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Xylose, an abundant sugar fraction of lignocellulosic biomass, is a five-carbon skeleton molecule. Since decades, utilization of this sugar has gained much attention and has been in particular focus as a substrate for production of biofuels like ethanol by microbial hosts, including Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In this yeast, xylose is naturally not used as a carbon source, but its utilization could be achieved by metabolic engineering either via the oxidoreductive route or through the isomerase pathway. Both pathways share xylulose as a common intermediate that must be phosphorylated before entering the endogenous metabolism via the non-oxidative pentose phosphate pathway (noxPPP). Besides this, in some bacteria a non-phosphorylating oxidative pathway for xylose degradation exists, known as Weimberg pathway, where a molecule of xylose is converted by a series of enzymes - xylose dehydrogenase (XylB), xylonate dehydratase (XylD), 3-keto-2-deoxy-xylonate dehydratase (XylX) and α-ketoglutarate semialdehyde dehydrogenase (KsaD) - to form α-ketoglutarate (AKG). Besides having several useful properties as a product, AKG could also be used for cell growth as an intermediate of the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle. One target of the present study is to establish a functional Weimberg pathway in S. cerevisiae. Previous studies have shown that this task is not trivial, for instance due to the toxicity of xylonate (the first metabolite of the pathway) and the involvement of an iron-sulfur cluster dependent enzyme, the D-xylonate dehydratase. The assembly of iron-sulfur clusters on a heterologous protein in yeast is known to be challenging.
To establish the Weimberg pathway in yeast, the genes xylB, xylD, and xylX were obtained from Caulobacter cresentus and ksaD was from Corynebacterium glutamicum. In a variant, the dehydratase xylD was replaced with orf41 from Arthrobacter nicotinovorans, which is believed to be independent of iron-sulfur clusters. Growth of yeast cells on xylose as a sole carbon source was expected as an indicator of a functional Weimberg pathway. However, the heterologous expression of the codon optimized genes was not sufficient to reach this goal. Due to the complexity of the interactions of the heterologous pathway with the endogenous cellular processes, it was assumed that potential limitations could be overcome by adaptive laboratory evolution, using xylose as a sole source of carbon. Increasing selection pressure was applied on a strain with Weimberg pathway genes integrated into the genome over several generations. As a variant of the evolutionary engineering approach, mutator strains were generated. For this, RAD27 and MSH2 genes were deleted, which are involved in nucleotide excision and mismatch repair mechanisms, respectively. Some of the resulting strains PRY24, PRY25, PRY27 and PRY28 were able grow in xylose as a sole carbon source after evolutionary engineering. As a control, a non-mutator strain PRY19 was also included. Strikingly, only the mutator strains were able to consume xylose as a sole carbon source, which shows the feasibility of the approach.
In addition to the mutator strain strategy, a further approach employed in the present study was the simultaneous expression of the Weimberg pathway in the cytosol and mitochondria. This was based on the reasoning that the iron-sulfur cluster biogenesis on XylD may be improved in the organelle and that the AKG is an intermediate of the TCA cycle. In the strain AHY02, all enzymes of the pathway were tagged with mitochondrial targeting signals in addition to a full cytosolically localized pathway. The localization of the mitochondrial variants was confirmed by fluorescence microscopy. Together with AHY02, CEN.PK2-1C wild type strain was also included as a control for evolution. When a selection pressure on xylose was applied, both strains - AHY02 and CEN.PK2-1C - were able to grow in the course of evolution. Deletion of the xylulokinase (XKS1) gene was found to be detrimental for both evolved strains in xylose-containing media. This suggests that the evolution of the endogenous oxidoreductive and noxPPP genes is responsible for growth of the evolved cells. For the evolved strain AHY02, it could also be possible that the Weimberg pathway genes supported to growth in addition to the oxidoreductive route. To elucidate the underlying molecular mechanisms, genome sequencing and reverse engineering approaches would be necessary in future.
In addition to screening for growth on xylose as a sole carbon source, a less stringent screening system was created to examine even a minor flux of xylose towards AKG. For this, all genes necessary for conversion of isocitrate to AKG where deleted, yielding a glutamate auxotrophic strain. In this system, the cells can grow on other carbon sources, whereas xylose is only provided as a source of AKG for the synthesis of glutamate...
Identification of new natural products from nematode-associated bacteria using mass spectrometry
(2023)
This work aims to find unknown natural products produced by bacteria, that live in close association with nematodes and to elucidate their structure by using mass spectrometry.
