Team:SJTU-BioX-Shanghai/Project/project2.1

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Biosynthesis - Violacein

  • State of the art

Violacein is a purple chromobacterial pigment synthased from the basic amino acid tryptophan. Its biosynthetic pathway contains 3 possible branches and produces 3 final products, which are violacein, deoxyviolacein and deoxychromoviridan. The five key enzymes originate from Chromobacterium violaceum could be expressed in E.coli and corresponding parts are available in the Parts Registry.

  • Aim

Our Membrane Rudder device calls for a branched chain reaction to test its efficiency. We decided to use VVD as a light sensor to control the direction of Violacein biosynthetic pathway. The efficiency of Membrane Rudder could be evaluated through measuring concentration of three final products.

  • Achievements
    • Constructed violacein pathway enzymes to membrane proteins.
    • Deoxyviolacein amount increased by 10-fold.
    • Side product deoxychromaviridans decreased by 7-fold.


Background

Violacein is a violet pigment produced by several bacteria through pathway of 5 related genes, vioA, vioB, vioC, vioD and vioE. It was initially discovered in Chromobacterium violaceum. This metabolite of tryptophan has such special applications as antibacterial, anti-trypanocidal, anti-ulcerogenic, and anticancer drugs.

There are three branches in this pathway which could verify the efficiency of the Membrane Rudder. We can identify the different end-products by thin-layer chromatography (TLC), or high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). The product proportion change demonstrates the efficiency of alteration in reaction direction.

Violacein Biosynthetic Pathway

The violacein biosynthetic pathway includes 5 key enzymes which work in conjunction. VioA, a flavoenzyme and VioB, a heme protein, they work together to oxidize and dimerize tryptophen into IPA imine dimer. Then vioE induces a indole rearrangement,producing prodeoxyviolacein acid, also known as PVA.

Fig.1 :The violacein biosynthetic pathway. The purple part on the left indicates the branch of pigment deoxyviolacein.The violet part on the right indicates the branch of pigment violacein. The green part indicates the branch of pigment deoxychromoviridans.

VioA, VioB and VioE catalyze a sequential reaction to produce PVA. There exists one intrinsic E.coli enzyme that aids in an additional side reaction, further modifying PVA into a green pigment called deoxychromoviridans.

The last two enzymes, VioC and VioD are flavin-dependent oxygenases. VioC alone transforms PVA into a purple pigment called deoxyviolacein, while Vio C could also act cooperatively with VioD. VioD hydroxylates 5-position indole ring, then the other 2-position indole ring is processed by VioC to create the oxindole, and in this way violacein is produced.

Design of Membrane Assembly

Theoretically our Membrane Rudder offers a method to fine-tune reaction direction.

Switch of reaction direction

We constructed our device as demonstrated in Fig.2. In Violacein Membrane Rudder System, VioA, VioB, VioE and VioC constitutively aggregate. When blue light is present, VioD with Membrane Anchor would aggregate with complex of VioA,B,C and E, making violacein the dominnant final product.But if you turn the light off, VioD with Membrane Anchor would dissociate with VioA,B,C and E. Thus the biosynthetic pathway for deoxyviolacein is switched on.

For VioB and VioE only function normally in dimereic state, free VioB and free VioE were coexpressed with membrane assembly carrying VioA,B,C,D and E to ensure the normal function of the whole system.

To characterize the practical effect of Violacein Membrane Rudder System, we coexpressed all proteins in Fig.2 with free VioB and VioE. Bacteria in experimental group were induced at a L-Arabinose concentration of 0.1% under blue light while control group were induced in the dark with other conditions all the same.

The BioBrick Part VVD-MA5-vioC and VVD-MA6-vioD is [http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_K771205 Part:BBa_K771205] and [http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_K771206 Part:BBa_K771206], respectively. For Membrane Anchor 2-vioA, MA3-vioB, MA4-vioE, the corresponding part is [http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_K771201 Part:BBa_K771201], [http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_K771202 Part:BBa_K771202], [http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_K771203 Part:BBa_K771203], respectively.

Fig.2 :The violacein Rudder construction.

Suppression over side-reactions

According to the mechanism behind our design of membrane rudder, a considerable reduction of deoxychromoviridans production is expected. Under light signal, VioD and VioC get close to other Vio enzymes. The assembly of sequential enzymes helps substrate flow to downstream enzymes, making violacein more preferably synthesized . The overall amount of available tryptophan in a bacterium is fixed, so preference to the production of violacein would inevitably cut the supply to the other branches of reaction.

