Sergey V. Mashko
Moscow State University
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Featured researches published by Sergey V. Mashko.
BMC Molecular Biology | 2009
Joanna I. Katashkina; Yoshihiko Hara; Lyubov I Golubeva; Irina G. Andreeva; Tatiana M. Kuvaeva; Sergey V. Mashko
BackgroundPantoea ananatis, a member of the Enterobacteriacea family, is a new and promising subject for biotechnological research. Over recent years, impressive progress in its application to L-glutamate production has been achieved. Nevertheless, genetic and biotechnological studies of Pantoea ananatis have been impeded because of the absence of genetic tools for rapid construction of direct mutations in this bacterium. The λ Red-recombineering technique previously developed in E. coli and used for gene inactivation in several other bacteria is a high-performance tool for rapid construction of precise genome modifications.ResultsIn this study, the expression of λ Red genes in P. ananatis was found to be highly toxic. A screening was performed to select mutants of P. ananatis that were resistant to the toxic affects of λ Red. A mutant strain, SC17(0) was identified that grew well under conditions of simultaneous expression of λ gam, bet, and exo genes. Using this strain, procedures for fast introduction of multiple rearrangements to the Pantoea ananatis genome based on the λ Red-dependent integration of the PCR-generated DNA fragments with as short as 40 bp flanking homologies have been demonstrated.ConclusionThe λ Red-recombineering technology was successfully used for rapid generation of chromosomal modifications in the specially selected P. ananatis recipient strain. The procedure of electro-transformation with chromosomal DNA has been developed for transfer of the marked mutation between different P. ananatis strains. Combination of these techniques with λ Int/Xis-dependent excision of selective markers significantly accelerates basic research and construction of producing strains.
BMC Biotechnology | 2008
N. I. Minaeva; Evgeny R Gak; Danila Vadimovich Zimenkov; Aleksandra Yu Skorokhodova; Irina Vladimirovna Biryukova; Sergey V. Mashko
BackgroundThe development of modern producer strains with metabolically engineered pathways poses special problems that often require manipulating many genes and expressing them individually at different levels or under separate regulatory controls. The construction of plasmid-less marker-less strains has many advantages for the further practical exploitation of these bacteria in industry. Such producer strains are usually constructed by sequential chromosome modifications including deletions and integration of genetic material. For these purposes complex methods based on in vitro and in vivo recombination processes have been developed.ResultsHere, we describe the new scheme of insertion of the foreign DNA for step-by-step construction of plasmid-less marker-less recombinant E. coli strains with chromosome structure designed in advance. This strategy, entitled as Dual-In/Out, based on the initial Red-driven insertion of artificial φ80-attB sites into desired points of the chromosome followed by two site-specific recombination processes: first, the φ80 system is used for integration of the recombinant DNA based on selective marker-carrier conditionally-replicated plasmid with φ80-attP-site, and second, the λ system is used for excision of inserted vector part, including the plasmid ori-replication and the marker, flanked by λ-attL/R-sites.ConclusionThe developed Dual-In/Out strategy is a rather straightforward, but convenient combination of previously developed recombination methods: phages site-specific and general Red/ET-mediated. This new approach allows us to detail the design of future recombinant marker-less strains, carrying, in particular, rather large artificial insertions that could be difficult to introduce by usually used PCR-based Recombineering procedure. The developed strategy is simple and could be particularly useful for construction of strains for the biotechnological industry.
