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ORIGINAL RESEARCH article

Front. Genet., 16 November 2018
Sec. Evolutionary and Genomic Microbiology
This article is part of the Research Topic Functional and Comparative Genomics of Saccharomyces and non-Saccharomyces Yeasts: Potential for Industrial and Food Biotechnology View all 18 articles

The Genetic Makeup and Expression of the Glycolytic and Fermentative Pathways Are Highly Conserved Within the Saccharomyces Genus

  • 1Department of Biotechnology, Delft University of Technology, Delft, Netherlands
  • 2Westerdijk Institute, Utrecht, Netherlands

The ability of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae to convert glucose, even in the presence of oxygen, via glycolysis and the fermentative pathway to ethanol has played an important role in its domestication. Despite the extensive knowledge on these pathways in S. cerevisiae, relatively little is known about their genetic makeup in other industrially relevant Saccharomyces yeast species. In this study we explore the diversity of the glycolytic and fermentative pathways within the Saccharomyces genus using S. cerevisiae, Saccharomyces kudriavzevii, and Saccharomyces eubayanus as paradigms. Sequencing data revealed a highly conserved genetic makeup of the glycolytic and fermentative pathways in the three species in terms of number of paralogous genes. Although promoter regions were less conserved between the three species as compared to coding sequences, binding sites for Rap1, Gcr1 and Abf1, main transcriptional regulators of glycolytic and fermentative genes, were highly conserved. Transcriptome profiling of these three strains grown in aerobic batch cultivation in chemically defined medium with glucose as carbon source, revealed a remarkably similar expression of the glycolytic and fermentative genes across species, and the conserved classification of genes into major and minor paralogs. Furthermore, transplantation of the promoters of major paralogs of S. kudriavzevii and S. eubayanus into S. cerevisiae demonstrated not only the transferability of these promoters, but also the similarity of their strength and response to various environmental stimuli. The relatively low homology of S. kudriavzevii and S. eubayanus promoters to their S. cerevisiae relatives makes them very attractive alternatives for strain construction in S. cerevisiae, thereby expanding the S. cerevisiae molecular toolbox.

Introduction

The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is known for its fast fermentative metabolism, which has played an important role in its domestication (Sicard and Legras, 2011). S. cerevisiae converts glucose to ethanol via the Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas pathway of glycolysis and the fermentative pathway, encompassing a total of 12 enzymatic steps (Barnett, 2003; Barnett and Entian, 2005). While S. cerevisiae can respire glucose, leading to an ATP yield of 16 moles of ATP per mole of glucose, it favors alcoholic fermentation. Indeed, even in the presence of oxygen, glucose excess triggers ethanol formation in S. cerevisiae and its relatives from the Saccharomyces genus, a phenomenon known as the Crabtree effect (De Deken, 1966; Merico et al., 2007). To sustain the energy demand for growth and maintenance despite the low ATP yield of alcoholic fermentation (2 moles of ATP per glucose molecule), the glycolytic flux in S. cerevisiae can easily reach fluxes of 20–25 mmoles ethanol per gram dry weight per hour (Solis-Escalante et al., 2015). This high activity of the glycolytic pathway is reflected in the remarkably high concentration of glycolytic enzymes in the cell, which can represent up to 30% of the total amount of soluble protein (Fraenkel, 2003; Carroll et al., 2011).

