Three new Lactobacillus vectors based on cryptic Lactobacillus plasmids were constructed. The shuttle vector pLP3537 consists of a 2.3-kb plasmid from Lactobacillus pentosus MD353, an erythromycin resistance gene from Staphylococcus aureus plasmid pE194, and pUC19 as a replicon for Escherichia coli. The vectors pLPE317 and pLPE323, which do not contain E. coli sequences, were generated by introducing the erythromycin resistance gene of pE194 into a 1.7-and a 2.3-kb plasmid from L. pentosus MD353, respectively. These vectors and the shuttle vector pLP825 (M.
A cluster of three genes involved in D-xylose catabolism (viz. xylose genes) in Lactobacillus pentosus has been cloned in Escherichia coli and characterized by nucleotide sequence analysis. The deduced gene products show considerable sequence similarity to a repressor protein involved in the regulation of expression of xylose genes in Bacillus subtilis (58%), to E. coli and B. subtilis D-xylose isomerase (68% and 77%, respectively), and to E. coli D-xylulose kinase (58%). The cloned genes represent functional xylose genes since they are able to complement the inability of a L. casei strain to ferment D-xylose. NMR analysis confirmed that 13C-xylose was converted into 13C-acetate in L. casei cells transformed with L. pentosus xylose genes but not in untransformed L. casei cells. Comparison with the aligned amino acid sequences of D-xylose isomerases of different bacteria suggests that L. pentosus D-xylose isomerase belongs to the same similarity group as B. subtilis and E. coli D-xylose isomerase and not to a second similarity group comprising D-xylose isomerases of Streptomyces violaceoniger, Ampullariella sp. and Actinoplanes. The organization of the L. pentosus xylose genes, 5'-xylR (1167 bp, repressor) - xylA (1350 bp, D-xylose isomerase) - xylB (1506 bp, D-xylulose kinase) - 3' is similar to that in B. subtilis. In contrast to B. subtilis xylR, L. pentosus xylR is transcribed in the same direction as xylA and xylB.
The xylose cluster of Lactobacillus pentosus consists of five genes, two of which, xylAB, form an operon and code for the enzymes involved in the catabolism of xylose, while a third encodes a regulatory protein, XylR. By introduction of a multicopy plasmid carrying the xyl operator and by disruption of the chromosomal xylR gene, it was shown that L. pentosus xylR encodes a repressor. Constitutive expression of xylAB in the xylR mutant is repressed by glucose, indicating that glucose repression does not require XylR. The xylR mutant displayed a prolonged lag phase compared to wild-type bacteria when bacteria were shifted from glucose to xylose medium. Differences in the growth rate in xylose medium at different stages of growth are not correlated with differences in levels of xylAB transcription in L. pentosus wild-type or xylR mutant bacteria but are positively correlated in Lactobacillus casei with a plasmid containing xylAB. Glucose repression was further investigated with a ccpA mutant. An 875-bp internal fragment of the ccpA gene of L. pentosus was isolated by PCR and used to construct a ccpA knockout mutant. Transcription analysis of L. pentosus xylA showed that CcpA is involved in glucose repression. CcpA was also shown to be involved in glucose repression of the ␣-amylase promoter of Lactobacillus amylovorus by demonstrating that glucose repression of the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene under control of the ␣-amylase promoter is strongly reduced in the L. pentosus ccpA mutant strain.
The xyl genes in Lactobacillus pentosus are induced by xylose and repressed by glucose, ribose, and arabinose. Northern blot analysis showed that regulation is mediated at the transcriptional level. Under inducing conditions, two xylA transcripts were detected, a major transcript of 1.5 kb and a minor transcript of 3 kb. The 3 kb transcript also comprises sequences from xylB, suggesting that xylA and xylB are transcribed together. A 1.2 kb xylR transcript was found under inducing and non-inducing conditions. In the presence of xylose, a second xylR transcript (> 7 kb) was detected, which includes sequences from two upstream genes, xylQ and xylP. The transcription start sites for xylA and xylR were mapped by primer extension and S1 nuclease experiments at 42 and 83 nucleotides, respectively upstream of the translation start sites. Induction by xylose of the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) gene under control of the xylA promoter, on a multicopy plasmid, was 60 to 80-fold, but only 3 to 10-fold in the presence of glucose and xylose. Expression of CAT under control of the xylR promoter was constitutive at a level tenfold less than that observed under control of the xylA promoter. Sequence analysis suggests the presence of two operator-like elements, one overlapping with the promoter -35 region of xylA and controlling the expression of xylA by binding factors involved in catabolite repression, and a second operator downstream of the promoter -10 region of xylA, which may bind the product of xylR, the repressor.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Heme biosynthesis in fungal host strains has acquired considerable interest in relation to the production of secreted heme-containing peroxidases. Class II peroxidase enzymes have been suggested as eco-friendly replacements of polluting chemical processes in industry. These peroxidases are naturally produced in small amounts by basidiomycetes. Filamentous fungi like Aspergillus sp. are considered as suitable hosts for protein production due to their high capacity of protein secretion. For the purpose of peroxidase production, heme is considered a putative limiting factor. However, heme addition is not appropriate in large-scale production processes due to its high hydrophobicity and cost price. The preferred situation in order to overcome the limiting effect of heme would be to increase intracellular heme levels. This requires a thorough insight into the biosynthetic pathway and its regulation. In this review, the heme biosynthetic pathway is discussed with regards to synthesis, regulation, and transport. Although the heme biosynthetic pathway is a highly conserved and tightly regulated pathway, the mode of regulation does not appear to be conserved among eukaryotes. However, common factors like feedback inhibition and regulation by heme, iron, and oxygen appear to be involved in regulation of the heme biosynthesis pathway in most organisms. Therefore, they are the initial targets to be investigated in Aspergillus niger.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s00253-011-3391-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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