The glycerol utilization (gyl) operon is involved in clavulanic acid (CA) production by Streptomyces clavuligerus, and possibly supplies the glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate (G3P) precursor for CA biosynthesis. The gyl operon is regulated by GylR and is induced by glycerol. To enhance CA production in S. clavuligerus, an extra copy of ccaR expressed from Pgyl (the gyl promoter) was integrated into the chromosome of S. clavuligerus NRRL 3585. This construct coordinated the transcription of CA biosynthetic pathway genes with expression of the gyl operon. In the transformants carrying the Pgyl-controlled regulatory gene ccaR, CA production was enhanced 3.19-fold in glycerol-enriched batch cultures, relative to the control strain carrying an extra copy of ccaR controlled by its own promoter (PccaR). Consistent with enhanced CA production, the transcription levels of ccaR, ceas2 and claR were significantly up-regulated in the transformants containing Pgyl-controlled ccaR.
Secondary metabolites are organic compounds with complex chemical structures and diverse physiological functions. Secondary metabolites include antibiotics, pigments, and other bioactive compounds. Many of these compounds have important agricultural and medical applications. Microorganisms, especially actinomycetes and filamentous fungi, are noted as a rich source of bioactive secondary metabolites. Typically, each species produces several antibiotics, with the profile being species-specific.
The biosynthesis of antibiotics is controlled by cascade regulation involving cluster-situated regulators (CSRs) and pleiotropic regulators. Three CSRs have been identified in the jadomycin biosynthetic gene cluster, including one OmpR-type activator (JadR1) and two TetR-like repressors (JadR* and JadR2). To examine their interactions in jadomycin biosynthesis, a series of mutants were generated and tested for jadomycin production. We noticed that jadomycin production in the jadR*-jadR2 double mutant was increased dramatically compared with either single mutant. Transcriptional analysis showed that jadR* and jadR2 act synergistically to repress jadomycin production by inhibiting the transcription of jadR1. Furthermore, jadR* and jadR2 reciprocally inhibit each other. The complex interactions among these three CSRs may provide clues for the activation of the jadomycin gene cluster, which would otherwise remain silent without stimulation from stress signals.
The whole-genome sequence of Thermoanaerobacter tengcongensis, an anaerobic thermophilic bacterium isolated from the Tengchong hot spring in China, was completed in 2002. However, in vivo studies on the genes of this strain have been hindered in the absence of genetic manipulation system. In order to establish such a system, the plasmid pBOL01 containing the replication origin of the T. tengcongensis chromosome and a kanamycin resistance cassette, in which kanamycin resistance gene expression was controlled by the tte1482 promoter from T. tengcongensis, was constructed and introduced into T. tengcongensis via electroporation. Subsequently, the high transformation efficiency occurred when using freshly cultured T. tengcongensis cells without electroporation treatment, suggesting that T. tengcongensis is naturally competent under appropriate growth stage. A genetic transformation system for this strain was then established based on these important components, and this system was proved to be available for studying physiological characters of T. tengcongensis in vivo by means of hisG gene disruption and complementation.