The genome of S. cerevisiae is characterized by a high genetic redundancy which can largely be attributed to a whole genome duplication event (Ohno, 1970; Wolfe and Shields, 1997). This redundancy is even more prominent among ‘metabolic’ genes and is remarkably elevated in the glycolytic and fermentative pathways of S. cerevisiae (Kellis et al., 2004; Kuepfer et al., 2005; Conant and Wolfe, 2007). These two pathways have been thoroughly investigated (and even established) in S. cerevisiae (Barnett, 2003; Van Heerden et al., 2015). With the exception of three steps that are catalyzed by single enzymes, i.e., phosphoglucose isomerase (Pgi1), fructose-bisphosphate aldolase (Fba1), and triosephosphate isomerase (Tpi1), the glycolytic, and fermentative steps are catalyzed by at least two and potentially up to seven isoenzymes for alcohol dehydrogenase (Adh). However, not all isoenzymes are equally important for the glycolytic and fermentative activity. With the notable exception of Pfk1 and Pfk2, two isoenzymes forming a heterooctamer that are equally important for the functionality of phosphofructokinase (Heinisch et al., 1991; Arvanitidis and Heinisch, 1994), for each step, a single isoenzyme is responsible for the bulk of the glycolytic and fermentative flux. These so-called major isoenzymes are encoded by major paralogs, which expression is strong and constitutive (i.e., HXK2, TDH3, GPM1, ENO2, PYK1, PDC1, ADH1) (Solis-Escalante et al., 2015). Because of these properties, glycolytic promoters are often used to drive gene expression in engineered strains (Peng et al., 2015). Conversely the expression of minor paralogs is, in most instances, far lower than the expression of the corresponding major paralogs and is condition-dependent (Ciriacy, 1979; Boer et al., 2003; Knijnenburg et al., 2009; Solis-Escalante et al., 2015). Following duplication events, redundant genes can have different fates. If their presence brings additional benefits to the cell, either in their native form or via neo-functionalization, the gene and its duplicate will be retained in the genome, otherwise the redundant copy will be lost (Kellis et al., 2004; Conant and Wolfe, 2008). The fact that the glycolytic and fermentative pathways still contain many paralogs that do not display obvious new functions suggests that they might increase fitness under specific conditions. For example, PDC6 encoding a pyruvate decarboxylase with low sulfur amino acid content is specifically induced in sulfur limiting conditions (Fauchon et al., 2002; Boer et al., 2003). However, challenging this theory, it was recently shown that the simultaneous removal of all minor paralogs from the glycolytic and fermentative pathways had no detectable effect on S. cerevisiae physiology under a wide variety of conditions (Solis-Escalante et al., 2015).

The Saccharomyces genus consists of at least eight naturally occurring species which all evolved toward optimal performance in their niche, leading to different physiological characteristics (Replansky et al., 2008; Hittinger, 2013; Naseeb et al., 2017). For instance, Saccharomyces kudriavzevii, Saccharomyces uvarum and Saccharomyces eubayanus are cold-tolerant, and perform better than S. cerevisiae at temperatures below 20°C (Arroyo-López et al., 2010; Masneuf-Pomarède et al., 2010; Salvadó et al., 2011; Hebly et al., 2015). Strains belonging to different Saccharomyces species can mate and form viable hybrids, some of which play an important role in the beverage industry. For instance Saccharomyces pastorianus, a hybrid of S. cerevisiae and S. eubayanus, is the main lager-brewing yeast (Bond, 2009) and hybrids of S. cerevisiae and S. kudriavzevii and of S. uvarum and S. eubayanus (known as S. bayanus) play an important role in beer and wine fermentation (González et al., 2006; González et al., 2008; Peris et al., 2012; Nguyen and Boekhout, 2017). The cold-tolerance of S. pastorianus and S. eubayanus has indubitably promoted the selection of their hybrids with S. cerevisiae in cold environments (Belloch et al., 2008; Arroyo-López et al., 2010; Libkind et al., 2011).

In a recent study, using a unique yeast platform enabling the swapping of entire essential pathways, it was shown that S. kudriavzevii glycolytic and fermentative pathways could be transplanted in S. cerevisiae and could efficiently complement the native pathways. Expression of the full set of S. kudriavzevii orthologs in S. cerevisiae, expressed from S. kudriavzevii promoters, resulted in enzyme activities and physiological responses remarkably similar to the parental strain carrying a full set of native S. cerevisiae genes. However, the impact of S. kudriavzevii promoters on transcriptional activity in S. cerevisiae was not explored (Kuijpers et al., 2016). Despite S. eubayanus and S. kudriavzevii industrial importance and the availability of their full genome sequence, remarkably little is known about the genetic makeup and transcriptional regulation of the glycolytic and fermentative pathways.

To address this knowledge gap, the present study explores the diversity of the glycolytic and fermentative pathways within the genus Saccharomyces, using the industrially relevant yeasts S. cerevisiae, S. eubayanus and S. kudriavzevii as paradigms. More precisely, the presence and sequence similarity between paralogs in these three yeasts were explored. Cultivation in bioreactors combined with transcriptome analysis was used to evaluate the presence of dominant paralogs in S. eubayanus and S. kudriavzevii and to compare the expression levels of glycolytic and fermentative orthologs in their native context. Finally, we explored transferability of S. kudriavzevii and S. eubayanus promoters by monitoring their expression and context-dependency upon transplantation in S. cerevisiae.