Molecular Biology | 2005
Joanna I. Katashkina; A. Yu. Skorokhodova; Danila Vadimovich Zimenkov; A. Yu. Gulevich; N. I. Minaeva; V. G. Doroshenko; Irina Vladimirovna Biryukova; Sergey V. Mashko
A new method of constructing a set of bacterial cell clones varying in the strength of a promoter upstream of the gene of interest was developed with the use of Escherichia coli MG1655 and lacZ as a reporter. The gist of it lies in constructing a set of DNA fragments with tac-like promoters by means of PCR with the consensus promoter Ptac and primers ensuring randomization of the four central nucleotides in the −35 region. DNA fragments containing the tac-like promoters and a selective marker (CmR) were used to replace lacI and the regulatory region of the lactose operon in E. coli MG1655. Direct LacZ activity assays with independent integrant clones revealed 14 new promoters (out of 44 = 256 possible variants), whose strength varied by two orders of magnitude: LacZ activity in the corresponding strains gradually varied from 102 Miller units with the weakest promoter to 104 Miller units with consensus Ptac Sequencing of the modified promoters showed that randomization of three positions in the −35 region is sufficient for generating a representative promoter library, which reduces the number of possible variants from 256 to 64. The method of constructing a set of clones varying in expression of the gene or operon of interest is promising for modern metabolic engineering.
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2012
Yoshihiko Hara; Naoki Kadotani; Hiroshi Izui; Joanna I. Katashkina; Tatiana M. Kuvaeva; Irina G. Andreeva; Lyubov I Golubeva; Dmitry B. Malko; Vsevolod J. Makeev; Sergey V. Mashko; Yurii Kozlov
Pantoea ananatis AJ13355 is a newly identified member of the Enterobacteriaceae family with promising biotechnological applications. This bacterium is able to grow at an acidic pH and is resistant to saturating concentrations of L-glutamic acid, making this organism a suitable host for the production of L-glutamate. In the current study, the complete genomic sequence of P. ananatis AJ13355 was determined. The genome was found to consist of a single circular chromosome consisting of 4,555,536 bp [DDBJ: AP012032] and a circular plasmid, pEA320, of 321,744 bp [DDBJ: AP012033]. After automated annotation, 4,071 protein-coding sequences were identified in the P. ananatis AJ13355 genome. For 4,025 of these genes, functions were assigned based on homologies to known proteins. A high level of nucleotide sequence identity (99%) was revealed between the genome of P. ananatis AJ13355 and the previously published genome of P. ananatis LMG 20103. Short colinear regions, which are identical to DNA sequences in the Escherichia coli MG1655 chromosome, were found to be widely dispersed along the P. ananatis AJ13355 genome. Conjugal gene transfer from E. coli to P. ananatis, mediated by homologous recombination between short identical sequences, was also experimentally demonstrated. The determination of the genome sequence has paved the way for the directed metabolic engineering of P. ananatis to produce biotechnologically relevant compounds.
Molecular Biology | 2009
A. Yu. Gulevich; A. Yu. Skorokhodova; V. Yu. Ermishev; Alexander A. Krylov; N. I. Minaeva; Z. M. Polonskaya; Danila Vadimovich Zimenkov; Irina Vladimirovna Biryukova; Sergey V. Mashko
A new method for the construction of translationally coupled operons in a bacterial chromosome was developed on the basis of the recombineering approach. The method includes the in vitro construction of an artificial operon with an efficiently translated proximal cistron, its insertion into the Escherichia coli chromosome, the modification of the operon via Red-driven insertion of a special “Junction” with an excisable selective marker into the intercistronic region of the initial operon, and the excision of the marker. The Junction structure was designed and tested. The Junction consists of three components. The first component is the E. coli rplC-rplD intercistronic region and serves for placing the TAA codon of the proximal gene in the SD sequence (TAAGGAG) of rplD. The second component is the CmR gene flanked by λattL/R sites in such a fashion that the residual λattB site after λInt/Xis-driven excision of the marker does not contain termination codons in frame with ATG of rplD. The third component is the E. coli trpE-trpD intercistronic region which is added so that TGA of trpE acts a termination codon of the new open reading frame (ORF), while the overlapping (TGATG) ATG of trpD is in the position of the initiation codon of the distal gene of the original operon. The general design of the Junction provides the conversion of the original two-cistron operon into a three-cistron operon with translationally coupled genes, where the coupling of the artificial ORF (rplD’-λattB-’trpE) with the proximal gene is due to the rplC-rplD intercistronic region and its coupling with the distal gene is due to trpE-trpD. The strategy was experimentally implemented to construct an artificial operon Ptac-aroG4-serA5, where the expression the distal serA5 gene was optimized owing to translational coupling in a three-cistron operon.
