CoA and 2-methylmalonyl CoA may originate from catabolism of odd-numbered fatty acids, reduction of acrylate, rearrangement of succinyl CoA and catabolism of methionine, threonine or valine. The latter two
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processes are thought to be the main routes to 2-methylmalonyl CoA and propionyl CoA in polyketide synthesis [56]. Correlations have been observed between macrolide antibiotic production and the level of catabolic enzymes in the valine- and threonine degradation pathways [57, 58]. In order to study this correlation further, Tang et al. [59] disrupted the vdh gene, encoding valine dehydrogenase, of the macrolide antibiotic producers Streptomyces ambofaciens and Streptomyces fradiae. It was found that the inability to catabolize valine led to a large decrease in antibiotic production in a defined medium. Furthermore, antibiotic production could be restored either by supplying propionate in the growth medium or by reintroducing the vdh gene. 4.1.2 Precursor Requirements in b -Lactam Production The precursors in penicillin production by P. chrysogenum are the amino acids valine and cysteine, and an intermediate in the pathway to lysine, i.e. L-aaminoadipic acid (see Fig. 3). In a study by Jørgensen et al. [60] it was shown that addition of these precursors to the growth medium of a high-yielding strain of P. chrysogenum resulted in increased penicillin yields, demonstrating that precursor supply may limit penicillin production at high yields. In particular, the supply of L-a-aminoadipic acid appears to be important in penicillin production. During classical strain improvement of P. chrysogenum, properties that are beneficial for penicillin production have been promoted, including changes in the pathway to L-a-aminoadipic acid and lysine (Fig. 12).
Fig. 12 Simplified pathway to L-a-aminoadipic acid and lysine in P. chrysogenum. HCS, Homocitrate synthase, a-AAR, L-a-aminoadipic acid reductase
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In this pathway, lysine exerts feedback inhibition on the first step of the pathway, i.e. the conversion of a-ketoglutarate to homocitrate by homocitrate synthase [61–63]. Therefore, penicillin production is normally inhibited by the presence of lysine [64–66]. However, in high penicillin-yielding strains this inhibition has been alleviated [67], implying that deregulation of the lysine pathway is important to achieve high yields of penicillin. Lysine also exerts feedback inhibition on the conversion of L-a-aminoadipic acid to d-adenyl-a-aminoadipate by L-a-aminoadipic acid reductase [68]. This inhibition is more pronounced in high-yielding strains of penicillin than in low-yielding strains [69]. Thus, high-yielding strains of P. chrysogenum, obtained by classical strain improvement, seem to have acquired mutations favouring a larger supply of L-aaminoadipic acid to the penicillin biosynthesis pathway. Another indication of the importance of L-a-aminoadipic acid supply in penicillin production is given by the properties of the first enzyme in the penicillin biosynthesis pathway,ACVS.ACVS is responsible for the condensation of L-a-aminoadipic acid, L-valine and L-cysteine to LLD-ACV (Fig. 3). In the characterization of the P. chrysogenum AVCS [13], it was found that the Km value for L-a-aminoadipic acid was almost an order of magnitude smaller than the Km values of ACVS from other species. It is possible that this high affinity for L-aaminoadipic acid, and thus the increased ability to drain L-a-aminoadipic acid from central metabolism, is part of the reason why P. chrysogenum has developed as a superior penicillin producer. Also in the cephamycin C producer Streptomyces clavuligerus, L-a-aminoadipic acid supply has proved to be important for the product yield. In the cephamycin C biosynthesis pathway, the initial step is the same as the initial step of the penicillin pathway in P. chrysogenum, i.e. the condensation of L-aaminoadipic acid, L-cysteine and L-valine by ACVS (Fig. 13). Lysine and L-a-aminoadipic acid are, however, synthesized by different pathways in S. clavuligerus and P. chrysogenum. In S. clavuligerus, lysine is formed from aspartate by a pathway that does not involve L-a-aminoadipic acid as an intermediate, and L-a-aminoadipic acid is formed from lysine and a-ketoglutarate by the action of lysine 6-amino transferase (LAT). An increased cephamycin C yield could be achieved by supplying lysine to the growth medium of S. clavuligerus [70], indicating that the supply of L-a-aminoadipic acid may be a limiting factor for cephamycin C biosynthesis. Moreover, the introduction of an additional copy of the LAT gene has resulted in an increased cephamycin C yield [71, 72]. In a study by Khetan et al. [73] LAT was shown to have high apparent Km values for lysine and a-ketoglutarate in relation to the intracellular concentrations of these compounds, which led to the suggestion that increased cephamycin C biosynthesis might be achieved by increasing the intracellular concentrations of these precursors by metabolic engineering of the primary metabolism. When precursors are drained from the anabolic pathways, additional demand is put on pathways that normally do not carry high fluxes. This is reflected in the precursor requirements for penicillin and biomass synthesis, re-
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Fig. 13 Simplified pathway to cephamycin C in S. clavuligerus. LAT, lysine 6-amino transferase, LLD-ACV, d-(L-a-aminoadipyl)-L-cysteinyl-D-valine, ACVS, ACV synthetase
spectively, in P. chrysogenum (Table 2). In a high-yielding strain of P. chrysogenum, the valine, cysteine and L-a-aminoadipic acid requirements for antibiotic synthesis are 4, 20 and 6 times higher, respectively, than the requirements for biomass synthesis (these values would be even higher for current production strains). In contrast, the central carbon metabolite precursor requirements for antibiotic synthesis are in the range of the requirements for biomass synthesis. Thus, production of penicillin at high yields does not drain remarkably high amounts of metabolites from the central metabolism, but rather requires channelling of these metabolites into the pathways leading to precursors of the biosynthesis pathway. 4.1.3 The Role of Synthesis of Specific Precursors Many antibiotics are synthesized from specialized precursors that are not part of the normal cellular metabolism (Table 3). Especially non-ribosomally synthesized peptide antibiotics, e.g. glycopeptides and polypeptides, are known to contain non-proteinogenic amino acids, D-amino acids, hydroxy acids and other unusual building blocks. Enzymes that are encoded by genes in the biosynthesis cluster perform the synthesis of these specialized precursors. D-Amino acids are common both in glycopeptides and polypeptides. They are formed from the corresponding L-amino acids by amino acid racemases. Racemization takes place after the activation of the amino acid on an enzyme-
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Table 2 Specific precursor requirements for production of penicillin at high yield and corresponding precursor requirements for biomass formation by P. chrysogenum
Precursors
Precursor requirements for producta mmol (g dw)–1
Precursor requirements for biomassb mmol (g dw)–1
Precursor requirements of products in relation to biomassc mmol (mmol)–1
Building blocks
Valine 1.4 Cysteine 1.4 L-a-Aminoadipic acid 1.4
0.34 0.07 0.22
4.1 20 6.4
Central metabolite precursors
3PGA Pyruvate a-Ketoglutarate Acetyl CoA
0.88 1.9 1.2 2.3
1.6 1.4 1.2 0.6
1.4 2.7 1.4 1.4
a
The specific precursor requirements are based on a yield of 480 mg penicillin (g dw)–1 [32]. Precursor requirements for biomass formation by P. chrysogenum are taken from Nielsen [49]. c The specific amount of precursor needed for penicillin production divided by the specific precursor requirement for biomass synthesis. Abbreviations: 3PGA, 3-phosphoglycerate. b
Table 3 Examples of specifically synthesized precursors in various antibiotics
Antibiotic
Specific precursors
Glycopeptide antibiotics
p-Hydroxyphenylglycine 3,5-Dihydroxyphenylglycine b-Hydroxytyrosine Vancosamine 2,4-Diaminobutyric acid p-Hydroxyphenylglycine p-Hydroxyphenylglycine
Polymyxin Ramoplanin Nocardicin
bound thioester-linked intermediate as illustrated in Fig. 14 for phenylalanine in the cyclic decapeptide gramicidin S [74–76]. A high content of the non-proteinogenic amino acid 2,4-diaminobutyric acid (DAB) is characteristic for the polypeptide antibiotics of the polymyxin group (Fig. 15). Addition of aspartate and DAB had stimulatory effects on production of polymyxin E by Bacillus polymyxa, indicating that DAB constitutes a rate-controlling factor in polymyxin biosynthesis [77]. DAB is synthesized from L-aspartic acid, possibly via aspartyl 4-phosphate and aspartate 4-semialdehyde [78]. In addition to serving as a precursor, DAB
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Fig. 14 Racemization of phenylalanine during the formation of gramicidin S. The initiation module PheATE of the gramicidin S synthetase has three domains. The adenylation (A) domain is responsible for recognition and ATP dependent activation of L- phenylalanine. Next, the amino acyl group is transferred from the L-Phe-AMP intermediate to the phosphopantetheinyl arm of the thiolation (T) domain and after that epimerized by the epimerization (E) domain. The module involved in the downstream chain elongation has a clear preference for the D-isomer.Abbreviations: L/D-Phe-AMP, phenylalanyl-adenosine-5¢-monophosphate diester; L/D-Phe-S-Ppant-T, phenylalanyl-S-phosphopantetheine- T domain acyl thioester enzyme covalent adduct
Fig. 15 Structure of polymyxin B and E. The amino acid in position 6 may be D-phenylalanine (polymyxin B) or D-leucine (polymyxin E), and the fatty acid may be either 6-methyloctanic acid (MOA) or 6-methylheptanoic acid (IOA). For other polymyxins the amino acids in positions 3, 7 and 10 may also differ
seems to have a wider regulatory effect. The presence of DAB was found to stimulate channelling of L-amino acids into polymyxin E while the incorporation into cell protein was repressed. The antibiotics of the polymyxin group also contain a branched short-chain fatty acid. The fatty acid is typically 6-methyloctanic acid (MOA) or isooctanic acid (IOA) synthesized from L-isoleucine and L-valine, respectively [79]. Consequently, a majority of the building blocks in polymyxin synthesis are derived from the amino acids of either the pyruvate or aspartate series (Fig. 16). A strategy for strain optimisation aiming at improved polymyxin production could be overexpression of key enzymes in the pathways leading to L-valine, L-leucine and to L-amino acids in the aspartate group. However, the physiological effects of such an approach are dependent on the interplay between the enzymes, and therefore it is important to find a properly
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Fig. 16 Simplified view of synthesis of building blocks for polymyxin. 1) PEP carboxylase, 2) pyruvate carboxylase 3) aspartate aminotransferase, 4) aspartase, 5) aspartate kinase.Abbreviations: PEP, phosphoenolpyruvate; IOA, isooctanic acid; MOA, 6-methyloctanic acid
balanced expression. Alleviation of feedback inhibition on aspartate kinase may also result in improved polymyxin production. Synthesis of specific precursors also plays an important role in the biosynthesis of glycopeptide antibiotics. The glycopeptide antibiotics vancomycin and teichoplanin are currently used as the antibiotics of last resort against infections of multi-resistant gram-positive bacteria. Biosynthesis of these antibiotics includes synthesis of specific precursors, assembly of the heptapeptide backbone through the action of non-ribosomal peptide synthases (NRPS), crosslinking of the heptapeptide, glycosylation and halogenation.A partial understanding of this complex pathway has been achieved, primarily by the identification and analysis of the biosynthesis gene clusters of chloroeremomycin [80] and balhimycin [81], both compounds differing from vancomycin only in the glycosylation patterns (Table 4). The non-proteinogenic amino acids p-hydroxyphenylglycine, 3,5-dihydroxyphenylglycine and b-hydroxytyrosine are common to the vancomycinand teichoplanin-type antibiotics. Feeding experiments have shown that p-hydroxyphenylglycine and b-hydroxytyrosine are derived from tyrosine, while 3,5-dihydroxyphenylglycine is derived from acetate in both the vancomycin [83] and the teichoplanin-producing organisms [84]. During the sequencing of the chloroeremomycin and balhimycin gene clusters, several genes encoding enzymes with a putative function in the synthesis of non-proteinogenic amino acids were identified and recently, the biosynthesis pathway to p-hydroxyphenylglycine was elucidated by examination of the function of these enzymes [85, 86]. It was verified that tyrosine is the main precursor in p-hydroxyphenylglycine synthesis, which occurs by a cyclic route in which tyrosine is
b
a
D-Glucose Vancosamine
D-Glucose Epivancosamine
N-Methyl-D-leucine L-Asparagine D-Glucose Dehydrovancosamine
Acyl chain
D-Glucosamine
D-Glucosamine
Acyl chain
D-Mannose
D-Mannose
b-Hydroxytyrosine Tyrosine
D-Chloro-b-hydroxytyrosine
L-Chloro-b-hydroxytyrosine
D-p-Hydroxyphenylglycine
A40926/ Dalbavancinb Nonomuraea sp.
L-3,5-Dihydroxyphenylglycine
Teichoplaninb Actinoplanes teichomyceticus
D-p-Hydroxyphenylglycine
Balhimycina Amycolatopsis mediterranei
L-3,5-Dihydroxyphenylglycine
Chloroeremomycina Amycolatopsis orientalis
Vancomycin, chloroeremomycin and balhimycin share the same heptapeptide backbone and only differ in the glycosylation patterns. Teichoplanin and A40926 share the same heptapeptide backbone, but differ in glycosylation and halogenation patterns. Dalbavancin is a semi-synthetic derivative of A40926 [82].
Other
Sugars
Amino acids
Vancomycina Amycolatopsis orientalis
Table 4 Building blocks of some glycopeptide antibiotics
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Fig. 17 Biosynthesis pathway to p-hydroxyphenylglycine [85]. a – tyrosine transaminase; b – prephenate dehydrogenase; c – 4-hydroxymandelate synthase (HmaS); d – 4-hydroxymandelate oxidase (Hmo); e – p-hydroxyphenylglycine transaminase (HpgT)
used as an amino-donor, yielding p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate, which is an intermediate of the pathway (Fig. 17). It is not clear whether tyrosine or prephenate is used as the initial substrate of the pathway.A gene encoding a putative prephenate dehydrogenase has been identified in the chloroeremomycin gene cluster, which has led to the hypothesis that prephenate is the initial substrate [85]. However, conversion of tyrosine to p-hydroxyphenylglycine through the action of tyrosine transaminase is the first step of the catabolic route of tyrosine degradation in many microorganisms [87], and it is possible that this route contributes to the pathway during certain conditions. Regardless of this, it is clear that tyrosine is the main precursor for p-hydroxyphenyl-glycine synthesis due to the cyclic mode of the pathway. The synthesis of 3,5-dihydroxyphenylglycine (Fig. 18) has recently been shown to occur via a type III polyketide synthase, using malonyl CoA as the starter and elongation units [88, 89]. The final step of the pathway is the amination of 3,5-dihydroxyphenolic acid to form 3,5-dihydroxyphenylglycine, in which tyrosine again acts as the amino donor [88, 90]. Thus, similar to p-hydroxyphenylglycine formation, the formation of 3,5-dihydroxyphenyl-glycine requires tyrosine as amino donor.
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Fig. 18 Biosynthesis pathway to 3,5-dihydroxyphenylglycine [88, 89]. a – reactions performed by type III PKS/chalcone synthase like protein; b – post-PKS modifications; c – transamination by Pgat (balhimycin)/HpgT (chloroeremomycin)
As a consequence of the tyrosine requirements in synthesis of these amino acids, it can be imagined that the supply of tyrosine may be rate controlling during high-yield glycopeptide production. In the production of teichoplanin at a low yield, tyrosine requirements are one third of the requirements for biomass formation (Table 5) and in relation to the drain of valine, cysteine and L-a-aminoadipic acid in high-yield penicillin production (Table 2), this represents a small flux through the anabolic reactions leading to the precursor amino acid. However, the ability of P. chrysogenum to channel large fractions of carbon through the reactions leading to valine, cysteine and L-a-aminoadipic acid is most likely a result of strain development through random mutagenesis. In an attempt to over-produce teichoplanin one may rapidly run into a limitation of tyrosine supply, and increasing the flux through the tyrosine synthetic pathway should therefore be a target for rational design of glycopeptide over-producing strains. An approach towards increased tyrosine supply could be modulation of the flux-split ratios at branch points in the biosynthesis route to aromatic amino acids (Fig. 19), i.e. by overexpressing some enzyme activities (chorismate mutase, arogenate transaminase and arogenate dehydrogenase) or by decreasing the activities of some enzymes (anthranilate synthase and prephenate dehydratase) around the chorismate and prephenate branch points. The success of
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Table 5 Specific precursor requirements for teichoplanin production and biomass formation by Actinoplanes teichomyceticus. Only synthesis of the heptapeptide backbone is included in the table
Precursors
Precursor requirements for producta mmol (g dw)–1
Precursor requirements for biomassb mmol (g dw)–1
Precursor requirements of products in relation to biomassc mmol (mmol)–1
Building blocks Tyrosine
0.04
0.12
0.33
Central metabolite precursors
0.04 0.04 0.02
0.52 0.36 3.75
0.08 0.11 0.005
PEP E4E Acetyl CoA
a
The precursor requirements are based on a yield of 10 mg teichoplanin (g dw)–1 [91]. Precursor requirements for biomass formation are based on the biomass composition of E. coli [92]. c The specific amount of precursor needed for teichoplanin production divided by the specific precursor requirement for biomass synthesis. Abbreviations: PEP, phosphoenolpyruvate, E4P, erythrose-4-phosphate b
such an approach depends on the regulation of the enzymes around the branch points. Since chorismate and tyrosine exert feedback inhibition on enzymatic steps in the pathway, it is not probable that increased intracellular concentrations of these compounds can be achieved. However, an increased flux towards tyrosine and antibiotic is possible through this approach if the capacity of the antibiotic synthetic pathway is high enough to keep the concentrations of these intermediates at a low level. Another strategy for increased supply of tyrosine for glycopeptide biosynthesis could be alleviation of the feedback inhibition on DAHP synthase and arogenate dehydrogenase (Fig. 19). The use of strains expressing feedback-resistant DAHP synthases is a common approach to increase the carbon flow to chorismate in microbial production of aromatic amino acids [94, 95]. Traditionally, random mutagenesis and screening have been applied to obtain these mutants. However, mutational changes resulting in tyrosine-feedback resistance have been described [96–99] and recently, desensitized DAHP synthases were obtained by site-directed mutagenesis [99]. Also in production of nonaromatic amino acids, reduction of the susceptibility of key enzymes to feedback inhibition has been shown to have a major impact. Thus, lysine production in a wild-type strain could be improved from 0 g/l to 25 g/l by introduction of a plasmid carrying a feedback-resistant aspartate kinase, obtained by site-directed mutagenesis [100]. Accordingly, alleviation of the feedback control in anabolic pathways may be a relevant approach for yield improvement not only in glycopeptide producing strains, but also in polypeptide and b-lactam producers.
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Fig. 19 Simplified view of the biosynthesis route to aromatic amino acids in actinomycetes. The properties of the enzymes in the pathway may vary from species to species, but the typical feedback inhibition patterns of streptomycetes are included in the figure [93]. 1) DAHP synthase, 2) anthranilate synthase, 3) chorismate mutase, 4) prephenate dehydratase, 5) arogenate transaminase, 6) arogenate dehydrogenase. Abbreviations: PEP, phosphoenolpyruvate, E4P, erythrose-4-phosphate, DAHP, 3-deoxy-D-arabino heptulosonate-7-phosphate
4.2 Cofactor Supply Secondary metabolism is often connected to the primary metabolism via the drain of co-factors needed for biosynthesis, as well as through the drain of precursors (Table 1). Specifically, polyketide and b-lactam synthesis requires a relatively large amount of reducing power in the form of NADPH. In the central carbon metabolism, NADPH is regenerated from NADP+ mainly through the oxidative branch of the pentose-phosphate (PP) pathway. In this pathway, two NADPH units are generated from each glucose-6-phosphate by the action of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase. However, in some streptomyces species, 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase uses NAD+ instead of NADP+ as the cofactor [101]. NADPH is also regenerated by isocitrate dehydrogenase in the TCA cycle. The largest amount of NADPH is typically formed in the PP pathway, and one could therefore imagine that extensive production of secondary metabolites such as b-lactams and polyketides, would require an increased flux through this pathway.
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In penicillin production, NADPH is required for synthesis of the precursors cysteine and valine. In addition, reduction of bis-ACV by the specific thioredoxin system requires NADPH, as discussed earlier. Synthesis of cysteine takes place in the cytosol, while valine synthesis occurs in the mitochondrial compartment, and as NADPH cofactors most likely cannot be transferred across the mitochondrial barrier, the NADPH needed in these reactions must be generated in the corresponding cellular compartment. Cysteine synthesis requires 5 units of NADPH per molecule of cysteine, while valine synthesis requires 2 NADPH units in total. However, one of the NADPH units in valine synthesis is the one used in synthesis of glutamate, the amino-group donor in the transamination reaction where valine is formed from a-ketoisovalerate. Glutamate is synthesized in the cytosol and thus, only one mitochondrial NADPH unit is required in the synthesis of one molecule of penicillin, while the rest of the required NADPH is of cytosolic origin. Cytosolic NADPH is mainly generated through the PP pathway, while the main NADPH generating reaction in the mitochondria is the reduction of isocitrate to a-ketoglutarate in the TCA-cycle. During flux analysis of P. chrysogenum growing in fed-batch and continuous culture, a correlation was found between the flux-split ratio at the glucose-6phosphate node and the yield of penicillin on glucose [32, 102]. The results indicated that an increased flux through the PP pathway was required to meet the NADPH demands of penicillin biosynthesis. Later a study of the central carbon metabolism of a high- and a low-yielding strain of P. chrysogenum revealed that the high-yielding strain exhibited a slightly higher flux through the PP pathway than the low-yielding strain [103]. The growth conditions for the highyielding strain were chosen so that the cells produced penicillin in one of the fermentations, while in a second fermentation, no penicillin was produced. It was shown that the flux through the PP pathway was the same in the two fermentations, and thus, the increased flux was considered to be a feature of the high-yielding strain rather than an effect of penicillin biosynthesis. It is possible that a high PP pathway flux is a feature that has been acquired during classical strain-improvement programs in order to accommodate an increased flux through the penicillin biosynthesis pathway. In contrast to the above observation, van Gulik et al. [48] found a strong correlation between PP pathway flux and penicillin production in a high-yielding P. chrysogenum strain, grown in chemostat at conditions of either high penicillin productivity or no penicillin formation. Moreover, when the strain was grown on carbon- and nitrogen sources that result in reduced NADPH formation, i.e. xylose and NO3 in place of glucose and NH4, decreased specific penicillin productivity was observed. Taken together, these studies point to the availability of cytosolic NADPH as a critical factor in penicillin production. However, it is interesting to compare the estimations of PP pathway flux in the different studies, since varying approaches were used for this task. In the studies by Jørgensen et al. [32], Henriksen et al. [102] and Gulik et al. [48], where a strong correlation between PP pathway flux and penicillin productivity was observed, the flux estimates through the PP pathway were based on metabolite balances where the balance
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over NADPH plays an important role in the flux estimation. In contrast, the flux analysis in the study by Christensen et al. [103] was based on metabolite balancing in combination with 13C-labelling balancing and no NADPH balance was needed to estimate the PP pathway flux. NADPH is involved in a large number of reactions in the cell, and it may therefore be difficult to account for all NADPH formed and consumed using metabolite balancing. In addition, the occurrence of futile cycles such as the ACVoxidation/bisACV reduction previously mentioned results in NADPH consumption that cannot be accounted for by metabolite balancing. As the mechanism of polyketide biosynthesis resembles the NADPH-dependent condensation/reduction cycle in fatty acid synthesis, it has been proposed that polyketide synthases also use this cofactor as the reducing power. Indeed, polyketide biosynthesis in cell-free extracts of several Streptomyces species has been shown to require NADPH [104, 105], and it is therefore generally considered that the enzymes carrying out the reduction steps in polyketide biosynthesis require NADPH as the cofactor. Biosynthesis of the polyketide antibiotic avermectin has been reported to correlate with an increased activity of the PP pathway in Streptomyces avermitilis [106]. Another case where antibiotic synthesis has been found to correlate with an increased flux through the PP pathway is the production of the cyclopentanone antibiotic methylenomycin by Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2) [107]. The authors of the study suggested that the observed increase in PP pathway flux was related to NADPH usage in the antibiotic synthesis. During actinorhodin production in Streptomyces lividans, the correlation between PP pathway flux and antibiotic production is different from the cases mentioned above.As discussed earlier, S. lividans can be forced to overproduce actinorhodin if transformed with a plasmid carrying multiple copies of the pathway-specific activator actII-ORF4, and very high yields of actinorhodin can be obtained from the recombinant strain when cultivated in fed-batch fermentation [53]. Rossa et al. [34] performed flux analysis on S. lividans strains overproducing either actinorhodin or undecylprogidin, and found that the production of both of these antibiotics were inversely related to the flux through the PP-pathway. In a theoretical analysis of actinorhodin biosynthesis based on elemental- and redox balancing in combination with analysis of the biosynthesis steps of the pathway, Bruheim et al. [108] estimated the cofactor requirements to be six units of NADPH per actinorhodin formed. These requirements were greatly exceeded by the amount of NADPH formed in the PP pathway and TCA cycle, as quantified by flux analysis during the production phase. Thus, there appeared to be no co-factor limitation in actinorhodin production by S. lividans. This notion was verified in a study where S. lividans mutants with a partly or completely disabled PP pathway were analysed for actinorhodin productivity [55]. It was found that strains with 50% reduced PP pathway activity produced substantially higher titres of actinorhodin and undecylprogidin than the strain with intact PP pathway activity. A reduced PP pathway activity, thus, did not lower the NADPH supply to an extent that would
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limit actinorhodin biosynthesis. In contrast, complete disabling of the PP pathway led to decreased actinorhodin production, indicating that some of the NADPH produced by this pathway is needed for antibiotic biosynthesis.An explanation for the increased productivity in the strains with decreased PP pathway activities may be the reduced loss of carbon in the form of CO2, potentially leading to increased availability of the intermediates that serve as precursors for polyketide synthesis. A similar correlation between polyketide synthesis and PP pathway flux was found in a study by Jonsbu et al. [42], where the production of nystatin by Streptomyces noursei was shown to correlate with a decreased PP pathway flux. In the referred study, central carbon fluxes were analysed during batch fermentation of S. noursei, and it was found that the flux through the PP pathway decreased, while the flux through the TCA cycle increased, during the polyketide-producing phase of the fermentation.
5 Concluding Remarks In this chapter we have discussed the importance of precursor and cofactor supply in the production of different types of antibiotics, the methods available for identification of rate-controlling steps in precursor supply and antibiotic biosynthesis pathways, and strategies for improving antibiotic yield through metabolic engineering. In short, these themes can be summarized in the following points: – Is precursor supply a problem in secondary metabolite production? Precursor supply is normally not a limiting factor in secondary metabolite production at natural levels, and overexpression of the biosynthesis cluster or manipulation of pathway-specific regulatory genes may therefore often be a feasible first strategy for improved antibiotic production. However, as the product yield is increased through strain development, it is probable that the supply of precursors or cofactors from primary metabolism eventually will become rate controlling for antibiotic biosynthesis. Particularly in situations, where precursors for antibiotic production are drained from cellular pathways that normally do not carry high fluxes, e.g. pathways in amino acid anabolism, precursor supply may become a problem. This is illustrated by the deregulation of anabolic pathways of high-yielding strains of P. chrysogenum,developed through classical strain improvement programs based on random mutagenesis. – Identification of connections between primary and secondary metabolism: precursor and cofactor supply The production of secondary metabolites at high yields may require changes in the carbon-flow of the primary metabolism in order to accommodate precursor and cofactor supply for the secondary biosynthesis pathway. In order to identify required changes in the metabolic fluxes, the complete primary
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metabolic network rather than individual pathways leading to precursors or generating cofactors, needs to be taken into consideration. Through metabolic flux analysis of high-and low yielding strains or of a specific strain subjected to different growth conditions, connections between the primary and secondary metabolism can be identified.A good example of this is the study of an actinorhodin overproducing strain of Streptomyces lividans, where the information obtained via metabolic flux analysis could be directly used for design of an improved producer strain. – Strategies for improving productivity via an increased flux towards antibiotic precursors Production of antibiotics at high yields does not necessarily drain high amounts of central metabolites from the primary carbon metabolism, but rather requires chanelling of these metabolites into the pathways leading to antibiotic precursors. An attractive approach to achieve this is the modification of flux-partitioning at relevant branch points in the metabolic network, thereby redirecting the flow of carbon towards antibiotic precursors. However, the outcome of such a strategy is highly dependent on the regulation of the enzymes around these branch points, i.e. the flexibility of the nodes. This is particularly relevant when the antibiotic precursors are amino acids or intermediates in the anabolic pathways leading to amino acids, since the enzymes in amino acid synthetic pathways are often tightly controlled via feedback inhibition. Thus, it may not be possible to increase the intracellular concentration of a precursor, but if the capacity of the biosynthesis pathway towards antibiotic is sufficiently high to keep the precursor concentration at a low level, an increased flux toward the product may still be achieved through this approach. As an alternative or in connection with the above strategy, directed evolution may be applied to obtain enzymes less sensitive to feedback inhibition. – Rate-controlling steps in the biosynthesis pathway Metabolic Control Analysis is a powerful tool for analysis of the degree of flux control exerted by the different enzymatic steps of a pathway. Since information regarding enzyme kinetics and intracellular concentrations of pathway intermediates are generally required for MCA, this tool has to our knowledge only been used for analysis of the penicillin biosynthesis pathway. However, MCA is potentially useful for analysis of many antibiotic biosynthesis pathways, as more biochemical information on the enzymatic steps in these becomes available. In wild-type antibiotic producers, the first step towards the antibiotic is often tightly controlled and overexpression of the first enzyme in the biosynthesis pathway may therefore result in increased productivity. Alleviation of flux control at the committed step, however, necessarily means that the control of flux through the pathway is shifted to succeeding steps in the biosynthesis, which may result in the accumulation of intermediates and formation of by-products. Overexpression of all structural genes in a biosynthesis cluster is therefore generally a more effective approach, illustrated by the fact that improved penicillin producers carry
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multiple copies of the complete biosynthesis cluster rather than any single gene in the cluster. However, there are situations where a specific enzymatic step late in the pathway is controlling the formation rate of the product to a large extent, e.g. the conversion of deacetylcephalosporin to cephalosporin C in Acremonium chrysogenum.
