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Absence of the highly expressed small carbohydrate-binding protein Cgt improves the acarbose formation in Actinoplanes sp. SE50/110. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Actinoplanes sp. SE50/110 is the wild type strain responsible for producing acarbose, a treatment for type II diabetes.
  • The small protein Cgt, found in this strain, binds to starch and is repressed by glucose or lactose, suggesting a role in sugar metabolism or stress protection.
  • However, when Cgt was deleted using CRISPR/Cas9, it showed no significant impact on stress response or carbon source utilization, but interestingly, strains with Cgt deletion produced 8-16% more acarbose in maltose-rich environments.

Article Abstract

Actinoplanes sp. SE50/110 (ATCC 31044) is the wild type of industrial producer strains of acarbose. Acarbose has been used since the early 1990s as an inhibitor of intestinal human α-glucosidases in the medical treatment of type II diabetes mellitus. The small secreted protein Cgt, which consists of a single carbohydrate-binding module (CBM) 20-domain, was found to be highly expressed in Actinoplanes sp. SE50/110 in previous studies, but neither its function nor a possible role in the acarbose formation was explored, yet. Here, we demonstrated the starch-binding function of the Cgt protein in a binding assay. Transcription analysis showed that the cgt gene was strongly repressed in the presence of glucose or lactose. Due to this and its high abundance in the extracellular proteome of Actinoplanes, a functional role within the sugar metabolism or in the environmental stress protection was assumed. However, the gene deletion mutant ∆cgt, constructed by CRISPR/Cas9 technology, displayed no apparent phenotype in screening experiments testing for pH and osmolality stress, limited carbon source starch, and the excess of seven different sugars in liquid culture and further 97 carbon sources in the Omnilog Phenotypic Microarray System of Biolog. Therefore, a protective function as a surface protein or a function within the retainment and the utilization of carbon sources could not be experimentally validated. Remarkably, enhanced production of acarbose was determined yielding into 8-16% higher product titers when grown in maltose-containing medium.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7275007PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00253-020-10584-1DOI Listing

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