Materials and Methods

Strains and Culture Conditions

All yeast strains used in this study are derived from the CEN.PK background (Entian and Kötter, 2007) and are listed in Table 1. Yeast cultures for transformation and genomic DNA isolation were grown in 500 mL shake flasks with 100 mL of complex, non-selective medium (YPD) containing 10 g L−1 Bacto Yeast extract, 20 g L−1 Bacto Peptone and 20 g L−1 glucose. Promoter regions were obtained from the strains S. cerevisiae CEN.PK113-7D (Van Dijken et al., 2000; Entian and Kötter, 2007; Nijkamp et al., 2012), S. kudriavzevii CR85 a wild isolate from oak bark (supplied by Prof. Querol and dr. Barrio, Universitat de València, Spain) (Lopes et al., 2010) and S. eubayanus CBS12357 (Libkind et al., 2011). The same strains were used for transcriptome analysis, with the exception of S. cerevisiae for which the diploid strain CEN.PK122 was used instead of the haploid CEN.PK113-7D (Entian and Kötter, 2007). All S. cerevisiae strains were grown at 30°C and S. kudriavzevii and S. eubayanus at 20°C in shake flasks at 200 rpm, unless different conditions are mentioned.

TABLE 1
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TABLE 1. Strains table.

All transformations were done in S. cerevisiae CEN.PK113-5D using the auxotrophic marker URA3 for selection. Synthetic medium containing 3 g L−1 KH2PO4, 0.5 g L −1 MgSO4⋅7H2O, 5 g L−1 (NH4)2SO4, 1 mL L−1 of a trace element solution, and 1 mL L−1 of a vitamin solution was used (Verduyn et al., 1992). Synthetic medium supplemented with 20 g L−1 glucose (SMG) or 2% (vol/vol) ethanol (SMEtOH) was used for culture propagation where specified. For solid media 20 g L−1 agar was added prior to heat sterilization. For storage and propagation of plasmids Escherichia coli XL1-Blue (Agilent Technologies, Santa Clara, CA, United States) was used, and grown in lysogeny broth (LB) supplemented with ampicillin (100 mg L−1) (Bertani, 1951; Bertani, 2004). For the storage of yeast and E. coli strains 30% or 15% (v/v) glycerol was added to exponentially growing cultures respectively, and aliquots were stored at −80°C.

Molecular Biology Techniques

For high fidelity PCR amplification Phusion high fidelity polymerase (Thermo Scientific, Landsmeer, Netherlands) was used according to manufacturer’s instructions. To improve efficiency of the PCR reactions, primer concentrations were decreased from 500 to 200 nM and the polymerase concentration was increased from 0.02 to 0.03 μL−1. PCR products were treated with 1 μL DpnI FastDigest restriction enzyme (Thermo Fisher Scientific) for 1 h at 37°C to remove residual circular templates. Afterward, the mixture was purified using GenEluteTM PCR Clean-Up Kit (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO) according to manufacturer’s protocol. PCR for diagnostic purposes was done using DreamTaq PCR mastermix (Thermo Fisher Scientific) according to manufacturer’s recommendations. Primers used in this study are listed in Supplementary Tables S1, S2. PCR products were resolved on 1% agarose gel with Tris-acetate-EDTA (TAE) buffer. Genomic DNA used as template for PCR amplification of the promoter regions was isolated using YeaStar genomic DNA kit (Zymo Research, Orange, CA) according to manufacturer’s protocol. Plasmids were extracted from E. coli using the GenElute plasmid miniprep kit (Sigma-Aldrich) according to manufacturer’s description and eluted with miliQ water. Restriction analysis of plasmids was done using FastDigest restriction enzymes with FastDigest Green Buffer (Thermo Fisher Scientific) incubating for 30 min at 37°C according to manufacturer’s recommendations.

