Yurong Xu, Meng Liu, Ruidong Zhao, Yue Pan, Panpan Wu, Chi Zhang, Xiangying Chi, Buchang Zhang, Hang Wu
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: The TetR family of transcriptional regulators (TFRs), serving as crucial regulators of diverse cellular processes, undergo conformational changes induced by small-molecule ligands, which either inhibit or activate them to modulate target gene expression. Some ligands of TFRs in actinomycetes and their regulatory effects have been identified and studied; however, regulatory mechanisms of the TetR family in the lincomycin-producing Streptomyces lincolnensis remain poorly understood.
Results: In this study, we found that AbrT (SLCG_1979), a TetR family regulator, plays a pivotal role in regulating lincomycin production and morphological development in S. lincolnensis. Deletion of abrT gene resulted in increased lincomycin A (Lin-A) production, but delayed mycelium formation and sporulation on solid media. AbrT directly or indirectly repressed the expression of lincomycin biosynthetic (lin) cluster genes and activated that of the morphological developmental genes amfC, whiB, and ftsZ. We demonstrated that AbrT bound to two motifs (5'-CGCGTACTCGTA-3' and 5'-CGTACGATAGCT-3') present in the bidirectional promoter between abrT and SLCG_1980 genes. This consequently repressed abrT itself and its adjacent gene SLCG_1980 that encodes an arabinose efflux permease. D-arabinose, not naturally occurring as L-arabinose, was identified as the effector molecule of AbrT, reducing its binding affinity to abrT-SLCG_1980 intergenic region. Furthermore, based on functional analysis of the AbrT homologue in Saccharopolyspora erythraea, we inferred that the TetR family regulator AbrT may play an important role in regulating secondary metabolism in actinomycetes.
Conclusions: AbrT functions as a regulator for governing lincomycin production and morphological development of S. lincolnensis. Our findings demonstrated that D-arabinose acts as a ligand of AbrT to mediate the regulation of lincomycin biosynthesis in S. lincolnensis. Our findings provide novel insights into ligand-mediated regulation in antibiotic biosynthesis.
期刊介绍:
Microbial Cell Factories is an open access peer-reviewed journal that covers any topic related to the development, use and investigation of microbial cells as producers of recombinant proteins and natural products, or as catalyzers of biological transformations of industrial interest. Microbial Cell Factories is the world leading, primary research journal fully focusing on Applied Microbiology.
The journal is divided into the following editorial sections:
-Metabolic engineering
-Synthetic biology
-Whole-cell biocatalysis
-Microbial regulations
-Recombinant protein production/bioprocessing
-Production of natural compounds
-Systems biology of cell factories
-Microbial production processes
-Cell-free systems