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73. Khetan A, Malmberg LH, Kyung YS, Sherman DH, Hu WS (1999) Biotechnol Prog 15:1020 74. Stachelhaus T, Marahiel MA (1995) J Biol Chem 270:6163 75. Stein T, Kluge B, Vater J, Franke P, Otto A, Wittmann-Liebold B (1995) Biochemistry 34:4633 76. Luo L, Walsh CT (2001) Biochemistry 40:5329 77. Kuratsu Y, Arai Y, Inuzuka K, Suzuki T (1983) Agric Biol Chem 47:2607 78. Ito M, Aida K, Uemura T (1970) Progress in antimicrobial and anticancer chemotherapy, vol 2. University of Tokyo Press, Tokyo, Japan, p 1128 79. Ito M, Aida K, Uemura T (1969) Agric Biol Chem 33:262 80. van Wageningen AM, Kirkpatrick PN,Williams DH, Harris BR, Kershaw JK, Lennard NJ, Jones M, Jones SJ, Solenberg PJ (1998) Chem Biol 5:155 81. Pelzer S, Süssmuth R, Heckmann D, Recktenwald J, Huber P, Jung G, Wohlleben W (1999) Antimicrob Agents Chemother 43:1565 82. Steiert M, Schmitz FJ (2002) Curr Opin Investig Drugs 3:229 83. Hammond SJ,Williamson MP,Williams DH, Boeck LD, Marconi GG (1982) J Chem Soc Chem Commun 344 84. Heydorn A, Petersen BO, Duus JØ, Bergmann S, Suhr-Jessen T, Nielsen J (2000) J Biol Chem 275:6201 85. Hubbard BK, Thomas MG, Walsh CT (2000) Chem Biol 42:1 86. Choroba OW, Williams DH, Spencer JB (2000) J Am Chem Soc 122:5389 87. Lindblad B, Lindstedt G, Lindstedt S, Rundgren M (1977) J Biol Chem 252:5073 88. Pfeifer V, Nicholson GJ, Ries J, Recktenwald J, Schefers AB, Shawky R, Schröder J, Wohlleben W, Pelzer S (2001) J Biol Chem 276:38370 89. Li TS, Choroba OW, Hong H, Williams DH, Spencer JB (2001) Chem Commun 2156 90. Sandercock AM, Charles EH, Scaife W, Kirkpatrick PN, O’Brien SW, Papageorgiou EA, Spencer JB, Williams DH (2001) Chem Commun 1252 91. Vara AG, Hochkoepple A, Nielsen J, Villadsen J (2002) Biotechnol Bioeng 77:589 92. Neidhardt FC, Ingraham JL, Schaechter M (1990) Physiology of the bacterial cell: a molecular approach. Sinauer Associates, Sunderland, Massachusetts 93. Hodgson DA (2000) Adv Microb Phys 42:47 94. Frost JW, Draths KM (1995) Annu Rev Microbiol 49:557 95. Bongaerts J, Krämer M, Müller U, Raeven L, Wubbolts M (2001) Met Eng 3:289 96. Weaver LM, Herrmann KM (1990) J Bacteriol 172:6581 97. Edwards RM, Taylor PP, Hunter MG, Fotheringham IG (1987) WO 87/00202 98. Jossek R, Bongaerts J, Sprenger GA (2001) FEMS Microbiol Lett 202:145 99. LiaoH, Lin L, Chien HR, Hsu W (2001) FEMS Microbiol Lett 194:59 100. Sugimoto M, Ogawa Y, Suzuki T, Tanaka A, Matsui H (1997) US Patent 5 688 671 101. Dekleva ML, Strohl WR (1988) Can J Microbiol 34:1235 102. Henriksen CM, Christensen LH, Nielsen J, Villadsen J (1996) J Biotechnol 45:149 103. Christensen B, Thykær J, Nielsen J (2000) Appl Microbiol Biotechnol 54:212 104. Strohl WR, Bartel PL, Connors NC, Zhu CB, Dosch DC, Beale JM, Floss HG, StutzmannEngwall K, Otten SL, Hutchinson CR (1989) Biosynthesis of natural and hybrid polyketides by anthracyclin-producing Streptomycetes. In: Hershberger CL, Queener SW, Hegeman G (eds) Genetics and molecular biology of industrial microorganisms. Am Soc Microbiol, Washington, p 68 105. Rajgarhia VB, Priestley ND, Strohl WR (2001) Met Eng 3:49 106. Ikeda H, Kotaki H, Tanaka H, Omura S (1988) Antimicrob Agents Chemother 32:282 107. Obanye AIC, Hobbs G, Gardner DCJ, Oliver SG (1996) Microbiology 142:133 108. Bruheim P, Butler M, Ellington TE (2002) Appl Microbiol Biotechnol 58:735 Received: February 2004
Adv Biochem Engin/Biotechnol (2004) 88: 179– 215 DOI 10.1007/b99261 © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2004
Industrial Enzymatic Production of Cephalosporin-Based b -Lactams Michael S. Barber 1 · Ulrich Giesecke 2 · Arno Reichert 3 ·Wolfgang Minas 3 (✉) 1
MBA, 18 Croydon Road, Caterham, SurreyCR3 6QB, UK Anbics Laboratories AG, Maria-Ward-Strasse 1a, 80638 Munich, Germany 3 Anbics Management-Services AG, Technoparkstrasse 1, 8005 Zurich, Switzerland
[email protected] 2
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1
Introduction
2 2.1 2.2
The Cephalosporin Market . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 187 Market Dynamics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 187 Bulk Active Ingredients and Sterile Products . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 189
3 3.1 3.1.1 3.1.2 3.1.3 3.2 3.2.1 3.2.2 3.2.3 3.2.4
Production of 7-ACA . . . . . . . . . . . . Fermentation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Strains . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Culture Conditions . . . . . . . . . . . . . CPC Purification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Conversion of Cephalosporin C into 7-ACA Chemical Cleavage . . . . . . . . . . . . . Enzymatic Cleavage . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Enzymes DAO and GAC . . . . . . . . Deacetyl-7-ACA by CAH . . . . . . . . . .
4
Process Economics of 7-ACA Production . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 206
5 5.1 5.2 5.2.1 5.2.2
Advanced Intermediates 3¢ Position . . . . . . . . 7¢ Position . . . . . . . . Chemical Route . . . . . Biocatalytic Route . . . .
6
APIs by 7¢¢ and 3¢¢ Modified 7-ACA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 211
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Outlook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 212
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Abstract Cephalosporins are chemically closely related to penicillins both work by inhibiting the cell wall synthesis of bacteria. The first generation cephalosporins entered the market in 1964. Second and third generation cephalosporins were subsequently developed that were more powerful than the original products. Fourth generation cephalosporins are now reaching the market. Each newer generation of cephalosporins has greater Gram-negative
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antimicrobial properties than the preceding generation. Conversely, the ‘older’ generations of cephalosporins have greater Gram-positive (Staphylococcus and Streptococcus) coverage than the ‘newer’ generations. Frequency of dosing decreases and palatability generally improve with increasing generations. The advent of fourth generation cephalosporins with the launch of cefepime extended the spectrum against Gram-positive organisms without a significant loss of activity towards Gram-negative bacteria. Its greater stability to b-lactamases increases its efficacy against drug-resistant bacteria. In this review we present the current situation of this mature market. In addition, we present the current state of the technologies employed for the production of cephalosporins, focusing on the new and environmentally safer ‘green’ routes to the products. Starting with the fermentation and purification of CPC, enzymatic conversion in conjunction with aqueous chemistry will lead to some key intermediates such as 7-ACA, TDA and TTA, which then can be converted into the active pharmaceutical ingredient (API), again applying biocatalytic technologies and aqueous chemistry. Examples for the costing of selected products are provided as well. Keywords Biocatalysis · Enzymation · Cephalosporin C · Fermentation · Acremonium chrysogenum · b-Lactam List of Abbreviations 7-ACA 7-Amino cephalosporanic acid ACV d-(L-a-Aminoadipoyl)-L-cysteinyl-D-valine tripeptide 7-ADCA Amino-desacetoxy cephalospranic acid 6-APA 6-Amino penicillinic acid API Active pharmaceutical ingredient CA Cephalosporin C acylase CAH Cephalosporin C acetyl hydrolase CLEA Cross-linked enzyme aggregates CLEC Cross-linked enzyme crystals CPC Cephalosporin C DA-7-ACA Deacetyl-7-ACA DAC Deacetylcephalosporin C D-Amino acid oxidase DAO DO AC Deacetoxycephalosporin C GAC Glutaryl acylase GL-7-ACA Glutaryl-7-ACA HIC Hydrophobic interaction chromatography IEX Ion exchange chromatography KA-7-ACA Ketoadipoyl-7-ACA MMTD 2-Mercapto-5-methyl-1,3,4-thiadiazole PGA Penicillin G amidase D-2-(2,3-Dioxo-4-ethyl-1-piperazin-carbonylamino)-2-(4-hydroxyPip-pHPG phenyl)acetic acid PMV Packed mycelium volume TDA 7-(Amino-3-(5-methyl-1,3,4-thiadiazole-2-yl)thiomethyl-3-cephem-4carboxylic acid TM Metric ton TTA 7-Amino-3-[(1,2,5,6-tetrahydro-2-methyl-5,6-dioxo-1,2,4-triazin-3-yl)thiomethyl]-cephalosporanic acid TZ-7-ACA Tetrazolylacetyl-7-ACA
Industrial Enzymatic Production of Cephalosporin-Based b-Lactams TZM YX/S
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Tetrazolylacetic acid methylester Yield coefficient consumption of amount substrate to yield amount product
1 Introduction The discovery of cephalosporin C (CPC) goes back to Giuseppe Brotzu, working at an institute in Cagliari on the island of Sardinia. Upon isolation from seawater near a sewage outlet a microorganism that had antibiotic activity against Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria was obtained. Upon classification as Cephalosporium, this organism was sent to Oxford in 1948. Work started in 1953 with the isolation and purification resulting several years later in the published structure of CPC [1]. In 1964 cefalotin was launched as the first semisynthetic CPC antibiotic. More than 50 semi-synthetic cephalosporins are being marketed today with sales of some US$9 billion annually. The market for “antibiotics” (perhaps better defined as anti-infective agents) sold at dose form level worldwide is estimated to be close to $60 billion in 2002, taking into account materials supplied under various aid programmes, secular and religious charity aided programmes, national bilateral aid and UN assistance programmes. The market is broken down by product type in Table 1 and by region in Table 2. In the context of this chapter, antibiotic means a chemical derived by fermentation or from a raw material obtained by fermentation, and having anTable 1 World anti-infectives market at ex-manufacturer/local primary distributor level
Product area
Estd. sales US$ Billion
Cephalosporins (all) Penicillins (incl Amoxiclav) All other betalactams Quinolones incl fluoroquinolones Macrolides (Erythromycin, Spiramycin and semi-synthetic derivatives thereof) Aminoglycosides (natural and semisynthetic) Tetracyclines All other antibacterials (incl anti-TB, topicals etc.) Antivirals (excl vaccines) Anti-infective vaccines Antifungals/antiparasitics Total
10 8 3 7 6 3 3 6 7 4 4 61
Data is rounded to one significant figure and, for the smaller groups above, should be regarded as indicative, rather than definitive. Source: Michael Barber and Associates, Caterham, UK (2003).
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Table 2 World anti-infectives market at ex-manufacturer/local primary distributor level by region
Country/Region
Estd. sales % of total US$ billion
Estd. popln. of region mill
Expenditure on anti-infectives per capita
USA Europe (all other, incl Russia) Europe (Germany, France, Italy) Japan S & E Asia/Australasia China Africa Americas incl Canada India Middle East Other Indian sub-continent Total
11 8
18 13
300 550
37 15
7
12
200
35
7 7 5 4 4 4 3 1–2 61
12 12 8 6 6 6 5 2 100
150 750 1500 800 550 1000 350 350 6.5 bill
47 9 3.3 5 7 4 9 4 Ave 9.4
Data is rounded, particularly sales value data in the Developing World, where it is difficult to obtain reliably consistent sales data. Source: Michael Barber and Associates, Caterham, UK (2003).
tibacterial, antiviral or antifungal properties. By common association, totally synthetic molecules, such as the fluoroquinolones and sulfonamides, which have substantially the same effect, are included in the general term “antibiotic”. There are, however, a number of important fermentation-derived antibiotics that have no antibacterial or similar activity. These include the anthracycline anticancer agents (e.g. doxorubicin, daunomycin, asparaginase, etc.) immunosuppressants (ciclosporin, mycophenolic acid, tacrolimus, sirolimus, etc.) vitamins, (e.g. ascorbic acid, pantothenic acid, cyano- and hydroxocobalamin, etc.). Those are not included in Table 1 and Table 2. It is apparent from Table 1 that the two series of b-lactam antibiotics, the cephalosporins and the penicillins, are the largest selling antibiotics. Both of these contain the “b-lactam” structural unit. The important structural feature is the nature of any group attached to the N atom at the top left-hand corner of the diagram in Fig. 1. This atom carries the principal side chain R1 of the cephalosporin series. Semisynthetic analogues are made by replacing the natural side chain with synthetic variants. The term “cephalosporins” includes more than 50 semisynthetic antibiotics derived from cephalosporin C (CPC), a natural antibiotic with no clinically useful antibacterial activity in its own right. b-Lactams exert their activity by inhibiting the cell wall synthesis of bacteria. The cephalosporins, the first of which, cefalotin, was introduced in 1964,
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Fig. 1 Semi-synthetic b-lactam synthesis. The cephalosporin nucleus (middle) is derivatized on R1 and R2 to yield the active cephalosporin. Examples for 3¢ and 7¢ side chains are shown and the respective final products (API) indicated
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collectively have the largest sales by value of any group of antibacterial agents. However, by volume, in terms of tonnes sold or the number of prescriptions written, penicillins outweigh cephalosporins by a factor of some four to one. There are two main groups of cephalosporin antibiotics; one is derived from penicillin (G or V), the second from cephalosporin C (CPC). Most products that have intrinsic oral activity are better made from penicillin, while most products made from CPC are insufficiently absorbed from the human gut to be therapeutically adequate by the oral route, unless converted to pro-drugs by esterification [2, 3]. The penicillin-derived products are mainly based on 7-ADCA (hitherto made entirely from penicillin G) or on other more complex transformation products (made originally from penicillin V but now increasingly from penicillin G). The economics of the different processes involved are difficult to compare but essentially all (except for cefaclor as made by Lilly) depend on the price of commodity potassium penicillin G, principally supplied from China. Most products are multi-source at both the dose form and bulk active ingredient levels. The first cephalosporins were only available as injections. Orally active products, cefalexin, cefradine, etc., followed some five years later. Though these were initially manufactured from cephalosporin C, Lilly realised early on that a cheaper synthesis was essential if API costs were to be reduced to a level that allowed cefalexin to be competitive, initially with ampicillin and later with amoxicillin.Accordingly, it developed a synthesis of a suitable precursor, starting from penicillin V, which enabled it both to compete on price and have sufficient material to meet the market demand it was creating. Gist Brocades made a further advance in the synthesis of the primary intermediates when it found that its “Delft” process for making 6-APA was equally applicable to the manufacture of the key cephalosporin intermediates, 7-ACA and 7-ADCA [4, 5]. The early cephalosporins had good activity against a wide range of Grampositive bacteria, including a number of strains that produce penicillinase (but which remain methicillin sensitive). In contrast, they tended to have little activity against enterococci and weak and erratic activity against Gram-negative organisms. Cefazolin and cefradine (typical first generation products, Table 3) are still widely used in China but generally less and less elsewhere. The therapeutic limitations of the first generation of products led to the development of the so-called “second generation” products (cefamandol, cefaclor and cefuroxime, Table 3). These are characterised by a slightly poorer effect on Gram-positive bacteria but a significantly improved activity against enterobacteria and better resistance towards b-lactamases, especially those from Gram negative species. The third generation products (e.g. cefotaxime, ceftriaxone and cefixime, Table 3), have even better activity against Gram-negative bacteria, especially enterobacteria species. Most of the third generation products have good activity against streptococci, which helps to compensate for the variably weaker activity against staphylococci. The newest, fourth generation, products (cefepime,
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Table 3 Overview of cephalosporins 2002
Names
Market volume MT bulk free acid equiv.a
Sales revenues $mill at dose form levelb
Sum $mill
1st Generation
Cefalotin Cefatrizine (o) Cefazolin Cefapirin Cefalexin (op) Cefadroxil (op) Cefradine (op)
70–80 105–115 850–900 25 2800–2900 450–480 1500–1570 5800–6070
80 110–120 730–770 <25 800–840 430–450 500–540 2700–2800
2700–2800
2nd Generation
Cefuroxime Cefamandole Cefonicid Cefaclor (op) Cefuroxime axetil (o) Cefprozil (o) Ceftibuten (o) Cefteram pivoxil (o) Cefditoren pivoxil (o) Cefcapene pivoxil (o) Cefetamet pivoxil (o) Cefmenoxime Cefotiam Cefotiam hexetil (o) Cefotetan Cefoxitin Ceftiofur Loracarbef (o)
130–135 15 10–15 340–350 190–200 75–85 15 15 25 45–50 20 10 50–55 25 15 25 20 5 1030–1080
320–340 < 25 60 450–480 700–740 390–410 70–90 70 170–200 280–310 40 20 200–220 50 70 70 140–160 25 3140–3380
3200–3300
Cefotaxime Ceftizoxime Ceftriaxone Cefodizime Cefdinir (o) Cefixime (o) Cefpodoxime Proxetil (o) Cefoperazone and comb. Ceftazidime Cefsulodin Cefmetazole Cefozopran Flomoxef Latamoxef
310–325 10 280–290 5 65 50 30 75–80 70–75 5 10 10 25–30 <5 965–990
460–500 25 1400–1440 40 420–460 270–290 225–255 280–320 450–480 <25 30 90 270–300 <10 4000–4250
4000–4250
3rd Generation
(continued)
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Table 3 (continued)
4th Generation Totals
Names
Market volume MT bulk free acid equiv.a
Sales revenues $mill at dose form levelb
Sum $mill
Cefepime Cefpirome
40 15 55
285–315 100–120 385–425
390–420
10300–10600
10400–10500
(o) Means the product is normally intended for oral administration. (p) Means this product is normally made from penicillin. a Data are rounded to 0 or 5 MT of free acid equivalent of requirement for dose form sales indicated. Sales data recorded in US$ at ex-manufacturer level; where a range is quoted, it covers variations such as exchange rate factors, errors in product sales recording, etc. b Source: Micheal Barber & Associates 2003.
cefpirome, Table 3) couple the anti-Gram negative activity of the third (and some of the second) generation products with the anti-Gram positive activity of the first. Generally, too, the later generation products have better pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics than the earlier generation products. Similar to penicillins, treatment with cephalosporins can cause possible side effects including hypersensitivity reactions, encephalopathy and tubulo-intestinal nephritis. Approximately 10% of penicillin-sensitive patients will also be allergic to cephalosporins. The conversion of 7-ACA into the respective APIs, and in particular the addition of a new side chain at position 7¢ can in many instances be performed in a mild enzymatic process catalysed by the penicillin G amidase (PGA). Addition of side chains at the 3¢ position, often thiols, can be achieved in aqueous chemistry. Alternatively, in addition to the enzymatic routes, both removal of the 7- amino adipoyl side chain and the addition of new side chains at the two aforementioned positions can also be performed via the classical organic chemistry-based route. Both routes are in strong competition. While certain markets, traditionally in the Far East, favour the chemical routes and in part are willing to pay a premium price for this, European producers are more prone to use the enzymatic routes. This may in part be driven by environmental concerns and regulations that significantly add to the costs of production. The following chapter will present an insight into the current cephalosporin market and provide information on the current production processes for some selected compounds from the industrial perspective, while at the same time protecting proprietary processes.
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2 The Cephalosporin Market 2.1 Market Dynamics In any well-investigated therapeutic area, later compounds inevitably have to have some significant advantage over those already on the market. Typically, this will mean that the product is more effective than its predecessors. In reality many elements of this effectiveness are a factor of improved pharmacokinetics rather than of absolute biological activity. In such cases, the introduction of the new compound generally leads to a reduction in the daily dose of the therapeutic agent. This is particularly true in the cephalosporin field. From their introduction in 1964 until around 1990 the increase in demand for cephalosporins, and thus the increase in bulk requirements, continued almost unhindered. Market demand seemed insatiable. However, in the 1985–1990 period, several of the older, high-volume, products became obsolescent, and were gradually replaced by newer products, which were both more potent and longer acting. Separately, therapeutic substitution, the replacement of a cephalosporin antibiotic with one having a different molecular structure and mode of action, occurred with increasing frequency. Examples of this include, in the US market, the steady replacement of the oral cephalosporins by Augmentin, and by azithro- and clarithromycin. In the penicillin-based cephalosporins, branded cefalexin was replaced by cefaclor in many markets, while later cefaclor came under pressure from 7-ACA derived products such as cefuroxime axetil, cefixime and cefdinir. In several markets these have, in turn, come under pressure from the latest in the series, cefprozil. Cefprozil is, in fact, very unusual, if not actually unique, in having been originally manufactured from penicillin and only later from CPC. With the 7-ACA-based products, a similar effect was observable. Many of the branded first and second-generation products gave way during the late 1980s to, for example, cefotaxime, ceftazidime and ceftriaxone. (The last became the leading cephalosporin product of all time, by dose form sales, in 1998.) These newer products were generally longer acting and required lower dosages than the earlier products. This meant that the growth in demand for 7-ACA, (historically 8–10%/year) suddenly slowed, leading to an oversupply situation and a dramatic fall in the price of 7-ACA (from $260/kg in 1990/1 to $170/kg in 1995). In addition, several important products have lost patent protection over the last five years, notably cefotaxime and, increasingly, ceftriaxone. Patents on cefuroxime axetil will also largely expire by 2003. Those on cefprozil, the last major product still the subject of basic product protection, begin to expire in 2005. As a consequence of this, several producers left the business during this period, for example, Asahi Chemical, Cephagen, Eli Lilly, Merck and perhaps Takeda. Other companies, notably Antibioticos, consolidated their activities onto fewer sites.
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It is almost inevitable that, after such market restructuring, the price obtained by the remaining producers tends to rise, aided by the continuing increase in demand for 7-ACA-derived cephalosporins. If these points are then coupled with the difficulties experienced by Antibioticos in commissioning its fully enzymatic process for 7-ACA, it is not surprising that the prices quoted for it rose sharply early in 1996, to around $210/kg 7-ACA, an increase of about $35/kg. An increase of this magnitude attracted the attention of companies to the now generous margins that were available; several new plants were built and a number of existing producers significantly expanded their capacity. Not surprisingly, the price fell dramatically during the third quarter of 1999 to barely half the level at the middle of that year. Yet again, this price collapse has taken its toll, leading to the withdrawal of at least two producers and probably more before the end of 2005. The current main producers of bulk cephalosporins are listed in Table 4. Quantities are given as equivalents of 7-ACA, the common key intermediate. Also indicated is whether the companies use the classical chemTable 4 Worldwide production of 7-ACA equivalent 2002
Manufacturer
Total production of 7-ACA equivalent:
Process used E=enzymatic C=chemical
Comments
Europe ACS Dobfar Antibioticos Biochemie GSK Subtotal
230–270 500–550 570–630 170–210 1530–1610
E (& C??) E&C E&C E&C
>90 ~50:50 ~60:40 ~30:70
Korea Cheil Jedang Chong Kun Dang Subtotal
250–300 120–160 390–440
C E
Japan Fujisawa
160–200
C
China Hebei (Shiyao Group) Shandong Lukang Fuzhou Harbin (Hayao Grp) North China PC Hisun Nanyang Subtotal
600–800 150–200 0–50 0–50 0–50 0 0 850–950
E&C C C C C E C
70:30 (year end) All producers have the enzymatic route under review as replacement for zinc salt method currently used and now considered obsolete
All others
<50
Various
Small production
Total production
3000–3100
Source: Michael Barber & Associates 2003.
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ical route to 7-ACA for modern enzymatic conversion, which has been developed and first introduced by the European companies. Notwithstanding the continued expansion of the overall 7-ACA-based products market, it seems unlikely that any increase in demand will make a significant impact on the current oversupply situation.Accordingly, no significant increase in the price of 7-ACA, in real terms is expected for at least three years, and certainly not to pre-1999 levels, since expectations of low cost active ingredients are now well established and will provide the benchmark for all future price discussions. Hence, by 2005–2007, there will be only about five major producers of 7-ACA and downstream intermediates, all of whom will use efficient new technology on a large scale. These observations strongly suggest that the cephalosporins business is in a period of transition, which should be substantially complete by 2007. This transition manifests itself in two essentially opposite ways. In the dose form business, it is moving from a situation in which it used to be driven by a few large, research based companies discovering new molecules, to one in which the number of producers of dose forms is increasing (on a worldwide basis). This trend is assisted by a tendency on the part of the bulk producers to increase supply beyond what the market can absorb. At the other end of the manufacturing chain, the number of producers of the basic raw materials is falling, under the influence of commercial and cost pressures on the one hand and technological improvement on the other. 2.2 Bulk Active Ingredients and Sterile Products The supply of oral dose forms presents few problems and can be readily augmented at short notice. Regulatory issues tend to be less significant outside, principally, the USA, North-West Europe and Japan than within those markets. Thus the wider availability of non-sterile oral grade bulk materials has led to a growth in the number of formulators in many countries. This is an example of how demand-pull is hidden and the prime market determinant appears to be supply push (see below). The reality is that unfulfilled demand creates a market vacuum into which the excess supply is sucked. India and Korea have emerged as two important suppliers of oral dose form cephalosporins to the open market in recent years, while China has a huge industry geared towards the needs of its enormous home market, historically but not exclusively importing the bulk active ingredients. The position with the sterile dose forms is different. Here the limiting steps are the supply of sterile bulk and/or the supply of filled vials. The number of companies able to produce such products to the exacting standards necessary is limited. Nevertheless, more than ten sterile bulk plants were commissioned in Korea during 1994–1998, as well as twice that number in India. China has upwards of 100 plants claiming to be able to make injectable cephalosporins, although the GMP status of many of these is uncertain. For high levels of GMP
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compliance, Italian producers are still predominant. However, the position could change as competition in the “free” market intensifies. Finally, the production of bulk non-sterile active ingredients has historically been an Italian speciality. This role is increasingly being assumed by India and Korea, with varying degrees of success. Just as the market for dose form antibiotics is generated by the incidence of infectious disease and the demand for treatment for it (demand pull), the market for the bulk active ingredients is driven, pulled by the demand for the dose form products. In many of the developing markets, the demand for treatment is still unfulfilled. In the case of the 7-ACA cephalosporins, reasons for this have included: 1. Perceived high price for the products compared with older, established treatments 2. Lack of foreign exchange to pay for high priced medicines 3. Lack of local manufacturing capability and facilities for sterile product manufacture 4. Lack of technology for such manufacture 5. Lack of sources of intermediates and synthons (especially side chains) 6. Lack of capital resources to fund any of the foregoing operations Improved prosperity in many markets, combined with trade liberalisation moves, has relieved the problems of item 6, which has made item 5 of particular importance. The expiry of so many patents has allowed companies to engage in the production of items hitherto closed to them, with a reasonable prospect of being able to sell their output into a demand-led market. As a result, India and, insofar as the 7-ACA-based products are concerned, Korea, emerged as major sources of bulk non-sterile and sterile active ingredients, while China became a leading source of side chains and synthons. Korea and Italy remain two of the leading sources of 7-ACA and advanced intermediates to the free market. Italy, of course, remains the largest single supplier of 7-ACAbased cephalosporins to the world market, in the form of bulk sterile and nonsterile products, bulk active ingredients and of 7-ACA and intermediates derived from it. It should be noted that the fall in bulk prices referred to above is a factor of increasing competition and over supply. The ultimate result will be the emergence of a few large producers, each with sustainably large shares of the world market, or of a few niche players with major positions in small, specialist sectors of the overall market.
3 Production of 7-ACA A generalized flowchart outlining the enzymatic processes leading to 7-ACA is presented in Fig. 2. The overall process comprises the following main stages:
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Fig. 2 Production scheme for the fermentative production of CPC (upper), purification of CPC from the broth (right box), and the enzymatic two step conversion into 7-ACA (lower row). Derivatization of 7-ACA will yield the API (Fig. 1). HIC, IEX+, IEX-, and RO represent hydrophobic interaction chromatography, cation-, anion exchange chromatography and reverse osmosis, respectively
– Fermentation of a high-yielding strain of Acremonium chrysogenum to produce a broth containing CPC – Purification of the fermentation broth to produce an aqueous solution of CPC – Enzymation of the purified aqueous extract to produce an aqueous solution of 7-ACA. – Precipitation and isolation of 7-ACA of appropriate purity (ca. 98%) for use in the preparation of advanced cephalosporin intermediates and/or active pharmaceutical ingredients. Adding up the times of all steps, an industrial scale production takes roughly three weeks, of which two weeks are devoted to the fermentation and about one week is required of the down stream processing. Derivatization at positions 3¢ and 7¢ to yield an API is not included. Starting from 7-ACA, these processes may take one day each for the derivatization plus the time for purification, crystallization and drying. The resulting bulk active cephalosporin can then be sterilized and formulated for marketing.
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Some of the individual steps of the outlined production scheme can be changed. In particular the second ion exchange column and the crystallization step of CPC are not absolutely required even though some producers will keep these steps in an existing process. Crystallization of CPC is needed, however, for the chemical route to 7-ACA, a process mainly performed by suppliers in Korea and China (Table 4). CPC can be precipitated as zinc salt, which is environmentally problematic, or as sodium or potassium salt. The latter two are recommended for enzymatic splitting into 7-ACA. The following sections will describe the production in more depth and the subsequent enzymatic conversion of CPC into 7-ACA, which has become standard for the European producers. The onward conversion into advanced intermediates that already contain a new side chain or an API that carries altered side chains on both positions (3¢ and 7¢) will be described on selected examples. 3.1 Fermentation 3.1.1 Strains Starting point for the synthesis of cephalosporins is CPC obtained as secondary metabolite from large scale fermentations of the filamentous fungus Acremonium chrysogenum (Fig. 3). High yielding industrial production strains are used for production. These strains require continued improvement in both the titre achieved at the end of fermentation and in their stability. In practice, industrial strains are constantly mutated and re-isolation of best performing strains is conducted routinely, as even prolonged storage of high producing strain can occasionally result in the loss of its productivity. Genetic engineer-
Fig. 3 Microphotograph of Acremonium chrysogenum grown in liquid culture
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ing is increasingly being used to improve productivity or to direct the fermentation to new products [6, 7]. In contrast to industrial strains of Penicillium, which carry multiple copies of the penicillin biosynthesis gene cluster, Acremonium only has one biosynthesis cluster [8]. Protoplast fusions have yielded recombinant strains with improved CPC production. Unfortunately, these strains were genetically unstable and hence not suitable for industrial production. As an alternative to a duplication of the entire gene cluster, cloning and expression of genes that represent rate limiting steps in the CPC biosynthesis [9] has been employed with some success. Of particular interest are those genes encoding export functions (cefT [10]) and the late steps (ring expansion form penicillin NÆdeacetoxy CPCÆdeacetyl CPCÆCPC, cefEF and cefG) in biosynthesis of CPC [11]. Another problem in industrial production is the accumulation of deacetyl CPC (DAC) in the fermentation broth. The accumulation of DAC in cultures of A. chrysogenum ought to be minimized since DAC is useless as an antibiotic and interferes with CPC purification. Some of the accumulated DAC may originate from the lack of acetylation of this biosynthetic intermediate since the level of expression of the cefG gene, which encodes the DAC-acetyltransferase, is very low [12] and overexpression of cefG gene results in a more efficient acetylation [11]. The remaining accumulated DAC may result from extracellular enzymes with CPC acetyl hydrolase (CAH) activity or by chemical hydrolysis particularly at alkaline pH. Recently Martin’s group has purified and characterized an extracellular CAH (E.C. 3.1.1.41) of A. chrysogenum, and cloned the respective gene, cahB, [13]. It remains to be seen whether a deletion of this esterase will positively effect the CPC production. Many medically useful semisynthetic oral cephalosporins (cefalexin, cefradin, cefadroxil) are made from 7-aminodeacetoxycephalosporanic acid (7-ADCA). These are usually produced through a chemical conversion of penicillin G or penicillin V. Recently a Penicillium chrysogenum strain has been genetically engineered by cloning and expression of the cefE gene from Streptomyces clavuligerus encoding for the enzyme catalysing the ring expansion [14]. This recombinant strain produced high titres of deacetoxycephalosporin C (DAOC). Production level of DAOC is nearly equivalent (75–80%) to the total b-lactams biosynthesised by the parental overproducing strain. DAOC deacylation is carried out by two final enzymatic bioconversions catalysed by D-amino acid oxidase (DAO) and glutaryl acylase (GAC) yielding 7-ADCA. In contrast to the data reported for recombinant strains of Penicillium chrysogenum expressing ring expansion activity, no detectable contamination with other cephalosporin intermediates occurred. The industrially amenable bioprocess for 7-ADCA production has been described could replace the expensive and environmentally unfriendly chemical method classically used. Nevertheless, genetic instability of the recombinant has been observed. While it would be possible to direct Acremonium to produce 7-ADCA by disrupting and one-step replacement of the cefEF gene with cefE from S. clavuligerus, it would not be an economically viable process.