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2011
Valerii Z. Akhverdyan; Evgueni R. Gak; Irina L. Tokmakova; Nataliya V. Stoynova; Yurgis A. V. Yomantas; Sergey V. Mashko
The advantages of phage Mu transposition-based systems for the chromosomal editing of plasmid-less strains are reviewed. The cis and trans requirements for Mu phage-mediated transposition, which include the L/R ends of the Mu DNA, the transposition factors MuA and MuB, and the cis/trans functioning of the E element as an enhancer, are presented. Mini-Mu(LR)/(LER) units are Mu derivatives that lack most of the Mu genes but contain the L/R ends or a properly arranged E element in cis to the L/R ends. The dual-component system, which consists of an integrative plasmid with a mini-Mu and an easily eliminated helper plasmid encoding inducible transposition factors, is described in detail as a tool for the integration/amplification of recombinant DNAs. This chromosomal editing method is based on replicative transposition through the formation of a cointegrate that can be resolved in a recombination-dependent manner. (E-plus)- or (E-minus)-helpers that differ in the presence of the trans-acting E element are used to achieve the proper mini-Mu transposition intensity. The systems that have been developed for the construction of stably maintained mini-Mu multi-integrant strains of Escherichia coli and Methylophilus methylotrophus are described. A novel integration/amplification/fixation strategy is proposed for consecutive independent replicative transpositions of different mini-Mu(LER) units with “excisable” E elements in methylotrophic cells.
Journal of Microbiological Methods | 2012
Anna A. Ublinskaya; Valeriy V. Samsonov; Sergey V. Mashko; Nataliya V. Stoynova
The genetic manipulation of cells is the most promising strategy for designing microorganisms with desired traits. The most widely used approaches for integrating specific DNA-fragments into the Escherichia coli genome are based on bacteriophage site-specific and Red/ET-mediated homologous recombination systems. Specifically, the recently developed Dual In/Out integration strategy enables the integration of DNA fragments directly into specific chromosomal loci (Minaeva et al., 2008). To develop this strategy further, we designed a method for the precise cloning of any long DNA fragments from the E. coli chromosome and their targeted insertion into the genome that does not require PCR. In this method, the region of interest is flanked by I-SceI rare-cutting restriction sites, and the I-SceI-bracketed region is cloned into the unique I-SceI site of an integrative plasmid vector that then enables its targeted insertion into the E. coli chromosome via bacteriophage φ80 Int-mediated specialized recombination. This approach allows any long specific DNA fragment from the E. coli genome to be cloned without a PCR amplification step and reproducibly inserted into any chosen chromosomal locus. The developed method could be particularly useful for the construction of marker-less and plasmid-less recombinant strains in the biotechnology industry.
Microbial Cell Factories | 2014
M. S. Shupletsov; Lyubov I Golubeva; Svetlana S Rubina; Dmitry A Podvyaznikov; Shintaro Iwatani; Sergey V. Mashko
BackgroundSteady-state 13C-based metabolic flux analysis (13C-MFA) is the most powerful method available for the quantification of intracellular fluxes. These analyses include concertedly linked experimental and computational stages: (i) assuming the metabolic model and optimizing the experimental design; (ii) feeding the investigated organism using a chosen 13C-labeled substrate (tracer); (iii) measuring the extracellular effluxes and detecting the 13C-patterns of intracellular metabolites; and (iv) computing flux parameters that minimize the differences between observed and simulated measurements, followed by evaluating flux statistics. In its early stages, 13C-MFA was performed on the basis of data obtained in a single labeling experiment (SLE) followed by exploiting the developed high-performance computational software. Recently, the advantages of parallel labeling experiments (PLEs), where several LEs are conducted under the conditions differing only by the tracer(s) choice, were demonstrated, particularly with regard to improving flux precision due to the synergy of complementary information. The availability of an open-source software adjusted for PLE-based 13C-MFA is an important factor for PLE implementation.ResultsThe open-source software OpenFLUX, initially developed for the analysis of SLEs, was extended for the computation of PLE data. Using the OpenFLUX2, in silico simulation confirmed that flux precision is improved when 13C-MFA is implemented by fitting PLE data to the common model compared with SLE-based analysis. Efficient flux resolution could be achieved in the PLE-mediated analysis when the choice of tracer was based on an experimental design computed to minimize the flux variances from different parts of the metabolic network. The analysis provided by OpenFLUX2 mainly includes (i) the optimization of the experimental design, (ii) the computation of the flux parameters from LEs data, (iii) goodness-of-fit testing of the model’s adequacy, (iv) drawing conclusions concerning the identifiability of fluxes and construction of a contribution matrix reflecting the relative contribution of the measurement variances to the flux variances, and (v) precise determination of flux confidence intervals using a fine-tunable and convergence-controlled Monte Carlo-based method.ConclusionsThe developed open-source OpenFLUX2 provides a friendly software environment that facilitates beginners and existing OpenFLUX users to implement LEs for steady-state 13C-MFA including experimental design, quantitative evaluation of flux parameters and statistics.
