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A molecular key for building hyphae aggregates: the role of the newly identified Streptomyces protein HyaS

Streptomycetes produce many metabolites with medical and biotechnological applications. During fermentations, their hyphae build aggregates, a process in which the newly identified protein HyaS plays an important role. The corresponding hyaS gene is present within all investigated Streptomyces speci...

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Autores principales: Koebsch, Ilona, Overbeck, Jens, Piepmeyer, Sophie, Meschke, Holger, Schrempf, Hildgund
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3815755/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21261929
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1751-7915.2009.00093.x
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author Koebsch, Ilona
Overbeck, Jens
Piepmeyer, Sophie
Meschke, Holger
Schrempf, Hildgund
author_facet Koebsch, Ilona
Overbeck, Jens
Piepmeyer, Sophie
Meschke, Holger
Schrempf, Hildgund
author_sort Koebsch, Ilona
collection PubMed
description Streptomycetes produce many metabolites with medical and biotechnological applications. During fermentations, their hyphae build aggregates, a process in which the newly identified protein HyaS plays an important role. The corresponding hyaS gene is present within all investigated Streptomyces species. Reporter fusions indicate that transcription of hyaS occurs within substrate hyphae of the Streptomyces lividans wild type (WT). The HyaS protein is dominantly associated with the substrate hyphae. The WT strain forms cylindrically shaped clumps of densely packed substrate hyphae, often fusing to higher aggregates (pellets), which remain stably associated during shaking. Investigations by electron microscopy suggest that HyaS induces tight fusion‐like contacts among substrate hyphae. In contrast, the pellets of the designed hyaS disruption mutant ΔH are irregular in shape, contain frequently outgrowing bunches of hyphae, and fuse less frequently. ΔH complemented with a plasmid carrying hyaS resembles the WT phenotype. Biochemical studies indicate that the C‐terminal region of HyaS has amine oxidase activity. Investigations of ΔH transformants, each carrying a specifically mutated gene, lead to the conclusion that the in situ oxidase activity correlates with the pellet‐inducing role of HyaS, and depends on the presence of certain histidine residues. Furthermore, the level of undecylprodigiosin, a red pigment with antibiotic activity, is influenced by the engineered hyaS subtype within a strain. These data present the first molecular basis for future manipulation of pellets, and concomitant production of secondary metabolites during biotechnological processes.
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spelling pubmed-38157552014-02-12 A molecular key for building hyphae aggregates: the role of the newly identified Streptomyces protein HyaS Koebsch, Ilona Overbeck, Jens Piepmeyer, Sophie Meschke, Holger Schrempf, Hildgund Microb Biotechnol Research Articles Streptomycetes produce many metabolites with medical and biotechnological applications. During fermentations, their hyphae build aggregates, a process in which the newly identified protein HyaS plays an important role. The corresponding hyaS gene is present within all investigated Streptomyces species. Reporter fusions indicate that transcription of hyaS occurs within substrate hyphae of the Streptomyces lividans wild type (WT). The HyaS protein is dominantly associated with the substrate hyphae. The WT strain forms cylindrically shaped clumps of densely packed substrate hyphae, often fusing to higher aggregates (pellets), which remain stably associated during shaking. Investigations by electron microscopy suggest that HyaS induces tight fusion‐like contacts among substrate hyphae. In contrast, the pellets of the designed hyaS disruption mutant ΔH are irregular in shape, contain frequently outgrowing bunches of hyphae, and fuse less frequently. ΔH complemented with a plasmid carrying hyaS resembles the WT phenotype. Biochemical studies indicate that the C‐terminal region of HyaS has amine oxidase activity. Investigations of ΔH transformants, each carrying a specifically mutated gene, lead to the conclusion that the in situ oxidase activity correlates with the pellet‐inducing role of HyaS, and depends on the presence of certain histidine residues. Furthermore, the level of undecylprodigiosin, a red pigment with antibiotic activity, is influenced by the engineered hyaS subtype within a strain. These data present the first molecular basis for future manipulation of pellets, and concomitant production of secondary metabolites during biotechnological processes. Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2009-05 2009-04-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3815755/ /pubmed/21261929 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1751-7915.2009.00093.x Text en Copyright © 2009 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2009 Society for Applied Microbiology and Blackwell Publishing Ltd
spellingShingle Research Articles
Koebsch, Ilona
Overbeck, Jens
Piepmeyer, Sophie
Meschke, Holger
Schrempf, Hildgund
A molecular key for building hyphae aggregates: the role of the newly identified Streptomyces protein HyaS
title A molecular key for building hyphae aggregates: the role of the newly identified Streptomyces protein HyaS
title_full A molecular key for building hyphae aggregates: the role of the newly identified Streptomyces protein HyaS
title_fullStr A molecular key for building hyphae aggregates: the role of the newly identified Streptomyces protein HyaS
title_full_unstemmed A molecular key for building hyphae aggregates: the role of the newly identified Streptomyces protein HyaS
title_short A molecular key for building hyphae aggregates: the role of the newly identified Streptomyces protein HyaS
title_sort molecular key for building hyphae aggregates: the role of the newly identified streptomyces protein hyas
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3815755/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21261929
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1751-7915.2009.00093.x
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