Coding
ATF1

Part:BBa_J45014

Designed by: Andr Green II   Group: iGEM06_MIT   (2006-07-31)

alcohol acetyltransferase I; converts isoamyl alcohol to isoamyl acetate (banana odor)

BBa_J45014 encodes alcohol acetyltransferase I derived from ATF1 from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. ATF1 catalyzes the conversion of isoamyl alcohol to isoamyl acetate. Isoamyl acetate has a banana smell.

Usage and Biology

[Note that this is not aspartate amino transferase (also called "AATase"), and that "ATF1" also refers to "Activating Transcription Factor 1" in humans (an entirely different protein that is homologous to "Atf1" in mouse).]


Assembly Compatibility:
  • 10
    COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[10]
  • 12
    COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[12]
  • 21
    INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[21]
    Illegal BglII site found at 99
    Illegal BamHI site found at 1426
  • 23
    COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[23]
  • 25
    COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[25]
  • 1000
    INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[1000]
    Illegal SapI.rc site found at 526
    Illegal SapI.rc site found at 1534

Characterisation by 2019 UNSW

Gene Constructions - Modifications

The following gene construct was designed to enable the cloning ATF1 gene and purification of the protein.

Additions to the gene are as follows:

  • Gibson forward and reverse overhangs – 5’ forward and 3’ reverse gibson overhangs are complementary to that of the pET-19b backbone. This allows for the ligation of the protein of interest into the pET-19b plasmid via Gibson Assembly.
  • Hexahistidine tag – The histidine residues has a high binding affinity to Ni2+, this enables the purification of the protein of interest using Immobilised metal affinity chromatography (IMAC) via a Ni-NTA column.
  • GG linkers - GG linkers are included between the peptide sequences. This flexible linker was designed to permit individual unhindered protein folding of the ATF1 enzyme and hexahistidine tag.

Atf1 ano.png

Figure 1: Sequence annotation of ATF1-His gBlock contains the ATF1 gene (orange) with a hexahistidine tag (light grey) separated by a GG linker (dark grey), TAA stop codon (silver) enclosed within gibson forward and reverse overhangs (pink).

Primers used for modification

Primers were designed for the addition of a C-terminal 6X Histidine Tag to the ATF1 gene by PCR-directed addition. The addition of the tag allows for purification of the protein via Immobilised Metal Affinity Chromatography (IMAC) by binding to Nickel-NTA columns. The primers were also designed to add Gibson overhangs to the 5’ and 3’ end of the ATF1 sequence to allow for ligation to pET19b backbone by Gibson Assembly.

ATF1 Forward:

  • 5’-ACTTTAAGAAGGAGATATACCATGAATGAAATCGATGAGAAAAATCAGGCC

ATF1 Reverse:

  • 5’-TCGGGCTTTGTTAGCAGCCGTTAGTGGTGATGATGGTGATGCCCACCAGGGCCTAAAAGGAGAGCTTTGTAAATGG

Cloning

Linearisation of ATF1 gene

The ATF1 gene (obtained from pSB1C3 storage plasmid obtained from Plate 3, Well 19L of the Spring 2019 Distribution Kit) was resuspended in water and transformed into competent T7 Express E. coli cells (NEB). Transformed cells were plated onto Luria Broth Agar plates supplemented with Chloramphenicol at 34 ug/uL for selection. This yielded over 100 colonies, of which 30 colonies were screened by colony PCR to identify colonies containing the ATF1 gene. PCR products were run on a 1% agarose gel by gel electrophoresis in 1X TAE Buffer for 1 hour at 100 V (Figure 2). This effectively linearises and modifies the ATF1 gene to contain the modifications described in Figure 1.

Gelbeepboop.png

Figure 2. Colony PCR of T7 Express E. coli cells following transformation of ATF1 in pSB1C3 plasmids was performed under the following conditions: 98°C for 3 minutes, 30X cycles of: 98°C for 10 seconds, 70°C* for 30 seconds, 72°C for 45 seconds. Final extension at 72°C for 5 minutes. PCR product held at 4°C.

Primers used:

  • Fwd: 5’-ACTTTAAGAAGGAGATATACCATGAATGAAATCGATGAGAAAAATCAGGCC,
  • Rev: 5’-TCGGGCTTTGTTAGCAGCCGTTAGTGGTGATGATGGTGATGCCCACCAGGGCCTAAAAGGAG AGCTTTGTAAATGG
Gradient annealing temperature was used to empirically determine the optimal annealing temperature. Bands were observed with annealing temperatures greater than 50C, and were optimal at 70C.

