Improved Pyrrolysine Biosynthesis Through Phage Assisted Non-Continuous Directed Evolution of the Complete Pathway ✉ Joanne M
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
ARTICLE https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-24183-9 OPEN Improved pyrrolysine biosynthesis through phage assisted non-continuous directed evolution of the complete pathway ✉ Joanne M. L. Ho 1,3, Corwin A. Miller1,3, Kathryn A. Smith 1, Jacob R. Mattia1 & Matthew R. Bennett 1,2 Pyrrolysine (Pyl, O) exists in nature as the 22nd proteinogenic amino acid. Despite being a fundamental building block of proteins, studies of Pyl have been hindered by the difficulty and 1234567890():,; inefficiency of both its chemical and biological syntheses. Here, we improve Pyl biosynthesis via rational engineering and directed evolution of the entire biosynthetic pathway. To accommodate toxicity of Pyl biosynthetic genes in Escherichia coli, we also develop Alter- nating Phage Assisted Non-Continuous Evolution (Alt-PANCE) that alternates mutagenic and selective phage growths. The evolved pathway provides 32-fold improved yield of Pyl- containing reporter protein compared to the rationally engineered ancestor. Evolved PylB mutants are present at up to 4.5-fold elevated levels inside cells, and show up to 2.2-fold increased protease resistance. This study demonstrates that Alt-PANCE provides a general approach for evolving proteins exhibiting toxic side effects, and further provides an improved pathway capable of producing substantially greater quantities of Pyl-proteins in E. coli. 1 Department of Biosciences, Rice University, Houston, TX, USA. 2 Department of Bioengineering, Rice University, Houston, TX, USA. 3These authors ✉ contributed equally: Joanne M. L. Ho, Corwin A. Miller. email: [email protected] NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | (2021) 12:3914 | https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-24183-9 | www.nature.com/naturecommunications 1 ARTICLE NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-24183-9 yrrolysine (Pyl, O) exists in nature as the 22nd proteino- PylRS and tRNAPyl to incorporate synthetic amino acids into Pgenic amino acid1. Pyl represents an ancient addition to the proteins, as these genes provide an aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase genetic code, believed to have been present in the last (aaRS)-tRNA pair that does not exhibit cross-reactivity with the universal common ancestor2. Today, Pyl is found in numerous existing Escherichia coli translation system6–10. bacterial and archaeal species but not in eukaryotes. Although Pyl In contrast to most synthetic amino acids, Pyl is naturally has been found in several classes of proteins3, it is best known for recognized by PylRS and is ligated to tRNAPyl with high effi- its essential role in a unique class of methanogenic enzymes1,4. ciency. However, studies of Pyl proteins have been hindered by Pyl has a remarkably distinct structure compared to other pro- the poor supply of the amino acid despite being a fundamental teinogenic amino acids and is noteworthy for its reactive elec- building block of proteins in nature. An increased level of Pyl are trophilic moiety1—a feature absent in all other proteinogenic thus needed to further our understanding of these proteins. amino acids. Improving production of Pyl proteins provides an unusual The genetic components required for Pyl incorporation are challenge, as genetic code expansion studies have typically encoded in a single operon, pylSTBCD4, which mediates Pyl focused on improving aaRS-tRNA pairs for better recognition of biosynthesis and protein incorporation through nonsense sup- synthetic amino acids. To date, Pyl protein production has been pression of amber (UAG) codons5. Within the operon, pylS severely limited by the poor activity of the archaeal biosynthetic encodes pyrrolysyl-tRNA synthetase (PylRS), which catalyzes the pylBCD pathway. When this pathway is expressed heterologously ligation of Pyl to tRNA, while pylT encodes the corresponding in laboratory strains (such as E. coli), Pyl proteins are produced at transfer RNA (tRNAPyl)4. Genes pylB, pylC, and pylD encode a very low yield4,11. An alternative to improving biosynthesis is to enzymes that biosynthesize pyrrolysine from lysine (Fig. 1A)4.To supply cells with an exogenous source of Pyl12. However, organic date, numerous genetic code expansion studies have utilized synthesis of Pyl is known for its difficulty12–14 and it remains commercially unavailable. We anticipated that Phage-Assisted Non-Continuous Evolu- NH2 A L-Lysine (x2) (3R)-3-Methyl-D-ornithine (3R)-3-Methyl-D-ornithyl- 15 N -L-lysine tion (PANCE) would provide an effective method for improv- O O PylB PylC ing production of Pyl proteins in E. coli, as Pyl biosynthesis is NH (R) (R) (S) 2 (R) HO (SAM) HO NH2 (ATP) (R) conducted by three genes across which problematic regions are O NH NH 2 NH2 2 fi O H dif cult to identify. In phage-assisted evolution, the activity of an (S) N HO OH evolving gene of interest is linked to the life cycle of M13 bac- (3R)-3-Methyl-D-glutamyl-semialdehyde- NH2 N -L-lysine (R) teriophage, allowing each generation of phage growth to effec- (R) O L-Pyrrolysine (R) 16 O NH tively serve as a