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3.1.2 Culture Conditions Similar to Penicillium chrysogenum fermentations (penicillin) or fermentations of filamentous bacteria such as Saccharopolyspora erythraea (erythromycin), A. chrysogenum cultures also undergo a series of barely understood changes in their morphology and physiology before the secondary metabolite is made. While the role or the function of these metabolites in nature is mostly unresolved – for antibiotics, self defence looks reasonable while the for clinical use desired antitumour or immunosuppressive activity may only be a side effect in the natural habitat – their production is initiated after exponential growth has ceased and the culture enters into stationary phase. Slowed growth, caused by depletion of nutrients, or accumulation of side products may induce this metabolic shift to the production of the secondary metabolites [15]. In modern processes, however, CPC production is already observed during the late growth phase during the productive fermentation stage [16–18]. Common industrial fermentation media are complex media containing corn steep liquor as a main source for nitrogen and phosphate, soy bean, cotton seed or peanut flour as source for protein (Table 5). A detailed description of the medium composition and the feed profiles cannot be given, as both vary depending on the strain. Often medium composition is driven by the available raw material and will also depend on the supplier and the batches of raw material used. In particular the quality of corn steep liquor, a major and critical constituent, varies depending on the origin of the corn (northern hemisphere for summer and southern hemisphere for the winter harvest), which can strongly affect CPC production. Carbon sources include rapidly consumable glucose and slow-release carbon sources, such as starch or soy oil. Descriptions of optimised media and feed strategies have been detailed in numerous scientific publications [19–22], but each of the currently used industrial strains is sufficiently different from each other that there are no universal recipes. Two genotypes of production strains have evolved. For one (older) lineage addition of methionine is needed for induction of CPC production, while the other requires sulfate which is reflected in the ‘generic’ medium compositions listed in Table 5. The effect of methionine is twofold: its main effect on CPC production results from a regulatory role, as methionine induces four of the enzymes of CPC biosynthesis at the level of transcription. Namely transcription of pcbAB, pcbC, cefEF, and to a lesser extent cefG, is induced [12]. L-Methionine is also converted to L-cysteine, one of three ACV precursors of cephalosporin C, by cystathionine-gamma-lyase. Eliminating cystathionine-gamma-lyase prevents the enhancing precursor effect of methionine, and moderate cystathionine-gamma-lyase overproduction increases CPC formation [23]. The sulfur is incorporated into CPC. Initially these media contain a high percentage of undissolved matter and the fungus will colonize these particles which results in an increase in viscosity during the cultivations. Considering the high vis-
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Table 5 Key components of industrial media for CPC fermentations. Depending on the strain lineage, requiring methionine or not, Medium 1 or 2 may be used
Production medium
Compound
Corn steep liquor Peanut seed flour Cotton seed flour Soya oil Methyl-oleate MgSO4 · 7H2O (NH4)2SO4 Ammonium acetate FeSO4 · 7H2O MgSO4 · 7H2O CaSO4 · 7H2O CaCO3 Soya flour D,L-Methionine Urea Starch Gulcose Desmophen (antifoam) pH 5.8 Feed
Soya oil Glucose syrup (NH4)2SO4 Methionine
Medium 1 kg/m3
Medium 2 kg/m3 92.5
100 17.5 14 3 2.5
8 14
6 2.5 2.5 5
0.1 0.04 10 34
3
11 3 500
3 20 65 0.5 66% 20%
15–20
cosity in combination with a fast growing culture, care must be taken to ensure sufficient supply of oxygen. Even though Acremonium is not particular sensitive to oxygen limitation, CPC production will be reduced and precursors, in particular PenN, will accumulate. Experiments with an early generation industrial strain demonstrated that by reducing the pO2 in the production phase from 40 to 5% of its saturation value, the CPC concentration diminished from 7.2 to 1.1 g l–1 and the PenN concentration increased from 2.57 to 7.65 g l–1 [19, 24, 25].Alternative reactor and agitator designs, but more importantly adaptations of the feed and temperature profiles, are used to control and maintain sufficient oxygenation of the culture. The end of the fermentation is defined by a drop in CPC production rate and possibly be a beginning fragmentation of the mycelium. The beginning of the four stage fermentation process outlined in Fig. 2 is fresh biomass scraped off an agar slant to inoculate the seed cultivation which will provide the biomass for the inoculation of the subsequent, so-called vegetative fermentation stages. These stages are merely required to produce large quantities of biomass as inoculum for the productive fermentation which is
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performed in batches of about 100 m3. Mostly rapidly metabolised carbon and nitrogen sources will support rapid growth during the vegetative stages with little to no CPC being made. In contrast, the productive fermentation stage at which the culture changes to the secondary metabolism requires a carefully controlled balance between rapidly consumed and slowly metabolised carbon sources. Glucose concentration has to be controlled in a narrow range since high glucose levels interfere with numerous catalytic and anabolic pathways. Controlled to a sufficiently low concentration, usually below the 5 g/l, production starts, while overfeeding represses CPC production when higher concentration permit glucose uptake rates to increase beyond 0.5 g/l/h [26]. The relationship between carbon source, its concentration and CPC production has recently been summarized [27]. While avoiding glucose repression a sufficient supply of energy rich carbon source in the form of oil is provided to sustain culture viability and production. Oil represents the major source of energy during the later stages of the fermentation and CPC production. In order to minimize the cost of fermentation and the downstream purification of CPC, oil levels should not exceed 1 vol.%. The source and the concentration of nitrogen require special attention [28, 29]. Typically the ammonium feed will be controlled as well to prevent both gross excess and starvation.As expected for a protein rich medium, ammonium
Fig. 4 Course of a production stage fermentation of Acremonium chrysogenum. Media optimisations led to the onset of CPC production already in mid-growth phase
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is released during the initial growth phase, while acids are released during the productive phase, indicating a growth on sugars. During the latter stage, ammonia feed will also be used for pH control. The productive fermentation stage takes roughly six days. On-line data on temperature, pH and pO2, together with samples taken to determine reducing sugars, ammonia, oil, phosphate, sulfur, CPC, and biomass provide the basis for controlling the fermentation. Figure 4 depicts the course of some parameter during the production stage fermentation. In contrast to laboratory-scale experimental cultivations, the industrial setting asks for robust, quick, and simple methodology. A commonly used parameter to determine the biomass concentration is the packed mycelium volume (PMV) obtained by simply spinning down a sample or by having it sedimented under defined condition to determine the percentage of the volume occupied by the biomass. The volume occupied by solids initially present in the broth can be neglected as its contribution rapidly decreases. Similarly, the content of oil floating on top of the centrifuged broth is readily and precisely determined and expressed as a percentage of the total volume. When the productive fermentation is stopped after approximately five to seven days, the CPC is isolated rapidly to avoid losses owing to its chemical instability in the broth and due to the action of esterases, which will also increase the level of side products, in particular DAC (7–15%), and the 3,4-lactone (~1%). While DAC would serve as precursor for 3-vinyl-derivates, such as cefdinir (Fig. 5) and DAOC, the second major side product (1–3%), could serve as precursor for cefuroxime, cefalexin, cefachlor or possibly cefradine, in practice it is difficult to isolate these products economically. Hence efforts are rather directed toward minimizing the side product formation. This can partly be achieved by the fermentation control; other attempts build on strain selection or genetic pathway engineering approaches as mentioned above. In every company, numerous programs exist for improving the industrial production processes.Aimed to reduce production costs, strains are developed with increased CPC titres and fermentations are optimised with respect to their yield coefficient (YX/S). The details of the aforementioned processes are generally well guarded within the industrial environment. In particular the strain and their fermentation conditions and the titres obtained are not freely available. Nevertheless, several studies have been published from academic groups that were conducted with older industrial strains [19–22].
Fig. 5 3-Vinyl-7-ACA precursor for cefdinir
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3.1.3 CPC Purification In contrast to the penicillin where purification is done by a straightforward crystallization adding potassium acetate, CPC requires a more elaborate and expensive chromatographic purification (Fig. 2). Irrespective of process details, the separation of biomass and antibiotic-containing broth is generally achieved by filtration by which the biomass is removed from the CPC containing filtrate. The filtered broth is then passed through large scale hydrophobic interaction chromatography (HIC) columns to remove impurities, in particular proteins, peptides and salts. In addition, the undesired side products DAC and DAOC are removed. The first column, called scavenger, is filled with an adsorber resin, e.g. Diaion HP20 and operated at pH 5.5–6.0 at which hydrophobic coloured compounds bind while CPC adsorption is minimal (<3%). Typically 360 g CPC per litre resin are applied. The second so-called ‘adsorber’ column is filled with a hydrophobic resin such as Sepabeads SP700. After pH adjustment of 2.8–3, the percolate from the scavenger is loaded to the column. Elution of CPC separate from DAC and DAOC is achieved by a change of pH to 6. The expected capacity is 52 g CPC per litre resin. Ion exchange chromatography (IEX; anion exchanger) is employed to purify further the CPC solution and to remove the remaining colour. This ‘decolourizer’ column is filled with an anion exchanger, e.g. Diaion DAC11. Equilibrated in the acetate form the CPC percolate from the adsorber is passed through the column. The resin will progressively release CPC before coloured impurities break through. Often a merry-go-round system with three columns is advantageous. In the first column CPC is replaced by the coloured impurities; the released CPC displaces the acetate in the second column, while the third column is being regenerated to the acetic form. When the colour breaks through at the first column, the columns are turned to new positions: column 1 to position 3 for regeneration, column 2 to position 1 for decolourisation and column 3 to position 2 for equilibrating to. Typically 90 g CPC per litre resin distributed in three columns are applied.A weak cation exchanger like Diaion WK40 may be installed to remove potential metal contamination that could interfere with the enzymatic conversion of CPC into 7-ACA. Typically about 180 g CPC (at pH 6) can be applied per litre resin. Following this purification, CPC can either be isolated as sodium or potassium salt, washed and dried, or the CPC in solution can be directly passed on to the enzymatic conversions. Several options are available at this point (Fig. 6): – 7¢ Side chain removal to yield 7-ACA – 7¢ Side chain removal and addition of new side chain at position 7¢ for the synthesis of advanced 7¢ intermediates – Partial removal of the 7¢ side chain followed by the modification at position 3¢ and complete removal of 7¢ chain for the synthesis of advanced 3¢ intermediates
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Fig. 6 Biocatalytic routes from CPC to 3¢ and 7¢ processed 7-ACA derivatives and APIs. Dark shaded boxes with bold lettering indicate potential commercial intermediates/products
– 3¢ Side chain modification followed by the 7¢ side chain removal to result in the synthesis of advanced 3¢ intermediates 3.2 Conversion of Cephalosporin C into 7-ACA Cephalosporins are semisynthetic products that derive from the fermentative product CPC. CPC is initially converted to 7-ACA by either a chemical or an enzymatic removal of the 7-amino adipoyl side chain. 7-ACA represents the key intermediate for the synthesis of the active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) which is obtained after (bio-)chemical derivatization at positions 3¢ and 7¢ of the b-lactam ring (Fig. 1). 3.2.1 Chemical Cleavage The nitrosyl chloride cleavage of CPC to 7-ACA developed by Morin et al. 1969 [30] opened the way to 7-ACA production in an industrial scale. This process has now been superseded by processes based on that developed by Ciba [31]. CPC is cleaved using phosphoric pentachloride after protection of the amino
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Fig. 7 Reaction scheme of chemical cleavage of CPC into 7-ACA. The material balance on the left indicates that 2.4 kg CPC are converted into 1 kg 7-ACA producing 9 kg of waste products. Material requiring special attention is marked with an X
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and carboxyl functions. The reaction proceeds as far as an imino chloride intermediate in the presence of base, to an imino ether intermediate by addition of alcohol and finally to an ester of 7-ACA by hydrolysis with acid. Further improvements have been introduced by using silyl protection which simultaneously blocks the amino and carboxyl functions of CPC and permits the cleavage with PCl5 to be carried out in the common solvent methylene chloride [32, 33] (Fig. 7). About 3000 tons of 7-ACA are produced from CPC annually of which the majority is manufactured by chemical deacylation (China, Japan, Korea). Chemical CPC processing represents the traditional route to the key intermediate. While yields and product quality produced by the chemical route are excellent, a major drawback is the need for organic solvents and the production of toxic chemical waste. This resulted in a gradual replacement of the chemical route to 7-ACA by the environmentally safer enzymatic cleavage of CPC in Europe. Hence, most of the chemically produced 7-ACA originates form Korea, China and Japan (Table 4). 3.2.2 Enzymatic Cleavage The biocatalytic conversion for CPC into 7-ACA, the key intermediate to all but the cefalexin-type cephalosporins, was developed in the late 1960s [34]. Two principle enzymatic routes are proposed (Fig. 8): – One-step hydrolysis of CPC with a CPC acylase (CA) – Two-step cleavage with D-amino acid oxidase (DAO) and glutaryl acylase (GAC) The acylase route, however, was never developed into an industrial process. None of the CAs evaluated had satisfactory kinetic properties with CPC as substrate [35–39]. Recently it has been proposed to change the binding site of Pseudomonas GAC systematically based on the results of X-ray analysis [40]. In contrast to the one-step cleavage, CPC conversion in two enzymatic steps has become industrial standard for 7-ACA production [34, 41–43]. In the first step of this process, CPC is oxidatively deaminated to keto-adipoyl-7-ACA (KA7-ACA) by means of a DAO. Peroxide is released in this reaction inducing a spontaneous oxidative de-carboxylation to glutaryl-7-ACA (GL-7-ACA).Addition of small quantities of peroxide after DAO treatment does ensure the quantitative conversion of KA-7-ACA to GL-7-ACA. GL-7-ACA is then hydrolysed by the GAC to 7-ACA and glutarate. GAC also accepts KA-7-ACA as substrate but the affinity is low and the reaction is strongly inhibited in the presence of GL-7-ACA. Nevertheless, the possibility of a third process exists: The enzymatic cleavage of CPC by DAO combined with catalase and GAC in a single reaction vessel. DAO catalyses the oxidative deamination to KA-7-ACA and the catalase is immediately removing
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Fig. 8 Enzymatic splitting of CPC into 7-ACA by CPC acylase (upper, dashed line) and by the twin enzyme splitting using DAO and GAC (lower, solid line)
all the peroxide generated during this reaction. With no GL-7-ACA being formed under these conditions, GAC will convert KA-7-ACA into 7-ACA and ketoglutarate [44]. 3.2.3 The Enzymes DAO and GAC 3.2.3.1 DAO D-Amino acid oxidase (DAO; EC 1.4.3.3) belongs to a group of flavine oxidoreductases and catalyses an oxidative deamination of D-amino acids to produce keto-acids and ammonia [45]; the reaction forms part of the metabolism of D-amino acid. D-Amino acid oxidases are rather frequent in nature; they are present in mammalian organs, mainly in the kidneys. Different microorganisms too are known to produce DAO, such as the yeasts Trigonopsis variabilis [46, 47], Candida tropicalis [48] and Rhodotorula gracillis [49], the fungi Neurospora crassa [50]; Rhodosporidium spec. [51], Fusarium solani [52], Penicillium chrysogenum and Fusarum oxysporum [53, 54] to mention only those of microbial origin. Only two enzymes, namely DAO from Rhodotorula gracilis and from Trigonopsis variabilis, have been developed into an industrial biocatalyst. The DAO of Rhodutorula gracilis and Trigonopsis variabilis is a homodimer (2¥38 kDa) of which each subunit contains one iron ion and a non-covalently bound FAD [47, 55].
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The biotechnological and biochemical applications for DAO extend from preparations of pure L-amino acids from racemic mixtures [56], the production of keto-acids from D-amino acids or in the quantitative and qualitative analysis of D-amino acids [57, 58] to the by far most important application, the enzymatic cleavage of CPC into GL-7-ACA. 3.2.3.2 GAC GAC is a metal free heterodimer of 16 kDa+54 kDa subunits without any prosthetic group [59]. GAC has been isolated from many organisms [59, 42], but only the one from Preudomonas diminuta, cloned and expressed in a recombinant E. coli has been developed into an industrial biocatalyst. The conversion of CPC to 7-ACA by a single enzymatic reaction has been of great interest. GACs from different sources are able to utilize several substrates and substrate analogs, but their activities on CPC vary from 0 to 4% relative to GL-7-ACA [37, 60, 61]. Site-directed mutagenesis has been carried out to improve its activity on CPC, but only a less than twofold improvement was obtained compared with the wild-type enzyme from Pseudomonas N176 [62, 63]. The recently determined three-dimensional structure of the active site conformation of the Pseudomonas GAC revealed the detailed interactions of GL-7-ACA with the side chain pocket in the active site. It was suggested that the glutaryl side chain moiety of GL-7-ACA is a dominating factor in substrate binding in the active site [64]. The unsuccessful attempts to obtain a direct enzymatic transformation of CPC into 7-ACA by a single GAC have led to the development of a two-enzyme process using DAO and GAC in sequence that was recently described by Tischer and coworker [65]. 3.2.3.3 Isolation and Immobilization Development of DAO and GAC into an industrial biocatalyst includes the fermentative production, the isolation, purification, and immobilization of the enzymes. Enzyme purification is needed to eliminate any unwanted catalytic activities found in cell extracts. In particular the activities of the CAH and catalase need to be removed. CAH increases the content of deacetyl7-ACA (DA-7-ACA) in the product by cleaving off the acetyl group from position 3¢. CAH will react on all CPC derivates throughout the process an can hence cause considerable losses in yields and purity. Catalase will consume the peroxide needed for the spontaneous de-carboxylation of KA-7ACA into GL-7-ACA. KA-7-ACA itself is unstable and decays to unknown products and the addition of increased amounts of peroxide to drive the conversion to GL-7-ACA will, as result of the interaction of peroxide with the CPC nucleus, lead to more side product [42]. CAH and catalase can either be sep-
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arated from DAO and GAC employing standard protein purification technologies [66, 67] or can be inactivated by chemical or physical treatment [68–70]. Alternatively catalase deficient production strains for the two enzymes may be used [71, 72]. DAO as well as GAC are both inactivated by separation of their subunits. Hence the immobilization of the enzymes on a solid support greatly increases their stability. Both enzymes have been immobilized as whole cells or as cell extracts in gels or on prefabricated carriers [69, 71, 73]. Currently only purified enzyme preparations are used for immobilization on commercially available carriers. DAO can be successfully immobilized covalently on epoxy carrier or glutardialdehyde activated amine matrixes, while the GAC is robust enough to be immobilized also on strong ion exchanger with subsequent crosslinking by glutardialdehyde [74]. By using selective immobilization conditions it seems to be possible to bind specific areas of DAO and GAC to the carrier in an “oriented binding” [75] and to provide a multipoint attachment [44]. Both measurements lead to a higher stability for these enzymes. Latest developments of enzyme immobilization like CLECs or CLEAs have not yet been applied in large scale immobilization of DAO and GAC. 3.2.3.4 Large Scale Enzymation of CPC Different strategies for the use of the immobilized enzymes have been proposed. According to the three aforementioned reaction steps the use of three vessels is common: In the first reactor is CPC converted to GL-7-ACA by DAO, the second reactor is used to oxidize the remaining amounts of KA-7-ACA to GL-7-ACA with peroxide, and in the third reactor GAC hydrolyses GL-7-ACA to 7-ACA (www. roche-applied-science.com/indbio/ind/PDF/cc2.pdf) (three pot design). It is possible to carry out the DAO reaction and addition of peroxide to complete the oxidative de-carboxylation by slowly adding H2O2 in the first reactor, however accepting a slight peroxide-induced inactivation of the DAO [41, 65] (two pot design). The combined use of DAO, GAC and catalase (one pot design) has been developed but has up to now not been implemented at large scale [44]. Several reactor design studies were performed which have not been realized in industrial scale. These include the cascade of reactors performing each enzymatic stage in three consecutive vessels to improve the efficacy of the enzyme use [76], and a packed column reactor which did not fulfil the requirement on oxygen transfer for DAO due to the low solubility of oxygen in the substrate solutions supplied to the column. Thus, reactions are largely performed batchwise in stirred tanks, pressurized with dispersed oxygen or air. In contrast to DAO, GAC can be used in packed columns as well as in stirred batch reactors. Important parameters for any enzyme reaction are substrate concentration, pH, and temperature.
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The DAO has no back reaction and hence no product inhibition. Therefore substrate concentration can be as high as 180 mmol/l CPC and the pH has no impact on the reaction yield as long as the enzyme, product and substrate are stable. Furthermore, the DAO catalysed oxidation shows linear substrate consumption and slows down as a concentration of 3 mmol/l CPC is approached due to the Km-value of the immobilized DAO. Under industrial conditions the reaction is usually performed until the residual CPC concentration is below 1% of the starting substrate solution. In contrast the GAC catalysed reaction is reversible and depends on pH and product concentrations. The reaction between glutarate and 7-ACA reach an equilibrium, and even at pH 8 and initial 75 mmol/l GL-7-ACA, up to 5% of the substrate remains unconverted. This equilibrium can be lowered by increasing the pH up to 8.5 or by decreasing the substrate concentration. However, at this high pH GL-7-ACA and 7-ACA is unstable. Hence exposure to these unfavourable conditions needs to be minimized. Due to their thermodynamic instability CPC, GL-7-ACA and 7-ACA are suffering a considerable decay during down streaming. In average, the b-lactam nucleus remains in aqueous solution for 16 h, from after harvesting the fermentation to the recovery as 7-ACA in the crystallization. Whenever possible, low temperature, 8–10 °C, and the suitable pH of 4.5–6 must be maintained to minimize this decay. In addition to yields, product quality will decide over commercial success of production. To reach an acceptable 7-ACA, additional product purification may be needed. However, any additional step will reduce the yield and increase considerably running and investment costs. 3.2.4 Deacetyl-7-ACA by CAH A niche product among the CPC based b-lactam intermediates is the DA-7ACA with a worldwide annual demand for approximately 100 t. DA-7-ACA is used for the production of 3-vinyl substituted intermediates (Fig. 5). CPC acetyl hydrolase (CAH) catalyses the hydrolysis of the ester bondage on position 3¢ of a CPC nucleus (Fig. 9). The kinetics of this enzyme resembles that of the GAC [77]. The enzyme is widely distributed in nature. It has been isolated from different fungal and bacterial sources [78–82] and been used as either whole cells preparation or as carrier immobilized cell free enzyme preparations.
Fig. 9 CPC acetyl Hydrolase (CAH) reaction scheme
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DA-7-ACA is normally produced by hydrolysis of 7-ACA, but can also be obtained from DAC, a side product (7–15%) of the CPC fermentation which is normally wasted. Converting CPC quantitatively into DAC using CAH followed by the enzymatic splitting with DAO and GAC has been proposed [41] but is pending implementation in technical scale.
4 Process Economics of 7-ACA Production As indicated earlier, competition from India, and the Far East with their ability to produce pharmaceutical intermediates and ingredients has put the prices for b-lactam intermediates like 7-ACA under pressure. Most producers of 7-ACA are back-integrated to the CPC fermentation so that they could apply economical and technical optimisations throughout the whole product value chain. In this respect the fermentation titre of CPC has an important effect on costs since it determines directly the level of 7-ACA output. Hence, state of the art fermentation equipment, constant strain and process improvement will significantly contribute to cost reduction. The introduction of the enzymatic CPC cleavage provides another important contribution to cost reduction as CPC from the purified fermentation broth can be directly processed. Crystallization and drying of CPC as sodium or potassium salt is no longer required. Elimination of these steps again increases the yield reducing production costs, in particular for energy, water, waste treatment, equipment, and labour. Finally the application of suitable and appropriate recovery systems for water, solvents, caustic soda, and others can further reduce production cost. Apart from principal measures to increase the yield of every step and to minimize losses, in particular product decay during downstreaming, the cost structure of a company also affects the process economics. The production costs of 7-ACA are approximately four to five times higher compared to 6-APA which are estimated to be around 15–25 $/kg. Three factors contribute to this discrepancy. First, the CPC yield in fermentation is eight- to tenfold lower than that of penicillin. Second, CPC recovery requires filtrationdialysis and a column chromatography which is very much increasing need of
Table 6 Cost structure for the production of 7-ACA
Raw and running materials Enzymes Utilities and technical services Labor and overheads Capital costs, insurances, depreciation, maintenance
22±4% 15±8% 22±4% 18±4% 23±4%
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utilities (steam, electricity, water) and running materials (filtration membranes, resins) whereas penicillin G or V is extracted directly from the broth and easily purified by crystallization. Third, the conversion of penicillin into 6-APA catalysed by a penicillin G or V acylase is more efficient then the CPC conversion to 7-ACA by DAO and GAC. While on the commercial scale penicillin G acylase (PGA) consumption can be as low as 0.06 kU/kg 6-APA [18], 1 kg 7-ACA requires about 1 kU of DAO and 1 kU of GAC (www. roche-appliedscience.com/indbio/ind/PDF/cc2.pdf). In addition, the production costs for DAO and GAC are higher than those for PGA. An estimation of the contribution of the various cost centres for 7-ACA, such as fermentation (mostly raw and running material) downstreaming (mostly enzymes), utilities, labour and company overhead are summarized in Table 6. The variability at each position is indicative for regional and structural differences among companies.
5 Advanced Intermediates Active semi-synthetic cephalosporins are mostly derived from 7-ACA (Fig. 1). Most often also the 3¢ position is changed. Addition of a new side chain in position 7¢ or alteration of the 3¢ side chain will lead to advanced intermediates which are subsequently converted into the API. Traditionally 7-ACA is a key intermediate for the synthesis of semisynthetic cephalosporins; however, as indicated in Fig. 6, early processing of the 3¢ position is possible, resulting in the synthesis of 3¢ position advanced intermediates. For example, processing the 3¢ position with MMTD or MTZ (Fig. 1) will yield TDA or TTA, the precursors for cefazolin and ceftriaxone, respectively. Both products are traded products. 5.1 3¢ Position The acetyl group in the 3¢ position can be substituted in an SN1 mechanism by heterocyclic mercapto groups or ring bound nitrogen. Following the traditional chemical route, modifications at the 3¢ position will be done by water-free chemistry: 7-ACA is 3-processed by heterocyclic thiols in organic solvents in presence of toxic BF3 gas, which catalyses the reaction as Lewis acid in 85% yield [83]. The yields of this process are generally high and the end products are of good quality. Alternatively aqueous chemistry is possible for 3¢ processing, e.g. with heterocyclic thiols or pyridine in aqueous solution. The substitution reaction takes place at neutral or slightly acidic pH at a moderately elevated temperature of between 50–75 °C and excess of side chain. While a higher temperature positively influences the conversion rate, the stability of the b-lactam is decreased.
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As a consequence, yields in aqueous solution are lower (about 65%) and the isolated derivatives can have an undesired yellow or brownish colour. The colour formation can be reduced or eliminated by the addition of reducing agents, such as sodium sulphite or sodium dithionite [84]. Alternatively, protection of the 7¢ amino group of 7-ACA can reduce colour formation. This protection step may not be necessary, if 3¢ processing occurs on GA-7-ACA [85] or directly on CPC [86, 87]. Compared to 7-ACA, conversion rate is slower, which can be compensated by a higher temperature with still negligible colour formation. 3¢ Processed CPC can be processed by DAO via the keto intermediate to the glutaryl derivative, which is finally converted by GAC to the 3¢ processed 7-ACA product. It is recommended to remove unreacted heterocyclic thiols prior to biocatalytic cleavage of the 7¢ side chain. In particular the DAO is sensitive to deactivation by thiols. Finally, the modification in 3¢ position may be done after a 7¢ derivatization of 7-ACA using the same aqueous chemistry. However, no unreacted 7-ACA should be present in the reaction which would result in colour formation. Conditions, reaction rate and yields are similar to those of CPC or GL-7-ACA conversion. Recovery of unreacted surplus side chain before isolation of the final product can be advantageous, contributing to both, improved product quality and process economy. 5.2 7¢ Position The synthesis on semi-synthetic b-lactams includes the modification of the free amino group of the b-lactam nucleus (7¢ position for cephalosporins, and 6¢ position for penicillins). 5.2.1 Chemical Route Traditional chemical synthesis requires that the carboxylic group of the b-lactam nucleus is protected by trimethylsilylation as the formation of acid chlorides is used for activation. For example D-phenylglycyl chloride is formed in halogenated organic solvents from D-phenylglycine and PCl5, which is formed in situ from PCl3 and Cl2. Sometimes this approach fails e.g. for p-hydroxy-D-phenylglyine, where the activated side chain is not available in desired purity and at an attractive price. Then, the so-called Dane salt method [88] was adopted for the activation of amino acids. The Dane salt is prepared from the side chain and methyl acetoacetate for protection of its amino group. It is subsequently converted in situ to a mixed anhydride, e.g. with pivaloyl chloride in presence of a base at low temperature (–60 to –50 °C). After coupling with the unprotected b-lactam nucleus the amino protecting group of the coupled side chain is removed at pH 1.
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Although both ways result in nearly quantitative yields, solvents and auxiliary reagents used generate up to 40 kg of non biodegradable waste per 1 kg cefalexin produced [89]. 5.2.2 Biocatalytic Route In particular the environmental issues and associated costs have resulted in the development of economically and environmentally viable enzymatic alternatives for the 7¢ derivatization of the b-lactam nucleus. These highly selective conversions are generally performed in aqueous environment and ambient temperatures. Penicillin G amidase (PGA, EC 3.5.1.11), which is normally used for the hydrolysis of penicillin G or cephalosporin G, is also a powerful tool for synthesis of semi synthetic b-lactam antibiotics. Two approaches have to be distinguished (for review [90]). The free acids of the side chains are used in the thermodynamically controlled synthesis. The equilibrium follows the degree of not dissociated side chain, which depends on the ks of the acid and the pH value.At the required low pH PGA is not very active and the conversion is slow. The dissociation constant can be shifted to more favourable values by water soluble solvents as ions are less well hydrated. In contrast the ks is reduced by high ionic strength as ions are better stabilised. Water soluble solvents have also a direct influence on the equilibrium, since they reduce the water activity and therefore water, a byproduct of synthesis, is apparently removed. Solvents, however, may cause fast deactivation of PGA. Following the law of mass action, the yield increases with higher concentrations of b-lactam nucleus and side chain. Temperature and enzyme input influence mainly reaction time, but less yields. The kinetically controlled synthesis with esters or amides of the side chains is much faster, since the Gibb’s energy of the activated side chains is improved and more alkaline pH values may be applied at which the PGA is more active. The higher Gibb’s energy is also the reason for better yields compared to the thermodynamic equilibrium. However, the kinetically controlled formation of the b-lactam antibiotic reaches a maximum and is accompanied by the consecutive b-lactam hydrolysis. Hence, kinetically controlled condensations have to be monitored carefully and terminated in time to minimize loss by hydrolysis. There are often conflicting effects of, e.g. higher pH, higher temperature or more enzyme input increasing the activity for both, hydrolysis and synthesis. In practice a pH around 6 to 7.5, low temperatures, e.g. 10 °C and an enzyme input for 4–8 h reaction time are considered optimal for good yields. In addition, high substrate concentrations will be advantageously for yields. Water soluble solvents and ionic strength will have some influence as detailed earlier. The substrate specificity of PGA requires that the side chains have the following similarities to the native substrate, phenylacetic acid:
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– A residue with p-electrons (phenyl-, pyridyl-, thienyl-, tetrazolyl-, CN- etc.) – A short spacer (-CH2-, -CHOH-, CHNH2-, -OCH2-, -SCH2-) – A carboxylic function or derivative (-COOH, COOR, CONHR) Since the enzyme will convert only dissolved reactants their solubility has a great influence on reaction rate and yields. Solubility problems can be addressed by choosing between the thermodynamically or the kinetically controlled synthesis as shown in the following examples. For cefalotin synthesis the thermodynamically controlled synthesis is advantageous as the thienylacetic acid side chain is water soluble, while its esters, e.g. methylester, dissolve only partly at optimal reaction conditions (Table 7). The thienyl acetic hydroxyethylester is not soluble under the conditions needed for the reaction. Yields of the thermodynamically controlled synthesis and the kinetically controlled approach are very similar if a water soluble ester can be chosen for activation [91]. Nevertheless, the latter approach has clear advantages such as significantly lower enzyme consumption for the same conversion time. The 7¢ Table 7 PGA mediated cefalotin synthesis from 7-ACA and thienyl acetic acid. Comparison between the thermodynamically controlled reaction using the free acid and the kinetically controlled reaction with the thienyl acetic acid methylester
No activation (free acid)
Methylester (partly soluble)
7-ACA Thienylacetic acid Isopropanol PGA-450 Temperature
150 mmol/l 600 mmol/l No 16–20 kU/l 20 °C
100 mmol/l 175 mmol/l 10% 4–5 kU/l 10 °C
pH Reaction time Yield in solution
Shift 7.0–5.3 8–10 h 93–94%
6.75 3–5 h 81–86%
Table 8 PGA mediated mandoyl-7-ACA synthesis from 7-ACA and mandelic acid. Comparison between the thermodynamically controlled reaction using the free acid and the kinetically controlled reaction with the methyl- and hydroxyethylester
Free acid (no activation)
Methylester (partly soluble)
Hydroxyethylester (soluble)
7-ACA D-Mandelic acid PGA-450 Temperature pH
150 mmol/l 600 mmol/l 13 kU/l 20 °C shift 7.0–5.3
150 mmol/l 300 mmol/l 2.5 kU/l 10 °C 6.5
150 mmol/l 288 mmol/l 1.8 kU/l 10 °C 7.0
Reaction time Yield in solution
5.1 h 90.6%
4h 72.8%
1.5 h 91.5%
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side chain of cefamandole, mandelic acid, is an example where either the free acid, D-mandelic acid, or its esters may be used to convert 7-ACA into mandoyl7-ACA. The approaches are compared in Table 8. The yields obtained with the free acid and the hydroxyethyl-activated side chain are similar. While the use of the free acid may be cheaper, this advantage is offset by the higher concentration of side chain in the reaction, a seven-times higher enzyme input, an over three times longer reaction time, and a more complicated process control (pH ramp).