DpnI digestion was performed on PCR products #4, #28 and #29 to remove circular template ATF1-pSB1C3 plasmids and PCR clean up kit (QIAGEN) was performed to purify the linear ATF1 gene.

Assembly of ATF1 into pET-19b

Purified ATF1 amplicons were then ligated into the pET-19b plasmid backbone by Gibson assembly, where linear ATF1 insert and linear pET-19b plasmids were incubated with Gibson Assembly Master Mix at 50°C for 1 hour. The assembly mixture was then transformed into competent T7 express E.coli cells by heat shock at 42°C for 10 seconds and plated onto Luria Broth Agar plates supplemented with Ampicillin at working concentration for selection. This yielded over 100 colonies.

Colony PCR was performed to screen 10 colonies under the following conditions: 98°C for 3 minutes, 30X cycles of: 98°C for 10 seconds, 67.6°C for 30 seconds, 72°C for 45 seconds. Final extension at 72°C for 5 minutes. PCR product held at 4°C. Primers used as below. PCR products were run on a 1% agarose gel at 100 V for 1 hour and visualised in a GelDoc under the transilluminator setting. The colony ATF1-#28b obtained an amplicon corresponding to the expected size of 1643 bp (Figure 3).

Atf1 gel gel.png

Figure 3: Colony PCR gel image of recombinant ATF1#28b-pET-19b plasmid. ATF1 gene was amplified by colony PCR under the following conditions: 98°C for 3 minutes, 30X cycles of: 98°C for 10 seconds, 67.6°C for 30 seconds, 72°C for 45 seconds. Final extension at 72°C for 5 minutes. PCR product held at 4°C. 10 uL of PCR product was run on a 1% agarose gel at 100 V for 1 hour using 5 uL of 2-log DNA ladder (NEB) as a standard (Lane 1). Single band obtained at approximately 1600 bp.

Colony PCR Primers used for ATF1 in pET-19b:

  • T7 Forward : 5’-TAATACGACTCACTATAGGG
  • T7 Reverse : 5’-GCTAGTTATTGCTCAGCGG

The colony ATF1-#28b was grown up overnight in a 5 mL culture of Luria Broth supplemented with Ampicillin at working concentration. Cells were pelleted and lysed for plasmid purification using QIAGEN miniprep kit. Purified plasmid DNA was sequenced confirmed by Sanger sequencing.

Sequencing results confirm that the ATF1 gene has been successfully transformed into the pET19b plasmid with the C-Terminal 6X Histidine tag. The ATF1-28b colony was used for further protein expression and purification work.

Protein Expression

Competent T7 Express E. coli colonies with pET-19b were used to inoculate 10 ml Luria Broth supplemented with ampicillin and incubated in a shaking incubator overnight at 37 degrees, 250 rpm. The starter culture was used to inoculate 1 L of Luria broth containing 1X ampicillin and incubated in a shaking incubator at 37℃, 150 rpm until OD600 reaches 0.6. Isopropyl-β-D-thiogalactoside (IPTG) was added to the culture to make a final concentration of 0.5 mM. The cultures were then incubated overnight at 20℃, 140 rpm. Pellets were harvested by centrifuging the cell culture at 4600 rpm at 4℃ for 20 minutes, after which the supernatant was removed. The pellets were resuspended in 50 ml of binding buffer (20 mM sodium phosphate, 500 mM NaCl, 10 mM imidazole, pH 8) and the cells were lysed by sonication. The lysate was then centrifuged to remove cellular debris at 4℃, 10 000 g for 25 minutes and the supernatant was passed through 0.22 µm filters. Soluble ATF1 was then purified via immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC) using a 5 mL NiNTA column (QIAGEN) connected to an AKTA start system. Fractions containing ATF1 (as seen in figure 5) were combined and concentrated using Amicon Ultra 10 kDa centrifugal filter units after which the concentrate was buffer exchanged with 20 mM sodium phosphate, pH 8.0. Pierce BCA Protein Assay Kit (Thermo Fisher) was used to estimate protein concentration according to the manufacturer’s instructions.

