Microbial Biotechnology (Nov 2021)

Reconstitution of a mini‐gene cluster combined with ribosome engineering led to effective enhancement of salinomycin production in Streptomyces albus

  • Dong Li,
  • Yuqing Tian,
  • Xiang Liu,
  • Wenxi Wang,
  • Yue Li,
  • Huarong Tan,
  • Jihui Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/1751-7915.13686
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 6
pp. 2356 – 2368

Abstract

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Summary Salinomycin, an FDA‐approved polyketide drug, was recently identified as a promising anti‐tumour and anti‐viral lead compound. It is produced by Streptomyces albus, and the biosynthetic gene cluster (sal) spans over 100 kb. The genetic manipulation of large polyketide gene clusters is challenging, and approaches delivering reliable efficiency and accuracy are desired. Herein, a delicate strategy to enhance salinomycin production was devised and evaluated. We reconstructed a minimized sal gene cluster (mini‐cluster) on pSET152 including key genes responsible for tailoring modification, antibiotic resistance, positive regulation and precursor supply. These genes were overexpressed under the control of constitutive promoter PkasO* or Pneo. The pks operon was not included in the mini‐cluster, but it was upregulated by SalJ activation. After the plasmid pSET152::mini‐cluster was introduced into the wild‐type strain and a chassis host strain obtained by ribosome engineering, salinomycin production was increased to 2.3‐fold and 5.1‐fold compared with that of the wild‐type strain respectively. Intriguingly, mini‐cluster introduction resulted in much higher production than overexpression of the whole sal gene cluster. The findings demonstrated that reconstitution of sal mini‐cluster combined with ribosome engineering is an efficient novel approach and may be extended to other large polyketide biosynthesis.