cycle of directed evolution . PANCE, which 2 PylD H (R) H (S) N N fl (S) spontaneous HO N relies on serial ask transfers, and its chemostat-based counter- HO O NH2 O part PACE have previously been used to rapidly evolve increased NH2 3 activity in a wide variety of individual enzymes, including RNA B Pyl PylRS BocK 1 polymerases16, proteases17, and aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases18. pylB pylC pylD Of note, PANCE is categorized as an in vivo continuous-directed evolution method19; “non-continuous” within its name denotes SP 2 4 its use of serial culture transfers, in contrast to the continuous flow machinery used for PACE16. Contrary to more targeted PylRS pylT gIII.3TAG AUC approaches (such as saturation mutagenesis), PANCE allows an 5’UAG 3’ gIII mRNA entire genetic region to be quickly evolved without focusing on AP specific regions of interest20. C Mutagenized SP Here, we detail the improvement of the pylBCD pathway for increased production of Pyl proteins in E. coli, performed using a SP infects selective host two-step process. Our first step entails the rational addition of a solubility tag to pylB, resulting in reduced toxic protein aggre- gation within the cell and also facilitating detectable levels of Pyl- AP SP MP SP containing sfGFP production. We next devise a version of PANCE that we term Alternating PANCE (Alt-PANCE), designed to accommodate mild to moderate cellular toxicity Less active SP SP infects fail to propagate mutagenic host during evolution. We use this method to evolve pylBCD for AP SP increased activity across numerous selection conditions. This process result in an additional 32-fold increase in Pyl-sfGFP Exit gene pool Active SP propagate production mediated by our most active mutant. Our evolu- Fig. 1 Pyl biosynthetic pathway evolution via Alt-PANCE. A Pyl tionary characterization find that the majority of mutations biosynthesis involves condensation of two lysine molecules by three occurred within pylB, and serve to increase cellular accumulation enzymes—the radical SAM enzyme PylB, ATP-dependent PylC, and PylD. of this protein by ~4–5-fold and increase its in vitro protease B Biosynthetic pylBCD operon was cloned into a selection phage (SP), while resistance by ~2-fold. This work provides both a procedure to the constitutively expressed pylST and phage shock promoter-controlled gIII enable continuous directed evolution of proteins exhibiting toxic were cloned into accessory plasmid (AP) vectors. Numbered portions side effects, and further provides a substantially improved bio- indicate selection circuit elements that were altered throughout evolution synthetic pathway for bacterial production of Pyl proteins. to control selection stringency, including (1) supplementation with BocK, (2) expression level of PylRS, (3) mutant variants of PylRS used, and (4) the number of amber codons present in gIII. C Each Alt-PANCE round entailed Results two phage passages: selective passage (left) entails operon activity- Devising Alt-PANCE and improving PylB solubility.We dependent expression of PIII (pink rods with circular tips); mutagenic initially attempted to use PANCE to evolve a codon-optimized passage (right) entails mutagenesis plasmid (MP)-dependent mutagenesis variant of the M. acetivorans pylBCD pathway, and the poor of the SP. initial activity of these genes led us to perform additional 2 NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | (2021) 12:3914 | https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-24183-9 | www.nature.com/naturecommunications NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-24183-9 ARTICLE optimization before beginning evolution. Following over- We performed Alt-PANCE of SP.BCD across three indepen- expression of the pylBCD pathway, we observed formation of dent lineages, termed lineages A, B, and C. As phage continued to inclusion bodies within each cell (Supplementary Fig. 1). After evolve, they were passaged across cells exhibiting a total of 11 noting that cells expressing only pylCD did not form inclusion different stringency conditions, with each successive change bodies, we rationally fused a SUMO tag to the N terminus of PylB predicted to increase selection strength through variation of four to improve its solubility21. The addition of a SUMO tag has separate parameters (Fig. 1B and Supplementary Table 1). After previously been shown to improve PylB solubility, enabling each round of Alt-PANCE, we tested phage growth under purification and crystallization of this protein22. Following the stronger selection conditions; we then either maintained selection addition of a SUMO tag to pylB, we observed that expression of strength at the prior level in the subsequent round, or increased it SUMO-pylBCD resulted in healthy cells without inclusion bodies, if growth was possible. Initially, we increased selection strength by indicating improved PylB solubility in vivo and reduced toxic side decreasing BocK supplementation, thereby forcing evolving phage effects (Supplementary Fig. 1). We next cloned SUMO-pylBCD to produce additional Pyl to fill the gap. Once the evolving phage into an M13 selection phage (SP) vector, termed SP.BCD (see could propagate in the absence of BocK, we increased selection “Methods”).