Promoters, Plasmids and Yeast Strain Construction

A schematic overview of the subsequent plasmid and strain construction steps is provided in Figure 1. Plasmids used in this study are reported in Supplementary Table S3. The HXK2, PGI1, PFK1, PFK2, FBA1, TPI1, TDH3, PGK1, GPM1, ENO2, PYK1, PDC1 and ADH1, and reference TEF1 and ACT1 promoter regions of approximately 800 bp (see Supplementary Table S4 for exact lengths) were PCR-amplified from S. cerevisiae CEN.PK113-7D, S. kudriavzevii CR85 and S. eubayanus CBS 12357 genomic DNA using primers listed in Supplementary Table S1. For compatibility with Golden Gate cloning, promoter sequences were flanked with BsaI and BsmBI restriction sites introduced as primer overhangs in the PCR amplification step.

FIGURE 1
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FIGURE 1. Schematic representation of the strain construction workflow. Glycolytic promoters of Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Sc), Saccharomyces kudriavzevii (Sk), and Saccharomyces eubayanus (Se) were PCR-amplified using primers with specific BsaI flanks. First a ‘GFP dropout’ plasmid was assembled from the following parts containing all unique overhangs for assembly: two connectors ConLS and ConR, URA3 marker, 5′ and 3′ URA3 flanks and the Amp-ColE1 containing the marker and origin of replication for Escherichia coli. This plasmid was used in a second round of BsaI Golden Gate assembly to replace the GFP fragment by the promoter of interest, mRuby2, and ENO2 terminator. The resulting plasmids were linearized by NotI restriction and integrated in the ura3 locus of S. cerevisiae strain IMX1076.

The plasmid backbone was constructed by Golden Gate assembly using the collection of part plasmids provided in the Yeast Toolkit (Lee et al., 2015). To increase the efficiency of plasmid assembly, first a GFP dropout plasmid pUD428 was constructed containing a URA3 marker, AmpR selection marker, bacterial origin of replication, two connector fragments and a GFP gene surrounded by URA3 upstream and downstream homology flanks (Supplementary Table S3). The correct assembly of plasmids was checked by restriction analysis. The GFP dropout cassette from pUD428 was subsequently replaced by the mRuby2 gene flanked by a promoter of interest and by the ENO2 terminator using Golden Gate cloning with BsaI. The reaction mixture was prepared with 1 μL T4 DNA ligase buffer (Thermo Fisher Scientific), 0.5 μL T7 DNA ligase (NEB New England Biolabs, Ipswich, MA), 0.5 μL FastDigest Eco31I (BsaI) (Thermo Fisher Scientific) and 10 ng of each DNA fragment. MiliQ H2O was added to a final volume of 10 μL. The assembly was done in a thermocycler using 25 cycles of restriction and ligation: 42°C for 2 min, 16°C for 5 min, followed by a final digestion step (60°C for 10 min) and an inactivation step (80°C for 10 min). If one of the fragments contained an internal BsaI site, the final digestion and inactivation steps were omitted. 1 μL of the assembly mix was transformed to E. coli (XL1-Blue) according to manufacturer’s description and plated on selective LB medium. Correct ligation of the promoter-mRuby2-terminator construct in this plasmid resulted in the loss of the GFP gene, which could be easily screened based on colony color. Additional plasmid confirmation was done by restriction analysis.

Prior to transformation into yeast, the constructed plasmids containing the promoter of interest, the mRuby2 gene and the ENO2 terminator were linearized by digestion with NotI (FastDigest, Thermo Fisher Scientific) according to manufacturer’s protocol for 30 min at 37°C. 400 ng of each plasmid was digested and the mixture was directly transformed to the strain CEN.PK113-5D in which the linearized plasmid was integrated in the ura3-52 locus. Yeast transformations were done according to Gietz and Woods (Gietz and Woods, 2002). Colonies were screened by PCR (Supplementary Table S2).

