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Taniguchi, Hironori: Exploring the potential of sigma factors for strain development in Corynebacterium glutamicum. 2016
Inhalt
1 Introduction
1.1 Strain development
1.2 Strain development using global regulators
1.3 Sigma factors
1.4 Transcription initiation mechanism by RNA polymerase holoenzyme
1.5 Sigma factor competition as a regulatory mechanism
1.6 Strain development using sigma factors
1.7 Corynebacterium glutamicum
1.8 Global regulators in C. glutamicum
1.9 Sigma factors of C. glutamicum
1.10 Objectives
2 Result
2.1 Exploring the role of sigma factor gene expression on production by Corynebacterium glutamicum: sigma factor H and FMN as example
2.1.1 Abstract
2.1.2 Introduction
2.1.3 Material and methods
2.1.3.1 Bacterial strains, plasmid and primer
2.1.3.2 Medium and growth condition
2.1.3.3 Riboflavin production experiments
2.1.3.4 Transcriptome analysis of sigH overexpressing strain using DNA microarray
2.1.3.5 Measurement of glucose-6-phosphate 1-dehydrogenase enzyme activities
2.1.3.6 FMN and FAD production experiments
2.1.4 Results
2.1.4.1 Effect of overexpressing sigma factor genes in C. glutamicum
2.1.4.2 Overexpression of sigH resulted in riboflavin secretion
2.1.4.3 Global gene expression changes due to sigH overexpression
2.1.4.4 FMN production by C. glutamicum established as proof-of-concept based on overexpression of endogenous genes sigH and ribF
2.1.5 Discussion
2.2 Characterization of the physiological role and the regulatory mechanism of sigma factor D in Corynebacterium glutamicum
2.2.1 Abstract
2.2.2 Introduction
2.2.3 Material and methods
2.2.3.1 Bacterial strains, plasmids and oligonucleotides
2.2.3.2 Medium and conditions for growth experiments
2.2.3.3 Photometric determination of supernatant turbidity
2.2.3.4 Confirmation of cell aggregation by microscopic and flow cytometric analysis
2.2.3.5 RNA extraction
2.2.3.6 RNA-seq analysis and real-time PCR analysis
2.2.3.7 Protein analysis in supernatant
2.2.3.8 Quantification of carbohydrate in acetone precipitates
2.2.3.9 Detection of TDCM by TLC
2.2.4 Results
2.2.4.1 Disruption and overexpression of sigD influenced the maximum growth rate
2.2.4.2 sigD overexpression influenced the characteristic of cell culture
2.2.4.3 sigD overexpression induced cell aggregation
2.2.4.4 SigD regulated transcription of several genes especially related to cell envelope integrity
2.2.4.5 sigD overexpression changed the pattern of secreted proteins
2.2.4.6 sigD overexpression altered the pattern of secreted metabolites
2.2.4.7 Overexpression of sigD increased the amounts of trehalose dicorynomycolate
2.2.4.8 cg0697 is a candidate for the anti-sigma factor of SigD
2.2.4.9 The cg0697 disrupted mutant showed a similar phenotype as the sigD overexpressing strain
2.2.4.10 Transcription of cg0697 is SigD-dependent and Cg0697 regulates SigD activity
2.2.4.11 Disruption of cg0697 led to similar transcriptome changes as sigD overexpression
2.2.4.12 Consensus promoter sequence for SigD
2.2.5 Discussion
2.3 Harnessing sigma factor gene expression for production in Corynebacterium glutamicum: sigma factor A and carotenoids as an example
2.3.1 Abstract
2.3.2 Introduction
2.3.3 Material and methods
2.3.3.1 Bacterial strains, plasmids and primers
2.3.3.2 Medium, growth conditions and growth rate comparison
2.3.3.3 Carotenoid extraction and quantification
2.3.3.4 Transcriptome analysis of the sigA overexpressing strain using DNA microarray
2.3.4 Results
2.3.4.1 The sigA overexpressing strain showed the best improvement of lycopene production
2.3.4.2 Overexpression of sigA improved lycopene accumulation especially in the stationary phase
2.3.4.3 Overexpression of sigA also influenced decaprenoxanthin accumulation of the wild type strain in the stationary phase
2.3.4.4 Global gene expression changed due to sigA overexpression
2.3.4.5 Addition of thiamine/PCA improved carotenoid production in the sigA overexpressing strain
2.3.4.6 The effect of sigA overexpression was transferable to the β-carotene producing strain
2.3.4.7 The effect of sigA overexpression is additive to the effect of the derepression of crt operon
2.3.5 Discussion
3 Discussion
3.1 sigH overexpression on production: riboflavin, FMN and further
3.2 Overexpression of a sigma factor gene sigD for biological understanding
3.3 Strain development using sigma factors: Carotenoids as targets
3.4 The effect of overexpression of different sigma factor genes
3.5 Strain development by overexpression of sigma factor genes
3.6 Potential use of sigma factors and more in the future
4 Supplemental Figures
5 References