In a word, productivity of deoxychromoviridans will be decreased.

To verify our assumption, free VioABCDE genes are also transformed into E.coli as control group.

Results and Discussion

Overview

By attaching the core enzymes to the VIVID, we managed to control the flow of branched chain reaction, such as violacein biosynthetic pathway. Results indicate that the extracts of bacterial cultures induced by light contained almost no deoxyviolacein while it was produced in the samples restrained from light. Moreover, a significant decrease of side products such as deoxychomoviridans was detected when membrane complex system was present.

Switch Analysis

The switch of the reaction can be realized by the extracellular signals. Through the light induction, the reaction producing deoxyviolacein by VioC alone is inhibited due to the lack of interaction with PVA. On the other hand, as long as light is restrained from the bacteria, however, the above reaction is initiated leading to the production of deoxyviolacein.

Fig.3 :HPLC result (right) and the ratio(left) of deoxyviolacein in sample with light induction and without light induction. Fig. B represents the deoxyviolacein HPLC peak results from sample with no light induction. Fig. C represents the deoxyviolacein HPLC peak results from sample with light induction. Results indicate that the amount of the deoxyviolacein from the sample with light induction is tremendously larger than that from the sample without light induction. The red part in the chart represents the portion of deoxyviolacein and the blue part represents violacein

The HPLC results show that the peak of deoxyviolacein appears at about 9 minutes after the injection. We find out that under the induction of light, production of deoxyviolacein was inhibited (almost 0%) while most products were violacein. Without the light induction, however, the pathway leading to the deoxyviolacein was initiated and thus deoxyviolacein was produced(about 8%). Such results confirmed our membrane rudder system and indicated that by controlling the extracellular signal, such as light, we are able to manipulate the branched chain reactions thus producing the target products we desire.

Inhibition of side reaction

Membrane complex system would help to reduce the amount of side-products to some extent. Under the case that the enzymes involved in the side reaction are situated in the cytoplasm, they are less competent than the core enzymes attached on the membrane to mediate the subsequent reactions due to the spatial obstacle.

Fig.4 :The HPLC peak area of deoxychromoviridans from sample with light induction and RBS-vio control group.

From the HPLC results, we detected a distinct decrease of side-products deoxychomoviridans. Judging from the peak area, we find out that the amount of deoxychromoviridans from rbs-vio control group is nearly eight times that from light-induced group. Such experiment results coincided with our anticipation and demonstrated that the membrane complex system would enhance the usage of substrates and thus reduce the amount of intermediate products and other subsequent side-products.

Future direction

Fig.5 :Alternative testification for the violacein biosynthetic pathway.

1. Evaluate our membrane rudder system in alternative way. By attaching enzyme VioC and VioE to the VIVID separately, we could further testify whether such system could be controlled by light signal. Under the induction of light, violacein is supposed to be scarce in the pigment extraction if membrane rudder system works as anticipation. On the other hand, the pathway producing violacein would be initiated and triggered if the sample is kept away from light.

2. Explore other potential light-inducing-dimerizable proteins. These proteins could dimerize under the wavelength of light different from 470nm(for VIVID dimerization). Appling these potential proteins as well as VIVID in our membrane rudder device would realize determining pathway of branched chain reaction under various wavelength of light.

3. Investigate various signals for reaction switching. Such signals as chemical signal and transcription signal are all available for the pathway of violacein biosynthetic. We could further our membrane rudder system through extracellular signals as well as intracellular signals.

Reference

1. Balibar, C. J. and C. T. Walsh (2006). "In vitro biosynthesis of violacein from L-tryptophan by the enzymes VioA-E from Chromobacterium violaceum." Biochemistry 45(51): 15444-57.

2. Hoshino, T. "Violacein and related tryptophan metabolites produced by Chromobacterium violaceum: biosynthetic mechanism and pathway for construction of violacein core." Appl Microbiol Biotechnol 91(6): 1463-75.

3. Shrode, L. B., Z. A. Lewis, et al. (2001). "vvd is required for light adaptation of conidiation-specific genes of Neurospora crassa, but not circadian conidiation." Fungal Genet Biol 32(3): 169-81.