6 APIs by 7¢ and 3¢ Modified 7-ACA As mentioned earlier, the synthesis of an active cephalosporin in most cases requires the derivatization of both 3¢ and 7¢ positions. Based on the classical chemical synthesis starting from 7-ACA, the 3¢ position is modified prior to the 7¢ position. In contrast, biocatalytic synthesis combined with aqueous chemistry opens up the possibility to use alternative starting material such as CPC or GL-7-ACA (Fig. 6). Nevertheless, the decision on which route to follow is driven by two parameters: step yields (≈costs) and regulatory issues. The latter point is relevant only if an existing process is to be modified, which then will require a set of actions to verify that the specifications of the final product are not adversely affected by the changes in the process. Starting with 7-ACA as substrate PGA can be used to perform the 7¢ derivatization. Generally, acidic conditions are favoured, to minimize hydrolysis and to keep the side chain in its undissociated form. However, the solubility of the 3¢ processed 7-ACA derivatives often requires a more alkaline pH and/or a lower substrate concentration.At higher pH, however, the rate of hydrolysis increases, thus lowering yields, while lower substrate concentrations reduce the space time yield. As detailed earlier, the 3¢ coupling in aqueous conditions is done at elevated temperature causing some decomposition of the substrate. In particular when 7-ACA is used as substrate this decomposition results in a strong colour formation. Hence, if a process is designed to firstly add a side chain at 7¢ position, care must be taken to remove all remaining traces of unreacted 7-ACA prior to 3¢ processing to avoid excess colour formation. This may require that the 7¢ derivative has to be isolated. With cefazolin synthesis as an example, the two possible routes are compared and summarized in Table 9. The synthesis of cefazolin via TDA is done at higher pH and with a reduced substrate concentration to overcome the poor solubility of TDA at acidic pH. Consequently, more enzyme (PGA) and side chain are needed and the spacetime yields are lower as compared to the route via TZ-7-ACA. Besides yields, the decision to use either route is also influenced by the product quality obtained and other industrial process considerations, such as costs
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Table 9 Synthesis of cefazolin using aqueous chemistry combined at position 3¢ and enzymatic synthesis at position 7¢. Comparison of the two possible routes starting the synthesis at the 3¢ position or at the 7¢ position, respectively
3¢Æ7¢ Processing 3-Processing: MMTD Isolated step yield 7-Processing: TZM PGA pH Isolated step yield 3-Processing: MMTD Isolated step yield Total cefazolin yield
75 mmol/l CPC 75 mmol/l ~50% TDA 62.5 mmol/l TDA 125 mmol/l 5 kU/l Ramp: 7.5–6.7 >80% cefazolin
35–40%
7¢Æ3¢ Processing
150 mmol/l 7-ACA from CPC 265.5 mmol/l 1.5 kU/l 7.0 57% TZ-7-ACA 150 mmol TZ-7-ACA 150 mmol/l 60% cefazolin 34%
for the side chain and its recovery or disposal which have not been addressed here.
7 Outlook The semi-synthetic b-lactam antibiotics will retain a significant market share. Their broad spectrum of activity, high potency, low toxicity, and stability toward hydrolysis makes them a class preferred by clinicians. New semisynthetic cephalosporins continue to be developed in the pharmacology programs of different companies and new generations of cephalosporins will be available in the future. As the pressure on the price remains high, new developments are fuelled by the advances in knowledge on the molecular biology of CPC biosynthesis. Molecular biology has entered the strain improvement programs of most companies and combined with a more careful control of the fermentation process will lead to more efficient processes. Whether titres similar to those obtained in penicillin fermentation can be reached remains to be seen. The introduction of ‘green’ routes to semi-synthetic b-lactams has started in Europe and has much room for improvement and expansion. Still most of the 7-ACA is produced by the traditional route as are most if not all of the APIs. Changes will only gradually be implemented as margins are low and products long off patent. Hence, most production facilities are long depreciated and investment into upgrading a facility is difficult to justify. However, emerging new compounds and new companies have the opportunity to step forward and implement new technologies.
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Acknowledgements The authors would like to thank Anbics AG Zug, Switzerland for providing the resources to write this review.
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Received: February 2004
Adv Biochem Engin/Biotechnol (2004) 88: 217– 264 DOI 10.1007/b99262 © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2004
Biochemistry and General Genetics of Nonribosomal Peptide Synthetases in Fungi Hans von Döhren Technical University Berlin, Department of Chemistry, Research Group of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Franklinstrasse 29, 10587 Berlin, Germany
[email protected]
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4 4.1 4.1.1 4.1.2 4.1.3 4.1.4 4.1.5 4.1.6 4.2 4.2.1 4.2.2 4.2.3 4.2.4 4.3 4.3.1 4.3.2 4.3.3 4.4 4.5
Biochemistry of Fungal NRPS Systems Studied . . . . . Beta Lactams – ACV Synthetase . . . . . . . . . . . . . Basic Reaction Scheme and Kinetics of Peptide Synthesis Peptide Synthesis and Adenylate Intermediates . . . . . Specificity of Adenylate Domains . . . . . . . . . . . . Epimerization Reaction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Thioesterase . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Product Formation and In Vitro Synthesis . . . . . . . Enniatins and Related Cyclodepsipeptides . . . . . . . The Reaction Cycle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . D-Hydroxy Acid Supply . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Assignment of Catalytic Sites . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Specificities of Adenylate Domains . . . . . . . . . . . . Cyclosporins . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Characterization of Cyclosporin Synthetase Gene . . . . Assignment of Catalytic Functions and Reaction Cycle . Synthesis of Cyclosporin Analogs . . . . . . . . . . . . Ergot Peptide Alkaloids . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Various Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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5 5.1 5.2
Outlook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 258 Combinatorial Approaches . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 258 Subcellular Localization of Peptide Synthetases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 258
References
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Abstract Peptides like penicillin or cyclosporin are nonribosomally synthesised by large multifunctional enzymes. Peptide synthetase genes are coexpressed with other biosynthesis genes organised in clusters. Such clusters are common in fungal genomes, and the respective products are thought to be advantageous though not essential for survival. The biochemistry of the sequential polymerisation reactions is reviewed, including multienzyme organization, amino acid activation and modification reactions. Keywords Nonribosomal peptide synthesis · Peptide biosynthesis · Biosynthetic gene cluster · Peptide antibiotics · Penicillin biosynthesis
List of Abbreviations AA Amino acid Aad Amino adipic acid ACE1 Magnaporthe grisea, avirulence gene (LLD-)ACV d-(L-a-Aminoadipyl)-L-cysteine-D-valine Ala Alanine A AMP Adenosine monophosphate ADP Adenosine diphosphate ATP Adenosine triphosphate Bmt (4R)-4-[(E)-2-butenyl]-4-methyl-L-threonine cefEF Deacetylcephalosporin C synthetase/hydroxylase (A. chrysogenum) cefG Acetyl coenzyme A:DAC acetyltransferase (A. chrysogenum) cefT Transmembrane protein (A. chrysogenum) CoA Coenzyme A Cys Cysteine C DMATS Dimethylallyl-tryptophan synthase Glu Glutamic acid Q His Histidine H Ile Isoleucine I Pyrophosphate PPi kb Kilo base-pairs kDa Kilo Dalton Leu Leucine L Lys Lysine K Mb Mega base-pairs mL Millilitre mRNA Messenger RNA NADH/NADPH b-Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (phosphate), reduced state nmol Nano mole NMR Nuclear magnetic resonance NRP Nonribosomal peptide NRPS Nonribosomal peptide synthetase
Biochemistry and General Genetics of Nonribosomal Peptide Synthetases in Fungi pcbAB pcbC penDE Phe PKS pmol PPTase Pro SAM Ser Thr Val
219
d-(L-a-Aminoadipyl)-L-cysteine-D-valine synthetase (A. chrysogenum,P. chrysogenum,S. clavuligerus) Isopenicillin N synthase (A. chrysogenum,P. chrysogenum,S. clavuligerus) Acyl coenzyme A: isopenicillin N acyltransferase (P. chrysogenum) Phenylalanine F Polyketide synthase Pico mole 4¢-Phosphopantetheine-protein transferases Proline P S-Adenosyl-L-methionine Serine S Threonine T Valine V
1 Nonribosomal Peptides in Fungi Lower eukaryotes like filamentous fungi and in particular members of the division Ascomycetes are producers of a variety of beneficial pharmaceuticals with peptide structures, like beta lactam antibiotics used as antibacterials, ergot alkaloids with various medical applications, cyclosporin used as immunosuppressant, and the echinocandin group applied as antifungals (Table 1). In addition, many peptides with structures unique to fungi are known, like siderophores of the ferrichrome and coprogen type, peptaibols with membrane effecting properties, or cyclodepsipeptides promoting a variety of biological effects, including nematocidal actions [1]. Biosynthesis of these unique compounds is directed from complex enzyme systems utilizing in addition to the protein amino acids a variety of non-protein amino acids to generate peptides differing from the linear mRNA-directed sequence of ribosomally derived polypeptides. These nonribosomal peptides may have unusual peptide bonds, may be highly modified, have various cyclic structures, or contain even acyl compounds or terpenoid components. Information on genome sequences of several filamentous fungi obtained so far revealed that these organisms have a strong capacity to produce bioactive metabolites, most of which have not been characterized yet. This capacity exceeds metabolite production in prokaryotes with respect to the number of polyketide synthase (PKS) and non-ribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) gene clusters in Actinomycetes, Myxobacteria and Cyanobacteria found by genomic analysis and screening efforts. Scheme 1 provides a survey of the currently known fungal NRPS systems, based on the peptide bond forming condensation domains.
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Scheme 1 Phylogenetic distribution of fungal NRPS systems (February 2004)
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Scheme 1 (continued)
Table 1 Selected nonribosomal peptides from fungi
Compound
Structure
Producer
Known properties
Cyclopeptin
Cyclodipeptide
Penicillium cyclopium Penicillium discolor
Mycotoxin
Gliotoxin
Cyclodipeptide
Trichoderma viride
Apoptosis inducing Immunosuppressive DNA damage Blocks protein thiols
Dimerum acid Cyclodipeptide
Trichoderma virens Penicillium chrysogenum
Siderophore
ACV
Tripeptide
Penicillium chrysogenum Aspergillus nidulans Acremonium chrysogenum
Penicillin and cephalosporin precursor
Ergotpeptides
Acyl-tripeptides
Claviceps purpurea
Neurotoxins Vasoconstrictors
Tentoxin
Cyclotetrapeptide
Alternaria alternata
Phytotoxic, ATP synthase inhibitor
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Table 1 (continued)
Compound
Structure
Producer
Known properties
AM-toxin HC-toxin
4-Peptidolactone 4-Cyclopeptide
Alternaria alternata Helminthosporium carbonum inhibitor
Phytotoxic Phytotoxic Histone deacetylase
Destruxin
5-Peptidolactone
Metarhizium anisopliae
Insecticidal
Ferrichrome
6-Cyclopeptide
Ustilago maydis
Siderophore
Ferricrocin
6-Cyclopeptide
Aspergillus nidulans
Siderophore
Enniatin
6-Depsipeptide
Fusarium oxysporum
Phytotoxin, insecticidal, ionophore
Echinocandin
Acyl-6-cyclopeptide Aspergillus nidulans
Antifungal
PF1022
8-Depsipeptide
Mycelia sterilia
Nematocidal
Aureobasidin
9-Peptidolactone
Aureobasidium pullulans
Antifungal
Cyclosporin
11-Cyclopeptide
Tolypocladium inflatum
Immunosuppressive Antifungal
Omphalotin
12-Cyclopeptide
Omphalotus olearius
Nematocidal
Ampullosporin 15-Acylpeptide
Sepedonium ampullosporum Neuroleptic, Antifungal, mycoparasitic function
Trichorzin TVB 18-Acylpeptide
Hypocrea virens
Antifungal, mycoparasitic function
Alamethicin
Trichoderma viride
Ion channel forming
20-Acylpeptide
2 NRPS-Encoding Genes 2.1 Size and Structure of Fungal NRPS-Encoding Genes Fungal NRPS systems, as concluded from the limited number of examples studied, are generally encoded by large intron-free genes, and all modules are fully integrated, contrary to most bacterial systems [3–5].As in prokaryotes, biosynthesis genes appear to be clustered; however, clusters may be split, and associated clusters even located on different chromosomes [6]. The essential protein-4¢phosphopantetheine transferase genes are not included in biosynthesis clusters [7, 8], and cyclizations are catalysed by condensation domains rather than thioesterase domains [9]. However, as more systems are being studied, exceptions to these rules have been found or will be found. Introns have
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been identified in the ergot peptide biosynthesis gene cluster of Claviceps purpurea in the lysergate activating enzyme [10], and in an orphan NRPS reading frame found in Metarhizium anisopliae [11]. Introns have also frequently been found in associated non-NRPS genes [12]. The general absence of introns within NRPS genes has been taken as an argument to speculate on horizontal transfer of such prokaryotic genes to fungi. Fungal systems are not always fully integrated, as again the ergot peptide system operates with two interacting multienzymes [13]. Evidence for interacting systems has also been obtained for the peptaibol ampullosporin in Sepedonium ampullosporum [14]. So far no interacting NRPS multienzymes are known in fungi [15]. There has also been no evidence for functional associations, like in yeast, fungal or mammalian fatty acid synthases, but this seems to hold also for bacterial interacting systems [16], contrary to polyketide synthases known to form dimers [17, 18]. NRPS genes are easily recognized by highly preserved protein motifs located within the sequences of a set of functional domains (as discussed below): The first complete NRPS gene isolated, the 3-module ACV synthetase from Penicillium chrysogenum, has a size of 11.2 kb, and contains no introns [19, 20]. The peptide synthetase gene cloned next has been the 4-module HC-toxin synthetase gene of 15.7 kb from Cochliobolus carbonum [21], followed by the giant 11-module cyclosporin synthetase gene from Tolypocladium inflatum with 45.8 kb, both without introns [22]. The recently described 18-module peptaibol synthetase from Trichoderma virens even has 62.8 kb [23]. The largest fungal peptides known are 20-membered peptaibols, so even larger open reading frames are to be expected. 2.2 Organization and Mobility of NRPS Genes There are various examples of fungal secondary metabolite gene clusters, including penicillin, HC-toxin, ferrichrome, and ergot alkaloids all containing, among others, NRPS genes [24]. Although at first sight these eukaryotic genes do not seem to be clustered in a comparable organization as in bacteria, the biosynthesis genes have been found to be organised in clusters, which even may be duplicated, as in case of HC-toxin, or amplified under highly selective conditions, as in industrial penicillin producing strains. These clusters exhibit typically eukaryotic features, and combine synthetases, modifying enzymes, and efflux pumps. Some data on NRPS clusters have been compiled in Table 2. Most advanced are the studies on fungal beta-lactam producing strains [6]. The penicillin biosynthesis genes pcbAB, pcbC and penDE are located in similar clusters in Penicillium chrysogenum, Penicillium notatum, Aspergillus nidulans and Penicillium nalgiovense. The clusters have been traced to chromosome I (10.4 Mb) of P. chrysogenum, chromosome II of P. notatum (9.6 Mb) and chromosome VI (3.0 Mb) of A. nidulans. In high producer strains clusters are
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Table 2 Genes clustered in fungal NRPS biosynthesis systems
Product
Organism
Genes identified
Penicillin
Penicillium chrysogenum Penicillium griseofulvum Emericella nidulans
pcbAB ACV synthetase pcbC isopenicllin N synthase penDE isopenicillin N acyl transferase
Cephalosporin
Acremonium chrysogenum
Chromosome VII early cluster pcbAB ACV synthetase pcbC isopenicillin N synthase pcbD1 acyl-CoA synthetase pcbD2 acyl-CoA racemase cefT efflux pump ORF3 D-hydroxy acid dehydrogenase Chromosome I late cluster cefEF expandase-hydroxylase cefG DAC acetyltransferase
HC toxin
Cochliobolus carbonum
TOXA efflux pump HTS1 HC toxin synthetase TOXC fatty acid synthase TOXE transcription factor TOXF transaminase TOXG Ala racemase
Cyclosporin
Tolypocladium inflatum
Tolypocladium inflatum Ala racemase Bmt synthase?
Ergot peptide
Claviceps purpurea
DMAT synthase LPS1 lysergate activating synthetase LPS2 peptide synthetase
Ferrichrome type siderophores
Aspergillus nidulans Ustilago maydis
sid1 ornithine monooxygenase sid2 peptide synthetase
Siderophore, unidentified
Aureobasidium pullulans
Ornithine monooxygenase Peptide synthetaseMDR
amplified: about five to six copies in the AS-P-78 strain and 11 to 14 copies in the E1 strain of P. chrysogenum, whereas only one copy is present in the wild type (NRRL 1951) strain and in the low producer Wis 54-1255 strain. The amplified regions in AS-P-78 and E1 are arranged in tandem repeats of 106.5- or 57.6-kb units, respectively. In Acremonium chrysogenum the genes involved in cephalosporin biosynthesis are separated in at least two clusters. The so-called ‘early cluster’ combines the genes of the synthetase pcbAB, the cyclase pcbC, the acyl-CoA synthetase pcbD1 and the acyl-CoA racemase pcbD2, both involved in epimerization of isopenicillin N, and the efflux pump cefT. The ‘late cluster’, which includes the cefEF and cefG genes, is involved in the last steps of cephalosporin biosynthesis. In the industrial C-10 strain both clusters are pre-
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sent in single copies on chromosome VII (4.6 Mb, early cluster) and chromosome I (2.2 Mb). The HC-toxin biosynthesis gene cluster has been genetically identified as TOX2 locus [25]. So far seven duplicated and coregulated genes have been identified on a 3.5-Mb chromosome, and with the exception of one copy of TOXE all are linked within 600 kb of each other. Different patterns may be found in different isolates due to reciprocal chromosomal translocations. A 13.3-kb intron-free peptide synthetase gene from Alternaria alternata, whose product catalyses the production of AM-toxin, is a primary pathogenicity determinant [26]. This NRPS-gene has been shown to reside on chromosomes of 1.8 Mb or less, depending on the A. alternata apple pathotype strain. In an original isolate of this strain, which had not undergone sub-culture, the loss of a 1.1-Mb chromosome has been correlated with non-toxin-production [27]. Evidence for the location of NRPS-genes on a similarly sized conditionally dispensible chromosome has been obtained for destruxins in Metarhizium anisopliae [28]. In an analysis of pathogenic and non-pathogenic wheat isolates of Pyrenophora tritici-repentis some evidence has been presented for significant differences in the structure of at least two of the chromosomes, including NRPS-genes [29]. The conservation of these biosynthesis gene clusters within the highly variable genetic background of ascomycetes, as especially manifested by the variable karyotypes of field populations, has been correlated hypothetically by Walton [24] with both their selective advantage and their common horizontal transfer [30].A recent analysis of 76 PKS genes from the genomes of Gibberella moniliformis, Gibberella zeae, Botryotinia fuckeliana and Cochliobolus heterostrophus, however, provided no evidence for horizontal gene transfers among fungi [31]. A selective advantage, especially discussed at the moment in plant pathogenic fungi, is the production of general or host-specific toxins. Clustering in addition improves the chance of survival of these coordinated activities.As secondary metabolites are by definition nonessential, and their advantage is of sporadic utility, their mobility could have been essential to maintain these biosynthetic activities. Further evidence is expected to come from genome analysis, uncovering novel secondary metabolism clusters [32]. In a genomics program focusing on filamentous ascomycete pathogens with genomes of about 35 Mb in size many NRPS and PKS clusters have been detected. Even closely related fungi vary greatly in the presence/absence of these multigenes. Genome sequencing of Cochliobolus, Botrytis and Fusarium indicates that each contains about 35 NRPS and PKS genes respectively [33, 34]. The recently published genome of Neurospora crassa, however, revealed a surprisingly small number of 3 NRPS genes [35]. This could be attributed to the repeat-induced point mutations strategy preventing duplications. Currently completed and running fungal genome projects have led to the discovery of a large number of unidentified biosynthesis gene clusters, some of which are compiled in Table 3 as orphan NRPS genes.
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Table 3 Selection of orphan NRPS genes
Organism
SizeAA
Notes
Reference, Accession no
Metarhizium anisopliae
5157
Destruxin gene searched for, but no match
[11] CAA61605
Aureobasidium pullulans
4912
Aureobasidin gene searched for, but likely siderophore
AAD00581
Neurospora crassa
5141
XP_327405
2848
From genome sequence, likely siderophore From genome sequence, likely siderophore From genome sequence, unknown
[35] XP_323884
Aspergillus nidulans
2180 2242 2559 7047 2326 5935 6077 7214
From genome sequence From genome sequence From genome sequence From genome sequence From genome sequence From genome sequence From genome sequence From genome sequence
EAA60443 EAA66311 EAA61517 EAA64650 EAA59057 EAA65335 EAA65835 EAA59538
Aspergillus oryzae
1924
Suspected siderophore synthetase
Q7Z8U6
Magnaporthe grisea
4643 5344 4117 2881 2173
From genome sequence From genome sequence From genome sequence From genome sequence From genome sequence
EAA53581 EAA54366 EAA48364 EAA51806 EAA48770
Alternaria brassicae
7191
Involved in pathogenicity
AAP78735
Gibberella zeae
7599 11999 9579 2487 4423 7791
From genome sequence From genome sequence From genome sequence From genome sequence From genome sequence From genome sequence
EAA69855 EAA75314 EAA69816 EAA69795 EAA73064 EAA69381
2034
XP_329487
2.3 Possible Roles of NRPs A well studied role of NRPs is their function in complexing Fe3+ in both uptake of extracellular iron and control of the intracellular level [36–38]. The possible role of fungal secondary metabolites in plant pathogenesis is currently investigated by comparative genomic analysis [33, 34]. Some NRPs have clear roles as pathogenicity/virulence determinants such as host-specific toxins produced
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by Cochliobolus spp. and Alternaria spp. The current knowledge on host-selective toxins has been recently reviewed [39]. The genomes of filamentous pathogenic Ascomycetes contain many genes involved in the biosynthesis of secondary metabolites, while saprophytes have few or none. Among the gene sets in pathogenic fungi there are few orthologs; thus a large number of yet unknown small molecules produced by fungi is predicted [34]. However, NRP production is just one of a set of events which may be involved in a complex interaction process, like competition in a microenvironment, invasive processes, parasitism or symbiosis, or general fitness in long-term survival. The consortium CEREPAT studying fungal genes required for plant infection processes [40] describes surprisingly little evidence for secondary metabolite biosynthesis contributions. Only the Magnaporthe grisea avirulence gene ACE1 encoding a combined PKS/NRPS system involved in the production of a yet uncharacterised fungal signal molecule has been described, which is recognised by resistant rice plants. Remarkably, the genome sequence of M. grisea revealed several NRPS genes of unknown functions (Table 3).A new type of gene, related to NRPS systems as it combines two adenylate domains and one thiolation domain in an ATA-structure, has been shown to act as a virulence factor in Cochliobolus heterostrophus [41]. Such a protein could either serve in trans an NRPS system, but might as well aminoacylate other molecules, or even form dipeptides. Besides destructive properties, endophyte toxins could play a protective role in ecology. Both Claviceps purpurea (parasitizing grasses) and Neotyphodium coenophialum (growing symbiotically with tall fescue) produce toxic ergopeptine alkaloids.Various NRPS genes are expressed under production conditions [42]. These alkaloids are also constituents of various plants, e.g. seeds of the morning glory species Ipomoea piurensis, known to contain endophytes of the Clavicipitaceae family [43].Well-known are sclerotia of C. purpurea formed on rye, which still present a risk today [44]. The content of toxins in these plants could well reduce feeding activities. Ascomycetes of the order Hypocreales parasitizing Basidiomycetes are known to produce peptides of the peptaibol type [45]. These are thought to function in the invasive process damaging host tissues [46].As not all metabolites are excreted, possible functions may be found in developmental processes of the producers, especially producers undergoing morphological changes during development. Evidence for fungal secondary metabolite functioning as sporogenic factors, spore components or inducers of biosynthetic processes by environmental stimuli has been reviewed recently [47]. Functions of secondary metabolites in general have been summarized by Demain and Fang [48]: (i) as competitive weapons used against other bacteria, fungi, amoebae, plants, insects, and large animals; (ii) as metal transporting agents; (iii) as agents of symbiosis between microbes and plants, nematodes, insects, and higher animals; (iv) as sexual hormones; and (v) as differentiation effectors. Special emphasis is placed on roles connected to sporulation, where metabolites can: (i) slow down germination of spores until a less competitive environment and more
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favourable conditions for growth exist; (ii) protect the dormant or initiated spore from consumption by amoebae; or (iii) clean the immediate environment of competing microorganisms during germination.
3 Nonribosomal Peptide Biosynthesis 3.1 Components Protein sequence data of prokaryotic and eukaryotic peptide synthetases reveal a similar organization of adenylate domains, thiolation domains (carrier proteins), condensation domains, with possible additional features like epimerization domains, or thioesterase domains. These domains have been well characterized from multiple sequence data of various NRPS systems [5], and data are easily accessible with the terms nonribosomal peptide synthetases (IPR010060 and TIGR01720), AMP binding domain for adenylate domains (IPR000873, PS00012, pfam00501); pp-binding, phosphopantetheine or acp domain for thiolation domains (IPR000255, PS00455, pfam00550); condensation and epimerization domains as DUF4 (IPR001240, pfam00668.11) with unknown function, and thioesterase domains (IPR001031, pfam0975) [2, 49–51]. A primary approach in the identification of domains is the detection of highly conserved core sequences. Such sequences have been derived from selected NRPS-data [3–5, 52, 53]. The currently edited core sequences have been largely derived from bacterial systems, so one has to consider fungal sequence data for comparison. The respective fungal sequences have been selected from currently well characterized NRPS systems with assigned modules, directing the synthesis of ACV (4 multienzymes with 3 modules), enniatin (2 modules), HCtoxin (4 modules), cyclosporin (11 modules), trichorzin (18 modules), and lysergylpeptide (3 modules). In addition, a rapidly growing number of orphan NRPS systems is available from genome sequencing projects, as well as systems with known products, but unclear module assignments, like ferrichrome synthetases [36, 54, 55]. 3.2 Adenylate Domains Adenylate domains serve the activation of carboxyl groups of mainly amino acids, imino acids or hydroxy acids, as well as various carboxylic acid modifying (capping) peptide terminal amino groups. Several crystal structures of this type have been resolved, including firefly luciferase [56], gramicidin S synthetase phenylalanine activating domain [57] and the dihydroxybenzoate activating domain of the Bacillus subtilis enterobactin system [58]. The domain structural data permit significant modelling approaches (Fig. 1).
