bacillus methanolicus
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2021 ◽  
Vol 188 ◽  
pp. 105972
Author(s):  
Megan Gruenberg ◽  
Marta Irla ◽  
Sebastian Myllek ◽  
Karen Draths

Author(s):  
Luciana Fernandes Brito ◽  
Marta Irla ◽  
Ingemar Nærdal ◽  
Simone Balzer Le ◽  
Baudoin Delépine ◽  
...  

The use of methanol as carbon source for biotechnological processes has recently attracted great interest due to its relatively low price, high abundance, high purity, and the fact that it is a non-food raw material. In this study, methanol-based production of 5-aminovalerate (5AVA) was established using recombinant Bacillus methanolicus strains. 5AVA is a building block of polyamides and a candidate to become the C5 platform chemical for the production of, among others, δ-valerolactam, 5-hydroxy-valerate, glutarate, and 1,5-pentanediol. In this study, we test five different 5AVA biosynthesis pathways, whereof two directly convert L-lysine to 5AVA and three use cadaverine as an intermediate. The conversion of L-lysine to 5AVA employs lysine 2-monooxygenase (DavB) and 5-aminovaleramidase (DavA), encoded by the well-known Pseudomonas putida cluster davBA, among others, or lysine α-oxidase (RaiP) in the presence of hydrogen peroxide. Cadaverine is converted either to γ-glutamine-cadaverine by glutamine synthetase (SpuI) or to 5-aminopentanal through activity of putrescine oxidase (Puo) or putrescine transaminase (PatA). Our efforts resulted in proof-of-concept 5AVA production from methanol at 50°C, enabled by two pathways out of the five tested with the highest titer of 0.02 g l–1. To our knowledge, this is the first report of 5AVA production from methanol in methylotrophic bacteria, and the recombinant strains and knowledge generated should represent a valuable basis for further improved 5AVA production from methanol.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kerstin Schultenkämper ◽  
Desirée D. Gütle ◽  
Marina Gil López ◽  
Laura B. Keller ◽  
Lin Zhang ◽  
...  

The Gram-positive Bacillus methanolicus shows plasmid-dependent methylotrophy. This facultative ribulose monophosphate (RuMP) cycle methylotroph possesses two fructose bisphosphate aldolases (FBA) with distinct kinetic properties. The chromosomally encoded FBAC is the major glycolytic aldolase. The gene for the major gluconeogenic aldolase FBAP is found on the natural plasmid pBM19 and is induced during methylotrophic growth. The crystal structures of both enzymes were solved at 2.2 Å and 2.0 Å, respectively, and they suggested amino acid residue 51 to be crucial for binding fructose-1,6-bisphosphate (FBP) as substrate and amino acid residue 140 for active site zinc atom coordination. As FBAC and FBAP differed at these positions, site-directed mutagenesis (SDM) was performed to exchange one or both amino acid residues of the respective proteins. The aldol cleavage reaction was negatively affected by the amino acid exchanges that led to a complete loss of glycolytic activity of FBAP. However, both FBAC and FBAP maintained gluconeogenic aldol condensation activity, and the amino acid exchanges improved the catalytic efficiency of the major glycolytic aldolase FBAC in gluconeogenic direction at least 3-fold. These results confirmed the importance of the structural differences between FBAC and FBAP concerning their distinct enzymatic properties. In order to investigate the physiological roles of both aldolases, the expression of their genes was repressed individually by CRISPR interference (CRISPRi). The fbaC RNA levels were reduced by CRISPRi, but concomitantly the fbaP RNA levels were increased. Vice versa, a similar compensatory increase of the fbaC RNA levels was observed when fbaP was repressed by CRISPRi. In addition, targeting fbaP decreased tktP RNA levels since both genes are cotranscribed in a bicistronic operon. However, reduced tktP RNA levels were not compensated for by increased RNA levels of the chromosomal transketolase gene tktC.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carsten Haupka ◽  
Luciana F. Brito ◽  
Tobias Busche ◽  
Daniel Wibberg ◽  
Volker F. Wendisch

The methylotrophic thermophile Bacillus methanolicus can utilize the non-food substrate methanol as its sole carbon and energy source. Metabolism of L-lysine, in particular its biosynthesis, has been studied to some detail, and methanol-based L-lysine production has been achieved. However, little is known about L-lysine degradation, which may proceed via 5-aminovalerate (5AVA), a non-proteinogenic ω-amino acid with applications in bioplastics. The physiological role of 5AVA and related compounds in the native methylotroph was unknown. Here, we showed that B. methanolicus exhibits low tolerance to 5AVA, but not to related short-chain (C4–C6) amino acids, diamines, and dicarboxylic acids. In order to gain insight into the physiological response of B. methanolicus to 5AVA, transcriptomic analyses by differential RNA-Seq in the presence and absence of 5AVA were performed. Besides genes of the general stress response, RNA levels of genes of histidine biosynthesis, and iron acquisition were increased in the presence of 5AVA, while an Rrf2 family transcriptional regulator gene showed reduced RNA levels. In order to test if mutations can overcome growth inhibition by 5AVA, adaptive laboratory evolution (ALE) was performed and two mutants—AVA6 and AVA10—with higher tolerance to 5AVA were selected. Genome sequencing revealed mutations in genes related to iron homeostasis, including the gene for an iron siderophore-binding protein. Overexpression of this mutant gene in the wild-type (WT) strain MGA3 improved 5AVA tolerance significantly at high Fe2+ supplementation. The combined ALE, omics, and genetics approach helped elucidate the physiological response of thermophilic B. methanolicus to 5AVA and will guide future strain development for 5AVA production from methanol.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (9) ◽  
pp. 4686
Author(s):  
Marta Irla ◽  
Sigrid Hakvåg ◽  
Trygve Brautaset