The first chapter of this work is dedicated to the detection of hitherto unknown natural products by using a metabolomics approach and subsequent structure elucidation of said compounds. This chapter includes metabolomics analysis of Xenorhabdus szentirmaii wild type and knockout mutants, overproduction of the target compound, identification of derivatives from other strains and MS based structure elucidation.
The second and third chapters are about natural products that protect C. elegans from B. thuringiensis infections.
The second chapter deals with natural products that protect the nematode host without killing the pathogen. I deployed molecular biology methods to generate deletion and overproduction strains of a target compound, identified it via LC-MS/MS analysis and used LC-MS/MS and lipidomics to analyse the chemical properties of the active compound.
The third chapter aims at finding natural products, which are produced by Pseudomonas strains MYb11 and MYb12, respectively. These natural products display the ability to protect C. elegans by killing B. thuringiensis. I identified said compounds via fractionation and subsequent bioactivity testing. After identification, I generated production strains of the target compounds and elucidated the structure of the bioactive derivative.
The last chapter deals with the structure elucidation of peptides produced by an unusual GameXPeptide synthetase in Xenorhabdus miraniensis. I analysed producer strains of GameXPeptides using LC-MS and elucidated the structural differences between the known GameXPeptides, produced by P. luminescens TT01, and the unusual ones produced by X. miraniensis.
Bacterial biosynthetic assembly lines, such as non-ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPS) and polyketide synthases, are often subject of synthetic biology – because they produce a variety of natural products invaluable for modern pharmacotherapy. Acquiring the ability to engineer these biosynthetic assembly lines allows the production of artificial non-ribosomal peptides (NRP), polyketides, and hybrids thereof with new or improved properties. However, traditional bioengineering approaches have suffered for decades from their very limited applicability and, unlike combinatorial chemistry, are stigmatized as inefficient because they cannot be linked to the high-throughput screening platforms of the pharmaceutical industry. Although combinatorial chemistry can generate new molecules cheaper, faster, and in greater numbers than traditional natural product discovery and bioengineering approaches, it does not meet current medical needs because it covers only a limited biologically relevant chemical space. Hence, methods for high-throughput generation of new natural product-like compound libraries could provide a new avenue towards the identification of new lead compounds. To this end, prior to this work, we introduced an artificial synthetic NRPS type, referred to as type S NRPS, to provide a first-of-its-kind bicombinatorial approach to parallelized high-throughput NRP library generation. However, a bottleneck of these first two generations of type S NRPS was a significant drop in production yields. To address this issue, we applied an iterative optimization process that enabled titer increases of up to 55-fold compared to the non-optimized equivalents, restoring them to wild-type levels and beyond.
Non-ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs) are the origin of a wide range of natural products, including many clinically used drugs. Engineering of these often giant biosynthetic machineries to produce novel non-ribosomal peptides (NRPs) at high titre is an ongoing challenge. Here we describe a strategy to functionally combine NRPS fragments of Gram-negative and -positive origin, synthesising novel peptides at titres up to 290 mg l-1. Extending from the recently introduced definition of eXchange Units (XUs), we inserted synthetic zippers (SZs) to split single protein NRPSs into up to three independently expressed and translated polypeptide chains. These synthetic type of NRPS (type S) enables easier access to engineering, overcomes cloning limitations, and provides a simple and rapid approach to building peptide libraries via the combination of different NRPS subunits.
Adhesion to host cells is the first and most crucial step in infections with pathogenic Gram negative bacteria and is often mediated by trimeric autotransporter adhesins (TAAs). TAA-producing bacteria are the causative agent of many human diseases and TAA targeted anti-adhesive compounds might counteract such bacterial infections. The modularly structured Bartonella adhesin A (BadA) is one of the best characterised TAAs and serves as an attractive adhesin to study the domain-function relationship of TAAs during infection. BadA is a major virulence factor of B. henselae and is essential for the initial attachment to host cells via adhesion to extracellular matrix proteins. B. henselae is the causative agent of cat scratch disease and adheres to fibronectin using its long BadA fibres. The life cycle of this pathogen, with alternating host conditions, drives evolutionary and host-specific adaptations.
Human, feline, and laboratory adapted B. henselae isolates display genomic and phenotypic differences. By analysing the genomes of eight B. henselae strains using long-read sequencing, a variable genomic badA island with a diversified and highly repetitive badA gene flanked by badA pseudogenes was identified. Moreover, numerous conserved flanking genes were characterised, however, their influence on the regulation of badA expression and modification remains to be explored. It seems that B. henselae G 5436 is the evolutionary ancestor of the other B. henselae strains analysed in this work. The diversity of the badA island among the B. henselae strains indicates that the downstream badA-like domain region might be used as a ‘toolbox’ for rearrangements in the badA gene. Overall, it is suggested that badA-domain duplications, insertions, and/or deletions are the result of active phase variation via site-specific recombination and contribute to rapid host adaptation in the scope of pathogenicity, immune evasion, and/or enhanced long-term colonisation.