AKTA top.png

Figure 4:Protein expression assay using BugBuster (Novagen) to determine expression of ATF1 as soluble and insoluble form. A large scale culture of ATF1 transformants in Luria Broth and ampicillin was induced at OD600 of 0.6 using 0.5 mM IPTG and grown for 20 hours at 20°C.

AKTA bot.png

Figure 5: SDS-PAGE of AKTA purification fractions (F3 to F8 and F10) for ATF1 His-tagged protein

Kinetic Ellman’s Assay Protocol

Free thiols can be quantified through the use of Ellman’s Reagent (DTNB). DTNB has an oxidizing disulfide bond that is reduced when free thiols are present, releasing one molecule of 5-thio-2-nitrobenzoic acid (TNB). Thus, free thiol concentration can be determined by observing absorption at 412 nm and measuring TNB concentration. (1) Our team will be using this kinetic assay to measure the amount of acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA), converted to coenzyme A-SH (CoA-SH) which is a co-substrate in the enzymatic reactions of Alcohol acetyltransferase (ATF1) and 10-deacetylbaccatin III-10-O-acetyltransferase (DBAT).

Dtnb.png

Figure 6: Reaction of 5,5'-Dithiobis-(2-Nitrobenzoic Acid) (DTNB) with a free thiol molecule resulting in the release of one molecule of 5-thio-2-nitrobenzoic acid (TNB).

Materials

  • Reaction Reaction Buffer: Tris-HCl (262 mM) 0.1M sodium phosphate, EDTA (13 mM), pH 8.0.
  • pH 8.0, containing 1mM EDTA
  • DTNB (3.5mM) in methanol3.5mM
  • Isoamyl alcohol (: 70mM) final concentration in H2O
  • Acetyl CcoA in H2O: 0.38mM final concentration
  • Purified enzyme: Concentration determined by BCA
  • Microtiter Plate

Method

  1. Construct a standard curve measuring absorbance of different concentrations of CoA-SH to determine limitations of CoA-OASH detection (needs more explanation on importance of standard or are we leaving it out)
  2. Wells were made in triplicate containing; Reaction Buffer (240ul), Isoamyl alcohol (10ul), acetyl CcoA (20ul), and purified enzyme (30ul) (water was substituted in a blank)
  3. DTNB (50ul) was then added to each well
  4. Absorbance was measured observed by a spectrophotometer every 30 seconds for one hour in a kinetic assay

Results

Kinetic assays were conducted, measuring every 0.5 and 1 minutes for a total of 30 and 60 minutes respectively. Excel was then used to create a graph containing a computer-generated linear trendline.(Figure 7)

ATF1 30.png

Figure 7:Kinetic assay of change in TNB absorbance over 30 minutes, measured every 0.5 minutes. Included is the computer generated linear trendline with calculated Cartesian equation and R value

ATF1 60.png

Figure 8: Kinetic assay of change in TNB absorbance over 60 minutes, measured every minute. Included is the computer generated linear trendline with calculated Cartesian equation and R value

The amount of TNB produced in 1 minute was calculated by c= ∆A/(εl) where c is the concentration change of TNB (M), ∆A is the change in absorbance in 1 minute, molar extinction coefficient ε= 14 150 M-1cm-1, and pathlength l= 1 cm. (2) The result was then divided by 60 to get the change in TNB concentration per second. (3)

The number of moles of TNB produced per second was calculated by n= cV where c is the concentration change calculated from the step above, and V = 350 x 10-6 L.

The rate of catalysis was calculated by (moles of TNB produced per second)/ (moles of enzyme) as TNB is formed in a 1:1 molar ratio with CoA-SH produced. This gave us an estimated Kcat range of 0.000632-0.000737(1/s)

It should be noted that in both assay experiments, the reaction appeared to take 4-5 minutes before settling into a constant reaction rate for the remainder of the assay.