Batch Cultivation in Bioreactors

Samples for transcriptome analysis of S. cerevisiae (CEN.PK122), S. kudriavzevii (CR85) and S. eubayanus (CBS 12357) were obtained from aerobic batch cultures in bioreactors performed in independent duplicate. Batch cultures were performed in SMG supplemented with 0.2 g L−1 antifoam Emulsion C (Sigma-Aldrich). The reactors were inoculated at a starting OD660 of 0.3 with cells resuspended in demineralized water, which were obtained from exponentially growing shake flask cultures incubated at the same temperature and with the same medium as was used in the bioreactors (SMG). Cultures were performed in 2 L bioreactors (Applikon, Schiedam, The Netherlands) containing a 1.4 L working volume. The cultures were constantly stirred at 800 rpm, sparged with 700 mL min−1 dried compressed air (Linde Gas Benelux, Schiedam, The Netherlands) and maintained at 30°C for S. cerevisiae and 25°C for S. kudriavzevii and S. eubayanus. The culture pH was kept at 5.0 during growth on glucose by automatic addition of 2M KOH.

Extracellular metabolites were determined by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) analysis using a Aminex HPX-87H ion-exchange column operated at 60°C with 5 mM H2SO4 as the mobile phase at a flow rate of 0.6 mL min−1 (Agilent, Santa Clara). Samples were centrifuged for 3 min at 20.000 g and the supernatant was used for analysis.

Biomass dry weight was determined in analytical duplicate by filtration of 10 mL sample on filters (pore-size 0.45 μm, Whatman/GE Healthcare Life Sciences, Little Chalfont, United Kingdom) pre-dried in a microwave oven at 360 W for 20 min, as previously described (Verduyn et al., 1992). Optical density at 660 nm (OD660) was determined in a Libra S11 spectrophotometer (Biocrom, Cambridge, United Kingdom). The CO2 and O2 concentration in the gas outflow was analyzed by a Rosemount NGA 2000 analyser (Baar, Switzerland), after cooling of the gas by a condenser (2°C) and drying using a PermaPure Dryer (model MD 110-8P-4; Inacom Instruments, Veenendaal, Netherlands). Sampling for transcriptome analysis was done during mid-exponential growth on glucose at a biomass concentration of approximately 1 g L−1. Sampling in liquid nitrogen and RNA extraction were performed as previously described (Piper et al., 2002).

Promoter Activity Assay

Promoter activity measurement of the mRuby2 reporter strain library was performed in 96-well plates. Precultures were grown in 12-well plates in 1.5 mL volume in a thermoshaker (Grant-bio PHMP-4, United Kingdom) with constant shaking (800 rpm) and temperature. Precultures were grown at the temperature of the subsequent plate assay (30°C or 20°C). For the first preculture YPD medium was inoculated from glycerol stocks and grown overnight till saturation. From this culture 20 μL were transferred to new 12-well plates and the strains were grown under the conditions of interest till mid-exponential phase (corresponding to OD660 of 3 to 5). Afterward the culture was centrifuged at 3000 g for 5 min, the supernatant was removed and cells were resuspended in fresh medium to an OD660 of 0.3 and transferred in volumes of 100 μL to a 96-well plate (CorningTM polystyrene white/transparent bottom, Greiner Bio-One) using six replicate wells per strain. To prevent evaporation, all plates, including preculture plates, were covered with sterile polyester acrylate sealing tape (Thermo Scientific). To supply sufficient levels of oxygen throughout the cultures, small openings were created in each well with a needle. The plate assays were performed in a plate reader (TECAN infinite M200 Pro. Tecan, Männedorf, Switzerland) with constant temperature and shaking (orbital, 1 mm). Every 20 min the optical density (OD660) and the fluorescence using excitation and emission wavelengths 559 nm/600 nm were measured. Cultures were monitored till saturation. A non-fluorescent CEN.PK113-7D strain was taken along every run to determine the background fluorescence, as well as two reference reporter strains expressing mRuby2 from the TEF1 and ACT1 promoters from S. cerevisiae. For every well, OD660 and fluorescence values from all time points during exponential growth were plotted against each other and the promoter activity was calculated as the slope of the linear regression between optical density and fluorescence.

Flow Cytometry Analysis

mRuby2 fluorescence intensity of individual cells from cultures grown in the TECAN plate reader was determined using flow cytometry. Mid-exponential cultures from the plate reader were diluted in Isoton II (Beckman Coulter, Brea, CA) and the fluorescence intensity was determined for 10000 cells per sample on a BD FACSAriaII (Franklin Lakes, NJ) equipped with an 561 nm excitation laser and 582/15 nm emission filter. Data were analyzed using FlowJo v10.2 (FlowJo LLC). As expected from strains in which the mRuby2 expression system is integrated in the genome the fluorescence signal was homogeneously distributed among the yeast population (Supplementary Figure S5).

