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Microbiology 145 (1999), 2335-2341
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Microbiology (1999), 145, 2335-2341.
© 1999 Society for General Microbiology


Molecular Genetics of Streptomycetes

A host–vector system for analysis and manipulation of rifamycin polyketide biosynthesis in Amycolatopsis mediterranei

Zhihao Hu1, Daniel Hunziker1, C. Richard Hutchinson1 and Chaitan Khosla1

Departments of Chemical Engineering1, Chemistry and Biochemistry2, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305-5025, USA
School of Pharmacy3 and Department of Bacteriology4, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706, USA

Author for correspondence: Chaitan Khosla. Tel: +1 650 723 6538. Fax: +1 650 723 6538. e-mail: ck{at}chemeng.stanford.edu

Modular polyketide synthases (PKSs) are a large family of multifunctional enzymes responsible for the biosynthesis of numerous bacterial natural products such as erythromycin and rifamycin. Advanced genetic analysis of these remarkable systems is often seriously hampered by the large size (>40 kb) of PKS gene clusters, and, notwithstanding their considerable fundamental and biotechnological significance, by the lack of suitable methods for engineering non-selectable modifications in chromosomally encoded PKS genes. The development of a facile host–vector strategy for genetic engineering of the rifamycin PKS in the producing organism, Amycolatopsis mediterranei S699, is described here. The genes encoding all 10 modules of the rifamycin PKS were replaced with a hygromycin-resistance marker gene. In a similar construction, only the first six modules of the PKS were replaced. The deletion hosts retained the ability to synthesize the primer unit 3-amino-5-hydroxybenzoic acid (AHBA), as judged by co-synthesis experiments with a mutant strain lacking AHBA synthase activity. Suicide plasmids carrying a short fragment from the 5' flanking end of the engineered deletion, an apramycin-resistance marker gene, and suitably engineered PKS genes could be introduced via electroporation into the deletion hosts, resulting in the integration of PKS genes and biosynthesis of a reporter polyketide in quantities comparable to those produced by the wild-type organism. Since this strategy for engineering recombinant PKSs in A. mediterranei requires only a selectable single crossover and eliminates the need for tedious non-selectable double-crossover experiments, it makes rifamycin PKS an attractive target for extensive genetic manipulation.

Keywords: rifamycin, polyketide synthase, Amycolatopsis

Abbreviations: AHBA, 3-amino-5-hydroxybenzoic acid; PKS(s), polyketide synthase(s)







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