References

  1. ATF1 - Alcohol O-acetyltransferase 1 - Saccharomyces cerevisiae (strain ATCC 204508 / S288c) (Baker's yeast) - ATF1 gene & protein [Internet]. Uniprot.org. [cited 21 October 2019]. Available from: https://www.uniprot.org/uniprot/P40353
  2. Eyer P, Worek F, Kiderlen D, Sinko G, Stuglin A, Simeon-Rudolf V, Reiner E. Molar absorption coefficients for the reduced Ellman reagent: reassessment. Analytical biochemistry. 2003 Jan 15;312(2):224-7.
  3. WEEK #3: ENZYME KINETICS: CHARACTERIZATION OF THE ENZYME ALKALINE PHOSPHATASE [Internet]. [cited 19 October 2019]. Available from: https://acad.carleton.edu/curricular/BIOL/classes/bio126/Documents/Lab_3.pdf?fbclid=IwAR1REQ1CFrBmPqrPmGXsg7E8N6s-bjxedr_VyICuEBsCa7hUEsTikM7i5aQ


Characterisation by 2022 Shanghai_Metropolis

Improvement of an existing part

Our composite part BBa_K4278717 is composited by the promoters, ATF1 gene fragment, NrsR gene fragment, and terminators. We amplified the DNA fragment and transformed it into S. cerevisiae to replace the BAT2 DNA fragment in the strain genome. It is improved based on the existing part BBa_J45014. In 2006, group iGEM2006_MIT designed a basic part BBa_J45014, ATF1, but they only provided the DNA sequence of it. To control the content of higher alcohols during fermentation, by reading literature and consulting experts in related fields, we replaced the BAT2 gene with the ATF1 reading cassette in the host strain. By detecting the fermentation product of the transformants, it was further confirmed that the engineered S. cerevisiae has reduced the production of higher alcohols which could be used to improve the quality of the wine in factories in the future [7].

Profile

Name: l-tef1-atf1-cyc1-tefp-nrsr-teft-r

Base Pairs: 4450 bp

Origin: Saccharomyces cerevisiae genome and pHCas9-Nours plasmid

Properties: an ATF1 and NrsR gene reading cassette

Usage and Biology

This composite part is the recombinant DNA fragment constructed by TEF1 promoter (BBa_K4278701), ATF1 DNA fragment (BBa_K4278702), CYC1 terminator (BBa_K4278703), TEF promoter (BBa_K4278705), NrsR DNA fragment (BBa_K4278706), and TEF terminator (BBa_K4278707). This DNA fragment also contained a homologous arm designed according to BAT2, we fused the 503bp upstream sequence of BAT2 (BBa_K4278700) at the 5’-terminal of the composite DNA sequence, and we fused the 501bp downstream sequence of BAT2 (BBa_K4278708) at the 3’-terminal. The homologous arms were used to replace the BAT2 gene fragment in the S. cerevisiae genome in a recombinant way [1-6].

Figure 1. The schematic diagram map of the composite DNA fragment.

Experimental approach

1. Construct the composite DNA fragment

Firstly, we amplified five fragments, which were CYC1-TEFp-NrsR-TEFt, pTEF1, BATup, BATdown, and ATF1. The results (Figure 2) indicated that the five target DNA strands are successfully amplified.

Figure 2. Gel electrophoresis to identify the target DNA fragments. CYCter-Nours: CYC1-TEFp-NrsR-TEFt (1715 bp), pTEF1: TEF1 promoter (400 bp), BATup: the upstream homologous arm of BAT2 (503 bp), BATdown: the downstream homologous arm of BAT2 (501 bp), ATF1 DNA fragment (1575 bp).

Secondly, we fused the DNA fragments in figure2 by PCR. The following result of the gel electrophoresis shows the gene strands are successfully amplified (Figure 3).

Figure 3. Gel electrophoresis to identify the target DNA fragments. M: DNA marker, 1: the composite DNA fragment of BBa_K4278717.

Proof of function

1. Measure the growth curve of ATF1 transformants

The constructed DNA fragment (BBa_K4278717) was transformed into the S. cerevisiae and replaced the BAT2 gene in the genome through a recombinant way and we named the transformants SF-1. In order to measure if the integrated gene interferon the growth of the host strain, we measured the growth curve arranged 32h and compared it with the wildtype AQ yeast. This result indicates that the genetically modified Saccharomyces cerevisiae SF-1 that we aimed to reduce drunk phenomenon caused no harmful effects on the survival and growth of the organism itself. Therefore, giving support for applications in the wine fermentation industry (Table 1).

Table 1. Raw data were obtained at each time period 2, 4, 7, 16, 24, and 32 hours, respectively. Each strain of WT and SF-1 was tested with Spectrophotometer three times, to obtain an OD600 absorbance level.