Whole Genome Sequencing

To obtain genome sequences of high quality, the strain S. kudriavzevii CR85 was sequenced in-house both by Illumina Miseq sequencing (Illumina, San Diego, CA) and by Oxford Nanopore Technology MinION sequencing (Oxford Nanopore Technology, Oxford, United Kingdom). Genomic DNA was isolated using the Qiagen 100/G kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) and the concentration was determined using Qubit® Fluorometer 2.0 (ThermoFisher Scientific). Illumina library preparation was done as described previously (Świat et al., 2017).

For Nanopore sequencing, 3 μg of genomic DNA were diluted in a total volume of 46 uL and then sheared with a g-TUBE (Covaris, Brighton, United Kingdom) to an average fragment size of 8–10 kb. The input DNA was then prepared for loading in a FLO-MIN106 flow cell with R9.4 chemistry and the 1D ligation sequencing kit (SQK-LSK108), following manufacturer’s instructions with the exception of a size selection step with 0.4x (instead of 1x) AMPure beads after the End-Repair/dA tailing module and the use of 80% (instead of 70%) ethanol for washes. Raw files generated by MinKNOW were base called using Albacore (version 1.2.5; Oxford Nanopore Technology). Reads, in fastq format, with minimum length of 1000 bp were extracted, yielding 4.15 Gigabase sequence with an average read length of 4.3 kb.

De novo assembly was performed using Canu (v1.4, settings: genomesize = 12m) (Koren et al., 2017) producing an 11.87 Megabase genome into 20 contigs of which 13 contigs in chromosome length plus 1 mitochondrial DNA, while 3 chromosomes consisted of 2 contigs each. The contig pairs were manually joined (with 1000 N’s between the contigs) into 3 chromosomes (chromosomes VII, XII, and XVI). Pilon (Walker et al., 2014) was then used to further correct assembly errors by aligning Illumina reads, using BWA (Li and Durbin, 2010) to the assembly using correction of only SNPs and short indels (–fix bases parameter). Gene annotations were performed using the MAKER2 annotation pipeline (version 2.31.9) (Holt and Yandell, 2011) using SNAP (version 2013–11-29) (Korf, 2004) and Augustus (version 3.2.3) (Stanke and Waack, 2003) as ab initio gene predictors. S288C EST and protein sequences were obtained from SGD (Saccharomyces Genome Database1) and were aligned using BLASTX (BLAST version 2.2.28+) (Camacho et al., 2009). The translated protein sequence of the final gene model was aligned using BLASTP to S288C protein Swiss-Prot database2. For CEN.PK113-7D and S. eubayanus CBS 12357 existing sequencing data was used (Baker et al., 2015; Salazar et al., 2017). The sequencing data are available at NCBI under bioproject accession number PRJNA480800.

RNA Sequencing and Data Analysis

Library preparation and RNA sequencing were performed by Novogene Bioinformatics Technology Co., Ltd. (Yuen Long, Hong Kong). Sequencing was done with Illumina paired end 150 bp sequencing read system (PE150) using a 250∼300 bp insert strand specific library which was prepared by Novogene. For the library preparation, as described by Novogene, mRNA enrichment was done using oligo(dT) beads. After random fragmentation of the mRNA, cDNA was synthetized from the mRNA using random hexamers primers. Afterward, second strand synthesis was done by addition of a custom second strand synthesis buffer (Illumina), dNTPs, RNase H and DNA polymerase I. Finally, after terminal repair, A ligation and adaptor ligation, the double stranded cDNA library was finalized by size selection and PCR enrichment.