The model strain B. henselae Marseille expresses a badA gene that includes 30 repetitive neck/stalk domains, each consisting of several predicted structural motifs. To further elucidate the motif sequences that mediate fibronectin binding, various modified badA constructs were generated. Their ability to bind fibronectin was assessed via whole-cell ELISA and fluorescence microscopy. In conclusion, it is suggested that BadA adheres to fibronectin in a cumulative fashion with quick saturation via unpaired β-strands appearing in structural motifs present in BadA neck/stalk domains 19, 27, and other homologous domains. Furthermore, antibodies targeting a 15-mer amino acid sequence in the DALL motif of BadA neck/stalk domain 27 were able to reduce fibronectin binding of the B. henselae mutant strain S27. Moreover, this DALL motif sequence is conserved in the genome of all analysed B. henselae strains. The identification of common binding motifs between BadA and fibronectin supports the development of new anti-adhesive compounds that might inhibit the initial adherence of B. henselae and other TAA-producing pathogens during infection.
mRNA localization to subcellular compartments has been reported across all kingdoms of life and it is generally believed to promote asymmetric protein synthesis and localization. In striking contrast to previous observations, we show that in S. cerevisiae the B-type cyclin CLB2 mRNA is localized and translated in the yeast bud, while the Clb2 protein, a key regulator of mitosis progression, is concentrated in the mother nucleus. Using single-molecule RNA imaging in fixed (smFISH) and living cells (MS2 system), we show that the CLB2 mRNA is transported to the yeast bud by the She2-She3 complex, via an mRNA ZIP-code situated in the coding sequence. In CLB2 mRNA localization mutants, Clb2 protein synthesis in the bud is decreased resulting in changes in cell cycle distribution and genetic instability. Altogether, we propose that CLB2 mRNA localization acts as a sensor for bud development to couple cell growth and cell cycle progression, revealing a novel function for mRNA localization.
Deviance detection describes an increase of neural response strength caused by a stimulus with a low probability of occurrence. This ubiquitous phenomenon has been reported for multiple species, from subthalamic areas to auditory cortex. While cortical deviance detection has been well characterised by a range of studies covering neural activity at population level (mismatch negativity, MMN) as well as at cellular level (stimulus-specific adaptation, SSA), subcortical deviance detection has been studied mainly on cellular level in the form of SSA. Here, we aim to bridge this gap by using noninvasively recorded auditory brainstem responses (ABRs) to investigate deviance detection at population level in the lower stations of the auditory system of a hearing specialist: the bat Carollia perspicillata. Our present approach uses behaviourally relevant vocalisation stimuli that are closer to the animals' natural soundscape than artificial stimuli used in previous studies that focussed on subcortical areas. We show that deviance detection in ABRs is significantly stronger for echolocation pulses than for social communication calls or artificial sounds, indicating that subthalamic deviance detection depends on the behavioural meaning of a stimulus. Additionally, complex physical sound features like frequency- and amplitude-modulation affected the strength of deviance detection in the ABR. In summary, our results suggest that at population level, the bat brain can detect different types of deviants already in the brainstem. This shows that subthalamic brain structures exhibit more advanced forms of deviance detection than previously known.
As abundant carbohydrates in renewable feedstocks, such as pectin-rich and lignocellulosic hydrolysates, the pentoses arabinose and xylose are regarded as important substrates for production of biofuels and chemicals by engineered microbial hosts. Their efficient transport across the cellular membrane is a prerequisite for economically viable fermentation processes. Thus, there is a need for transporter variants exhibiting a high transport rate of pentoses, especially in the presence of glucose, another major constituent of biomass-based feedstocks. Here, we describe a variant of the galactose permease Gal2 from Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Gal2N376Y/M435I), which is fully insensitive to competitive inhibition by glucose, but, at the same time, exhibits an improved transport capacity for xylose compared to the wildtype protein. Due to this unique property, it significantly reduces the fermentation time of a diploid industrial yeast strain engineered for efficient xylose consumption in mixed glucose/xylose media. When the N376Y/M435I mutations are introduced into a Gal2 variant resistant to glucose-induced degradation, the time necessary for the complete consumption of xylose is reduced by approximately 40%. Moreover, Gal2N376Y/M435I confers improved growth of engineered yeast on arabinose. Therefore, it is a valuable addition to the toolbox necessary for valorization of complex carbohydrate mixtures.
