TY - JOUR
T1 - Combination strategy to increase cyclosporin A productivity by Tolypocladium niveum using random mutagenesis and protoplast transformation
AU - Lee, Mi Jin
AU - Duong, Cac Thi Phung
AU - Han, Kyuboem
AU - Kim, Eung Soo
PY - 2009
Y1 - 2009
N2 - The cyclic undecapeptide cyclosporin A (CyA), one of the most valuable immunosuppressive drugs, is produced nonribosomally by a multifunctional cyclosporin synthetase enzyme complex by the filamentous fungus Tolypocladium niveum. To increase CyA productivity by wild-type T. niveum (ATCC 34921), random mutagenesis was first performed using an antifungal agar-plug colony assay (APCA) selection approach. This generated a mutant strain producing more than 9-fold greater CyA than the wild-type strain. Additionally, a foreign bacterial gene, Vitreoscilla hemoglobin gene (VHb), was transformed via protoplast regeneration and its transcription was confirmed by RT-PCR in the UV-irradiated mutant cell. This led to an additional 33.5% increase of CyA production. Although most protoplast-regenerated T. niveum transformants tend to lose CyA productivity, the optimized combination of random mutagenesis and protoplast transformation described here should be an efficient strategy to generate a commercially valuable, yet metabolite low-producing, fungal species, such as CyA-producing T. niveum.
AB - The cyclic undecapeptide cyclosporin A (CyA), one of the most valuable immunosuppressive drugs, is produced nonribosomally by a multifunctional cyclosporin synthetase enzyme complex by the filamentous fungus Tolypocladium niveum. To increase CyA productivity by wild-type T. niveum (ATCC 34921), random mutagenesis was first performed using an antifungal agar-plug colony assay (APCA) selection approach. This generated a mutant strain producing more than 9-fold greater CyA than the wild-type strain. Additionally, a foreign bacterial gene, Vitreoscilla hemoglobin gene (VHb), was transformed via protoplast regeneration and its transcription was confirmed by RT-PCR in the UV-irradiated mutant cell. This led to an additional 33.5% increase of CyA production. Although most protoplast-regenerated T. niveum transformants tend to lose CyA productivity, the optimized combination of random mutagenesis and protoplast transformation described here should be an efficient strategy to generate a commercially valuable, yet metabolite low-producing, fungal species, such as CyA-producing T. niveum.
KW - Cyclosporin A
KW - Mutagenesis
KW - Protoplast transformation
KW - Tolypocladium niveum
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=70849109003&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.4014/jmb.0811.629
DO - 10.4014/jmb.0811.629
M3 - Article
C2 - 19809241
AN - SCOPUS:70849109003
SN - 1017-7825
VL - 19
SP - 869
EP - 872
JO - Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
JF - Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
IS - 9
ER -