The sequencing data for the three strains, S. cerevisiae CEN.PK122, S. kudriavzevii CR85 and S. eubayanus CBS 12357 obtained by Novogene had an average read depth of 21, 24, and 24 million reads per sample, respectively. For each sample, reads were aligned to the relevant reference genome using a two-pass STAR procedure (Dobin et al., 2013). In the first pass, we assembled a splice junction database which was used to inform the second round of alignments. As paralogs in the glycolytic pathways were highly similar, we used stricter criteria for aligning and counting reads to facilitate delineation of paralogs. Introns were allowed to be between 15 and 4000 bp, and soft clipping was disabled to prevent low quality reads from being spuriously aligned. Ambiguously mapped reads were removed. Expression was quantified per transcript using htseq-count in strict intersection mode (Anders et al., 2015). As we wished to compare gene expression across genomes, where orthologs may have different gene lengths, data were normalized for gene length. Therefore the average FPKM expression counts for each gene in each species were calculated (Trapnell et al., 2010). The genomes from S. cerevisiae CEN.PK113-7D, S. kudriavzevii CR85 and S. eubayanus CBS 12357 were used as reference NCBI BioProject accession numbers PRJNA52955, PRJNA480800, and PRJNA264003 respectively3. Data are available at Gene Expression Omnibus with accession number GSE117404. CEN.PK113-7D transcriptome data is available on Gene Expression Omnibus database under accession number GSE63884.

Comparison of DNA Sequences

Sequences from annotated glycolytic ORF and promoters of S. cerevisiae CEN.PK113-7D, S. kudriavzevii CR85 and S. eubayanus CBS 12357 were used for alignments with Clone Manager 9 Professional Edition, NCBI BioProject accession numbers PRJNA52955, PRJNA480800, and PRJNA264003 respectively. For the TPI1 sequence alignment the sequences with the following accession numbers were used: CU928179 (Z. rouxii), HE605205 (C. parapsilosis), CP028453 (Y. lipolytica), AJ390491 (C. albicans), XM_002551264 (C. tropicalis), AJ012317 (K. lactis), FR839630 (P. pastoris) AWRI1499 (D. bruxellensis), XM_018355487 (O. parapolymorpha), CR380954 (C. glabrata), CP002711 (A. gossypii), AP014602 (K. marxianus), XM_001642913 (K. polysporus), CP000501 (S. stipitis), XM_002616396 (C. lusitaniae), and CP028714 (E. coli).

Alignment of these sequences was performed using multiple sequence alignment in Clustal Omega (Goujon et al., 2010; Sievers et al., 2011) and the phylogenetic trees were obtained with JalView (version 2.10.4b1) using average distance and percentage identity (Waterhouse et al., 2009).

Statistics

Statistical analysis was performed using the software IBM SPSS statistics 23 (SPSS inc. Chicago). For transcriptome data, fluorescence data and batch culture data analysis of variance (ANOVA) with Dunnett post-hoc test was performed to test if the results for S. kudriavzevii and S. eubayanus were statistically different from S. cerevisiae.

Results

Genetic Makeup of the Glycolytic and Fermentative Pathways in S. cerevisiae and Its Close Relatives S. kudriavzevii and S. eubayanus

The genetic makeup of pathways involved in central carbon metabolism in S. cerevisiae has already been well characterized, and more particularly for glycolysis and alcoholic fermentation. The ten reactions of the glycolytic pathway and the two reactions of ethanolic fermentation in S. cerevisiae are catalyzed by a set of 26 enzymes encoded by 26 genes (Figure 2). High quality sequences are already available for S. cerevisiae and S. eubayanus (Baker et al., 2015; Salazar et al., 2017). To explore these pathways in S. kudriavzevii the strain S. kudriavzevii CR85 was sequenced using both Illumina and Oxford Nanopore technologies (see Materials and Methods section and Supplementary Table S5). S. cerevisiae’s high genetic redundancy and the locations of the genes were fully mirrored in S. kudriavzevii and S. eubayanus genomes (Figure 1). The only exception was the absence of PDC6 in S. kudriavzevii. While a ScPDC6 ortholog with 81% identity was identified in S. eubayanus, no ortholog could be found in S. kudriavzevii. For all other glycolytic genes from S. cerevisiae, genes with 80–97% homology of the coding regions were found in S. kudriavzevii and S. eubayanus (Figure 2). Overall, genes from S. eubayanus were slightly more distant from their S. cerevisiae orthologs than genes from S. kudriavzevii, which is in line with earlier reports (Dujon, 2010; Shen et al., 2016; Figure 2).

