Proteomic analysis reveals that the co-ordination of cytosolic and mitochondrial pathways is beneficial for sabinene biosynthesis in engineered Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Biotechnol J. 2024 Apr;19(4):e2300710. doi: 10.1002/biot.202300710.

Abstract

Reconstruction and optimization of biosynthetic pathways can help to overproduce target chemicals in microbial cell factories based on genetic engineering. However, the perturbation of biosynthetic pathways on cellular metabolism is not well investigated and profiling the engineered microbes remains challenging. The rapid development of omics tools has the potential to characterize the engineered microbial cell factory. Here, we performed label-free quantitative proteomic analysis and metabolomic analysis of engineered sabinene overproducing Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains. Combined metabolic analysis andproteomic analysis of targeted mevalonate (MVA) pathway showed that co-ordination of cytosolic and mitochondrial pathways had balanced metabolism, and genome integration of biosynthetic genes had higher sabinene production with less MVA enzymes. Furthermore, comparative proteomic analysis showed that compartmentalized mitochondria pathway had perturbation on central cellular metabolism. This study provided an omics analysis example for characterizing engineered cell factory, which can guide future regulation of the cellular metabolism and maintaining optimal protein expression levels for the synthesis of target products.

Keywords: compartmentalization; isoprenoid; mitochondria; proteome; yeast.

MeSH terms

  • Bicyclic Monoterpenes*
  • Metabolic Engineering*
  • Mitochondria / genetics
  • Mitochondria / metabolism
  • Proteomics
  • Saccharomyces cerevisiae* / metabolism

Substances

  • sabinene
  • Bicyclic Monoterpenes