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Fig. 1 Ribbon diagrams of the crystal structures of the adenylate domains of gramicidin S synthetase (A) and luciferase (B). Note the large N-terminal and the small C-terminal subdomain [57]
Activation of the amino acid-, imino acid- or hydroxy acid carboxyl groups is the reversible reaction catalysed by NRPS systems. This reaction has been studied mainly by the substrate dependent ATP-PPi-exchange reaction (reaction 1): E + RCO2– + MgATP2– ´ E{RCOAMP} + MgPPi2–
(1)
Addition of labelled PPi yields labelled ATP, and this can be employed to detect NRPS or related enzymes. The respective reaction rates, measured at equilibrium state, provide information on adenylate formation/pyrophosphorylysis, apparent Km of substrates and substrate analogues, and with some enzyme kinetic efforts substrate affinities and the patterns of substrate binding may be deduced [59]. The ease and the sensitivity of the procedure makes it to the primary method of investigation of NRPS substrate specificity. There are several remarkable features of this isotope exchange assay. When the reaction progress is followed, equilibrium of isotope exchange is attained at a defined distribution of the label between ATP and PPi. This has been shown in case of ACV synthetase by Baldwin and colleagues [60], but is rarely done for the restrictions by enzyme stability. Evaluation of this equlibrium, which has been reached in the case of the A. chrysogenum enzyme in about 3 h, has never been attempted, but the concentrations roughly reflect the initial rates of the exchange reactions. Following structure-activity studies the adenylate is thought to be stabilized within a cleft formed between the two subdomains of the activation domain [57, 61]. The rate is thus related to the formation, presence and stability of this mixed anhydride with respect to PPi, and at high MgATP2–-concentrations with
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respect to ATP in the formation of diadenosine tetraphosphate (A2P4) (reaction 2): E {RCOAMP} + MgATP2– Æ E + RCOOH + AP4A
(2)
A high rate of the amino acid-dependent isotope exchange does not necessarily reflect the efficiency of adenylate formation, and certainly not the efficiency of incorporation of an amino acid into peptidyl intermediates or the final product. As most NRPS multienzymes contain multiple activation domains, multiple sites may participate in the reactions assayed, and no clear result concerning a single specific site may be obtained. In fungal systems like ACV synthetases the non-additivity of the initial rates has been observed in the A. chrysogenum enzyme [62]. The activation of one substrate amino acid at two or more sites should be expected to depend on different binding constants, and thus be detectable by kinetic analysis. So far, however, no evidence for mixed types of concentration dependences has been found. It is thus not yet clear, if nonadditivity results from misactivation or alteration of kinetic properties in the presence of multiple substrates. In case of gramicidin S synthetase 2 evidence for misactivations has been reported [63]. For the derivation of binding constants the multiplicity of substrates has to be considered. Adenylate formation is a two-substrate reaction, and binding constants need to be determined with respect to both acid and ATP. Most work has settled for a constant MgATP2–-concentration to approximate a Km with simple Michaelis-Menten kinetics. It should be clear, however, that such apparent Km has no thermodynamic significance and is generally not related to kinetic constants of peptide synthesis. Both the formation of dinucleotide polyphosphates [66], which has also been observed in acyl CoA synthetases and insect luciferase [67–69], and the inhibition of the amino acid dependent ATP-PPi-exchange reaction at high ATP concentrations imply the presence of a second nucleotide binding site of adenylate domains [70]. This further complicates kinetic analysis. A side reaction recently observed is an ATPase activity of peptide synthetases, which is modulated by the amino acid substrate [71]. This reaction has been investigated as a possible proofreading mechanism of noncognate substrates. In a recent analysis of adenylate domains Conti et al. [57] proposed positionally conserved side chains lining the respective amino acid and acid binding pockets. This analysis has led both Stachelhaus and Challis and colleagues to the proposal of a nonribosomal code [64, 65]. By aligning the polypeptide sequences between the core motifs A3 and A6 8 or 9 pocket lining residues are predicted. Identical or similar residues permit the prediction of amino acid specificity with a remarkable accuracy. This predictive structure-based model of amino acid recognition derived largely by comparative analysis of bacterial NRPS domains clearly is not applicable for all fungal synthetases.A possible ex-
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planation could be found in a differing architecture of these substrate binding sites. Thus an alternative selection of the critical substrate lining residues might define slightly differing contacts. A survey of 50 assigned fungal adenylate domains employing the nonribosomal code approach provides a number of well defined characteristic sets of amino acids with defined specificities. Thus all three adenylate domains of ACV synthetases have identical sets of predicted contact residues for aminoadipate, cysteine or valine. However, no other valine specific domains correlate. Also predicted contact sets for alanine or proline show wide variations. On the other hand both D-alanine specific domains of cyclosporin synthetase and HC-toxin synthetase have identical residue sets. This approach thus yields some useful data, but information on more domains need to be collected. Multiple alignment revealed a remarkable clustering with respect to the synthetases involved. Thus, all adenylate domains of cyclosporin synthetase or trichorzin synthetase are grouped together, regardless of their specificity.All ACV synthetases form one cluster, and within this cluster groups of specificity are seen. This implies that domain comparison of peptaibol synthetases or peptides of the cyclosporin type would indeed identify specificities. However, some domains do not seem to follow such a scheme. 3.3 Thiolation Domains Aminoacylation or acylation of the “swinging arm” cofactor 4¢-phosphopantetheine is considered as the covalent transport principle in NRPS and polyketide synthases (PKS). Experimental procedures to establish the presence of thioester intermediates have largely relied on the demonstration of acid stable and performic acid cleavable radiolabelled amino acids. This approach has recently been extended by the mass spectrometric detection of cleaved intermediates and cofactor containing enzyme fragments [72, 73]. Any radiolabelling procedure of enzyme-bound intermediates requires free pantetheine thiol groups, but these may be acylated in the respective enzyme preparation. Stabilities of aminoacyl- and peptidyl-thioesters depend on the type of acyl compound involved. Rates of hydrolytic cleavage have been estimated in the gramicidin S system [74].At 3 °C half-lives for aminoacyl- or peptidylthioesters were between 1 and 90 h. Reduced stabilities of 0.4–0.5 h were observed for thioesters of ornithine or ornithyl-peptides due to the cyclization to 3-amino-2-piperidone. It is thus not surprising that aminoacylation levels are often well below the expected estimates [75]. Rates of aminoacylation reactions have been determined in the range of more than 100 min–1 [76]. The reaction involves the interaction of adjacent adenylate and thiolation domains, or possibly of nonadjacent domains in trans [77]. Carrier proteins and domains with a size of about 80 amino acids have a conserved structure of four helices with a loop containing the cofactor attachment site [78]. The solution structure of the first thiolation domain of tyroci-
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Fig. 2 Structure of the peptidyl carrier protein (PCP) from the first multienzyme of tyrocidine synthetase [79]. Note the four conserved helices and several conformations of the flexible loop, where the cofactor is attached
dine synthetase 1 from Bacillus brevis has been determined from NMR measurements [79] (Fig. 2). These domains are generally identified by the conserved 4¢-phosphopantetheine attachment site as signature sequence, which is posttranslationally modified by protein-phosphopantotheinyl transferases (see below).A survey of fungal sequences of 52 functionally assigned domains provides this residue distribution: L(32) I(12) M(3) R(2) S(1) A(1) G(52) G(51) M(1) D(32) H(17) N(2) S(1) S(52) I(30) L(20) V(1) M(1) In a recent analysis of thiolation domains interacting with epimerization domains Linne et al. suggested that this specific interaction requires an aspartyl side chain in the signature sequence LGGDSL [80]. The sequence LGGHSL is found in domains interacting with condensation domains. However, fungal thiolation domains contain most frequently an LGGDSI-signature in the absence of epimerization domains. So the conclusion that the Asp residue is essential for catalysis of epimerization is not valid in general. Integrated thiolation domains contain less charged acidic side chains, as covalent contacts between interacting domains are already fixed. The central role of the thiolation domains is evident from their multiple interactions with adjacent and nonadjacent domains. Considering, e.g.ACV synthetase the current multiple carrier thiotemplate model predicts successive contacts of the first thiolation domain with the adjacent aminoadipate adenylate domain and the first
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Fig. 3 Scheme of domain interactions in ACV synthetase. Each circle represents a functional domain (N=N-terminal domain, unclear function, A1–A3=adenylate forming domains, activating A (Aad), C (Cys) and V (Val), T1–T3=thiolation domains, C1 and C2=condensation domains, and E=epimerisation domain, TE=thioesterase domain), the connecting lines represent linker regions. Interactions of the domains are indicated by arrows, and it is evident that each thiolation domain has a different set of contacts with other domains. The boxed peptidyl intermediates AC (Aad-Cys),ACV (Aad-Cys-Val) and ACV* (Aad-Cys-D-Val) originate from these interactions
condensation domain; the second thiolation domain to interact with the cysteine adenylate domain, and both the adjacent and nonadjacent condensation domains; the third thiolation domain then interacts with the valine adenylate domain, the nonadjacent second condensation domain, the adjacent epimerization domain, and the nonadjacent thioesterase domain (Fig. 3). 3.4 4¢-Phosphopantetheine-Protein Transferases (PPTs) 4¢-Phosphopantetheine-protein transferases (PPTs) belong to a superfamily of enzymes which posttranslationally modify thiolation or carrier domains in NRPS and PKS systems, including fatty acid synthases. As the target proteins
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Fig. 4 Reaction catalysed by the 4¢-phosphopantetheine-protein transferase family (PPT). The 4¢-phosphopantetheine moiety of CoA is transferred posttranslationally onto a conserved serine residue contained in acyl carrier or peptidyl carrier domains or proteins in PKS and NRPS systems. Thus inactive apo-forms are converted into active holo enzymes. The reaction is dependent on Mg2+ and yields 3¢,5¢-ADP as a second product, which may act as inhibitor of the reaction [81]
differ widely in structure the transferase structures show some variation, although surprisingly a single enzyme often serves a variety of substrate carrier proteins. The pantothenylation or priming of an apo-NRPS or -PKS is catalysed from CoA generating the holo-NRPS and 3¢,5¢-ADP (Fig. 4). PPTs are well known in bacterial systems, and their genes are often contained within biosynthesis gene clusters [82, 83]. Well characterized is Sfp, a PPT located in the surfactin cluster of Bacillus subtilis [84, 85]. The 26 kDa protein modifies a variety of carrier proteins and domains, including acyl carrier domains and aryl carrier domains, and is a valuable tool to generate functional NRPSs and PKSs by heterologous expression. The crystal structure of Sfp showed that the mode of CoA binding differs from other CoA-dependent enzymes, as the terminal cysteamine moiety does not interact with the protein [86]. It is thus possible to directly charge CoA-thioesters onto apo-enzymes to investigate e.g. the specificity of modification and condensation reaction or to generate new products in vitro [87–89]. The first fungal PPTs acting on NRPS systems have been partially purified from A. nidulans, Fusarium scirpi and Tolypocladium niveum, indicating their larger size of about 35 kDa (von Döhren et al., unpublished). A respective gene has been identified recently by Keszenman-Pereira et al. [7] by searching for PPT-motifs in the Aspergillus fumigatus database. The identified open reading frame has been known in context of a temperature-sensitive mutant of Aspergillus nidulans, cfwA2. It now has been demonstrated that NpgA is essential for the biosynthesis of penicillin, pigment, lysine via the a-aminoadipate pathway [7], and the biosynthesis of both the peptide bond-containing ferricrocin and the ester bond-containing triacetylfusarinine [8]. All these processes depend on the posttranslational modification of the respective NRPS and PKS apoenzymes. A PPT (Lys5) involved in the lysine biosynthesis pathway modifying the a-aminoadipate reductase (Lys2) has been identified before in Can-
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Fig. 5 Schematic overview of interactions of the 4¢-phosphopantetheine-protein transferase Sfp with its substrate CoA. The peptide side chain does not interact with the protein, so that substituted CoA molecules can be transferred to carrier proteins [86]
dida albicans by Guo et al. [90]. The available data suggest that in fungi a single PPT may be able to transfer the cofactor to a broad range of enzymes with acyl or peptidyl carrier protein domains. A comparison of the structures of prokaryotic and eukaryotic PPTs reveals wide variations in size and organization with conservation of a set of invariant residues and a single motif involved in CoA-binding (Fig. 5). The large size difference of well characterized Sfp from Bacillus and the fungal PPTs stems from N- and C-terminal extensions and inserts within the conserved sites. The quantity of the cofactor in isolated synthetases represents an unsolved analytical problem. Microbiological determinations are not reliable, as underestimates are generally obtained [91]. A possible approach to determine the state of posttranslational modification, the ratio of apo- to holo-enzyme, or the cofactor stoichiometry is to measure the 4¢-phosphopantetheine transfer by the
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pantetheine-protein-transferase assay [92]. A PPT fraction obtained from A. nidulans, which modified apo-tyrocidine synthetase 1 from Bacillus brevis, did not transfer significant amounts of pantetheine from labelled CoA to ACV synthetase, indicating the absence of apo-synthetase (von Döhren et al., unpublished). 3.5 Condensation Domains Condensation reactions require a domain of about 450 amino acids, which has been functionally identified employing gramicidin S/tyrocidine synthetase systems [94]. These domains are readily identified by a set of signature sequences including HHxxxDGWS, also found in the superfamily of CoA-dependent acyl transferases [95]. In analogy to the ribosomal system the current functional interpretation proposes an aminoacyl and a peptidyl site (A-site and P-site) to enter the activated intermediates [96]. The acylated carrier proteins would thus resemble charged tRNAs, and the condensing site the peptidyl transferase. As condensing domains show structural differences, the question of control of incoming substrates may be relevant. The usually not directly linked acceptor carrier domain provides in trans the monomeric acyl substrate, while the directly linked donor carrier generally presents in cis the peptidyl donor. In initiating condensation domains P-sites accept both acylated and free aminoacylthioesters. Peptide bond formation involves presumably deprotonation of the amino(imino) group, and control of shape and stereochemistry of the incoming intermediates. The reaction requires the binding of two carrier proteins, and the sequential binding events secure the direction and order of the sequential events of peptide biosynthesis. It has been demonstrated various times that charging of carrier proteins does not lead to peptide bond formation, unless an initiating module has been loaded. This event serves as a switch for the initiation of these processes. Belshaw and colleagues showed by analysing a condensing domain forming a D-Phe-Pro bond that replacement of proline by alanine dramatically decreased the reaction rate [88]. These studies employed mischarging of the interacting carrier domains by amino(imino-)acyl-CoA with PPT. It was concluded that C-domains possess a low selectivity for the upstream donor (P-site) and a higher selectivity for the downstream acceptor residue (A-site). In a recent study stereospecificity of a condensation domain has been demonstrated introducing the chiral peptide intermediates as CoA-derivatives [97]. Interestingly, stereospecificity was lost upon condensation of aminoacyl intermediates. Each carrier protein interacts in cis and in trans with condensation domains. As acylated carriers present their substrates in trans, in the absence of donor substrates from a carrier in cis position an unproductive conformation may be stabilized. In a study designing an two-module interacting multienzyme system of the type ATE-CAT Linne et al. observed that an N-terminal C-domain
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Fig. 6 Structure of the VibH monomer as a prototype of NRPS condensation domains, epimerisation domains, and cyclocondensation domains [99]
prevented peptide bond formation [98]. It has been concluded that an elongation module of the type CAT is transformed into an initiation module by removal of the C-domain. However, several NRPS systems contain N-terminal Cdomains. These C-domains share certain structural features not found in C-domains involved in elongational [96]. As a prototype of a C-domain the crystal structure of an isolated C-domain of the vibriobactin biosynthesis, VibH, has been determined [99]. The VibHstructure revealed a novel topology, and is a monomer consisting of two subdomains (Fig. 6). Alignments confirmed the structure to be representative of NRPS conservation domains, the related epimerisation domains, and cyclocondensation domains, forming peptide bonds involving cysteine residues, followed by cyclization to a thiazolidine ring structure. The essential HHxxxDG motif is located at the interface of the two domains, where a solvent channel runs through the protein, providing access to the essential histidine (HHxxxDG) from both faces of the enzyme. Binding of respective carrier domains has been deduced by analogy with chloramphenicol acetyl transferase and the E2p subunit of pyruvate dehydrogenase, both members of the acyl transferase superfamily. The downstream carrier, which transports the initiating acyl residue or the peptidyl intermediate will bind to the C-terminal face of this domain with the pantetheinyl arm
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extending into the solvent channel. The upstream carrier with the acceptor compound, usually an aminoacyl residue, generally binding in trans to the condensation domain, would approach from the opposing open end of the domain, and both pantetheinyl arms would extend into the solvent channel. 3.6 Epimerization Domains and Amino Acid Racemases Epimerization domains largely resemble condensation domains, and can be identified by the slightly different signature sequences. Their function is to epimerize aminoacyl and peptidyl intermediates at the thioester stage. This reaction is reversible, and these intermediates are thus in an equilibrium state of both isomers. The following reaction, usually a condensation reaction, is involved in the control of stereospecificity to select the D-isomer. In an analysis of the epimerization domain of gramicidin S synthetase Stachelhaus and Walsh performed a mutational analysis generating mutant enzymes with altered epimer ratios and altered behaviour in epimer transfer in the successive condensation reaction [100]. This reaction shows a kinetically controlled stereopreference for the D-aminoacyl intermediate, which is reduced from 98 to 44% in the mutants containing the H753A and Y976A mutations in the motifs E2 (HHxxxDxxSW) and E7 (NY), respectively. These results demonstrate that stereocontrol is not only exerted in the next reaction to follow, but that control may as well be located in the epimerization domain and presumably domain interaction regions. Not all D-configured amino acids are transformed by this reaction. Some adenylate domains accept specifically D-residues, which have to be supplied by respective amino acid racemases. Prominent examples are Ala residues in cyclosporin and HC-toxin. The racemase involved in cyclosporin formation has been characterized from Tolypocladium niveum and shown to catalyse the reversible pyridoxal phosphate dependent racemization of alanine. Km values for L- and D-alanine were found to be 38 and 2 mmol L–1, respectively. The molecular mass of the denatured enzyme was estimated with 37 kDa, while gel filtration with a size between 120 and 150 kDa indicated association [101]. In HCtoxin-producing isolates of Cochliobolus carbonum the toxG gene has been identified, which supports D-Ala-independent growth of a strain of Escherichia coli defective in D-Ala synthesis [102]. A strain with both of its copies of toxG mutated grows normally in culture, but produces only a minor form of HCtoxin containing Gly in place of D-Ala. The addition of D-Ala to the culture medium restores production of the D-Ala-containing forms of HC-toxin by the toxG mutant. The racemase gene contains 3xx amino acids, and the cofactor binding site is located in the N-terminal half. Similar genes have been detected in A. nidulans and Schizosaccharomyces pombe [103], and the structurally related serine hydroxymethyltransferase and L-threonine aldolase are evolutionary related [104].
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3.7 Thioesterases Both integrated and nonintegrated thioesterases have been found in prokaryotic NRPS systems. So far fungal systems studied contain a special type of thioesterase, as ACV synthetase [105], but generally no enzymes of the prokaryotic type have been found. Thioesterases of ACV synthetases differ from other thioesterases integrated in nonribosomal peptide synthetases in their direct association with an epimerase domain. So the GXSXG-motif may be involved in the control of tripeptide epimerization by selection of the tripeptide isomer to be released. To abolish hydrolysis an S3599A change was introduced in the highly conserved GXSXG-motif, resulting in a more than 95% decrease of penicillin production. Purification of the modified multienzyme showed surprisingly only a 50% reduction of the peptide formation rate, with the stereoisomer LLL-ACV as dominating product. This surprising result indicated, that the seryl side chain of the classical thioesterase motif is not essential for hydrolysis of this peptidyl intermediate. The functions of bacterial thioesterases include cyclization by ester- or peptide bond formation, or hydrolysis of peptidyl intermediates, including possibly the release of stalled intermediates originating from misactivation reactions [106–110].Apparently in eukaryotic systems the cyclization reactions are catalysed by condensation domains. Proteins similar to the GrsT-type releasing Table 4
T1b T2 T3 T4 T5 T6 T7 ET1 ET2 ET3 ET4 ET5 ET6 a
Core motifsa of thioesterases involved in NRPS systems Separate thioesterases (grsT type ot type II)
Integrated thioesterases following thiolation domains (bacterial)
Integrated thioesterases following epimerase domains (ACV synthetases)
PxAGG pgr pxxxfGHSmGa LfiSgxxxAP LPxLRAD Wr GgxHHFl – – – – – –
lFxfxP(a/v)gg – GpyxxxG(W/Y)SxGg – – W Gxgxh – – – – – –
LF(V/L)LPPGEGGAESY – QPxGPYxxxGWSFGG – – – – VvFNN LxxiDxFF LDPI IvLFKA QxxlFEyy NnLDxlLp
Conserved residues are given in capital letters, not completely conserved positions in small letters, F represents aromatic amino acids (F,Y,W) b Motifs designated as T may be found in several type of thioesterases, while motifs defined as ET may be restricted to thioesterases associated with epimerization domains.
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thioester intermediates have not been found within fungal sequence data bases. In Table 4 the core sequences of the different types of NRPS-related thioesterases have been compiled. 3.8 N-Methyltransferase Domains N-Methylated peptide bonds in nonribosomally formed peptides originate from N-methyl transfer to thiol-attached amino acids (reaction 3): E-SA + SAM Æ E-S NMe-A + SahC
(3)
This was first demonstrated by Zocher et al. analysing the enniatin system [111], and later confirmed also for beauvericin, cyclosporin, and in actinomycin biosynthesis [112–114]. By sequencing the enniatin synthetase gene Haese et al. have shown the respective N-methyl-transferase domain to be integrated in the adenylate domain between the core motifs A8 and A9 [115]. The same result emerged from the cyclosporin synthetase sequence, where 7 transferase domains were confirmed in the respective modules [22]. This domain with a size of about 450 amino acid residues (55 kDa) shares some sequence similarities with a heterologous family of S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAM)-dependent methyltransferases, including DNA methyltransferases. NRPS N-methyltransferase domains have been studied in both enniatin synthetase and cyclosporin synthetase with inhibitors, by affinity labelling and mutational analysis [116–118]. SAM may be used directly to photolabel its binding site involving a highly conserved tyrosine residue, and closely adjacent glutamic acid and proline [117]. This site corresponds to one of a set of core motifs identified by sequence comparisons of transferases from both prokaryotic and fungal origin [119]. Inhibition of SAM binding by sinefungin inhibits competitively amino acid methylation. The reaction product S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine (AdoHcy) binds to a different site inhibiting the formation of unmethylated products. In the absence of SAM nonmethylated peptides are formed at a reduced rate [119]. Thus N-methylation is not obligatory for the condensation reaction to proceed. However, in products with many N-methyl residues like cyclosporin (7 of 11 amino acids methylated) the rate reduction of about 90% at each condensation step will prevent the accumulation of significant amounts of peptides unmethylated in more than two positions [120]. Truncation of the domain at both ends rapidly leads to loss of SAM-binding [116], and the suggestion of binding and control of the amino acid to be modified [117] needs further investigation.
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3.9 Reduction Domains Various nonribosomal peptides have been known to contain a reduced C-terminal carboxyl group, and respective terminal alcohol functions are also found in polyketide structures. These originate by a two-step reduction via the aldehyde catalysed by an NADPH/NADH dependent catalytic domain, thus releasing the final carrier-bound thioester intermediate. Alternatively, the aldehyde can be transaminated, giving rise to a terminal amine. Such a reductase doamin has been first described in the myxochelin biosynthesis system of the myxobacterium Stigmatella aurantiaca [121]. This reductase domain of about 400 amino acids (conserved domain database COG3320) shows significant similarity to several related proteins, such as nucleoside-diphosphate-sugar epimerases, to members of an NAD dependent epimerase/dehydratase family, flavonol reductase/cinnamoyl-CoA reductase and other NADPH-dependent enzymes. In fungi, it is found in the aminoadipate reductase system, a gene product termed Lys2, converting 2-aminoadipate to 2-aminoadipate 6-semialdehyde, which is related to NRPS systems with the domain structure ATR. Lys2 is synthesised in apo form, which is then pantothenoylated by the PPT Lys5 to holo-Lys2 [90, 122, 123]. In a study on Lys2 from Penicillium chrysogenum the three domains have been released by limited proteolysis in a functional state [124]. As a unique fungal enzyme, Lys2 has been suggested as a specific gene for fungal phylogenetic analysis [125]. In a recent study, the possible origin of the adenylate domain of fungal aminoadipate reductases in comparison to bacterial NRPS domains has been analysed [126]. It has been concluded that the lys2 gene has been inherited during fungal evolution, and no evidence for horizontal transfer events has been found, contrary to the bacterial relatives. Prominent fungal peptides with reduced C-terminals are peptaibols, linear peptides containing 2-aminoisobutyrate ending in an aminoalcohol function. The trichorzin synthetase gene carries a respective reduction domain, but so far biochemical studies on the reaction sequence are missing. Linear gramicidin terminates in an ethanolamine moiety, which is thought to originate by reduction of a terminal glycine residue. However, initial biochemical analysis of this reductase showed only a one-step reduction yielding the corresponding aldehyde in vitro [127]. Similar domains are contained in orphan NRPS genes of unknown origin, listed in Table 3, such as a 7214 amino acid residue protein in Aspergillus nidulans, or a protein of 11999 amino acids from Gibberella zeae.
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4 Biochemistry of Fungal NRPS Systems Studied 4.1 Beta Lactams – ACV Synthetase Some aspects of the biochemistry of ACV synthetases have been reviewed in the preceding text and in detail by von Döhren et al. [128]. 4.1.1 Basic Reaction Scheme and Kinetics of Peptide Synthesis The evaluation of kinetic properties of NRPS systems is a complex problem. The basic pathway has been established in 1971 defining activation, thiolation and peptidyl transfers as basic reactions. The further refinement from sequence data establishing the multiple carrier model, and the analysis of domain interactions have added some precision to the questions asked. However, we are far from a complete kinetic description of even the simple tripeptide synthetase, like ACV synthetase. The organization of this three-module system correlates well with the two sequential condensations, epimerization and hydrolytic release of the tripeptide (Fig. 3). At first sight the arrangement of domains and modules perfectly fits the colinearity rule found in the majority of NRPS systems, which implies that the linear sequence of domains corresponds to the sequence of reactions of the pathway [129]. The ACV synthetase accepts four different substrates at six binding sites releasing three moles of AMP and three moles of MgPPi for each ACV formed at optimal conditions [130]. A sequence of ten reactions has been proposed in analogy to other NRPS-systems: M1 + Aad + ATP Æ M1(Aad-AMP) + PPi Æ M1-Sp1-Aad + AMP
(4, 5)
M2 + Cys + ATP Æ M2(Cys-AMP) + PPi Æ M2-Sp2-Cys + AMP
(6, 7)
C1
M1-Sp1-Aad + M2-Sp2-Cys Æ M2-Sp2-Cys-Aad + M1-Sp1H M3 + Val + ATP Æ M3(Val-AMP) + PPi Æ M3-Sp3-Val + AMP C2
M2-Sp2-Cys-Aad + M3-Sp3-Val Æ M3-Sp3-Val-Cys-Aad + M2-Sp2H
(8) (9, 10) (11)
M3-Sp3-Val-Cys-Aad Æ M3-Sp3-D-Val-Cys-Aad Æ Aad-Cys-D-Val (12, 13) + M3-Sp2H The synthetase consists of the three modules M1, M2 and M3. Each module is composed of an activation site forming the acyl or aminoacyl adenylate, a car-
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rier domain which is posttranslationally modified with 4¢-phosphopantetheine (Sp1, Sp2 and Sp3), and a condensation domain (C1, C2) or alternatively, a structurally similar epimerization domain (E3). Activation of aminoadipate (Aad) leads to an acylated enzyme intermediate, where Aad is attached to the terminal cysteamine of the cofactor (M1-Sp1-Aad) (reactions 4 and 5). Likewise, activation of cysteine (Cys) leads to cysteinylated module 2 (reactions 6 and 7). For the condensation reaction to occur between aminoadipate as donor and cysteine as acceptor, both intermediates are thought to react at the condensation site of module 1 (C1). Each condensation site is composed in analogy to the ribosomal peptide formation of an aminoacyl and a peptidyl site, and in this case of initiation the thioester of Aad enters the P-site, while the thioester of Cys enters the A-site. Condensation occurs and leaves the dipeptidyl intermediate Aad-Cys at the carrier protein of the second module (reaction 8). The third amino acid valine is activated on module 3, and Val is attached to the carrier protein 3 (reactions 9 and 10). Formation of the tripeptide occurs at the second condensation site C2, with the dipeptidyl-intermediate entering the P-site, and the valinyl-intermediate the A-site (reaction 11). Finally epimerization of the tripeptide (or dipeptide) intermediate occurs at the epimerization site of module 3 (E3) (reaction 12), and the stereospecific peptide release is controlled by the thioesterase (TE) (reaction 13). Work summarized earlier had shown that ACV is made from L-Aad, L-Cys, and L-Val, that d-(L-a-Aad)-L-Cys (AC) may be converted into ACV, but L-CysD-Val not. Likewise D-Val is no substrate for ACV synthetase, contrary to the first characterized NRPS systems of gramicidin S and tyrocidine [131, 132]. These observations are in agreement with the scheme, except for the incorporation of AC. This dipeptide has later been shown to be activated as adenylate. Nonoptimized conditions, however, lead to unproductive ATP hydrolysis of up to more than 20 moles per mole of ACV [130]. Unproductive reactions include hydrolysis of intermediates, mainly adenylates, hydrolysis of ATP [71], and formation of diadenosine tetraphosphate [66], as discussed in the section on adenylate domains. 4.1.2 Peptide Synthesis and Adenylate Intermediates In a remarkable series of experiments Shiau and colleagues have studied peptide bond formation in the A. chrysogenum ACV synthetase [60, 62, 75, 133–135]. In the presence of glutamate, Cys and Val L-cysteinyl-D-valine is recovered exclusively. Glutamate as an analog of 2-aminoadipate does form an adenylate, but fails to be incorporated into peptides. The glutamate adenylate is thus not accessible for condensation to proceed at the first condensation domain. Presumably its presence, due to an induced conformational change [61], enhances peptide bond formation at the second condensation domain between
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the thioesters of Cys and Val, followed by epimerization of the dipeptidyl intermediate and hydrolytic release reactions 14 and 15, with Cys for A2: M2-Sp2-A2 + M3-Sp3-Val Æ M3-Sp3-Val-A2 + M2-Sp2H Ep3
TE
M3-Sp3-Val-A2 Æ M3-Sp3-D-Val-A2 Æ A2-D-Val + M3-Sp2H
(14) (15)
Likewise, if O-methyl-L-serine is used as a Cys analog, the assumed O-methylserinyl-thioester intermediate reacts only slowly with the Aad-thioester, but is readily released by aminolysis of free Val (reaction 16, with A2 either Cys or Omethyl-serine) or may react with the Val-thioester intermediate to be further processed (reactions 14 and 15, with O-methyl-serine for A2): M2-Sp2-A2 + Val Æ M2-Sp2H + A2-Val
(16)
That indeed dipeptide synthesis may proceed from the two C-terminal modules has been shown with N-acylated Cys analogs in the absence of Aad.As the dipeptide Aad-Cys may be activated as adenylate, N-substituted cysteines enter the reaction cycle as in reaction 13 [135]. Following the dipeptide synthesis from O-methyl-serine and Val by determining the loss 18O from di[18O]valine evidence for both reactions was obtained, but a direct reaction of Cys-AMP with free Val cannot be excluded (reaction 17): M2(A2-AMP) + Val Æ M2 + A2-Val + AMP
(17)
The dipeptide L,L-O-(methyl-serinyl)valine was formed without significant loss of label, and at the same time no label was observed in the AMP released. This result thus excludes a thioester intermediate, which by thiolysis of the adenylate would have led to an even distribution of the 18O between AMP and Val. However, the isomeric dipeptide L,D-O(methyl-serinyl)valine was recovered with all possible labelling patterns of 18O18O, 16O18O, and 16O16O (69). To explain the retention of label in the epimerised dipeptide is not easy. Baldwin and colleagues proposed an alternative direct acyl transfer mechanism operating with dipeptidyl adenylates of the type Cys-Val, being epimerised, transferred to a thiol group to undergo peptide bond formation with the Aad thioester followed by hydrolysis (reaction 1). This is a possible interpretation of the data, but the rates of formation of the dipeptide shunt or byproducts in the 1–2% range compared to ACV formation may exclude this path from in vivo or optimised in vitro conditions. Any direct acyl transfer mechanism would be based on the surface migration of free adenylates between the respective condensation domains, which is both unlikely and not required to interpret the available experimental data [75, 133, 134]. Evidence for the colinearity rule in the catalytic sequence has been obtained omitting Val from the tripeptide biosynthesis assay: the dipeptide Aad-Cys has been shown to accumulate as thioester inter-
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mediate [136]. Likewise, the assumed O-methyl-serinyl-thioester intermediate reacts only slowly with the Aad-thioester, but is readily released by aminolysis of free Val (reaction 16, with A2 either Cys or O-methyl-serine) or may react with the Val-thioester intermediate to be further processed (reactions 14 and 15, with O-methyl-serine for A2): M2-Sp2-A2 + Val Æ M2-Sp2H + A2-Val
(16)
Following the dipeptide synthesis from O-methyl-serine and Val by determining the loss 18O from di[18O]valine evidence for both reactions was obtained, but a direct reaction of Cys-AMP with free Val cannot be excluded (reaction 17): M2(A2-AMP) + Val Æ M2 + A2-Val + AMP
(17)
To demonstrate peptide bond formation from aminoacyl adenylates, Dieckmann et al. [137] have applied the isolated adenylate domain of tyrocidine synthetase 1 to generate various dipeptides. These were obtained from phenylalanyl adenylate with alanine, leucine, leucineamide, and phenylalanine (reaction 18, with AA=amino acid or amine acceptor and E=enzyme): E(PheAMP) + AAl Æ Phe-AA + E + AMP
(18)
Further studies are needed on the kinetics of aminolysis of adenylates and thioesters, and the possible migration of adenylates to contact reactive intermediates. Such surface diffusion or tunnelling has to compete with the effective pantetheine-mediated covalent transport system. 4.1.3 Specificity of Adenylate Domains To assign catalytic activities to defined regions A. chrysogenum ACV synthetase has been partially digested by proteinase K and subtilisin. Two fragments of 119 and 95 kDa have been identified [138]. The larger one contained the second adenylate domain and specifically catalysed a cysteine-dependent ATP-PPi exchange reaction. The smaller fragment containing the third adenylate domain yielded a second cleavage product of 47 kDa, which surprisingly activated Aad. Activation of Val was completely lost upon proteinase treatment. A 110 kDa N-terminal fragment of the Streptomyces clavuligerus ACV synthetase has been expressed in Escherichia coli [139]. The insoluble protein obtained was dissolved in urea and renatured, but activation of all three amino acids was detected, with Val giving the highest reaction rate. Although only a fraction of the expressed protein is posttranslationally modified by pantetheine, the formation of thioesters had been investigated, and only Aad was detected [139, 140]. This experiment for the first time demonstrated selection of
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intermediates at the thiolation stage. To overcome the folding and solubility problems Turner et al. accomplished the homologous expression of ACV synthetase fragments from P. chrysogenum in A. nidulans [141, 142]. A strain carrying an acvA-deletion was used to express b-galactosidase fusions of the first module and a fragment containing the second and third module, respectively. The proteins were obtained only in low yield, and proteolysis precluded their complete purification. However, the first domain was shown to activate Aad, Val, Cys, isoleucine, allo-isoleucine, alpha-aminobutyrate, S-carboxymethylcysteine, and glutamic acid, which is in complete agreement with the activity data of the bacterial fragment. The C-terminal fragment did activate Cys, which also was shown to form a thioester, but in addition produced adenylates with Val, isoleucine, leucine, and alpha-aminobutyrate. No activation of Aad was detected. These results again supported the assignment of Aad-activation to the first adenylate domain. A C-terminal 136 kDa fragment of the A. chrysogenum ACV synthetase was expressed in E. coli and the resulting protein pellet solubilised and refolded (von Döhren et al.). Activation of leucine, Val, alpha-aminobutyrate, Aad, aminocaproic acid, and norvaline was detected. To achieve expression of a soluble enzyme, the adenylate domain of the P. chrysogenum synthetase was excised as a 501 amino acid fragment by PCR and expressed in A. nidulans again as a b-galactosidase fusion protein [138]. The purified protein showed adenylate formation with leucine, 2-amino-ethyl-cysteine, Aad, S-carboxymethylCys, but surprisingly not with Val. The data imply that the Val dependent ATPPPi-exchange activity is diminishing with the reduction of fragment size, and finally disappeared in the fusion protein.Aad and leucine activation have been found in the smaller fragments. These results show a clear distortion of substrate binding and catalytic activities upon fragmentation of the multienzymes. The substrate pocket architecture seems to depend on the context of adjacent domains as well. Although questions remain, the linearity rule of NRPS holds in ACV synthetases. It remains to be shown if possibly misactivated amino acids in the terminal domains are propagated in trans to the respective adenylation domains, or lost by hydrolytic proofreading. 4.1.4 Epimerization Reaction The studies on epimerization of the amino acid residue in position three have been reviewed in some detail by Bycroft et al. [62], and for NRPS systems by Kleinkauf and von Döhren [131]. From the failure to detect D-valine thioester intermediates in both fungal and bacterial ACV synthetases ([139, 143], Etchegaray, personal communication), epimerization at the peptide stage has been concluded. The epimerization domain located directly next to the valine thiolation domain would then catalyse the reversible epimerization of the pantetheine-attached tripeptidyl intermediate, leading to the enzyme bound
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epimers LLD-ACV and LLL-ACV (reaction scheme). Attempts to detect the tripeptide intermediates have been unsuccessful, due to the rapid release of the product LLD-ACV by the C-terminal thioesterase function. 4.1.5 Thioesterase The carboxy-terminal thioesterase domain catalyses the hydrolytic release of the tripeptide product (LLD-ACV). Both tripeptide epimers are thought to be bound as thioesters to the third thiolation domain; upon interaction with the thioesterase the LLD-peptide would be preferentially hydrolysed. As already discussed, the mutation of the suspected catalytic Ser side chain led to a reduction of the peptide formation rate, with the stereoisomer LLL-ACV as dominating product. This surprising result indicates, that the seryl side chain of the classical thioesterase motif is not essential for hydrolysis of this peptidyl intermediate. The data also supported the presence of LLL-ACV as an intermediate in penicillin biosynthesis. 4.1.6 Product Formation and In Vitro Synthesis Product synthesis just for looking into the path of assembly or optimisation of enzyme systems to exploit the synthetic potential of NRPS-systems was pioneered by Wang and colleagues in the 1970s mainly on gramicidin S, and later attempted by Kleinkauf and coworkers also with gramicidin S, with enniatins, cyclosporins, and ACV-type of tripeptides (reviewed in [144]). In early studies Banko et al. used total protein extracts from Acremonium chrysogenum C-10 (ATCC 48272) to obtain AC with a linear rate for 6 h corresponding to about 1 pmol min–1 mg–1 [145]. The rate increased to 130 pmol min–1 mg–1 for ACV when all three amino acids were added, and decreased to 49% with L-carboxymethylcysteine and to 1.5% with L-glutamate replacing 2-aminoadipate, and to 19% with allo-isoleucine and 6.5% with L-2aminobutyrate replacing valine [146]. Extensive purification and stabilization studies of this synthetase have been carried out by Zhang and Demain [147, 148], and later by Baldwin and colleagues [150, 151]. Final activities of about 10 nmol min–1 mg–1 were reached. In a study employing an enzyme preparation from the same strain of A. chrysogenum Hadjmalek and Bronstad prepared ACV and the analogs containing L-homocysteine and S-carboxy-methylcysteine in the microgram to milligram scale using reaction volumes of 20 mL (von Döhren et al., unpublished). A number of substrate analogs have been employed to generate unnatural tripeptides [5, 62, 148]. Rate estimates for some tripeptides are compiled in Table 5. Some differences of fungal and bacterial synthetases are obvious.
