Cargando…

Glucose-methanol co-utilization in Pichia pastoris studied by metabolomics and instationary (13)C flux analysis

BACKGROUND: Several studies have shown that the utilization of mixed carbon feeds instead of methanol as sole carbon source is beneficial for protein production with the methylotrophic yeast Pichia pastoris. In particular, growth under mixed feed conditions appears to alleviate the metabolic burden...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Jordà, Joel, Suarez, Camilo, Carnicer, Marc, ten Pierick, Angela, Heijnen, Joseph J, van Gulik, Walter, Ferrer, Pau, Albiol, Joan, Wahl, Aljoscha
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3626722/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23448228
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1752-0509-7-17
_version_ 1782266239038521344
author Jordà, Joel
Suarez, Camilo
Carnicer, Marc
ten Pierick, Angela
Heijnen, Joseph J
van Gulik, Walter
Ferrer, Pau
Albiol, Joan
Wahl, Aljoscha
author_facet Jordà, Joel
Suarez, Camilo
Carnicer, Marc
ten Pierick, Angela
Heijnen, Joseph J
van Gulik, Walter
Ferrer, Pau
Albiol, Joan
Wahl, Aljoscha
author_sort Jordà, Joel
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Several studies have shown that the utilization of mixed carbon feeds instead of methanol as sole carbon source is beneficial for protein production with the methylotrophic yeast Pichia pastoris. In particular, growth under mixed feed conditions appears to alleviate the metabolic burden related to stress responses triggered by protein overproduction and secretion. Yet, detailed analysis of the metabolome and fluxome under mixed carbon source metabolizing conditions are missing. To obtain a detailed flux distribution of central carbon metabolism, including the pentose phosphate pathway under methanol-glucose conditions, we have applied metabolomics and instationary (13)C flux analysis in chemostat cultivations. RESULTS: Instationary (13)C-based metabolic flux analysis using GC-MS and LC-MS measurements in time allowed for an accurate mapping of metabolic fluxes of glycolysis, pentose phosphate and methanol assimilation pathways. Compared to previous results from NMR-derived stationary state labelling data (proteinogenic amino acids, METAFoR) more fluxes could be determined with higher accuracy. Furthermore, using a thermodynamic metabolic network analysis the metabolite measurements and metabolic flux directions were validated. Notably, the concentration of several metabolites of the upper glycolysis and pentose phosphate pathway increased under glucose-methanol feeding compared to the reference glucose conditions, indicating a shift in the thermodynamic driving forces. Conversely, the extracellular concentrations of all measured metabolites were lower compared with the corresponding exometabolome of glucose-grown P. pastoris cells. The instationary (13)C flux analysis resulted in fluxes comparable to previously obtained from NMR datasets of proteinogenic amino acids, but allowed several additional insights. Specifically, i) in vivo metabolic flux estimations were expanded to a larger metabolic network e.g. by including trehalose recycling, which accounted for about 1.5% of the glucose uptake rate; ii) the reversibility of glycolytic/gluconeogenesis, TCA cycle and pentose phosphate pathways reactions was estimated, revealing a significant gluconeogenic flux from the dihydroxyacetone phosphate/glyceraldehydes phosphate pool to glucose-6P. The origin of this finding could be carbon recycling from the methanol assimilatory pathway to the pentose phosphate pool. Additionally, high exchange fluxes of oxaloacetate with aspartate as well as malate indicated amino acid pool buffering and the activity of the malate/Asp shuttle; iii) the ratio of methanol oxidation vs utilization appeared to be lower (54 vs 79% assimilated methanol directly oxidized to CO(2)). CONCLUSIONS: In summary, the application of instationary (13)C-based metabolic flux analysis to P. pastoris provides an experimental framework with improved capabilities to explore the regulation of the carbon and energy metabolism of this yeast, particularly for the case of methanol and multicarbon source metabolism.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3626722
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-36267222013-04-16 Glucose-methanol co-utilization in Pichia pastoris studied by metabolomics and instationary (13)C flux analysis Jordà, Joel Suarez, Camilo Carnicer, Marc ten Pierick, Angela Heijnen, Joseph J van Gulik, Walter Ferrer, Pau Albiol, Joan Wahl, Aljoscha BMC Syst Biol Research Article BACKGROUND: Several studies have shown that the utilization of mixed carbon feeds instead of methanol as sole carbon source is beneficial for protein production with the methylotrophic yeast Pichia pastoris. In particular, growth under mixed feed conditions appears to alleviate the metabolic burden related to stress responses triggered by protein overproduction and secretion. Yet, detailed analysis of