Promoter Activation in Δhfq Mutants as an Efficient Tool for Specialized Metabolite Production Enabling Direct Bioactivity Testing.
Edna BodeAntje K HeinrichMerle HirschmannDesalegne AbebewYan-Ni ShiTien Duy VoFrank WescheYi-Ming ShiPeter GrünSvenja SimonyiNadine KellerYvonne EngelSebastian WenskiReuel BennetSophie BeyerIris BischoffAnthony BuayaSophie BrandtIbrahim CakmakHarun CimenSimone EcksteinDenia FrankRobert FürstMartin GandGerd GeisslingerSelcuk HazirMarina HenkeRalf HeermannVirginie LecaudeyWilhelm SchäferSusanne SchiffmannAnja SchüfflerRebecca SchwenkMarisa SkaljacEckhard ThinesMarco ThinesThomas UlshöferAndreas VilcinskasThomas A WichelhausHelge B BodePublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2019)
Natural products (NPs) from microorganisms have been important sources for discovering new therapeutic and chemical entities. While their corresponding biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) can be easily identified by gene-sequence-similarity-based bioinformatics strategies, the actual access to these NPs for structure elucidation and bioactivity testing remains difficult. Deletion of the gene encoding the RNA chaperone, Hfq, results in strains losing the production of most NPs. By exchanging the native promoter of a desired BGC against an inducible promoter in Δhfq mutants, almost exclusive production of the corresponding NP from the targeted BGC in Photorhabdus, Xenorhabdus and Pseudomonas was observed including the production of several new NPs derived from previously uncharacterized non-ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPS). This easyPACId approach (easy Promoter Activated Compound Identification) facilitates NP identification due to low interference from other NPs. Moreover, it allows direct bioactivity testing of supernatants containing secreted NPs, without laborious purification.