Genome-wide transcriptomic data obtained in RNA-seq experiments can serve as a reliable source for identification of novel regulatory elements such as riboswitches and promoters. Riboswitches are parts of the 5′ untranslated region of mRNA molecules that can specifically bind various metabolites and control gene expression. For that reason, they have become an attractive tool for engineering biological systems, especially for the regulation of metabolic fluxes in industrial microorganisms. Promoters in the genomes of prokaryotes are located upstream of transcription start sites and their sequences are easily identifiable based on the primary transcriptome data. Bacillus methanolicus MGA3 is a candidate for use as an industrial workhorse in methanol-based bioprocesses and its metabolism has been studied in systems biology approaches in recent years, including transcriptome characterization through RNA-seq. Here, we identify a putative lysine riboswitch in B. methanolicus, and test and characterize it. We also select and experimentally verify 10 putative B. methanolicus-derived promoters differing in their predicted strength and present their functionality in combination with the lysine riboswitch. We further explore the potential of a B. subtilis-derived purine riboswitch for regulation of gene expression in the thermophilic B. methanolicus, establishing a novel tool for inducible gene expression in this bacterium.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christine Frank ◽  
Tamara Hoffmann ◽  
Oskar Zelder ◽  
Max F. Felle ◽  
Erhard Bremer

The thermotolerant methylotroph Bacillus methanolicus MGA3 was originally isolated from freshwater marsh soil. Due to its ability to use methanol as sole carbon and energy source, B. methanolicus is increasingly explored as a cell factory for the production of amino acids, fine chemicals, and proteins of biotechnological interest. During high cell density fermentation in industrial settings with the membrane-permeable methanol as the feed, the excretion of low molecular weight products synthesized from it will increase the osmotic pressure of the medium. This in turn will impair cell growth and productivity of the overall biotechnological production process. With this in mind, we have analyzed the core of the physiological adjustment process of B. methanolicus MGA3 to sustained high osmolarity surroundings. Through growth assays, we found that B. methanolicus MGA3 possesses only a restricted ability to cope with sustained osmotic stress. This finding is consistent with the ecophysiological conditions in the habitat from which it was originally isolated. None of the externally provided compatible solutes and proline-containing peptides affording osmostress protection for Bacillus subtilis were able to stimulate growth of B. methanolicus MGA3 at high salinity. B. methanolicus MGA3 synthesized the moderately effective compatible solute L-glutamate in a pattern such that the cellular pool increased concomitantly with increases in the external osmolarity. Counterintuitively, a large portion of the newly synthesized L-glutamate was excreted. The expression of the genes (gltAB and gltA2) for two L-glutamate synthases were upregulated in response to high salinity along with that of the gltC regulatory gene. Such a regulatory pattern of the system(s) for L-glutamate synthesis in Bacilli is new. Our findings might thus be generally relevant to understand the production of the osmostress protectant L-glutamate by those Bacilli that exclusively rely on this compatible solute for their physiological adjustment to high osmolarity surroundings.


mSystems ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Baudoin Delépine ◽  
Marina Gil López ◽  
Marc Carnicer ◽  
Cláudia M. Vicente ◽  
Volker F. Wendisch ◽  
...  

Methanol is inexpensive, is easy to transport, and can be produced both from renewable and from fossil resources without mobilizing arable lands. As such, it is regarded as a potential carbon source to transition toward a greener industrial chemistry. Metabolic engineering of bacteria and yeast able to efficiently consume methanol is expected to provide cell factories that will transform methanol into higher-value chemicals in the so-called methanol economy. Toward that goal, the study of natural methylotrophs such as Bacillus methanolicus is critical to understand the origin of their efficient methylotrophy. This knowledge will then be leveraged to transform such natural strains into new cell factories or to design methylotrophic capability in other strains already used by the industry.


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (10) ◽  
pp. 3617 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guido Hennig ◽  
Carsten Haupka ◽  
Luciana F. Brito ◽  
Christian Rückert ◽  
Edern Cahoreau ◽  
...  

Methanol is a sustainable substrate for biotechnology. In addition to natural methylotrophs, metabolic engineering has gained attention for transfer of methylotrophy. Here, we engineered Corynebacterium glutamicum for methanol-dependent growth with a sugar co-substrate. Heterologous expression of genes for methanol dehydrogenase from Bacillus methanolicus and of ribulose monophosphate pathway genes for hexulose phosphate synthase and isomerase from Bacillus subtilis enabled methanol-dependent growth of mutants carrying one of two independent metabolic cut-offs, i.e., either lacking ribose-5-phosphate isomerase or ribulose-5-phosphate epimerase. Whole genome sequencing of strains selected by adaptive laboratory evolution (ALE) for faster methanol-dependent growth was performed. Subsequently, three mutations were identified that caused improved methanol-dependent growth by (1) increased plasmid copy numbers, (2) enhanced riboflavin supply and (3) reduced formation of the methionine-analogue O-methyl-homoserine in the methanethiol pathway. Our findings serve as a foundation for the engineering of C. glutamicum to unleash the full potential of methanol as a carbon source in biotechnological processes.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sigrid Hakvåg ◽  
Ingemar Nærdal ◽  
Tonje M. B. Heggeset ◽  
Kåre A. Kristiansen ◽  
Inga M. Aasen ◽  
...  

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