the metabolome and fluxome under mixed carbon source metabolizing conditions are missing. To obtain a detailed flux distribution of central carbon metabolism, including the pentose phosphate pathway under methanol-glucose conditions, we have applied metabolomics and instationary (13)C flux analysis in chemostat cultivations. RESULTS: Instationary (13)C-based metabolic flux analysis using GC-MS and LC-MS measurements in time allowed for an accurate mapping of metabolic fluxes of glycolysis, pentose phosphate and methanol assimilation pathways. Compared to previous results from NMR-derived stationary state labelling data (proteinogenic amino acids, METAFoR) more fluxes could be determined with higher accuracy. Furthermore, using a thermodynamic metabolic network analysis the metabolite measurements and metabolic flux directions were validated. Notably, the concentration of several metabolites of the upper glycolysis and pentose phosphate pathway increased under glucose-methanol feeding compared to the reference glucose conditions, indicating a shift in the thermodynamic driving forces. Conversely, the extracellular concentrations of all measured metabolites were lower compared with the corresponding exometabolome of glucose-grown P. pastoris cells. The instationary (13)C flux analysis resulted in fluxes comparable to previously obtained from NMR datasets of proteinogenic amino acids, but allowed several additional insights. Specifically, i) in vivo metabolic flux estimations were expanded to a larger metabolic network e.g. by including trehalose recycling, which accounted for about 1.5% of the glucose uptake rate; ii) the reversibility of glycolytic/gluconeogenesis, TCA cycle and pentose phosphate pathways reactions was estimated, revealing a significant gluconeogenic flux from the dihydroxyacetone phosphate/glyceraldehydes phosphate pool to glucose-6P. The origin of this finding could be carbon recycling from the methanol assimilatory pathway to the pentose phosphate pool. Additionally, high exchange fluxes of oxaloacetate with aspartate as well as malate indicated amino acid pool buffering and the activity of the malate/Asp shuttle; iii) the ratio of methanol oxidation vs utilization appeared to be lower (54 vs 79% assimilated methanol directly oxidized to CO(2)). CONCLUSIONS: In summary, the application of instationary (13)C-based metabolic flux analysis to P. pastoris provides an experimental framework with improved capabilities to explore the regulation of the carbon and energy metabolism of this yeast, particularly for the case of methanol and multicarbon source metabolism. BioMed Central 2013-02-28 /pmc/articles/PMC3626722/ /pubmed/23448228 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1752-0509-7-17 Text en Copyright © 2013 Jordà et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Jordà, Joel
Suarez, Camilo
Carnicer, Marc
ten Pierick, Angela
Heijnen, Joseph J
van Gulik, Walter
Ferrer, Pau
Albiol, Joan
Wahl, Aljoscha
Glucose-methanol co-utilization in Pichia pastoris studied by metabolomics and instationary (13)C flux analysis
title Glucose-methanol co-utilization in Pichia pastoris studied by metabolomics and instationary (13)C flux analysis
title_full Glucose-methanol co-utilization in Pichia pastoris studied by metabolomics and instationary (13)C flux analysis
title_fullStr Glucose-methanol co-utilization in Pichia pastoris studied by metabolomics and instationary (13)C flux analysis
title_full_unstemmed Glucose-methanol co-utilization in Pichia pastoris studied by metabolomics and instationary (13)C flux analysis
title_short Glucose-methanol co-utilization in Pichia pastoris studied by metabolomics and instationary (13)C flux analysis
title_sort glucose-methanol co-utilization in pichia pastoris studied by metabolomics and instationary (13)c flux analysis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3626722/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23448228
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1752-0509-7-17
work_keys_str_mv AT jordajoel glucosemethanolcoutilizationinpichiapastorisstudiedbymetabolomicsandinstationary13cfluxanalysis
AT suarezcamilo glucosemethanolcoutilizationinpichiapastorisstudiedbymetabolomicsandinstationary13cfluxanalysis
AT carnicermarc glucosemethanolcoutilizationinpichiapastorisstudiedbymetabolomicsandinstationary13cfluxanalysis
AT tenpierickangela glucosemethanolcoutilizationinpichiapastorisstudiedbymetabolomicsandinstationary13cfluxanalysis
AT heijnenjosephj glucosemethanolcoutilizationinpichiapastorisstudiedbymetabolomicsandinstationary13cfluxanalysis
AT vangulikwalter glucosemethanolcoutilizationinpichiapastorisstudiedbymetabolomicsandinstationary13cfluxanalysis
AT ferrerpau glucosemethanolcoutilizationinpichiapastorisstudiedbymetabolomicsandinstationary13cfluxanalysis
AT albioljoan glucosemethanolcoutilizationinpichiapastorisstudiedbymetabolomicsandinstationary13cfluxanalysis
AT wahlaljoscha glucosemethanolcoutilizationinpichiapastorisstudiedbymetabolomicsandinstationary13cfluxanalysis