Promoter-proximal introns impact recombinant amylase expression in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

FEMS Yeast Res. 2023 Jan 4:23:foad047. doi: 10.1093/femsyr/foad047.

Abstract

Consolidated bioprocessing (CBP) of starch requires recombinant Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains that produce raw starch-degrading enzymes and ferment the resultant sugars to ethanol in a single step. In this study, the native S. cerevisiae COX4 and RPS25A promoter-proximal introns were evaluated for enhanced expression of amylase genes (ateA, temA or temG_Opt) under the control of an S. cerevisiae promoter (ENO1P, TEF1P, TDH3P, or HXT7P). The results showed that different promoters and promoter-intron combinations differentially affected recombinant amylase production: ENO1P-COX4i and TDH3P-RPS25Ai were the best promoters for AteA, followed closely by HXT7P. The latter was also the best promoter for TemA and TemG production, followed closely by TDH3P-RPS25Ai for both these enzymes. Introducing promoter-proximal introns increased amylase activity up to 62% in Y294[ENO-COX-AteA] and Y294[TDH3-RPS-TemA], a significant improvement relative to the intron-less promoters. Strains co-expressing both an α-amylase and glucoamylase genes yielded up to 56 g/L ethanol from 20% w/v raw starch, with a higher carbon conversion observed with strains co-expressing TDH3P-RPS25Ai-temG_Opt than HXT7P-temG_Opt. The study showed that promoter-proximal introns can enhance amylase activity in S. cerevisiae and suggest that these alternative cassettes may also be considered for expression in more efficient ethanol-producing industrial yeast strains for raw starch CBP.

Keywords: intron-mediated enhancement; promoter-proximal introns; recombinant amylase; starch-based biofuels.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Amylases* / genetics
  • Amylases* / metabolism
  • Ethanol / metabolism
  • Fermentation
  • Introns
  • Saccharomyces cerevisiae* / metabolism
  • Starch / metabolism

Substances

  • Amylases
  • Starch
  • Ethanol