Characterization of Microalgal Acetyl-CoA Synthetases
with High Catalytic Efficiency Reveals Their Regulatory Mechanism
and Lipid Engineering Potential
posted on 2019-08-16, 19:34authored byTao Wu, Xuemei Mao, Yaping Kou, Yuelian Li, Han Sun, Yongjin He, Feng Chen
Acetyl-CoA
synthetase (ACS) plays a key role in microalgal lipid
biosynthesis and acetyl-CoA industrial production. In the present
study, two ACSs were cloned and characterized from the oleaginous
microalga Chromochloris zofingiensis. In vitro kinetic analysis showed that the Km values of CzACS1 and CzACS2 for potassium acetate were 0.99
and 0.81 mM, respectively. Moreover, CzACS1 and CzACS2 had outstanding
catalytic efficiencies (kcat/Km), which were 70.67 and 79.98 s–1 mM–1, respectively, and these values were higher than
that of other reported ACSs. CzACS1 and CzACS2 exhibited differential expression patterns at the transcriptional
level under various conditions. Screening a recombinant library of
52 transcription factors (TFs) constructed in the present study via
yeast one-hybrid assay pointed to seven TFs with potential involvement
in the regulation of the two ACS genes. Expression
correlation analysis implied that GATA20 was likely an important regulator
of CzACS2 and that ERF9 could regulate two CzACSs simultaneously.