4.5 Article

Deletion analysis of Pichia pastoris alcohol dehydrogenase 2 (ADH2) promoter and development of synthetic promoters

Journal

BIOTECHNOLOGY JOURNAL
Volume 17, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/biot.202100332

Keywords

ADH2 promoter; Mxr1 transcription factor; Pichia pastoris; synthetic promoter

Funding

  1. TUBITAK (Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey) [215Z116]
  2. Akdeniz University Scientific Research Projects Coordination Unit [FDK-2015-691]

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This study investigated the regulation of the ADH genes in P. pastoris, identifying the UAS and URS sequences of the ADH2 promoter. Five synthetic promoters were constructed by altering regulatory sites, leading to improved xylanase production. The highest activity synthetic promoter, SNT5, was further evaluated at the fermenter scale, with potential implications for industrial processes.
Pichia pastoris (Komagataella phaffii) is a non-conventional Crabtree-negative yeast with the capability of reaching very high cell densities in a fed-batch fermentation process. The alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) genes of P. pastoris involved in ethanol metabolism were identified and were previously characterized. This work aimed to extend current knowledge of the regulation of the ADH2 promoter. To this end, we first determined the upstream activator (UAS) and repressor (URS) sequences of the promoter by deletion assays. Two upstream activator sites have been identified, positioned between -900 and -801 bp, and -284 and -108 bp upstream of the ADH2 transcription start site. The sequences positioned between -361 and -262 bp had a negative effect on the promoter activity and designated a repressor sequence (URS). We then demonstrated that Mxr1 (methanol expression regulator 1) transcription factor activates the ADH2 promoter through the direct interaction with UAS regions in response to ethanol. Furthermore, five different synthetic promoters were constructed by adding or deleting the regulatory sites. These synthetic promoters were tested for extracellular xylanase production at shake flask level by inducing with ethanol. These promoter variants improved the xylanase production ranging between 165% and 200% of the native promoter. The synthetic promoter 5 (SNT5) that displayed the highest activity was further evaluated at the fermenter scale. The modification in the promoter features might have several implications for industrial processes where decoupling the cell growth and product formation is advantageous.

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