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Table 5 ACV biosynthesis, relative ratesa of peptide formation
Amino acid
A. chrysogenumb
S. clavuligerusc
Aad S-Carboxymethyl-cysteine Cys Serine Homocysteine Allylglycine Homoserine O-Methylserine Vinylglycine Valine Allo-Isoleucine 2-Aminobutyrate Norvaline Allylglycine Leucine Isoleucine Glycine Vinylglycine Norleucine
100 99 100 4 9 122 n.d. 76 101 100 100 5 n.d. 15 n.d. 20 n.d. 5 n.d.
100 52 100 n.d. 73 n.d. n.d. n.d. n.d. 100 44 41 27 20 13 11 10 n.d. 8
a b c
Rates are given in % relative to the original substrates Aad, Cys, or Val. Adsorption assay (Porapak) [150]. HPLC assay [148].
4.2 Enniatins and Related Cyclodepsipeptides Cyclodepsipeptides of the type cyclo(D-hydroxy acid – N-methyl-L-amino acid)3 or 4 are formed in repetitive cycles by a single synthetase of the type NATCAMTTC. Examples are enniatins (D-Hiv and Val/Ile/Leu, n=3), beauvericin (D-Hiv and Phe, n=3), PF1022 (D-Lac/Phelac/hPhelac and Leu, n=4), and bassianolide (D-Hiv and Phe, n=4), and all systems with the exception of the last have been studied in detail [119]. Enniatin synthetase has been characterised as a prototype of an iterative system of N-methylated peptides by Zocher et al. [5, 119, 151]. PF 1022 synthetase extends the cyclohexapeptide structure into a cyclooctapeptide structure. Surprisingly, this multienzyme resembles closely enniatin synthetase [152–154]. Two key features of these multidomain proteins are the N-methyl-transferase domain, integrated within the adenylate domain between the core motifs A8 and A9, and the tandem thiolation domains.
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4.2.1 The Reaction Cycle To describe the reaction cycle, the domains of enniatin synthetase will be used and described as NA1T1C1A2MT2T3C2, representing the two adenylation domains A1, A2, the 3 thiolation domains T1-T3 with the respective pantetheine cofactors Sp1, Sp2 and Sp3, the methyl transferase domain M, and the 2 condensation domains C1, C2. No functions have yet been assigned to the N-terminal domain N. Activation of the constituents D-Hiv and Val proceeds independently at the respective adenylate domains (reactions 18, and 20) followed by thioester formation at the respective pantetheine groups p1 and p2 (reactions 19 and 21): A1 + D-HIV + ATP Æ A1(D-HIV-AMP) + PPi Æ T1-Sp1-D-Hiv + AMP (18, 19) A2 + Val + ATP Æ A2(Val-AMP) + PPi Æ T2-Sp2-Val + AMP
(20, 21)
The valyl thioester intermediate is then N-methylated in a reaction involving binding of the second carrier domain T2 to the methyltransferase domain M, which is integrated in the adenylation domain A2 (reaction 22): M
T2 + Sp2-Val + SAM Æ T2-Sp2-N-MeVal + Sahc
(22)
Both carrier domains then interact with the condensation domain C1 to form the peptidol intermediate D-Hiv-N-MeVal, which remains bound to the acceptor thiolation domain T2 (reaction 23): C1
T1-Sp1-D-Hiv + T2-Sp2-N-MeVal Æ T2-Sp2-N-MeVal-D-Hiv + T1-Sp1H (23) It has now been postulated that the intermediate is transferred to a waiting position at the carrier domain T3 (reaction 24), so that the cycle 1–6 can be repeated: T2-Sp2-N-MeVal-D-Hiv Æ T3-Sp3-N-MeVal-D-Hiv
(24)
When the reactions have been repeated with the dipeptidol-charged enzyme, a synthetase with two identical intermediates is formed at the carrier domains T2 and T3.Alternatively, T3 is also charged with N-MeVal, and likewise accepts D-Hiv in reaction 6 with T1 and T3 interacting with C1. The two dipeptidol intermediates could then interact with the condensation domain 2 to form the tetrapeptidol intermediate remaining attached to T3 (reaction 25):
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H. von Döhren C2
T2-Sp2-N-MeVal-D-Hiv + T3-Sp3-N-MeVal-D-Hiv Æ T3-Sp3-N-MeVal-D-Hiv-N-MeVal-D-Hiv + T2-Sp2H
(25)
At this stage again repetition of reactions 19–24 leads to a synthetase with a dipeptidol intermediate at T2 and a tetrapeptidol intermediate at T3, which could again combine at C2 to the hexapeptidol intermediate (reaction 26), which needs to be cyclized: C2
T2-Sp2-N-MeVal-D-Hiv + T3-Sp3-N-MeVal-D-Hiv-N-MeVal-D-Hiv Æ (26) T3-Sp3-N-MeVal-D-Hiv-N-MeVal-D-Hiv-N-MeVal-D-Hiv + T2-Sp2H It is not clear at the moment if indeed the condensation domain C2 catalyses the cyclization reaction. No function has yet been assigned to the N-terminal domain, which represents a truncated condensation domain. It could also be speculated that reactions 26 and 27 proceed at the condensation domain C1, interacting with all 3 carrier domains, that C2 thus facilitates cyclization, or that the N-terminal domain interacts with C2 for cyclization. As in PF1022 a similar domain architecture has been found [153, 157]; four cycles of dipeptidol formation occur. To explain the cyclodepsipeptide size a cyclization cavity controlling the timing of ring closure has been postulated [5, 119, 151]. 4.2.2 D-Hydroxy Acid Supply
Supply of the D-hydroxy acid is provided by specific NADPH-dependent dehydrogenases from the respective 2-ketoacids [119, 155–157]. D-2-Hydroxyisovalerate dehydrogenase from the enniatin producer Fusarium sambucinum (38 kDa polypeptide, 160 kDa native molecular mass) and D-phenyllactate dehydrogenase from the PF1022 producer Mycelia sterilia have been characterized in detail. While the D-Hiv producing enzyme is highly specific for 2-ketoisovalerate, the D-phenyllactate dehydrogenase accepts a range of 2-hydroxy acids. Sequence data obtained for this enzyme identified it as a member of Disomer specific 2-hydroxyacid dehydrogenases (protein family pfam02826). Respective enzymes have been identified, e.g. in the genomes of Neurospora crassa, Fusarium graminea, and Magnaporthe grisea. 4.2.3 Assignment of Catalytic Sites The basic enzymology of enniatin synthetase has been characterized in detail with the enzyme from Fusarium oxysporum [119]. Cloning of the gene has been achieved by expression of a cDNA library of Fusarium scirpi employing im-
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munodetection [115]. An open reading frame of 9393 bp has been identified and shown to encode a 347 kDa protein.A disruption mutant in Fusarium avenaceum showed loss of production, and reduced virulence [158, 159]. The domains have been functionally assigned by fragment expression in E. coli [160] and limited proteolysis. Enniatin synthetase isolated from F. scirpi is partially degraded during isolation and two fragments of 105 and 200 kDa have been isolated [160]. The larger fragment represents the N-terminal part, including the domains NA1T1C1, catalyses activation of D-Hiv as well as its thioester attachment. No reactions were detected with Val. The smaller fragment with the structure T1C1A2(part) has no detectable catalytic activity, but contains the cofactor pantetheine. To further assign functions, the synthetase has been labelled with thioester bound substrates and photolabelled with SAM, followed by V8 protease digestion of the native protein. Recovered fragments of 45 and 46 kDa with bound Hiv correlate well with A1T1 regions, however, a 22 kDa fragment of the A2T2 region was also labelled.As DDL-Hiv was used for labelling, the data have been explained by L-Hiv activation at the Val site of A2. Likewise, unlabelled Val thioester may have been present at T2, reacting with D-Hiv to the dipeptidol. A 68 kDa fragment spanning T2 and T3 with parts of the adjacent M and C2 carried the Val label, as expected. In an attempt to localize the dipeptidol attachment site, the Hiv analog isovaleric acid has been used together with labelled Val.As isovalerate is missing the hydroxyl function, only isovaleryl-NMeVal is formed as shunt intermediate. Unexpectedly, an isolated 30 kDa fragment spanned T1 and part of C1, which certainly does not fit the proposed reaction sequence. It should be kept in mind, that the intermediates are reactive thioesters, which could easily form peptide bonds with any free amino groups around. Such modified side chains are more stable, and might lead to pitfalls in this type of study. Photolabelling studies verified SAM binding to a 45 kDa fragment containing the M-domain, and complete chymotryptic digestion led to the isolation of a nonapeptide [161]. Fragment expression in E. coli of various segments of enniatin synthetase led to inclusion bodies, which have been dissolved in urea or guanidine hydrochloride, and renaturated by dilution, ion exchange or hydrophobic chromatography, or gel filtration [160]. A 121 kDa fragment carrying the complete A1T1 regions showed D-Hiv activation, but also some reaction with Val. A 158 kDa fragment of the C-terminal region comprising the complete A2MT2T3 region activated Val, but not D-Hiv. Further shortening to a 108 kDa fragment just covering A2 M led to a further reduction of the Val-activating reaction, but also to a significant D-Hiv dependent reaction. These data verify perfectly the A1/A2 assignment, but also demonstrate that fragment structure may be altered either by folding problems or loss of interaction.
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4.2.4 Specificities of Adenylate Domains Since enniatins produced by various strains of Fusarium differ in their amino acid composition [162], the system offers the opportunity to trace changes in substrate specificity to structural alterations in the respective amino acid activating domain. The synthetases from the enniatin B producers F. lateritium and F. scirpi preferentially activate valine, while the synthetase of the enniatin A producer F. sambucinum prefers leucine and isoleucine. A sequence comparison of the F. scirpi and F. sambucinum adenylate domains revealed three point mutations, which do not correspond to pocket lining residues, one mutation being located even outside the specificity conferring region between the motifs A3 and A6 (Doller A, Haese A, Zocher R, unpublished). 4.3 Cyclosporins Cyclosporins are cycloundecapeptides containing the unusual amino acid (4R)4-[(E)-2-butenyl]-4-methyl-L-threonine (Bmt), the nonprotein constituents D-alanine and a-aminobutyrate, and the seven N-methylated peptide bonds. Biosynthesis aspects have been reviewed in detail [163–165]. 4.3.1 Characterization of Cyclosporin Synthetase Gene The characterization of the cyclosporin synthetase was successful when the high producer mutants Tolypocladium niveum 7939/F and 7939/4547,48 were analysed. In these strains it was suggested that the presence of higher enzyme levels was exerted by gene dosage, relaxed regulation at the transcriptional level or a reduced level of protein degradation [166]. Cloning of the synthetase gene has been achieved by reverse genetics [22]. Sequence data was obtained by tryptic and proteinase Lys-C or Glu-C digestion followed by N-terminal sequencing of isolated peptides. In addition, labelling with L-Ala or photolabelling with SAM was employed. One of the 20 internal sequences obtained was used to screen a genomic library of T. niveum. Regions of interest were selected by Northern hybridisation. The enormous size of the mRNA involved permitted only the detection of a heterogeneous population above 9.5 kb. The respective clones were assembled to a 47 kb stretch containing an intron-free reading frame of 45,823 bp. The ATG start codon was deduced from other fungal genes. The positions of labelled fragments matched the predicted domain pattern. Since both D-alanine and Bmt are directly incorporated, a respective racemase and PKS providing these direct precursors were coexpressed with the peptide synthetase. Both enzymes have been characterized in detail [167–169]. Other proteins may be required to protect the producer cell against the peptide.
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So cyclophilins have been proposed to serve as cyclosporin acceptor in a selfprotective function [170]. A cyclophilin from Tolypocladium niveum has been isolated and characterized as a 17 kDa prolyl-peptidyl-isomerase. This protein is presumably identical to the product of the cyclophilin gene cloned by Weber and Leitner to establish a convenient transformation system [171]. This gene encodes a 19,569 Da-protein with high similarity to the Neurospora crassa cyclophilin. The promoter region has been combined with the Escherichia coli hygromycin B phosphotransferase gene and the transcriptional terminator of the Aspergillus nidulans trpC gene. This construct has been used to transform T. niveum, leading to multiple and often tandem integrations into the genome. Fragments of the cyclosporin synthetase gene inserted into this vector were constructed and successfully used for gene disruption with a high frequency, indicating a single copy of the synthetase. 4.3.2 Assignment of Catalytic Functions and Reaction Cycle Since cyclosporin is an asymmetrical molecule with respect to N-methylated peptide bonds, the positions of N-methyl transferase domains provided the basic information on the initiation position, and the tentative functional assignment of all 40 domains except the N-terminus [22]: NA1T1C1-A2M2T2C2-A3MT3C3-A4M4T4C4-A5M5T5C5-A6T6C6-A7M7T7C7N-MeLeu N-MeLeu N-MeVal N-MeBmt Abu N-MeGly A8M8T8C8-A9T9C9-A10M10T10C10-A11T11C11 N-MeLeu Val N-MeLeu Ala D-Ala
Limited proteolysis provided a 130 kDa C-terminal fragment of the structure A11T11C11, shown to activate L-Ala [22]. To prove the initiating D-Ala and the predicted sequence of reactions, labelled intermediates were cleaved with performic acid, and separated by TLC. Only D-Ala was confirmed as N-terminal amino acid, and among several peptides D-Ala-N-MeLeu, D-Ala-N-MeLeu-NMeLeu, D-Ala-N-MeLeu-N-MeLeu-N-MeVal, and the nonapeptide D-Ala-NMeLeu-N-MeLeu-N-MeVal-N-MeBmt-Abu-N-MeGly-N-MeLeu were confirmed [172]. So the system perfectly agrees to the colinearity rule. A total of 40 sequential reactions comprising 11 activation reactions, 11 thiolation reactions, 7 methylations, and 11 peptide bond formations including the terminating cyclization are catalysed by this single protein.A list of the first 10 reactions is given: A1 + D-Ala + ATP Æ A1(D-Ala-AMP) + PPi Æ T1-Sp1-D-Ala + AMP (27, 28) A2 + Leu + ATP Æ A2(Leu-AMP) + PPi Æ T2-Sp2-Leu + AMP M2
T2-Sp2-Leu + SAM Æ T2-Sp2-N-MeLeu + Sahc
(29, 30) (31)
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T1-Sp2-D-Ala + T2-Sp3-N-MeLeu Æ T2-Sp2-N-MeLeu-D-Ala + T1-Sp2H A3 + Leu + ATP Æ A3(Leu-AMP) + PPi Æ T3-Sp3-Leu + AMP
(33, 34)
M3
T3-Sp3-Leu + SAM Æ T3-Sp3-N-MeLeu +Sahc C2
(32)
T2-Sp2-Ala-N-MeLeu + T3-Sp3-N-MeLeu Æ T3-Sp3-N-MeLeu-N-MeLeu-D-Ala + T2-Sp2H
(35) (36)
4.3.3 Synthesis of Cyclosporin Analogs Analysis of fermentation broths has provided a total of 32 analogs (Fig. 7, Table 6 [163–165]). The 20 positional exchanges would permit the formation of more than 72,000 analogs. Obviously the enzyme system is restricted with respect to such combinatorial applications. With the enniatin system nonmethylated analogs are formed at a 90% reduced rate. Any alteration leading to a comparable rate reduction would amount to a 99% reduction for two positional changes.Altered intermediates may even influence the rates of several reactions. So these assembly line type of processes tolerate only small structural variations. Some positions do not tolerate substitutions, like the Leu residues in positions 2,3 and 10, while the Leu in position 7 has been replaced by Val and Ile. System evolu-
Fig. 7 Cyclosporin analogs formed in vivo in commercial fermentations; 27 of the 32 analogs have a single alteration with respect to amino acid exchange or lack of N-methylation, only 5 compounds are doubly altered. So cyclosporin F has deoxy-N-MeBmt in position 5 and norvaline in position 6, cyclosporin K in addition valine in position 6, cyclosporin M norvaline in positions 6 and 9, cyclosporin O N-MeLeu in position 5 and norvaline in position 6, cyclosporin R is lacking methyl groups in positions 3 and 7 [165]. *AOA=aminooctanoic acid
1
D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala
Peptide
CyA CyB CyC CyD CyE CyF CyG CyH CyI CyK CyL CyM CyN CyO CyP CyQ CyR CyS CyU CyV CyW CyX CyY CyZ Cy26 Cy27 Cy28 Cy29 Cy30 Cy31 Cy32
MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu Leu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu
2
MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu Leu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu Leu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu Leu? MeLeu Leu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu
3 MeVal MeVal MeVal MeVal Val MeVal MeVal D-MeVal MeVal MeVal MeVal MeVal MeVal MeVal MeVal MeVal MeVal MeVal MeVal MeVal Val MeVal MeVal MeVal MeVal MeVal MeVal MeVal MeVal MeVal MeVal
4 MeBmt MeBmt MeBmt MeBmt MeBmt MedBmt MeBmt MeBmt MeBmt MedBmt Bmt MeBmt MeBmt MeLeu Bmt MeBmt MeBmt MeBmt MeBmt MeBmt MeBmt MeBmt MeBmt MeAOA MeBmt Bmt MeLeu MeBmt MeLeu MeBmt MeBmt
5 Abu Ala Thr Val Abu Nva Abu Abu Val Val Abu Nva Nva Nva Thr Abu Abu Thr Abu Abu Thr Nva Nva Abu Nva Val Abu Abu Val Abu Abu
6
Table 6 Cyclosporins produced by Tolypocladium niveum in different nutrient broths
Sar Sar Sar Sar Sar Sar Sar Sar Sar Sar Sar Sar Sar Sar Sar Sar Sar Sar Sar Sar Sar Sar Sar Sar Sar Sar Sar Sar Sar Sar Gly
7 MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu Val MeLeu Val MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeIle MeLeu Ile MeLeu
8 Val Val Val Val Val Val Val Val Val Val Val Nva Val Val Val Val Val Val Val Val Val Val Val Val Leu Val Val Val Val Val Val
9 MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu Leu? MeLeu Leu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu Leu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu MeLeu
10 Ala Ala Ala Ala Ala Ala Ala Ala Ala Ala Ala Ala Ala Ala Ala Ala Ala Ala Ala Abu Ala Ala Ala Ala Ala Ala Ala Ala Ala Ala Ala
11
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tion has led to certain restrictions to assure functioning of the products, presumably by binding cyclophilins. In vitro systems permit the synthesis of many more compounds. Transport and metabolization do not have to be considered, as well as competing substrates. Analogs not available in vivo are e.g. D-Abu replacement of the initiating D-Ala [173]. A ring extension may be achieved by replacing Ala by b-Ala [174]. A number of cyclosporins has thus been prepared, but not all proposed structures have been verified by standard analytical techniques [120, 165, 175]. Multienzymes with altered specificities may be obtained by screening for producers of analogs, such as strains of Neocosmospora or Acremonium forming predominantly cyclosporin C instead of A, thus favouring activation of Thr instead of Abu in position 6 [176, 177]. Even alterations of more positions have been found in the analogs FR901459, with a nonmethylated Leu in position 3, Thr in position 6, and Leu replacing Val in position 9 [178], and SDZ-214-103, with D-Hiv as starter hydroxy acid in addition to these 3 alterations [179]. In addition to this strategy to develop production systems for desired analogs, the respective genetic information may be used for the design of enzyme analogs. NRPS engineering has been pioneered by Stachelhaus et al. with the strategies of domain shuffling [180–182] and later by mutational alteration of domain specificity [64, 183, 184]. Domain exchange has been employed in the cyclosporin system by Schörgendorfer et al. to improve the production of cyclosporin 29 in T. inflatum fermentations [185]. Thus the concentration of the natural analog containing Ile in position 8 has been increased 270-fold by exchanging the Leu activating domain. 4.4 Ergot Peptide Alkaloids The ergot peptide biosynthesis has been reviewed in detail by Keller [44], and the structure of the respective gene cluster has been analysed by Tudzynski et al. [186]. These mycotoxins with a wide range of pharmaceutical applications are produced by fungi of the family Clavicipitaceae in the sclerotial tissue of parasitized plants. A key enzyme in the assembly is the dimethylallyl-tryptophan synthase (DMATS), catalysing the formation of 4-(g,g-dimethylallyl)tryptophan from dimethylallyldiphosphate and tryptophan. This enzyme has been isolated and characterized [187, 188] from a strain of Claviceps purpurea (ATCC 26245), which has been later identified as Claviceps fusiformis [189] and protein sequence information obtained has been used to identify the respective gene [190]. This gene served as a starting point for Tudzynski et al. to clone additional ergot peptide biosynthesis genes by chromosomal walking providing the evidence for a respective gene cluster [191]. They used a derivative of C. purpurea 1029, producing mainly ergotamine in axenic culture. The DMATS gene contained two introns in identical positions and the derived polypeptide showed 68% identity to the C. fusiformis enzyme. A 9 kb open reading frame encoding a 3-module NRPS of 356 kDa is located downstream of the synthase
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gene, and contains a single intron in the second module. Peptide sequences derived from the respective isolated and characterized multienzyme proved the identity of this lysergyl peptide synthetase. Upstream of the DMATS gene two putative oxidase-encoding genes have been found, presumably involved in Dlysergic acid formation. The gene for the second NRPS component catalysing the activation of D-lysergic acid remains to be identified, together with at least one gene for a P450 monooxygenase. The discussion of biosynthesis reactions will be restricted to the peptide moiety added to D-lysergate, and the reader is referred to the review of Keller for a full account [44].Activation of D-lysergate as adenylate by lysergyl peptide synthetase 2 (LPS2) and transfer to synthetase 1 (LPS1) as a thioester is the initiating step of peptide synthesis. There have been various attempts to isolate LPS2 [192], but its identity has only been recently ascertained [10]. The most detailed study reports copurification of two multienzymes of 140 and 370 kDa, both containing 4¢-phosphopantetheine [193]. This multienzyme system catalyses the formation of D-lysergyl tripeptide lactams, typically L-Ala, L-Phe and L-Pro in this sequence. The respective Kms for this process of 1.4 mmol L–1, 190 mmol L–1, 15 mmol L–1, and 125 mmol L–1 reflect the relative concentrations of the substrates in vivo, and indicate a possible limitation of D-lysergic acid. The reaction sequence of peptide elongation has been elucidated by the generation and isolation of enzyme-bound intermediates [194]. Labelled dihydrolysergic acid was exclusively found attached to LPS2, and upon addition of L-Ala the label moved to LPS1 with formation of dihydrolysergyl-L-Ala.Addition of L-Phe leads to the acyldipeptide, and upon addition of proline the tripeptidylthioester intermediate is formed and released by lactam formation to the piperazinedione. The final oxidation of the acyl tripeptide lactam to ergopeptines by formation of the cyclol bridge is catalysed by a yet unknown separate enzyme. The in vitro system established by Keller et al. has been shown to incorporate substrate analogs such as L-Val and L-a-Abu for L-Ala, and L-Leu, L-Val and L-a-Abu for L-Phe. Replacements of L-Pro by 4-hydroxyproline and thiazolidine-4-carboxylic acid have been reported in vivo with Sphacelia sorghi and C. purpurea, respectively [195, 196]. A substrate specificity shift is presumably found in ergobalansine synthetase, where L-Pro has been replaced by L-Ala. The compound has been isolated from the seeds of Ipomoea piurensis, a morning glory species, which is harbouring two Balansia species as endophytes, also belonging to the family Clavicipitaceae [197]. A strain of Claviceps zizaniae isolated from wild rice species of Zizania has been found to produce only two ergocryptine isomers with the peptide moiety Val-Leu-Pro [198]. The now fairly detailed understanding of this biosynthesis process forms the basis of new molecular genetic approaches towards rational drug design [199].
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4.5 Various Systems Biochemical studies performed in various other fungal systems have been reviewed [5, 131, 132]. These include alamethicin, trichorzin, ampullosporin [14], HC-toxin [21], destruxin, SDZ 90-215 [200], SDZ 214-103 [175, 201], and beauvericin (for references see also [202]).
5 Outlook 5.1 Combinatorial Approaches A dramatic increase in knowledge on the structure and function of NRPS domains has been achieved in the last years. Much of this work has led to the construction and combination of domains and modules to produce new peptides, and to generate workable combinatorial approaches, although mainly with prokaryotic domains and expression systems (for a review see [184]).Work on fungal systems is slow, mainly due to the lack of suitable expression systems. First combinatorial data have been presented involving fungal domains, either in linkage to bacterial NRPS [180] or within a fungal multienzyme [185].Workable systems for domain exchange have been developed in Aspergillus nidulans (Turner G, Brakhage A, von Döhren H et al., unpublished). The improvement of these systems requires a more profound knowledge of the domain interactions, which is hampered by crystallization problems with multidomain systems. Available electron micrographs of NRPS multienzymes show compact globular structures, which have been documented for gramicidin S synthetase [203], enniatin synthetase (Zocher, unpublished data), cyclosporin synthetase [204], and ferrichrome synthetase (Siegmund KD, personal communication). 5.2 Subcellular Localization of Peptide Synthetases Fungal systems differ from bacteria especially due to compartmentation of the eukaryotic cells. So the localization of peptide synthetases with respect to precursor availability either by import or biosynthesis, product formation, accumulation and export is a complex issue. Evidence for a vacuolar attachment of ACV synthetase in P. chrysogenum has been obtained [205], but has not been fully substantiated in further studies [206]. The synthetase is now considered to be cytoplasmatic [207], (see chapter of Driessen and colleagues). Cyclosporin synthetase and the functionally interconnected D-alanine racemase were recovered after sucrose density gradient centrifugation as subcel-
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lular fractions by immunoelectron microscopy [204]. A considerable proportion of cyclosporin synthetase and D-alanine racemase was detected at the vacuolar membrane. The product cyclosporin was localized in the fungal vacuole. There is no doubt that the development of workable peptide forming systems also requires a detailed knowledge of compartmentation and transport processes.
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199. 200. 201. 202. 203. 204. 205. 206. 207.
