Substitution of the native srfA promoter by constitutive Pveg in two B. Subtilis strains and evaluation of the effect on Surfactin production

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Judit Willenbacher - , Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (Author)
  • Teresa Mohr - , Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (Author)
  • Marius Henkel - , University of Hohenheim (Author)
  • Susanne Gebhard - , University of Bath (Author)
  • Thorsten Mascher - , Institute of Microbiology, Chair of General Microbiology, TUD Dresden University of Technology (Author)
  • Christoph Syldatk - , Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (Author)
  • Rudolf Hausmann - , University of Hohenheim (Author)

Abstract

The genetic enhancement of Surfactin production increasingly gained attention in the last years, since relatively low product yields limit the industrial application of this biosurfactant. The natural quorum sensing regulation of the srfA operon (coding for the Surfactin synthetase) can reasonably be assumed to be the bottleneck of Surfactin synthesis. Therefore, the replacement of the naturally quorum sensing regulated, and herewith cell density dependent, promoter PsrfA against the Bacillus subtilis endogenous and constitutive promoter Pveg was hypothesized to generally enhance Surfactin yields. The markerless promoter replacement was conducted in the two B. subtilis Surfactin producer strains 3A38 and DSM 10T. The promoter substitution led to an enhancement of Surfactin concentrations in the producer strain 3A38, initially producing only minor amounts of Surfactin (0.07 g/L increased to 0.26 g/L). In contrast, promoter exchange in B. subtilis DSM 10T (wild-type strain producing 0.62 g/L Surfactin) did not achieve an enhancement of Surfactin concentrations (detrimental reduction to 0.04 g/L). These findings implicate that Surfactin synthesis is differently regulated in minor and strong Surfactin producer strains. The hypothesized general enhancement of Surfactin yields after substitution of the native promoter was therefore not confirmed.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)14-17
Number of pages4
JournalJournal of biotechnology
Volume2016
Issue number224
Publication statusPublished - 20 Apr 2016
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

PubMed 26953743

Keywords

Keywords

  • Bacillus subtilis, Biosurfactant, Promoter exchange, Quorum sensing, SrfA operon, Surfactin