Cyclophilins, or immunophilins, are proteins found in many organisms including bacteria, plants and humans. Most of them display peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase activity, and play roles as chaperones or in signal transduction. Here, we show that cyclophilin anaCyp40 from the cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 is enzymatically active, and seems to be involved in general stress responses and in assembly of photosynthetic complexes. The protein is associated with the thylakoid membrane and interacts with phycobilisome and photosystem components. Knockdown of anacyp40 leads to growth defects under high-salt and high-light conditions, and reduced energy transfer from phycobilisomes to photosystems. Elucidation of the anaCyp40 crystal structure at 1.2-Å resolution reveals an N-terminal helical domain with similarity to PsbQ components of plant photosystem II, and a C-terminal cyclophilin domain with a substrate-binding site. The anaCyp40 structure is distinct from that of other multi-domain cyclophilins (such as Arabidopsis thaliana Cyp38), and presents features that are absent in single-domain cyclophilins.
The interaction of microplastics with freshwater biota and their interaction with other stressors is still not very well understood. Therefore, we investigated the ingestion, excretion and toxicity of microplastics in the freshwater gastropod Lymnaea stagnalis.
MP ingestion was analyzed as tissues levels in L. stagnalis after 6–96 h of exposure to 5–90 μm spherical polystyrene (PS) microplastics. To understand the excretion, tissue levels were determined after 24 h of exposure followed by a 12 h–7 d depuration period. To assess the toxicity, snails were exposed for 28 d to irregular PS microplastics (<63 μm, 6.4–100,000 particles mL−1), both alone and in combination with copper as additional stressor. To compare the toxicity of natural and synthetic particles, we also included diatomite particles. Microplastics ingestion and excretion significantly depended on the particle size and the exposure/depuration duration. An exposure to irregular PS had no effect on survival, reproduction, energy reserves and oxidative stress. However, we observed slight effects on immune cell phagocytosis. Exposure to microplastics did not exacerbate the reproductive toxicity of copper. In addition, there was no pronounced difference between the effects of microplastics and diatomite. The tolerance towards microplastics may originate from an adaptation of L. stagnalis to particle-rich environments or a general stress resilience. In conclusion, despite high uptake rates, PS fragments do not appear to be a relevant stressor for stress tolerant freshwater gastropods considering current environmental levels of microplastics.
Functional genomics studies in model organisms and human cell lines provided important insights into gene functions and their context-dependent role in genetic circuits. However, our functional understanding of many of these genes and how they combinatorically regulate key biological processes, remains limited. To enable the SpCas9-dependent mapping of gene-gene interactions in human cells, we established 3Cs multiplexing for the generation of combinatorial gRNA libraries in a distribution-unbiased manner and demonstrate its robust performance. The optimal number for combinatorial hit calling was 16 gRNA pairs and the skew of a library’s distribution was identified as a critical parameter dictating experimental scale and data quality. Our approach enabled us to investigate 247,032 gRNA-pairs targeting 12,736 gene-interactions in human autophagy. We identified novel genes essential for autophagy and provide experimental evidence that gene-associated categories of phenotypic strengths exist in autophagy. Furthermore, circuits of autophagy gene interactions reveal redundant nodes driven by paralog genes. Our combinatorial 3Cs approach is broadly suitable to investigate unexpected gene-interaction phenotypes in unperturbed and diseased cell contexts.
Die kontinuierliche Messung des CO2-Gaswechsels homogener Sedimente einzelliger Grünalgen hat ergeben, daß das Kohlendioxyd während der ersten Belichtungsphase zunächst an einen primären, in den verdunkelten Zellen bereits vorhandenen CO2-Acceptor (AI) angelagert wird. AI ist nur im Licht zur Aufnahme und lockeren Bindung von Kohlendioxyd befähigt und gibt die während kurzer Lichtperioden (4-30 sec) aufgenommene CO2-Menge in der anschließenden Dunkelperiode sehr schnell wieder ab. Im Verlauf längerer Belichtungszeiten (> 30 sec) übergibt AI das locker gebundene Kohlendioxyd an den inzwischen in zunehmender Konzentration gebildeten CO2-Acceptor des Calvin - Zyklus (Ribulosediphosphat = AII). Die mit der Aufnahme und lockeren Bindung von Kohlendioxyd an den aktivierten Acceptor AI und der CO2-Weitergabe an AII zusammenhängenden Übergangserscheinungen werden eingehend diskutiert.