Received: April 2004
Author Index Volumes 51 – 88 Author Index Volumes 1–50 see Volume 50
Ackermann, J.-U. see Babel, W.: Vol. 71, p. 125 Adam, W., Lazarus, M., Saha-Möller, C. R., Weichhold, O., Hoch, U., Häring, D., Schreier, Ü.: Biotransformations with Peroxidases. Vol. 63, p. 73 Ahring, B. K.: Perspectives for Anaerobic Digestion. Vol. 81, p. 1 Ahring, B. K. see Angelidaki, I.: Vol. 82, p. 1 Ahring, B. K. see Gavala, H. N.: Vol. 81, p. 57 Ahring, B. K. see Hofman-Bang, J.: Vol. 81, p. 151 Ahring, B. K. see Mogensen, A. S.: Vol. 82, p. 69 Ahring, B. K. see Pind, P. F.: Vol. 82, p. 135 Ahring, B. K. see Skiadas, I. V.: Vol. 82, p. 35 Akhtar, M., Blanchette, R. A., Kirk, T. K.: Fungal Delignification and Biochemical Pulping of Wood. Vol. 57, p. 159 Allan, J. V., Roberts, S. M., Williamson, N. M.: Polyamino Acids as Man-Made Catalysts. Vol. 63, p. 125 Allington, R. W. see Xie, S.: Vol. 76, p. 87 Al-Abdallah, Q. see Brakhage, A. A.: Vol. 88, p. 45 Al-Rubeai, M.: Apoptosis and Cell Culture Technology. Vol. 59, p. 225 Al-Rubeai, M. see Singh, R. P.: Vol. 62, p. 167 Alsberg, B. K. see Shaw, A. D.: Vol. 66, p. 83 Angelidaki, I., Ellegaard, L., Ahring, B. K.: Applications of the Anaerobic Digestion Process. Vol. 82, p. 1 Angelidaki, I. see Gavala, H. N.: Vol. 81, p. 57 Angelidaki, I. see Pind, P. F.: Vol. 82, p. 135 Antranikian, G. see Ladenstein, R.: Vol. 61, p. 37 Antranikian, G. see Müller, R.: Vol. 61, p. 155 Archelas, A. see Orru, R. V. A.: Vol. 63, p. 145 Argyropoulos, D. S.: Lignin. Vol. 57, p. 127 Arnold, F. H., Moore, J. C.: Optimizing Industrial Enzymes by Directed Evolution. Vol. 58, p. 1 Autuori, F., Farrace, M. G., Oliverio, S., Piredda, L., Piacentini, G.: “Tissie” Transglutaminase and Apoptosis. Vol. 62, p. 129 Azerad, R.: Microbial Models for Drug Metabolism. Vol. 63, p. 169 Babel, W., Ackermann, J.-U., Breuer, U.: Physiology, Regulation and Limits of the Synthesis of Poly(3HB). Vol. 71, p. 125 Bajpai, P., Bajpai, P. K.: Realities and Trends in Emzymatic Prebleaching of Kraft Pulp. Vol. 56, p. 1 Bajpai, P., Bajpai, P. K.: Reduction of Organochlorine Compounds in Bleach Plant Effluents. Vol. 57, p. 213 Bajpai, P. K. see Bajpai, P.: Vol. 56, p. 1 Bajpai, P. K. see Bajpai, P.: Vol. 57, p. 213 Banks, M. K., Schwab, P., Liu, B., Kulakow, P.A., Smith, J. S., Kim, R.: The Effect of Plants on the Degradation and Toxicity of Petroleum Contaminants in Soil: A Field Assessment.Vol. 78, p. 75
266
Author Index Volumes 51–88
Barber, M. S., Giesecke, U., Reichert, A., Minas, W.: Industrial Enzymatic Production of Cephalosporin-Based b-Lactams. Vol. 88, p. 179 Barut, M. see Strancar, A.: Vol. 76, p. 49 Bárzana, E.: Gas Phase Biosensors. Vol. 53, p. 1 Basu, S. K. see Mukhopadhyay, A.: Vol. 84, p. 183 Bathe, B. see Pfefferle, W.: Vol. 79, p. 59 Bazin, M. J. see Markov, S. A.: Vol. 52, p. 59 Bellgardt, K.-H.: Process Models for Production of b-Lactam Antibiotics. Vol. 60, p. 153 Beppu, T.: Development of Applied Microbiology to Modern Biotechnology in Japan.Vol.69, p. 41 van den Berg, M. A. see Evers, M. E.: Vol. 88, p. 111 Berovic, M. see Mitchell, D.A.: Vol. 68, p. 61 Beyeler, W., DaPra, E., Schneider, K.: Automation of Industrial Bioprocesses. Vol. 70, p. 139 Beyer, M. see Seidel, G.: Vol. 66, p. 115 Beyer, M. see Tollnick, C.: Vol. 86, p. 1 Bhardwaj, D. see Chauhan, V.S.: Vol. 84, p. 143 Bhatia, P.K., Mukhopadhyay, A.: Protein Glycosylation: Implications for in vivo Functions and Thereapeutic Applications. Vol. 64, p. 155 Bisaria, V.S. see Ghose, T.K.: Vol. 69, p. 87 Blanchette R. A. see Akhtar, M.: Vol. 57, p. 159 Bocker, H., Knorre, W.A.: Antibiotica Research in Jena from Penicillin and Nourseothricin to Interferon. Vol. 70, p. 35 de Bont, J.A.M. see van der Werf, M. J.: Vol. 55, p. 147 van den Boom, D. see Jurinke, C.: Vol. 77, p. 57 Borah, M. M. see Dutta, M.: Vol. 86, p. 255 Bovenberg, R. A. L. see Evers, M. E.: Vol. 88, p. 111 Brainard, A. P. see Ho, N. W. Y.: Vol. 65, p. 163 Brakhage, A. A., Spröte, P., Al-Abdallah, Q., Gehrke, A., Plattner, H., Tüncher, A.: Regulation of Penicillin Biosynthesis in Filamentous Fungi. Vol. 88, p. 45 Brazma, A., Sarkans, U., Robinson, A., Vilo, J., Vingron, M., Hoheisel, J., Fellenberg, K.: Microarray Data Representation, Annotation and Storage. Vol. 77, p. 113 Breuer, U. see Babel, W.: Vol. 71, p. 125 Broadhurst, D. see Shaw, A. D.: Vol. 66, p. 83 Bruckheimer, E. M., Cho, S. H., Sarkiss, M., Herrmann, J., McDonell, T. J.: The Bcl-2 Gene Family and Apoptosis. Vol 62, p. 75 Brüggemann, O.: Molecularly Imprinted Materials – Receptors More Durable than Nature Can Provide. Vol. 76, p. 127 Bruggink, A., Straathof, A. J. J., van der Wielen, L. A. M.: A ‘Fine’ Chemical Industry for Life Science Products: Green Solutions to Chemical Challenges. Vol. 80, p. 69 Buchert, J. see Suurnäkki, A.: Vol. 57, p. 261 Bungay, H. R. see Mühlemann, H. M.: Vol. 65, p. 193 Bungay, H.R., Isermann, H.P.: Computer Applications in Bioprocessin. Vol. 70, p. 109 Büssow, K. see Eickhoff, H.: Vol. 77, p. 103 Byun, S.Y. see Choi, J.W.: Vol. 72, p. 63 Cabral, J. M. S. see Fernandes, P.: Vol. 80, p. 115 Cahill, D. J., Nordhoff, E.: Protein Arrays and Their Role in Proteomics. Vol. 83, p. 177 Cantor, C. R. see Jurinke, C.: Vol. 77, p. 57 Cao, N. J. see Gong, C. S.: Vol. 65, p. 207 Cao, N. J. see Tsao, G. T.: Vol. 65, p. 243 Carnell, A. J.: Stereoinversions Using Microbial Redox-Reactions. Vol. 63, p. 57 Cash, P.: Proteomics of Bacterial Pathogens. Vol. 83, p. 93 Casqueiro, J. see Martín, J. F.: Vol. 88, p. 91 Cen, P., Xia, L.: Production of Cellulase by Solid-State Fermentation. Vol. 65, p. 69 Chand, S., Mishra, P.: Research and Application of Microbial Enzymes – India’s Contribution. Vol. 85, p. 95
Author Index Volumes 51–88
267
Chang, H. N. see Lee, S. Y.: Vol. 52, p. 27 Chauhan, V. S., Bhardwaj, D.: Current Status of Malaria Vaccine Development. Vol. 84, p. 143 Cheetham, P. S. J.: Combining the Technical Push and the Business Pull for Natural Flavours.Vol. 55, p. 1 Cheetham, P. S. J.: Bioprocesses for the Manufacture of Ingredients for Foods and Cosmetics. Vol. 86, p. 83 Chen, C. see Yang, S.-T.: Vol. 87, p. 61 Chen, Z. see Ho, N. W. Y.: Vol. 65, p. 163 Chenchik, A. see Zhumabayeva, B.: Vol. 86, p. 191 Cho, S. H. see Bruckheimer, E. M.: Vol. 62, p. 75 Cho, G.H. see Choi, J.W.: Vol 72, p. 63 Choi, J. see Lee, S.Y.: Vol. 71, p. 183 Choi, J.W., Cho, G.H., Byun, S.Y., Kim, D.-I.: Integrated Bioprocessing for Plant Cultures. Vol. 72, p. 63 Christensen, B., Nielsen, J.: Metabolic Network Analysis – A Powerful Tool in Metabolic Engineering. Vol. 66, p. 209 Christians, F. C. see McGall, G.H.: Vol. 77, p. 21 Chu, J. see Zhang, S.: Vol. 87, p. 97 Chui, G. see Drmanac, R.: Vol. 77, p. 75 Ciaramella, M. see van der Oost, J.: Vol. 61, p. 87 Contreras, B. see Sablon, E.: Vol. 68, p. 21 Conway de Macario, E., Macario, A. J. L.: Molecular Biology of Stress Genes in Methanogens: Potential for Bioreactor Technology. Vol. 81, p. 95 Cordero Otero, R.R. see Hahn-Hägerdal, B.: Vol. 73, p. 53 Cordwell S. J. see Nouwens, A.S.: Vol. 83, p. 117 Cornet, J.-F., Dussap, C. G., Gros, J.-B.: Kinetics and Energetics of Photosynthetic MicroOrganisms in Photobioreactors. Vol. 59, p. 153 da Costa, M. S., Santos, H., Galinski, E. A.: An Overview of the Role and Diversity of Compatible Solutes in Bacteria and Archaea. Vol. 61, p. 117 Cotter, T. G. see McKenna, S. L.: Vol. 62, p. 1 Croteau, R. see McCaskill, D.: Vol. 55, p. 107 Danielsson, B. see Xie, B.: Vol. 64, p. 1 DaPra, E. see Beyeler, W.: Vol. 70, p. 139 Darzynkiewicz, Z., Traganos, F.: Measurement of Apoptosis. Vol. 62, p. 33 Davey, H. M. see Shaw, A. D.: Vol. 66, p. 83 Dean, J. F. D., LaFayette, P. R., Eriksson, K.-E. L., Merkle, S. A.: Forest Tree Biotechnolgy. Vol. 57, p. 1 Debabov, V. G.: The Threonine Story. Vol. 79, p. 113 Demain, A.L., Fang, A.: The Natural Functions of Secondary Metabolites. Vol. 69, p. 1 Dhar, N. see Tyagi, A. K.: Vol. 84, p. 211 Diaz, R. see Drmanac, R.: Vol. 77, p. 75 Dochain, D., Perrier, M.: Dynamical Modelling, Analysis, Monitoring and Control Design for Nonlinear Bioprocesses. Vol. 56, p. 147 von Döhren, H.: Biochemistry and General Genetics of Nonribosomal Peptide Synthetases in Fungi. Vol. 88, p. 217 Dolfing, J. see Mogensen, A. S.: Vol. 82, p. 69 Driessen, A. J. M. see Evers, M. E.: Vol. 88, p. 111 Drmanac, R., Drmanac, S., Chui, G., Diaz, R., Hou, A., Jin, H., Jin, P., Kwon, S., Lacy, S., Moeur, B., Shafto, J., Swanson, D., Ukrainczyk, T., Xu, C., Little, D.: Sequencing by Hybridization (SBH): Advantages, Achievements, and Opportunities. Vol. 77, p. 75 Drmanac, S. see Drmanac, R.: Vol. 77, p. 75 Du, J. see Gong, C. S: Vol. 65, p. 207 Du, J. see Tsao, G. T.: Vol. 65, p. 243 Dueser, M. see Raghavarao, K.S.M.S.: Vol. 68, p. 139
268
Author Index Volumes 51–88
Dussap, C. G. see Cornet J.-F.: Vol. 59, p. 153 Dutta, M., Borah, M. M., Dutta, N. N.: Adsorptive Separation of b-Lactam Antibiotics: Technological Perspectives. Vol. 86, p. 255 Dutta, N. N. see Ghosh, A. C.: Vol. 56, p. 111 Dutta, N. N. see Sahoo, G. C.: Vol. 75, p. 209 Dutta, N. N. see Dutta, M.: Vol. 86, p. 255 Dynesen, J. see McIntyre, M.: Vol. 73, p. 103 Eggeling, L., Sahm, H., de Graaf, A. A.: Quantifying and Directing Metabolite Flux: Application to Amino Acid Overproduction. Vol. 54, p. 1 Eggeling, L. see de Graaf, A.A.: Vol. 73, p. 9 Eggink, G., see Kessler, B.: Vol. 71, p. 159 Eggink, G., see van der Walle, G. J. M.: Vol. 71, p. 263 Ehrlich, H. L. see Rusin, P.: Vol. 52, p. 1 Eickhoff, H., Konthur, Z., Lueking, A., Lehrach, H., Walter, G., Nordhoff, E., Nyarsik, L., Büssow, K.: Protein Array Technology: The Tool to Bridge Genomics and Proteomics.Vol.77, p. 103 Elias, C. B., Joshi, J. B.: Role of Hydrodynamic Shear on Activity and Structure of Proteins. Vol. 59, p. 47 Eliasson, A. see Gunnarsson, N.: Vol. 88, p. 137 Ellegaard, L. see Angelidaki, I.: Vol. 82, p. 1 Elling, L.: Glycobiotechnology: Enzymes for the Synthesis of Nucleotide Sugars. Vol. 58, p. 89 Eriksson, K.-E. L. see Kuhad, R. C.: Vol. 57, p. 45 Eriksson, K.-E. L. see Dean, J. F. D.: Vol. 57, p. 1 Evers, M. E., Trip, H., van den Berg, M. A., Bovenberg, R. A. L., Driessen, A. J. M.: Compartmentalization and Transport in b-Lactam Antibiotics Biosynthesis. Vol. 88, p. 111 Faber, K. see Orru, R. V. A.: Vol. 63, p. 145 Fang, A. see Demain, A.L.: Vol. 69, p. 1 Farrace, M. G. see Autuori, F.: Vol. 62, p. 129 Farrell, R. L., Hata, K., Wall, M. B.: Solving Pitch Problems in Pulp and Paper Processes. Vol. 57, p. 197 Fellenberg, K. see Brazma, A.: Vol. 77, p. 113 Fernandes, P., Prazeres, D. M. F., Cabral, J. M. S.: Membrane-Assisted Extractive Bioconversions. Vol. 80, p. 115 Ferro, A., Gefell, M., Kjelgren, R., Lipson, D. S., Zollinger, N., Jackson, S.: Maintaining Hydraulic Control Using Deep Rooted Tree Systems. Vol. 78, p. 125 Fiechter, A.: Biotechnology in Switzerland and a Glance at Germany. Vol. 69, p. 175 Fiechter, A. see Ochsner, U. A.: Vol. 53, p. 89 Flechas, F. W., Latady, M.: Regulatory Evaluation and Acceptance Issues for Phytotechnology Projects. Vol. 78, p. 171 Foody, B. see Tolan, J. S.: Vol. 65, p. 41 Fréchet, J. M. J. see Xie, S.: Vol. 76, p. 87 Freitag, R., Hórvath, C.: Chromatography in the Downstream Processing of Biotechnological Products. Vol. 53, p. 17 Friehs, K.: Plasmid Copy Number and Plasmid Stability. Vol. 86, p. 47 Furstoss, R. see Orru, R. V. A.: Vol. 63, p. 145 Galinski, E.A. see da Costa, M.S.: Vol. 61, p. 117 Gàrdonyi, M. see Hahn-Hägerdal, B.: Vol. 73, p. 53 Gatfield, I.L.: Biotechnological Production of Flavour-Active Lactones. Vol. 55, p. 221 Gavala, H. N., Angelidaki, I., Ahring, B. K.: Kinetics and Modeling of Anaerobic Digestion Process. Vol. 81, p. 57 Gavala, H. N. see Skiadas, I. V.: Vol. 82, p. 35 Gefell, M. see Ferro, A.: Vol. 78, p. 125 Gehrke, A. see Brakhage, A. A.: Vol. 88, p. 45
Author Index Volumes 51–88
269
Gemeiner, P. see Stefuca, V.: Vol. 64, p. 69 Gerlach, S. R. see Schügerl, K.: Vol. 60, p. 195 Ghose, T. K., Bisaria, V.S.: Development of Biotechnology in India. Vol. 69, p. 71 Ghose, T. K. see Ghosh, P.: Vol. 85, p. 1 Ghosh, A. C., Mathur, R. K., Dutta, N. N.: Extraction and Purification of Cephalosporin Antibiotics. Vol. 56, p. 111 Ghosh, P., Ghose, T. K.: Bioethanol in India: Recent Past and Emerging Future. Vol. 85, p. 1 Ghosh, P. see Singh, A.: Vol. 51, p. 47 Giesecke, U. see Barber, M. S.: Vol. 88, p. 179 Gilbert, R. J. see Shaw, A. D.: Vol. 66, p. 83 Gill, R.T. see Stephanopoulos, G.: Vol. 73, p. 1 Gomes, J., Menawat, A. S.: Fed-Batch Bioproduction of Spectinomycin. Vol. 59, p. 1 Gong, C. S., Cao, N. J., Du, J., Tsao, G. T.: Ethanol Production from Renewable Resources. Vol. 65, p. 207 Gong, C. S. see Tsao, G. T.: Vol. 65, p. 243 Goodacre, R. see Shaw, A. D.: Vol. 66, p. 83 de Graaf, A. A., Eggeling, L., Sahm, H.: Metabolic Engineering for L-Lysine Production by Corynebacterium glutamicum. Vol. 73, p. 9 de Graaf, A. A. see Eggeling, L.: Vol. 54, p. 1 de Graaf, A. A. see Weuster-Botz, D.: Vol. 54, p. 75 de Graaf, A. A. see Wiechert, W.: Vol. 54, p. 109 Grabley, S., Thiericke, R.: Bioactive Agents from Natural Sources: Trends in Discovery and Application. Vol. 64, p. 101 Griengl, H. see Johnson, D. V.: Vol. 63, p. 31 Gros, J.-B. see Larroche, C.: Vol. 55, p. 179 Gros, J.-B. see Cornet, J. F.: Vol. 59, p. 153 Gu, M. B., Mitchell, R. J., Kim, B. C.: Whole-Cell-Based Biosensors for Environmental Biomonitoring and Application.Vol. 87, p. 269 Guenette M. see Tolan, J. S.: Vol. 57, p. 289 Gunnarsson, N., Eliasson, A., Nielsen, J.: Control of Fluxes Towards Antibiotics and the Role of Primary Metabolism in Production of Antibiotics. Vol. 88, p. 137 Gupta, M. N. see Roy, I.: Vol. 86, p. 159 Gupta, S. K.: Status of Immunodiagnosis and Immunocontraceptive Vaccines in India. Vol. 85, p. 181 Gutman, A. L., Shapira, M.: Synthetic Applications of Enzymatic Reactions in Organic Solvents. Vol. 52, p. 87 Haagensen, F. see Mogensen, A. S.: Vol. 82, p. 69 Hahn-Hägerdal, B., Wahlbom, C. F., Gárdonyi, M., van Zyl, W. H., Cordero Otero, R. R., Jönsson, L. J.: Metabolic Engineering of Saccharomyces cerevisiae for Xylose Utilization. Vol. 73, p.53 Haigh, J.R. see Linden, J.C.: Vol. 72, p. 27 Hall, D. O. see Markov, S. A.: Vol. 52, p. 59 Hall, P. see Mosier, N. S.: Vol. 65, p. 23 Hammar, F.: History of Modern Genetics in Germany. Vol. 75, p. 1 Hannenhalli, S., Hubbell, E., Lipshutz, R., Pevzner, P. A.: Combinatorial Algorithms for Design of DNA Arrays. Vol. 77, p. 1 Haralampidis, D., Trojanowska, M., Osbourn, A. E.: Biosynthesis of Triterpenoid Saponins in Plants. Vol. 75, p. 31 Häring, D. see Adam, E.: Vol. 63, p. 73 Harvey, N. L., Kumar, S.: The Role of Caspases in Apoptosis. Vol. 62, p. 107 Hasegawa, S., Shimizu, K.: Noninferior Periodic Operation of Bioreactor Systems. Vol. 51, p. 91 Hata, K. see Farrell, R. L.: Vol. 57, p. 197 Hecker, M.: A Proteomic View of Cell Physiology of Bacillus subtilis – Bringing the Genome Sequence to Life. Vol. 83, p. 57
270
Author Index Volumes 51–88
van der Heijden, R. see Memelink, J.: Vol. 72, p. 103 Hein, S. see Steinbüchel, A.: Vol. 71, p. 81 Hembach, T. see Ochsner, U. A.: Vol. 53, p. 89 Henzler, H.-J.: Particle Stress in Bioreactor. Vol. 67, p. 35 Herrler, M. see Zhumabayeva, B.: Vol. 86, p. 191 Herrmann, J. see Bruckheimer, E. M.: Vol. 62, p. 75 Hill, D. C., Wrigley, S. K., Nisbet, L. J.: Novel Screen Methodologies for Identification of New Microbial Metabolites with Pharmacological Activity. Vol. 59, p. 73 Hiroto, M. see Inada, Y.: Vol. 52, p. 129 Ho, N. W. Y., Chen, Z., Brainard, A. P. Sedlak, M.: Successful Design and Development of Genetically Engineering Saccharomyces Yeasts for Effective Cofermentation of Glucose and Xylose from Cellulosic Biomass to Fuel Ethanol. Vol. 65, p. 163 Hoch, U. see Adam, W.: Vol. 63, p. 73 Hoff, B. see Schmitt, E. K.: Vol. 88, p. 1 Hofman-Bang, J., Zheng, D., Westermann, P., Ahring, B. K., Raskin, L.: Molecular Ecology of Anaerobic Reactor Systems. Vol. 81, p. 151 Hoheisel, J. see Brazma, A.: Vol. 77, p. 113 Holló, J., Kralovánsky, U.P.: Biotechnology in Hungary. Vol. 69, p. 151 Honda, H., Kobayashi, T.: Industrial Application of Fuzzy Control in Bioprocesses. Vol. 87, p. 151 Honda, H., Liu, C., Kobayashi, T.: Large-Scale Plant Micropropagation. Vol. 72, p. 157 Hórvath, C. see Freitag, R.: Vol. 53, p. 17 Hou, A. see Drmanac, R.: Vol. 77, p. 75 Hubbell, E. see Hannenhalli, S.: Vol. 77, p. 1 Huebner, S. see Mueller, U.: Vol. 79, p. 137 Hummel,W.: New Alcohol Dehydrogenases for the Synthesis of Chiral Compounds.Vol.58, p.145 Ikeda, M.: Amino Acid Production Processes. Vol. 79, p. 1 Imamoglu, S.: Simulated Moving Bed Chromatography (SMB) for Application in Bioseparation. Vol. 76, p. 211 Inada, Y., Matsushima, A., Hiroto, M., Nishimura, H., Kodera, Y.: Chemical Modifications of Proteins with Polyethylen Glycols. Vol. 52, p. 129 Irwin, D. C. see Wilson, D. B.: Vol. 65, p. 1 Isermann, H. P. see Bungay, H. R.: Vol. 70, p. 109 Iyer, P. see Lee, Y. Y.: Vol. 65, p. 93 Jackson, S. see Ferro, A.: Vol. 78, p. 125 James, E., Lee, J. M.: The Production of Foreign Proteins from Genetically Modified Plant Cells. Vol. 72, p. 127 Jeffries, T. W., Shi, N.-Q.: Genetic Engineering for Improved Xylose Fementation by Yeasts. Vol. 65, p. 117 Jendrossek, D.: Microbial Degradation of Polyesters. Vol. 71, p. 293 Jenne, M. see Schmalzriedt, S.: Vol. 80, p. 19 Jin, H. see Drmanac, R.: Vol. 77, p. 75 Jin, P. see Drmanac, R.: Vol. 77, p. 75 Johnson, D.V., Griengl, H.: Biocatalytic Applications of Hydroxynitrile. Vol. 63, p. 31 Johnson, E. A., Schroeder, W. A.: Microbial Carotenoids. Vol. 53, p. 119 Johnsurd, S. C.: Biotechnolgy for Solving Slime Problems in the Pulp and Paper Industry. Vol. 57, p. 311 Johri, B. N., Sharma, A., Virdi, J. S.: Rhizobacterial Diversity in India and its Influence on Soil and Plant Health. Vol. 84, p. 49 Jönsson, L. J. see Hahn-Hägerdal, B.: Vol. 73, p. 53 Joshi, J. B. see Elias, C. B.: Vol. 59, p. 47 Jurinke, C., van den Boom, D., Cantor, C. R., Köster, H.: The Use of MassARRAY Technology for High Throughput Genotyping. Vol. 77, p. 57
Author Index Volumes 51–88
271
Kaderbhai, N. see Shaw, A. D.: Vol. 66, p. 83 Karanth, N. G. see Krishna, S. H.: Vol. 75, p. 119 Karthikeyan, R., Kulakow, P. A.: Soil Plant Microbe Interactions in Phytoremediation. Vol. 78, p. 51 Kataoka, M. see Shimizu, S.: Vol. 58, p. 45 Kataoka, M. see Shimizu, S.: Vol. 63, p. 109 Katzen, R., Tsao, G.T.: A View of the History of Biochemical Engineering. Vol. 70, p. 77 Kawai, F.: Breakdown of Plastics and Polymers by Microorganisms. Vol. 52, p. 151 Kell, D. B. see Shaw, A. D.: Vol. 66, p. 83 Kessler, B., Weusthuis, R., Witholt, B., Eggink, G.: Production of Microbial Polyesters: Fermentation and Downstream Processes. Vol. 71, p. 159 Khosla, C. see McDaniel, R.: Vol. 73, p. 31 Khurana, J. P. see Tyagi, A. K.: Vol. 84, p. 91 Kieran, P. M., Malone, D. M., MacLoughlin, P. F.: Effects of Hydrodynamic and Interfacial Forces on Plant Cell Suspension Systems. Vol. 67, p. 139 Kijne, J.W. see Memelink, J.: Vol. 72, p. 103 Kim, B. C. see Gu, M. B.: Vol. 87, p. 269 Kim, D.-I. see Choi, J.W.: Vol. 72, p. 63 Kim, R. see Banks, M. K.: Vol. 78, p. 75 Kim, Y.B., Lenz, R.W.: Polyesters from Microorganisms. Vol. 71, p. 51 Kimura, E.: Metabolic Engineering of Glutamate Production. Vol. 79, p. 37 King, R.: Mathematical Modelling of the Morphology of Streptomyces Species. Vol. 60, p. 95 Kino-oka, M., Nagatome, H., Taya, M.: Characterization and Application of Plant Hairy Roots Endowed with Photosynthetic Functions. Vol. 72, p. 183 Kirk, T. K. see Akhtar, M.: Vol. 57, p. 159 Kjelgren, R. see Ferro, A.: Vol. 78, p. 125 Knorre, W.A. see Bocker, H.: Vol. 70, p. 35 Kobayashi, M. see Shimizu, S.: Vol. 58, p. 45 Kobayashi, S., Uyama, H.: In vitro Biosynthesis of Polyesters. Vol. 71, p. 241 Kobayashi, T. see Honda, H.: Vol. 72, p. 157 Kobayashi, T. see Honda, H.: Vol. 87, p. 151 Kodera, F. see Inada, Y.: Vol. 52, p. 129 Kolattukudy, P. E.: Polyesters in Higher Plants. Vol. 71, p. 1 König, A. see Riedel, K: Vol. 75, p. 81 de Koning, G. J. M. see van der Walle, G. A. M.: Vol. 71, p. 263 Konthur, Z. see Eickhoff, H.: Vol. 77, p. 103 Koo, Y.-M. see Lee, S.-M.: Vol. 87, p. 173 Kossen, N.W.F.: The Morphology of Filamentous Fungi. Vol. 70, p. 1 Köster, H. see Jurinke, C.: Vol. 77, p. 57 Koutinas, A. A. see Webb, C.: Vol. 87, p. 195 Krabben, P., Nielsen, J.: Modeling the Mycelium Morphology of Penicilium Species in Submerged Cultures. Vol. 60, p. 125 Kralovánszky, U.P. see Holló, J.: Vol. 69, p. 151 Krämer, R.: Analysis and Modeling of Substrate Uptake and Product Release by Procaryotic and Eucaryotik Cells. Vol. 54, p. 31 Kretzmer, G.: Influence of Stress on Adherent Cells. Vol. 67, p. 123 Krieger, N. see Mitchell, D.A.: Vol. 68, p. 61 Krishna, S. H., Srinivas, N. D., Raghavarao, K. S. M. S., Karanth, N. G.: Reverse Micellar Extraction for Downstream Processeing of Proteins/Enzymes. Vol. 75, p. 119 Kück, U. see Schmitt, E. K.: Vol. 88, p. 1 Kuhad, R. C., Singh, A., Eriksson, K.-E. L.: Microorganisms and Enzymes Involved in the Degradation of Plant Cell Walls. Vol. 57, p. 45 Kuhad, R. Ch. see Singh, A.: Vol. 51, p. 47 Kulakow, P. A. see Karthikeyan, R.: Vol. 78, p. 51 Kulakow, P. A. see Banks, M. K.: Vol. 78, p. 75
272
Author Index Volumes 51–88
Kumagai, H.: Microbial Production of Amino Acids in Japan. Vol. 69, p. 71 Kumar, R. see Mukhopadhyay, A.: Vol. 86, p. 215 Kumar, S. see Harvey, N. L.: Vol. 62, p. 107 Kunze, G. see Riedel, K.: Vol. 75, p. 81 Kwon, S. see Drmanac, R.: Vol. 77, p. 75 Lacy, S. see Drmanac, R.: Vol. 77, p. 75 Ladenstein, R., Antranikian, G.: Proteins from Hyperthermophiles: Stability and Enzamatic Catalysis Close to the Boiling Point of Water. Vol. 61, p. 37 Ladisch, C. M. see Mosier, N. S.: Vol. 65, p. 23 Ladisch, M. R. see Mosier, N. S.: Vol. 65, p. 23 LaFayette, P. R. see Dean, J. F. D.: Vol. 57, p. 1 Lammers, F., Scheper, T.: Thermal Biosensors in Biotechnology. Vol. 64, p. 35 Larroche, C., Gros, J.-B.: Special Transformation Processes Using Fungal Spares and Immobilized Cells. Vol. 55, p. 179 Latady, M. see Flechas, F. W.: Vol. 78, p. 171 Lazarus, M. see Adam, W.: Vol. 63, p. 73 Leak, D. J. see van der Werf, M. J.: Vol. 55, p. 147 Lee, J.M. see James, E.: Vol. 72, p. 127 Lee, S.-M., Lin, J., Koo, Y.-M.: Production of Lactic Acid from Paper Sludge by Simultaneous Saccharification and Fermentation. Vol. 87, p. 173 Lee, S. Y., Chang, H. N.: Production of Poly(hydroxyalkanoic Acid). Vol. 52, p. 27 Lee, S. Y., Choi, J.: Production of Microbial Polyester by Fermentation of Recombinant Microorganisms. Vol. 71, p. 183 Lee, Y.Y., Iyer, P., Torget, R.W.: Dilute-Acid Hydrolysis of Lignocellulosic Biomass.Vol. 65, p. 93 Lehrach, H. see Eickhoff, H.: Vol. 77, p. 103 Lenz, R. W. see Kim, Y. B.: Vol. 71, p. 51 Licari, P. see McDaniel, R.: Vol. 73, p. 31 Lievense, L. C., van’t Riet, K.: Convective Drying of Bacteria II. Factors Influencing Survival. Vol. 51, p. 71 Lin, J. see Lee, S.-M.: Vol. 87, p. 173 Linden, J. C., Haigh, J. R., Mirjalili, N., Phisaphalong, M.: Gas Concentration Effects on Secondary Metabolite Production by Plant Cell Cultures. Vol. 72, p. 27 Lipshutz, R. see Hannenhalli, S.: Vol. 77, p. 1 Lipson, D. S. see Ferro, A.: Vol. 78, p. 125 Little, D. see Drmanac, R.: Vol. 77, p. 75 Liu, B. see Banks, M. K.: Vol. 78, p. 75 Liu, C. see Honda, H.: Vol. 72, p. 157 Lohray, B. B.: Medical Biotechnology in India. Vol. 85, p. 215 Lueking, A. see Eickhoff, H.: Vol. 77, p. 103 Luo, J. see Yang, S.-T.: Vol. 87, p. 61 Lyberatos, G. see Pind, P. F.: Vol. 82, p. 135 MacLoughlin, P.F. see Kieran, P. M.: Vol. 67, p. 139 Macario, A. J. L. see Conway de Macario, E.: Vol. 81, p. 95 Madhusudhan, T. see Mukhopadhyay, A.: Vol. 86, p. 215 Malone, D. M. see Kieran, P. M.: Vol. 67, p. 139 Maloney, S. see Müller, R.: Vol. 61, p. 155 Mandenius, C.-F.: Electronic Noses for Bioreactor Monitoring. Vol. 66, p. 65 Markov, S. A., Bazin, M. J., Hall, D. O.: The Potential of Using Cyanobacteria in Photobioreactors for Hydrogen Production. Vol. 52, p. 59 Marteinsson, V.T. see Prieur, D.: Vol. 61, p. 23 Martín, J. F., Ullán, R. V., Casqueiro, J.: Novel Genes Involved in Cephalosporin Biosynthesis: The Three-component Isopenicillin N Epimerase System. Vol. 88, p. 91 Marx, A. see Pfefferle, W.: Vol. 79, p. 59
Author Index Volumes 51–88
273
Mathur, R. K. see Ghosh, A. C.: Vol. 56, p. 111 Matsushima, A. see Inada, Y.: Vol. 52, p. 129 Mauch, K. see Schmalzriedt, S.: Vol. 80, p. 19 Mazumdar-Shaw, K., Suryanarayan, S.: Commercialization of a Novel Fermentation Concept. Vol. 85, p. 29 McCaskill, D., Croteau, R.: Prospects for the Bioengineering of Isoprenoid Biosynthesis. Vol. 55, p. 107 McDaniel, R., Licari, P., Khosla, C.: Process Development and Metabolic Engineering for the Overproduction of Natural and Unnatural Polyketides. Vol. 73, p. 31 McDonell, T. J. see Bruckheimer, E. M.: Vol. 62, p. 75 McGall, G.H., Christians, F.C.: High-Density GeneChip Oligonucleotide Probe Arrays. Vol. 77, p. 21 McGovern, A. see Shaw, A. D.: Vol. 66, p. 83 McGowan, A. J. see McKenna, S. L.: Vol. 62, p. 1 McIntyre, M., Müller, C., Dynesen, J., Nielsen, J.: Metabolic Engineering of the Aspergillus. Vol. 73, p. 103 McIntyre, T.: Phytoremediation of Heavy Metals from Soils. Vol. 78, p. 97 McKenna, S. L., McGowan, A. J., Cotter, T. G.: Molecular Mechanisms of Programmed Cell Death. Vol. 62, p. 1 McLoughlin, A. J.: Controlled Release of Immobilized Cells as a Strategy to Regulate Ecological Competence of Inocula. Vol. 51, p. 1 Memelink, J., Kijne, J.W., van der Heijden, R., Verpoorte, R.: Genetic Modification of Plant Secondary Metabolite Pathways Using Transcriptional Regulators. Vol. 72, p. 103 Menachem, S. B. see Argyropoulos, D. S. : Vol. 57, p. 127 Menawat, A. S. see Gomes J.: Vol. 59, p. 1 Menge, M. see Mukerjee, J.: Vol. 68, p. 1 Merkle, S. A. see Dean, J. F. D.: Vol. 57, p. 1 Meyer, H. E. see Sickmann, A.: Vol. 83, p. 141 Minas, W. see Barber, M. S.: Vol. 88, p. 179 Mirjalili, N. see Linden, J.C.: Vol. 72, p. 27 Mishra, P. see Chand, S.: Vol. 85, p. 95 Mitchell, D.A., Berovic, M., Krieger, N.: Biochemical Engineering Aspects of Solid State Bioprocessing. Vol. 68, p. 61 Mitchell, R. J. see Gu, M. B.: Vol. 87, p. 269 Möckel, B. see Pfefferle, W.: Vol. 79, p. 59 Moeur, B. see Drmanac, R.: Vol. 77, p. 75 Mogensen, A. S., Dolfing, J., Haagensen, F., Ahring, B. K.: Potential for Anaerobic Conversion of Xenobiotics. Vol. 82, p. 69 Moore, J.C. see Arnold, F. H.: Vol. 58, p. 1 Moracci, M. see van der Oost, J.: Vol. 61, p. 87 Mosier, N.S., Hall, P., Ladisch, C.M., Ladisch, M.R.: Reaction Kinetics, Molecular Action, and Mechanisms of Cellulolytic Proteins. Vol. 65, p. 23 Mreyen, M. see Sickmann, A.: Vol. 83, p. 141 Mueller, U., Huebner, S.: Economic Aspects of Amino Acids Production. Vol. 79, p. 137 Mühlemann, H.M., Bungay, H.R.: Research Perspectives for Bioconversion of Scrap Paper. Vol. 65, p. 193 Mukherjee, J., Menge, M.: Progress and Prospects of Ergot Alkaloid Research. Vol. 68, p. 1 Mukhopadhyay, A.: Inclusion Bodies and Purification of Proteins in Biologically Active Forms. Vol. 56, p. 61 Mukhopadhyay, A. see Bhatia, P.K.: Vol. 64, p. 155 Mukhopadhyay, A., Basu, S. K.: Intracellular Delivery of Drugs to Macrophages. Vol. 84, p. 183 Mukhopadhyay, A., Madhusudhan, T., Kumar, R.: Hematopoietic Stem Cells: Clinical Requirements and Developments in Ex-Vivo Culture. Vol. 86, p. 215 Müller, C. see McIntyre, M.: Vol. 73, p. 103
