Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology (Feb 2021)

Comparative Transcriptome Analysis of Streptomyces nodosus Mutant With a High-Yield Amphotericin B

  • Kai Huang,
  • Kai Huang,
  • Bo Zhang,
  • Bo Zhang,
  • Yu Chen,
  • Yu Chen,
  • Zhi-Qiang Liu,
  • Zhi-Qiang Liu,
  • Yu-Guo Zheng,
  • Yu-Guo Zheng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fbioe.2020.621431
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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Antibiotics play an important role in human health. Most antibiotics are derived from microbial secondary metabolites. Amphotericin is a polyene macrolide antibiotic synthesized by Streptomyces nodosus. S. nodosus ZJB2016050 with high-yield amphotericin B (AmB) was obtained by traditional mutagenesis using S. nodosus ATCC14899 as the original strain. The differences in the characterization of the two strains were found in color, mycelium morphology, and AmB yield. Subsequent comparative transcriptome explained the yield differences between the two strains. Pathways including the carbohydrate metabolic pathway and the secondary product synthesis pathway were targeted. The upregulation of glucokinase, phosphoglycerate mutase, and pyruvate dehydrogenase accelerates the consumption of glucose and has great effects on the accumulation of precursors. One of the competitive secondary metabolites of the polyketone synthetase (PKS) II type sapromomycin analog synthesis gene cluster was downregulated, which competes for malonyl-CoA. Five PKS modules (except for the first module amphA) of the amphotericin synthetic gene cluster in the high-yielding strain were downregulated, which resulted in the total amphotericin A (AmA) and AmB of S. nodosus ZJB2016050 being less than that of the wild-type S. nodosus ATCC14899. Combined with gene differential expression in the pentose phosphate pathway and the reaction mechanism of the ER5 domain, the reason that S. nodosus ZJB2016050 preferred to synthesize AmB was probably related to intracellular reduction.

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