The change in allele frequencies within a population over time represents a fundamental process of evolution. By monitoring allele frequencies, we can analyze the effects of natural selection and genetic drift on populations. To efficiently track time-resolved genetic change, large experimental or wild populations can be sequenced as pools of individuals sampled over time using high-throughput genome sequencing (called the Evolve & Resequence approach, E&R). Here, we present a set of experiments using hundreds of natural genotypes of the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana to showcase the power of this approach to study rapid evolution at large scale. First, we validate that sequencing DNA directly extracted from pools of flowers from multiple plants -- organs that are relatively consistent in size and easy to sample -- produces comparable results to other, more expensive state-of-the-art approaches such as sampling and sequencing of individual leaves. Sequencing pools of flowers from 25-50 individuals at ∼40X coverage recovers genome-wide frequencies in diverse populations with accuracy r > 0.95. Secondly, to enable analyses of evolutionary adaptation using E&R approaches of plants in highly replicated environments, we provide open source tools that streamline sequencing data curation and calculate various population genetic statistics two orders of magnitude faster than current software. To directly demonstrate the usefulness of our method, we conducted a two-year outdoor evolution experiment with A. thaliana to show signals of rapid evolution in multiple genomic regions. We demonstrate how these laboratory and computational Pool-seq-based methods can be scaled to study hundreds of populations across many climates.
The entire chemical modification repertoire of yeast ribosomal RNAs and the enzymes responsible for it have recently been identified. Nonetheless, in most cases the precise roles played by these chemical modifications in ribosome structure, function and regulation remain totally unclear. Previously, we demonstrated that yeast Rrp8 methylates m1A645 of 25S rRNA in yeast. Here, using mung bean nuclease protection assays in combination with quantitative RP-HPLC and primer extension, we report that 25S/28S rRNA of S. pombe, C. albicans and humans also contain a single m1A methylation in the helix 25.1. We characterized nucleomethylin (NML) as a human homolog of yeast Rrp8 and demonstrate that NML catalyzes the m1A1322 methylation of 28S rRNA in humans. Our in vivo structural probing of 25S rRNA, using both DMS and SHAPE, revealed that the loss of the Rrp8-catalyzed m1A modification alters the conformation of domain I of yeast 25S rRNA causing translation initiation defects detectable as halfmers formation, likely because of incompetent loading of 60S on the 43S-preinitiation complex. Quantitative proteomic analysis of the yeast Δrrp8 mutant strain using 2D-DIGE, revealed that loss of m1A645 impacts production of specific set of proteins involved in carbohydrate metabolism, translation and ribosome synthesis. In mouse, NML has been characterized as a metabolic disease-associated gene linked to obesity. Our findings in yeast also point to a role of Rrp8 in primary metabolism. In conclusion, the m1A modification is crucial for maintaining an optimal 60S conformation, which in turn is important for regulating the production of key metabolic enzymes.
The entire chemical modification repertoire of yeast ribosomal RNAs and the enzymes responsible for it have recently been identified. Nonetheless, in most cases the precise roles played by these chemical modifications in ribosome structure, function and regulation remain totally unclear. Previously, we demonstrated that yeast Rrp8 methylates m1A645 of 25S rRNA in yeast. Here, using mung bean nuclease protection assays in combination with quantitative RP-HPLC and primer extension, we report that 25S/28S rRNA of S. pombe, C. albicans and humans also contain a single m1A methylation in the helix 25.1. We characterized nucleomethylin (NML) as a human homolog of yeast Rrp8 and demonstrate that NML catalyzes the m1A1322 methylation of 28S rRNA in humans. Our in vivo structural probing of 25S rRNA, using both DMS and SHAPE, revealed that the loss of the Rrp8-catalyzed m1A modification alters the conformation of domain I of yeast 25S rRNA causing translation initiation defects detectable as halfmers formation, likely because of incompetent loading of 60S on the 43S-preinitiation complex. Quantitative proteomic analysis of the yeast Δrrp8 mutant strain using 2D-DIGE, revealed that loss of m1A645 impacts production of specific set of proteins involved in carbohydrate metabolism, translation and ribosome synthesis. In mouse, NML has been characterized as a metabolic disease-associated gene linked to obesity. Our findings in yeast also point to a role of Rrp8 in primary metabolism. In conclusion, the m1A modification is crucial for maintaining an optimal 60S conformation, which in turn is important for regulating the production of key metabolic enzymes.