2. Functional test

We use gas chromatography to measure the content of higher alcohols. The following table shows the experimental data of various alcohols produced by wild-type AQ yeast and SF-1 yeast. We did two sets of experiments for each yeast. The experimental data showed that the ethanol content of SF-1 yeast was similar to that of wild-type AQ yeast, indicating that the knockout of the BAT2 gene and integration of the ATF1 gene had little effect on the production of ethanol.

As indicated in Table 2, the content of high alcohol produced by AQ yeast , AQ yeast , Fragments F, Fragments F, Plasmid pYES2-ATF1 , and Plasmid pYES2-ATF1 is 249.71, 242.59, 89.81, 97.29 mg/L, respectively.

Table 2. the result of fermented product measured by gas chromatography.
Figure 4. The results measured by gas chromatographic.

In Table 2 and Figure 4, we can find that the percentage of higher alcohols produced by wild-type yeast was significantly higher than that produced by SF-1. These results indicated that replacing the BAT2 gene with the ATF1 gene of alcohol acetyltransferase could reduce the production of higher alcohols in yeast strains. In other words, the wine produced by SF-1 engineering bacteria has a low content of higher alcohols, which is not likely to cause symptoms such as headache and thirst after drinking. Our study provides solutions to problems such as hangovers and headaches after drinking alcohol, which have certain practical significance.

Improvement of an existing part

Our composite part BBa_K4278717 is composited by the promoters, ATF1 gene fragment, NrsR gene fragment, and terminators. We amplified the DNA fragment and transformed it into S. cerevisiae to replace the BAT2 DNA fragment in the strain genome. It is improved based on the existing part BBa_J45014. In 2006, group iGEM2006_MIT designed a basic part BBa_J45014, ATF1, but they only provided the DNA sequence of it. To control the content of higher alcohols during fermentation, by reading literature and consulting experts in related fields, we replaced the BAT2 gene with the ATF1 reading cassette in the host strain. By detecting the fermentation product of the transformants, it was further confirmed that the engineered S. cerevisiae has reduced the production of higher alcohols which could be used to improve the quality of the wine in factories in the future [7].

References

1.Zhang J., Zhang C., Wang J., Dai L., Xiao D. (2014) Expression of the Gene Lg-ATF1 Encoding Alcohol Acetyltransferases from Brewery Lager Yeast in Chinese Rice Wine Yeast. In: Zhang TC., Ouyang P., Kaplan S., Skarnes B. (eds) Proceedings of the 2012 International Conference on Applied Biotechnology (ICAB 2012). Lecture Notes in Electrical Engineering, vol 249. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-37916-1_5.

2.Ma L, Huang S, Du L, Tang P, Xiao D. Reduced Production of Higher Alcohols by Saccharomyces cerevisiae in Red Wine Fermentation by Simultaneously Overexpressing BAT1 and Deleting BAT2. J Agric Food Chem. 2017 Aug 16;65(32):6936-6942. doi: 10.1021/acs.jafc.7b01974.

3.Lilly M, Bauer FF, Styger G, Lambrechts MG, Pretorius IS. The effect of increased branched-chain amino acid transaminase activity in yeast on the production of higher alcohols and on the flavour profiles of wine and distillates. FEMS Yeast Res. 2006 Aug;6(5):726-43. doi: 10.1111/j.1567-1364.2006.00057.x.

4.Dai L., Zhang C., Zhang J., Qi Y., Xiao D. (2014) Effects of IAH1 Gene Deletion on the Profiles of Chinese Yellow Rice Wine. In: Zhang TC., Ouyang P., Kaplan S., Skarnes B. (eds) Proceedings of the 2012 International Conference on Applied Biotechnology (ICAB 2012). Lecture Notes in Electrical Engineering, vol 249. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-37916-1_42.

5.Choi YJ, Lee J, Jang YS, Lee SY. Metabolic engineering of microorganisms for the production of higher alcohols. mBio. 2014 Sep 2;5(5):e01524-14. doi: 10.1128/mBio.01524-14.

6.孙中贯,刘琳,王亚平,王雪山,肖冬光.酿酒酵母高级醇代谢研究进展[J].生物工程学报,2021,37(2):429~447.

7.于洪梅. 气相色谱法分析啤酒中 5 种高级醇的方法研究[J]. 食品研究与开发, 2018, 39(18):5

[edit]
Categories
//function/biosynthesis/odorant
//function/odor
s
Parameters
ec_num2.3.1.84
keggsce:YOR377W
proteinATF1-1148 mutant
swissproP40353