Fems Microbiology Letters | 2011
Irina G. Andreeva; Lyubov I Golubeva; Tatiana M. Kuvaeva; Evgueni R. Gak; Joanna I. Katashkina; Sergey V. Mashko
Pantoea ananatis accumulates gluconate during aerobic growth in the presence of glucose. Computer analysis of the P. ananatis SC17(0) sequenced genome revealed an ORF encoding a homologue (named gcd) of the mGDH (EC 1.1.99.17) apoenzyme from Escherichia coli and a putative pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ) biosynthetic operon homologous to pqqABCDEF from Klebsiella pneumoniae. Construction of Δgcd and Δpqq mutants of P. ananatis confirmed the proposed functions of these genetic elements. The P. ananatis pqqABCDEF was cloned in vivo and integrated into the chromosomes of P. ananatis and E. coli according to the Dual In/Out strategy. Introduction of a second copy of pqqABCDEF to P. ananatis SC17(0) doubled the accumulation of PQQ. Integration of the operon into E. coli MG1655ΔptsGΔmanXY restored the growth of bacteria on glucose. The obtained data show the essential role of pqqABCDEF in PQQ biosynthesis in P. ananatis and E. coli. We propose that the cloned operon could be useful for an efficient phosphoenolpyruvate-independent glucose consumption pathway due to glucose oxidation and construction of E. coli strains with the advantage of phosphoenolpyruvate-derived metabolite production.
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2010
Vera Georgievna Doroshenko; Irina S. Tsyrenzhapova; Alexander A. Krylov; Evgeniya M. Kiseleva; Vladimir Yu. Ermishev; Svetlana M. Kazakova; Irina Vladimirovna Biryukova; Sergey V. Mashko
DAHP synthase (EC 4.1.2.15) is one of the key enzymes involved in aromatic amino acid biosynthesis in Escherichia coli. An approximately twofold decrease in DAHP synthase activity level was detected in the late growth phase of the l-phenylalanine (Phe)-producing E. coli strain, in which this enzyme encoded by aroG4 is resistant to feedback inhibition. An additional copy of aroG4 that is controlled by promoters of E. coli phoA or pstS genes was integrated into the chromosome of the Phe producer. The choice of promoter was based on the detected activation of the Pho regulon that occurs in response to the depletion of soluble inorganic orthophosphate (Pi) in the medium, provided that the optical density of the Phe-producing culture did not exceed 70% of its maximum value. Pho-mediated aroG4 transcription increased both the accumulation of Phe and the level of DAHP synthase activity in the late stage of batch cultivation on glucose in Pi-limited conditions. Disruption of rpoS led to the improved performance of a PphoA-aroG4 strain. The pstS promoter that is recognized by the σ70/σS-associated core RNA polymerase resulted in the stable maintenance of DAHP synthase activity during long-drawn fed-batch cultivation of the RpoS+ strain carrying the PpstS-aroG4.