4.7 Article

Engineered Probiotic Lactococcus lactis for Lycopene Production against ROS Stress in Intestinal Epithelial Cells

Journal

ACS SYNTHETIC BIOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue 4, Pages 1568-1576

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.1c00639

Keywords

engineered probiotic; Lactococcus lactis; lycopene; aerobic respiration; intestinal epithelial cells; oxidative stress

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2019YFA0906700]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Shandong Province [ZR2020MC014]
  3. State Key Laboratory of Microbial Technology Open Projects Fund [M2021-11]

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This study demonstrated the production of lycopene in engineered L. lactis strains by manipulating metabolic pathways and increasing biomass through activation of aerobic respiration. The engineered L. lactis strain showed potential in protecting intestinal epithelial cells against oxidative damage.
Lactococcus lactis is a food-grade chassis for delivery of bioactive molecules to the intestinal mucosa in situ, while its ability to produce lycopene for detoxification of reactive oxidative species (ROS) is not realized yet. Here, L. lactis NZ9000 was engineered to synthesize lycopene by heterologous expression of a gene cluster crtEBI in plasmids or chromosomes, yielding the recombinant strains NZ4 and NZ5 with 0.59 and 0.54 mg/L lycopene production, respectively. To reroute the pyruvate flux to lycopene, the main lactate dehydrogenase and a-acetolactate synthase pathways were sequentially disrupted. The resultant strains NZ Delta ldh-1 and NZ Delta ldh Delta als-1 increased lycopene accumulation to 0.70 and 0.73 mg/L, respectively, while their biomasses were reduced by 12.42% and the intracellular NADH/NAD ratios increased by 3.05- and 2.10-fold. To increase the biomasses of these engineered strains, aerobic respiration was activated and tuned by the addition of exogenous heme and oxygen. As a result, the engineered L. lactis strains partly recovered the growth and redox balance, yielding the lycopene levels of 0.91-1.09 mg/L. The engineered L. lactis strain protected the intestinal epithelial cells NCM460 against H2O2 challenge, with a 30.09% increase of cell survival and a 29.2% decrease of the intracellular ROS level compared with strain NZ9000 treatment. In summary, this work established the use of the engineered probiotic L. lactis for lycopene production and prospected its potential in the prevention of intestinal oxidative damage.

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