274
Author Index Volumes 51–88
Müller, R., Antranikian, G., Maloney, S., Sharp, R.: Thermophilic Degradation of Environmental Pollutants. Vol. 61, p. 155 Müllner, S.: The Impact of Proteomics on Products and Processes. Vol. 83, p. 1 Nagatome, H. see Kino-oka, M.: Vol. 72, p. 183 Nagy, E.: Three-Phase Oxygen Absorption and its Effect on Fermentation. Vol. 75, p. 51 Nath, S.: Molecular Mechanisms of Energy Transduction in Cells: Engineering Applications and Biological Implications. Vol. 85, p. 125 Necina, R. see Strancar, A.: Vol. 76, p. 49 Nielsen, J. see Christensen, B.: Vol. 66, p. 209 Nielsen, J. see Gunnarsson, N.: Vol. 88, p. 137 Nielsen, J. see Krabben, P.: Vol. 60, p. 125 Nielsen, J. see McIntyre, M.: Vol. 73, p. 103 Nisbet, L.J. see Hill, D.C.: Vol. 59, p. 73 Nishimura, H. see Inada, Y.: Vol. 52, p. 123 Nordhoff, E. see Cahill, D.J.: Vol. 83, p. 177 Nordhoff, E. see Eickhoff, H.: Vol. 77, p. 103 Nouwens, A. S., Walsh, B. J., Cordwell S. J.: Application of Proteomics to Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Vol. 83, p. 117 Nyarsik, L. see Eickhoff, H.: Vol. 77, p. 103 Ochsner, U. A., Hembach, T., Fiechter, A.: Produktion of Rhamnolipid Biosurfactants.Vol. 53, p. 89 O’Connor, R.: Survival Factors and Apoptosis: Vol. 62, p. 137 Ogawa, J. see Shimizu, S.: Vol. 58, p. 45 Ohta, H.: Biocatalytic Asymmetric Decarboxylation. Vol. 63, p. 1 Oliverio, S. see Autuori, F.: Vol. 62, p. 129 van der Oost, J., Ciaramella, M., Moracci, M., Pisani, F.M., Rossi, M., de Vos, W.M.: Molecular Biology of Hyperthermophilic Archaea. Vol. 61, p. 87 Orlich, B., Schomäcker, R.: Enzyme Catalysis in Reverse Micelles. Vol. 75, p. 185 Orru, R.V.A., Archelas, A., Furstoss, R., Faber, K.: Epoxide Hydrolases and Their Synthetic Applications. Vol. 63, p. 145 Osbourn, A. E. see Haralampidis, D.: Vol. 75, p. 31 Oude Elferink, S. J. W. H. see Stams, A. J. M.: Vol. 81, p. 31 Padmanaban, G.: Drug Targets in Malaria Parasites. Vol. 84, p. 123 Panda, A.K.: Bioprocessing of Therapeutic Proteins from the Inclusion Bodies of Escherichia coli. Vol. 85, p. 43 Paul, G.C., Thomas, C.R.: Characterisation of Mycelial Morphology Using Image Analysis. Vol. 60, p. 1 Perrier, M. see Dochain, D.: Vol. 56, p. 147 Pevzner, P. A. see Hannenhalli, S.: Vol. 77, p. 1 Pfefferle, W., Möckel, B., Bathe, B., Marx, A.: Biotechnological Manufacture of Lysine. Vol. 79, p. 59 Phisaphalong, M. see Linden, J.C.: Vol. 72, p. 27 Piacentini, G. see Autuori, F.: Vol. 62, p. 129 Pind, P. F., Angelidaki, I., Ahring, B. K., Stamatelatou, K., Lyberatos, G.: Monitoring and Control of Anaerobic Reactors. Vol. 82, p. 135 Piredda, L. see Autuori, F.: Vol. 62, p. 129 Pisani, F.M. see van der Oost, J.: Vol. 61, p. 87 Plattner, H. see Brakhage, A. A.: Vol. 88, p. 45 Podgornik, A. see Strancar, A.: Vol. 76, p. 49 Podgornik, A., Tennikova, T. B.: Chromatographic Reactors Based on Biological Activity. Vol. 76, p. 165 Pohl, M.: Protein Design on Pyruvate Decarboxylase (PDC) by Site-Directed Mutagenesis. Vol. 58, p. 15
Author Index Volumes 51–88
275
Poirier, Y.: Production of Polyesters in Transgenic Plants. Vol. 71, p. 209 Pons, M.-N., Vivier, H.: Beyond Filamentous Species. Vol. 60, p. 61 Pons, M.-N., Vivier, H.: Biomass Quantification by Image Analysis. Vol. 66, p. 133 Prazeres, D. M. F. see Fernandes, P.: Vol. 80, p. 115 Prieur, D., Marteinsson, V.T.: Prokaryotes Living Under Elevated Hydrostatic Pressure.Vol. 61, p. 23 Prior, A. see Wolfgang, J.: Vol. 76, p. 233 Pulz, O., Scheibenbogen, K.: Photobioreactors: Design and Performance with Respect to Light Energy Input. Vol. 59, p. 123 Raghavarao, K. S. M. S., Dueser, M., Todd, P.: Multistage Magnetic and Electrophoretic Extraction of Cells, Particles and Macromolecules. Vol. 68, p. 139 Raghavarao, K. S. M. S. see Krishna, S. H.: Vol. 75, p. 119 Ramanathan, K. see Xie, B.: Vol. 64, p. 1 Raskin, L. see Hofman-Bang, J.: Vol. 81, p. 151 Reichert, A. see Barber, M. S.: Vol. 88, p. 179 Reuss, M. see Schmalzriedt, S.: Vol. 80, p. 19 Riedel, K., Kunze, G., König, A.: Microbial Sensor on a Respiratory Basis for Wastewater Monitoring. Vol. 75, p. 81 van’t Riet, K. see Lievense, L. C.: Vol. 51, p. 71 Roberts, S. M. see Allan, J. V.: Vol. 63, p. 125 Robinson, A. see Brazma, A.: Vol. 77, p. 113 Rock, S. A.: Vegetative Covers for Waste Containment. Vol. 78, p. 157 Roehr, M.: History of Biotechnology in Austria. Vol. 69, p. 125 Rogers, P. L., Shin, H. S., Wang, B.: Biotransformation for L-Ephedrine Production. Vol. 56, p. 33 Rossi, M. see van der Oost, J.: Vol. 61, p. 87 Rowland, J. J. see Shaw, A. D.: Vol. 66, p. 83 Roy, I., Sharma, S., Gupta, M. N.: Smart Biocatalysts: Design and Applications. Vol. 86, p. 159 Roychoudhury, P. K., Srivastava, A., Sahai, V.: Extractive Bioconversion of Lactic Acid. Vol. 53, p. 61 Rusin, P., Ehrlich, H. L.: Developments in Microbial Leaching – Mechanisms of Manganese Solubilization. Vol. 52, p. 1 Russell, N.J.: Molecular Adaptations in Psychrophilic Bacteria: Potential for Biotechnological Applications. Vol. 61, p. 1 Sablon, E., Contreras, B., Vandamme, E.: Antimicrobial Peptides of Lactic Acid Bacteria: Mode of Action, Genetics and Biosynthesis. Vol. 68, p. 21 Sahai, V. see Singh, A.: Vol. 51, p. 47 Sahai, V. see Roychoudhury, P. K.: Vol. 53, p. 61 Saha-Möller, C. R. see Adam, W.: Vol. 63, p. 73 Sahm, H. see Eggeling, L.: Vol. 54, p. 1 Sahm, H. see de Graaf, A.A.: Vol. 73, p. 9 Sahoo, G. C., Dutta, N. N.: Perspectives in Liquid Membrane Extraction of Cephalosporin Antibiotics: Vol. 75, p. 209 Saleemuddin, M.: Bioaffinity Based Immobilization of Enzymes. Vol. 64, p. 203 Santos, H. see da Costa, M.S.: Vol. 61, p. 117 Sarkans, U. see Brazma, A.: Vol. 77, p. 113 Sarkiss, M. see Bruckheimer, E. M.: Vol. 62, p. 75 Sauer, U.: Evolutionary Engineering of Industrially Important Microbial Phenotypes. Vol. 73, p. 129 Scheibenbogen, K. see Pulz, O.: Vol. 59, p. 123 Scheper, T. see Lammers, F.: Vol. 64, p. 35 Schmalzriedt, S., Jenne, M., Mauch, K., Reuss, M.: Integration of Physiology and Fluid Dynamics. Vol. 80, p. 19 Schmidt, J. E. see Skiadas, I. V.: Vol. 82, p. 35
276
Author Index Volumes 51–88
Schmitt, E. K., Hoff, B., Kück, U.: Regulation of Cephalosporin Biosynthesis. Vol. 88, p.1 Schneider, K. see Beyeler, W.: Vol. 70, p. 139 Schomäcker, R. see Orlich, B.: Vol. 75, p. 185 Schreier, P.: Enzymes and Flavour Biotechnology. Vol. 55, p. 51 Schreier, P. see Adam, W.: Vol. 63, p. 73 Schroeder, W. A. see Johnson, E. A.: Vol. 53, p. 119 Schubert, W.: Topological Proteomics, Toponomics, MELK-Technology. Vol. 83, p. 189 Schügerl, K., Gerlach, S. R., Siedenberg, D.: Influence of the Process Parameters on the Morphology and Enzyme Production of Aspergilli. Vol. 60, p. 195 Schügerl, K. see Seidel, G.: Vol. 66, p. 115 Schügerl, K.: Recovery of Proteins and Microorganisms from Cultivation Media by Foam Flotation. Vol. 68, p. 191 Schügerl, K.: Development of Bioreaction Engineering. Vol. 70, p. 41 Schügerl, K. see Tollnick, C.: Vol. 86, p. 1 Schumann, W.: Function and Regulation of Temperature-Inducible Bacterial Proteins on the Cellular Metabolism. Vol. 67, p. 1 Schuster, K. C.: Monitoring the Physiological Status in Bioprocesses on the Cellular Level. Vol. 66, p. 185 Schwab, P. see Banks, M. K.: Vol. 78, p. 75 Scouroumounis, G. K. see Winterhalter, P.: Vol. 55, p. 73 Scragg, A. H.: The Production of Aromas by Plant Cell Cultures. Vol. 55, p. 239 Sedlak, M. see Ho, N. W. Y.: Vol. 65, p. 163 Seidel, G., Tollnick, C., Beyer, M., Schügerl, K.: On-line and Off-line Monitoring of the Production of Cephalosporin C by Acremonium Chrysogenum. Vol. 66, p. 115 Seidel, G. see Tollnick, C.: Vol. 86, p. 1 Shafto, J. see Drmanac, R.: Vol. 77, p. 75 Sharma, A. see Johri, B. N: Vol. 84, p. 49 Sharma, M., Swarup, R.: The Way Ahead – The New Technology in an Old Society. Vol. 84, p. 1 Sharma, S. see Roy, I.: Vol. 86, p. 159 Shamlou, P. A. see Yim, S.S.: Vol. 67, p. 83 Shapira, M. see Gutman, A. L.: Vol. 52, p. 87 Sharp, R. see Müller, R.: Vol. 61, p. 155 Shaw, A. D., Winson, M. K., Woodward, A. M., McGovern, A., Davey, H. M., Kaderbhai, N., Broadhurst, D., Gilbert, R. J., Taylor, J., Timmins, E. M., Alsberg, B. K., Rowland, J. J., Goodacre, R., Kell, D. B.: Rapid Analysis of High-Dimensional Bioprocesses Using Multivariate Spectroscopies and Advanced Chemometrics. Vol. 66, p. 83 Shi, N.-Q. see Jeffries, T. W.: Vol. 65, p. 117 Shimizu, K. see Hasegawa, S.: Vol. 51, p. 91 Shimizu, S., Ogawa, J., Kataoka, M., Kobayashi, M.: Screening of Novel Microbial for the Enzymes Production of Biologically and Chemically Useful Compounds. Vol. 58, p. 45 Shimizu, S., Kataoka, M.: Production of Chiral C3- and C4-Units by Microbial Enzymes. Vol. 63, p. 109 Shin, H. S. see Rogers, P. L.: Vol. 56, p. 33 Sickmann, A., Mreyen, M., Meyer, H. E.: Mass Spectrometry – a Key Technology in Proteome Research. Vol. 83, p. 141 Siebert, P. D. see Zhumabayeva, B.: Vol. 86, p. 191 Siedenberg, D. see Schügerl, K.: Vol. 60, p. 195 Singh, A., Kuhad, R. Ch., Sahai, V., Ghosh, P.: Evaluation of Biomass. Vol. 51, p. 47 Singh, A. see Kuhad, R. C.: Vol. 57, p. 45 Singh, R. P., Al-Rubeai, M.: Apoptosis and Bioprocess Technology. Vol. 62, p. 167 Skiadas, I. V., Gavala, H. N., Schmidt, J. E., Ahring, B. K.: Anaerobic Granular Sludge and Biofilm Reactors. Vol. 82, p. 35 Smith, J. S. see Banks, M. K.: Vol. 78, p. 75
Author Index Volumes 51–88
277
Sohail, M., Southern, E. M.: Oligonucleotide Scanning Arrays: Application to High-Throughput Screening for Effective Antisense Reagents and the Study of Nucleic Acid Interactions. Vol. 77, p. 43 Sonnleitner, B.: New Concepts for Quantitative Bioprocess Research and Development.Vol. 54, p. 155 Sonnleitner, B.: Instrumentation of Biotechnological Processes. Vol. 66, p. 1 Southern, E. M. see Sohail, M.: Vol. 77, p. 43 Spröte, P. see Brakhage, A. A.: Vol. 88, p. 45 Srinivas, N. D. see Krishna, S. H.: Vol. 75, p. 119 Srivastava, A. see Roychoudhury, P. K.: Vol. 53, p. 61 Stafford, D.E., Yanagimachi, K.S., Stephanopoulos, G.: Metabolic Engineering of Indene Bioconversion in Rhodococcus sp. Vol. 73, p. 85 Stamatelatou, K. see Pind, P. F.: Vol. 82, p. 135 Stams, A. J. M., Oude Elferink, S. J. W. H., Westermann, P.: Metabolic Interactions Between Methanogenic Consortia and Anaerobic Respiring Bacteria. Vol. 81, p. 31 Stark, D., von Stockar, U.: In Situ Product Removal (ISPR) in Whole Cell Biotechnology During the Last Twenty Years. Vol. 80, p. 149 Stefuca, V., Gemeiner, P.: Investigation of Catalytic Properties of Immobilized Enzymes and Cells by Flow Microcalorimetry. Vol. 64, p. 69 Steinbüchel, A., Hein, S.: Biochemical and Molecular Basis of Microbial Synthesis of Polyhydroxyalkanoates in Microorganisms. Vol. 71, p. 81 Stephanopoulos, G., Gill, R.T.: After a Decade of Progress, an Expanded Role for Metabolic Engineering. Vol. 73, p. 1 Stephanopoulos, G. see Stafford, D. E.: Vol. 73, p. 85 von Stockar, U., van der Wielen, L. A. M.: Back to Basics: Thermodynamics in Biochemical Engineering. Vol. 80, p. 1 von Stockar, U. see Stark, D.: Vol. 80, p. 149 Straathof, A. J. J. see Bruggink, A.: Vol. 80, p. 69 Strancar, A., Podgornik, A., Barut, M., Necina, R.: Short Monolithic Columns as Stationary Phases for Biochromatography. Vol. 76, p. 49 Suryanarayan, S. see Mazumdar-Shaw, K.: Vol. 85, p. 29 Suurnäkki, A., Tenkanen, M., Buchert, J., Viikari, L.: Hemicellulases in the Bleaching of Chemical Pulp. Vol. 57, p. 261 Svec, F.: Capillary Electrochromatography: a Rapidly Emerging Separation Method. Vol. 76, p. 1 Svec, F. see Xie, S.: Vol. 76, p. 87 Swanson, D. see Drmanac, R.: Vol. 77, p. 75 Swarup, R. see Sharma, M.: Vol. 84, p. 1 Tabata, H.: Paclitaxel Production by Plant-Cell-Culture Technology. Vol. 87, p. 1 Tang, Y.-J. see Zhong, J.-J.: Vol. 87, p. 25 Taya, M. see Kino-oka, M.: Vol. 72, p. 183 Taylor, J. see Shaw, A. D.: Vol. 66, p. 83 Tenkanen, M. see Suurnäkki, A.: Vol. 57, p. 261 Tennikova, T. B. see Podgornik, A.: Vol. 76, p. 165 Thiericke, R. see Grabely, S.: Vol. 64, p. 101 Thomas, C. R. see Paul, G. C.: Vol. 60, p. 1 Thömmes, J.: Fluidized Bed Adsorption as a Primary Recovery Step in Protein Purification. Vol. 58, p. 185 Timmens, E. M. see Shaw, A. D.: Vol. 66, p. 83 Todd, P. see Raghavarao, K. S. M. S.: Vol. 68, p. 139 Tolan, J. S., Guenette, M.: Using Enzymes in Pulp Bleaching: Mill Applications.Vol. 57, p. 289 Tolan, J. S., Foody, B.: Cellulase from Submerged Fermentation. Vol. 65, p. 41 Tollnick, C. see Seidel, G.: Vol. 66, p. 115
278
Author Index Volumes 51–88
Tollnick, C., Seidel, G., Beyer, M., Schügerl, K.: Investigations of the Production of Cephalosporin C by Acremonium chrysogenum. Vol. 86, p. 1 Torget, R. W. see Lee, Y. Y.: Vol. 65, p. 93 Traganos, F. see Darzynkiewicz, Z.: Vol. 62, p. 33 Trip, H. see Evers, M. E.: Vol. 88, p. 111 Trojanowska, M. see Haralampidis, D.: Vol. 75, p. 31 Tsao, D. T.: Overview of Phytotechnologies. Vol. 78, p. 1 Tsao, G. T., Cao, N. J., Du, J., Gong, C. S.: Production of Multifunctional Organic Acids from Renewable Resources. Vol. 65, p. 243 Tsao, G. T. see Gong, C. S.: Vol. 65, p. 207 Tsao, G.T. see Katzen, R.: Vol. 70, p. 77 Tüncher, A. see Brakhage, A. A.: Vol. 88, p. 45 Tyagi, A. K., Dhar, N.: Recent Advances in Tuberculosis Research in India. Vol. 84, p. 211 Tyagi, A. K., Khurana, J. P.: Plant Molecular Biology and Biotechnology Research in the PostRecombinant DNA Era. Vol. 84, p. 91 Ukrainczyk, T. see Drmanac, R.: Vol. 77, p. 75 Ullán, R. V. see Martín, J. F.: Vol. 88, p. 91 Uyama, H. see Kobayashi, S.: Vol. 71, p. 241 VanBogelen, R. A.: Probing the Molecular Physiology of the Microbial Organism, Escherichia coli using Proteomics. Vol. 83, p. 27 Vandamme, E. see Sablon, E.: Vol. 68, p. 21 Verpoorte, R. see Memelink, J.: Vol. 72, p. 103 Viikari, L. see Suurnäkki, A.: Vol. 57, p. 261 Vilo, J. see Brazma, A.: Vol. 77, p. 113 Vingron, M. see Brazma, A.: Vol. 77, p. 113 Virdi, J. S. see Johri, B. N: Vol. 84, p. 49 Vivier, H. see Pons, M.-N.: Vol. 60, p. 61 Vivier, H. see Pons, M.-N.: Vol. 66, p. 133 de Vos, W.M. see van der Oost, J.: Vol. 61, p. 87 Wahlbom, C.F. see Hahn-Hägerdal, B.: Vol. 73, p. 53 Wall, M. B. see Farrell, R. L.: Vol. 57, p. 197 van der Walle, G. A. M., de Koning, G. J. M., Weusthuis, R. A., Eggink, G.: Properties, Modifications and Applications of Biopolyester. Vol. 71, p. 263 Walsh, B. J. see Nouwens, A.S.: Vol. 83, p. 117 Walter, G. see Eickhoff, H.: Vol. 77, p. 103 Wang, B. see Rogers, P. L.: Vol. 56, p. 33 Wang, R. see Webb, C.: Vol. 87, p. 195 Webb, C., Koutinas, A. A., Wang, R.: Developing a Sustainable Bioprocessing Strategy Based on a Generic Feedstock. Vol. 87, p. 195 Weichold, O. see Adam, W.: Vol. 63, p. 73 van der Werf, M. J., de Bont, J. A. M. Leak, D. J.: Opportunities in Microbial Biotransformation of Monoterpenes. Vol. 55, p. 147 Westermann, P. see Hofman-Bang, J.: Vol. 81, p. 151 Westermann, P. see Stams, A. J. M.: Vol. 81, p. 31 Weuster-Botz, D., de Graaf, A. A.: Reaction Engineering Methods to Study Intracellular Metabolite Concentrations. Vol. 54, p. 75 Weusthuis, R. see Kessler, B.: Vol. 71, p. 159 Weusthuis, R. A. see van der Walle, G. J. M.: Vol. 71, p. 263 Wiechert, W., de Graaf, A. A.: In Vivo Stationary Flux Analysis by 13C-Labeling Experiments. Vol. 54, p. 109 van der Wielen, L. A. M. see Bruggink, A.: Vol. 80, p. 69 van der Wielen, L. A. M. see von Stockar, U.: Vol. 80, p. 1
Author Index Volumes 51–88
279
Wiesmann, U.: Biological Nitrogen Removal from Wastewater. Vol. 51, p. 113 Williamson, N. M. see Allan, J. V.: Vol. 63, p. 125 Wilson, D. B., Irwin, D. C.: Genetics and Properties of Cellulases. Vol. 65, p. 1 Winson, M. K. see Shaw, A. D.: Vol. 66, p. 83 Winterhalter, P., Skouroumounis, G. K.: Glycoconjugated Aroma Compounds: Occurence, Role and Biotechnological Transformation. Vol. 55, p. 73 Witholt, B. see Kessler, B.: Vol. 71, p. 159 Wolfgang, J., Prior, A.: Continuous Annular Chromatography. Vol. 76, p. 233 Woodley, J. M.: Advances in Enzyme Technology – UK Contributions. Vol. 70, p. 93 Woodward, A. M. see Shaw, A. D.: Vol. 66, p. 83 Wrigley, S. K. see Hill, D. C.: Vol. 59, p. 73 Xia, L. see Cen, P.: Vol. 65, p. 69 Xie, B., Ramanathan, K., Danielsson, B.: Principles of Enzyme Thermistor Systems: Applications to Biomedical and Other Measurements. Vol. 64, p. 1 Xie, S., Allington, R. W., Fréchet, J. M. J., Svec, F.: Porous Polymer Monoliths: An Alternative to Classical Beads. Vol. 76, p. 87 Xu, C. see Drmanac, R.: Vol. 77, p. 75 Yanagimachi, K.S. see Stafford, D.E.: Vol. 73, p. 85 Yang, S.-T., Luo, J., Chen, C.: A Fibrous-Bed Bioreactor for Continuous Production of Monoclonal Antibody by Hybridoma. Vol. 87, p. 61 Yim, S. S., Shamlou, P. A.: The Engineering Effects of Fluids Flow and Freely Suspended Biological Macro-Materials and Macromolecules. Vol. 67, p. 83 Zhang, S., Chu, J., Zhuang, Y.: A Multi-Scale Study on Industrial Fermentation Processes and Their Optimization. Vol. 87, p. 97 Zheng, D. see Hofman-Bang, J.: Vol. 81, p. 151 Zhong, J.-J.: Biochemical Engineering of the Production of Plant-Specific Secondary Metabolites by Cell Suspension Cultures. Vol. 72, p. 1 Zhong, J.-J., Tang, Y.-J.: Submerged Cultivation of Medicinal Mushrooms for Production of Valuable Bioactive Metabolites. Vol. 87, p. 25 Zhuang, Y. see Zhang, S.: Vol. 87, p. 97 Zhumabayeva, B., Chenchik, A., Siebert, P. D., Herrler, M.: Disease Profiling Arrays: Reverse Format cDNA Arrays Complimentary to Microarrays. Vol. 86, p. 191 Zollinger, N. see Ferro, A.: Vol. 78, p. 125 van Zyl, W. H. see Hahn-Hägerdal, B.: Vol. 73, p. 53
Subject Index
ABC transporter 130 7-ACA 180, 184, 190, 199 Acetyl-CoA:DAC acetyltransferase 13, 17, 18 Acetyl-CoA synthetase 116 O-Acetylhomoserine sulfhydrylase 5 Acinetobacter spec. 37 Acremonium chrysogenum 2, 48, 93, 146, 180, 192 Actinorhodin 160, 173 Active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) 180 Active site 104 ACV synthetase (ACVS) 20, 114–116, 122, 125, 130, 143, 144, 242 ACV tripeptide 35 Acyl-CoA 58 – /isopenicillin N acyltransferase (AT) 143 Acyl-CoA synthetases 11 7-ADCA 184, 193 Adenylate domains 228 Adipate 153 Adipoyl-7-ADCA 153 Aflatoxin biosynthesis 21 Alanine racemase 99 Amino acid oxidase 202 Amino acid racemases 96, 238 Amino acids 92, 163 – –, aromatic 169, 171 Aminoadipate 114–129 a-Aminoadipate reductase 4 l-a-Aminoadipic acid 3, 143, 162 d-(l-a-Aminoadipyl)-l-cysteinyl-d-valine synthetase (ACVS) 8 7-Aminocephalosporanic acid (7-ACA) 36, 37 7-Aminodeacetoxycephalosporanic acid (7-ADCA) 36 Ammonia 123, 126 AnCF 46 6-APA 184 Arogenate dehydrogenase 170
Aspergillus flavus 21 Aspergillus fumigatus 30 Aspergillus nidulans 22, 26, 30, 45, 145 Avermectin 173 Bacillus polymyxa 164 Bacillus subtilis 228 Bahlimycin 166 Benomyl, resistance 33 Biosynthesis genes, clustering 52 13C-labelling
151 CAH 205 Carbon source regulation 62 CCAAT-box binding protein 69 cDNA library 101 Cefalotin 181 cefD1/cefD2 13, 16 cefEF 13, 17, 25, 34 cefG 13, 17, 35 Cephalosporins 93, 113 Cephalosporin C 2, 48, 146, 180 – production 102 – regulator CPCR1 73 Cephalosporin-based b-lactams 179 Cephalosporium acremonium 2 Cephamycin 116, 117, 162 Chloroeremomycin 166 Claviceps purpurea 223 Complex polyketides 160 CPC 180 – purification 198 CPC acylase 200 CPCR1 22, 27 cpcR1 26, 29, 31, 34 CRE1 22 cre1 25, 31, 32 CREA 22 Cryphonectria parasitica 21 Cyclodepsipeptides 219, 248 Cyclodipeptides 221 Cyclosporins 99, 252 Cyclosporin analogs 254
282 Cyclosporin synthetase gene 252 Cystathionine-g-lyase 7 Cysteine 5, 114, 115, 120–125 Dane salt method 208 DAO 202 DAOC hydroxylase 12 Deacetoxycephalosporin C (DAOC) 12, 36 Deacetyl-7-ACA 205 Deacetylcephalosporin C (DAC) 12 DHAP synthase 170 2,4-Diaminobutyric acid 164 3,5-Dihydroxyphenylglycine 166, 169 Dimethylallyl-tryptophan synthase 256 Elasticity coefficients 142 Enniatins 248 Enoyl-CoA isomerase 100 Entner-Doudoroff pathway 153 Enzymes, multifunctional 97 Epimerases 95 Epimerization domains 98 Ergot peptide alkaloids 256 Erythromycin 194 Excretion 122, 129, 130 FadA, a-subunit 21 Fatty acids 100 – –, methyl-branched 103 Flux control coefficients 142 Flux-split ratio 155 Fungi, filamentous 92 –, marine 106 –, nonribosomal peptides 219 –, penicillin biosynthesis 45 Fusarium solani 37 Fusarium sporotrichioides 21 G protein 74 GAC 202, 203 Gel electrophoresis, pulsed-field 31 Gene disruption 34 Gene products, compartmentation 60 Glucose repression 24 Glycopeptide antibiotics 166, 167 – –, precursor requirements 170 HAP-complex 30 HC-toxin 99 HC-toxin synthetase 99 p-Hydroxyphenylglycine 166, 168 Hydroxyproline-2-epimerase 100 b-Hydroxytyrosine 166 Hygromycin B, resistance 33 Hyphal differentiation 21
Subject Index Imine, transitional 96 Infectious diseases 92 IPN epimerase 102 Isomerases, cis-trans 95 Isopenicillin N (IPN) 115–117, 119, 129, 143 Isopenicillin N synthase (IPNS) 10, 19, 56, 113–116, 143, 144 Kallichroma tethys 106
b-Lactams 180, 242 – antibiotics 2, 92 –, cephalosporin-based 179 – synthesis, semi-synthetic 183 LLD-ACV 143 Lyases, intramolecular 95 lys2 20 Lysine 118–124, 128, 131 Lysine 6-amino transferase 162 Magnaporthe grisea 26 Marine fungus 106 mecB 7 Metabolic control analysis 140 Metabolic flux analysis 147 Metabolites, secondary 93 Methionine 18 Methylacyl-CoA racemase 11, 100 Methylenomycin 173 N-Methyltransferases 240 Microbody 116–118, 128, 131 Mutations, trans-acting 73 NADPH 171 Neurospora crassa 22, 26 NIT2 22 Nitrate reductase 4 Norleucine 21 NRPS 219 NRPS-encoding genes 222 Nystatin 174 Optical isomers 96 Oxidoreductases, intramolecular 95 6-Oxopiperidine-2-carboxylic acid (OPC) 119, 120 PACC 22, 46, 63 pacC 23, 31 Packed mycelium volume 197 pcbAB 13, 15, 25, 34 pcbC 13, 15, 25, 34 Penicillin, effect of dissolved oxygen concentration 144
Subject Index –, maximum theoretical yield 156 –, NADPH requirements 172 –, pathway 143 –, precursor requirements 161, 164 –, principal nodes 156 Penicillin biosynthesis 45, 218 Penicillin G amidase 186, 209 Penicillin N 36 Penicillium chrysogenum 23, 30, 37, 45, 193, 223 – –, adipoyl-7 ADCA production 153 – –, overexpression of biosynthetic genes 145 – –, pathway to l-a-aminoadipic acid 161 – –, pathway to cysteine 157 – –, pathway to penicillin V 143 – –, stoichiometric model 150, 156 PENR1 30 Pentose-phosphate pathway (PP pathway) 152, 171, 173 Peptaibols 219 Peptide antibiotics 218 Peptide intermediates 92 Peptide synthases, nonribosomal 166 Peptide synthesis, nonribosomal 217 Peptide synthetase 217 Peptides, nonribosomal 97 Permease 123–127 Peroxisomal targeting signal 115–120, 128 Peroxisome 114–122, 128 Phenoxyacetic acid (POA) 116, 126, 127 Phenylacetic acid (PA) 113, 116, 119, 126–129 Phenylacetyl-coenzyme A ligase (PCL) 114, 116, 118, 128 Phleomycin, resistance 33 Phosphate 122–126 Phosphopanteteine 98 4¢-Phosphopantetheine-protein transferases (PPTs) 233 4¢-Phosphopantetheinyl transferase 54 Pigment synthesis 21 Polyketide synthases (PKS) 219, 231 Polyketides, NADPH requirements 173 –, aromatic 160 –, precursor requirements 160 Polymyxin 164 Post-transcriptional regulation 74 PPTs 233 Prinicpal nodes 155 Production strains 75 Promoter structures 61 Promoters 31 –, pcbC 30, 35 Protein, oxygen-binding heme 36
283 –, RFX 26 Proton motive force (pmf) 124–130 Pseudomonas diminuta 37 Pseudo-steady state assumption 149 Pyridoxal phosphate 96 Racemases 95 Rate-limiting steps 35 Reciprocal labeling 153 Regulation, glucose-dependent 33 Reporter genes, gusA 34 – –, lacZ 34 Resistance, benomyl 33 –, hygromycin B 33 –, phleomycin 33 Respiration pathway, alternative 21 Reverse transsulfuration pathway 7 RFX transcription factor 22 RFX/winged-helix family 26 Rhodotorula gracilis 37 Saccharomyces cerevisiae 26 Saccharopolyspora erythraea 194 Schiff base 104 Schizosaccharomyces pombe 26 Steady state flux 141 Stoichiometric coefficient 148 Streptomyces ambofaciens 161 Streptomyces avermitilis 173 Streptomyces clavuligerus 162, 193 Streptomyces coelicolor 173 Streptomyces fradiae 161 Streptomyces glaucescens 145 Streptomyces lividans, actinorhodin production 160, 173 – –, stoichiometric model 150 Streptomyces noursei 174 Sulfate 120, 125, 126 Sulfur network 19 Targeted inactivation 101 TDA 180 Teichoplanin 166 –, precursor requirements 170 Tetracenomycin C 146 Thioesterase 104, 228, 239, 247 Thiolation 231 Titer improvement 36 Tolypocladium niveum 238 Transcript, cre1 25 Transcript levels 18 Transcription, glucose 19 –, pH-dependent 19 Transcription factor 22 – –, CPCR1 26
284 Transcription factor – –, CRE1 26, 32 – –, PACC 26, 32 – –, RFX-family 26 Transcriptional map 101 Transcriptional regulation 19 Transferases, intramolecular 95 Transformants, non-producing 102 Transformation system 33 Transporter 122–130 Trichoderma reesei 36 Trichothecene 21 Tripeptide d-(l-a-aminoadipyl)-l-cysteinyld-valine (ACV) 8
Subject Index TTA 180 b-Tubulin 33 Tyrocidine synthetase 231, 232 Undecylprogidin 173 Vacuole 114, 115, 118, 125 Valine 5, 114, 115, 122–125 Vancomycin 166 Velvet A 72 Vitreoscilla 36 Zinc fingers, C2H2type 25 – –, transcription factors 24