Identification and Molecular Characterization of the Operon Required for L-Asparagine Utilization in Corynebacterium glutamicum

Understanding the metabolic pathways of amino acids and their regulation is important for the rational metabolic engineering of amino acid production. The catabolic pathways of L-asparagine and L-aspartate are composed of transporters for amino acid uptake and asparaginase and aspartase, which are i...

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Veröffentlicht in:Microorganisms (Basel) 2022-05, Vol.10 (5), p.1002
Hauptverfasser: Toyoda, Koichi, Sugaya, Riki, Domon, Akihiro, Suda, Masako, Hiraga, Kazumi, Inui, Masayuki
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Understanding the metabolic pathways of amino acids and their regulation is important for the rational metabolic engineering of amino acid production. The catabolic pathways of L-asparagine and L-aspartate are composed of transporters for amino acid uptake and asparaginase and aspartase, which are involved in the sequential deamination to fumarate. However, knowledge of the catabolic genes for asparagine in bacteria of the Actinobacteria class has been limited. In this study, we identified and characterized the operon required for L-Asn catabolism in R. The operon consisted of genes encoding a transcriptional regulator (AnsR), asparaginase (AnsA2), aspartase (AspA2), and permease (AnsP). The enzymes and permease encoded in the operon were shown to be essential for L-Asn utilization, but another asparaginase, AnsA1, and aspartase, AspA1, were not essential. Expression analysis revealed that the operon was induced in response to extracellular L-Asn and was transcribed as a leaderless mRNA. The DNA-binding assay demonstrated that AnsR acted as a transcriptional repressor of the operon by binding to the inverted repeat at its 5'-end region. The AnsR binding was inhibited by L-Asn. This study provides insights into the functions and regulatory mechanisms of similar operon-like clusters in related bacteria.
ISSN:2076-2607
2076-2607
DOI:10.3390/microorganisms10051002