FIGURE 2
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FIGURE 2. Genes and reactions involved in glycolysis and alcoholic fermentation in S. cerevisiae and sequence comparison between the promoters and coding regions of S. cerevisiae (Sc), S. kudriavzevii (Sk), and S. eubayanus (Se). The major paralogs in S. cerevisiae are represented in bold. The coding regions and promoter regions (800 bp) of S. kudriavzevii and S. eubayanus were aligned to the corresponding S. cerevisiae sequences and the percentage identity is indicated. PDC6 was absent in S. kudriavzevii. The color scale indicates the degree of sequence identity between S. cerevisiae and its relatives.

In addition to the coding regions, the promoter regions were compared. Since the exact length of most promoter regions is not clearly defined, the 800 bp upstream of the coding regions were considered as promoters. Promoter sequences were substantially less conserved than the coding sequences, ranging from 43 to 78% identity when comparing S. kudriavzevii and S. eubayanus to S. cerevisiae promoters (Figure 2). Remarkably, some regions covering up to 45 bp were strictly conserved among the three species, whereas other parts of the promoter sequences hardly shared homology (see example of PGK1p on Supplementary Figure S1). As promoter regions are poorly defined, promoters shorter than 800 bp might be fully functional. Alignment with shorter regions might therefore increase the degree of homology between promoters. Alignments using 500 bp upstream the coding region only slightly increased the alignment percentages (up to 7%), mostly as a consequence of the enrichment for conserved transcription factor binding sites located between 100 and 500 bp upstream of the ORF (Harbison et al., 2004). Notably, orthologs with a relatively high or low degree of conservation between S. cerevisiae and S. kudriavzevii also displayed a similar pattern when comparing S. eubayanus to S. cerevisiae. For example, the SkGPM2 and SeGPM2 promoters both have a relatively low homology (49 and 53%) to the ScGPM2 promoter, whereas the SkPFK1 and SePFK1 promoter have both a high degree (76 and 74%) of similarity to ScPFK1. Interestingly, the genes and promoters displaying a relatively low degree of homology between S. cerevisiae and its relatives, are homologs considered as minor in S. cerevisiae (for example GPM2 and PYK2) (Figure 2). Blast searches did not identify additional glycolytic orthologs present in S. eubayanus or S. kudriavzevii but absent in S. cerevisiae.

The activity of a promoter strongly depends on the presence of regulatory sequences as the TATA box and other specific transcription factor binding sites. In S. cerevisiae, the most important glycolytic transcription factor is Gcr1, which has been experimentally shown to bind to most glycolytic promoters and to activate the expression of the corresponding genes as summarized before (Chambers et al., 1995). Gcr1 binding sites are only active when located next to DNA consensus sequences bound by Rap1 (Drazinic et al., 1996), a more pleiotropic transcription factor involved in the transcriptional regulation of a wide variety of genes including many glycolytic genes (Chambers et al., 1995). Another multifunctional transcription factor is Abf1 which binds to several glycolytic promoters (Chambers et al., 1995). With a single exception, all binding sites for Rap1, Gcr1, and Abf1 which were experimentally proven to be active in S. cerevisiae, were conserved in S. kudriavzevii and S. eubayanus promoter regions (Figure 3). The exception was the SeADH1 promoter in which the Rap1 and Gcr1 site which are conserved between S. cerevisiae and S. kudriavzevii could not be identified. Together with the presence and high protein similarity of the SeRap1 (82%), SkRap1 (86%), SeGcr1 (85%), and SkGcr1 (85%), proteins with S. cerevisiae, these results suggested that the regulation of the glycolytic genes might be similar in the three species.

FIGURE 3
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FIGURE 3. Rap1, Gcr1, and Abf1 transcription factor binding sites which are conserved in the glycolytic and fermentation promoters of S. cerevisiae, S. kudriavzevii, and S. eubayanus. The boxes indicate the location in the promoter of the binding sites for the Rap1 (red), Gcr1 (blue), and Abf1 (yellow) transcription factors which are experimentally shown to be functional in S. cerevisiae. The boxes contain the alignments of the three promoters at the transcription factor binding sites, conserved nucleotides are indicated in green. The Gcr1 and Rap1 sites in the ADH1 promoter were not identified in SeADH1p.

Expression of the Glycolytic Genes During Aerobic Batch Cultivation

To evaluate the similarity in glycolytic and fermentative gene expression, the transcriptome of S. cerevisiae, S. kudriavzevii, and S. eubayanus was compared. S. kudriavzevii and S. eubayanus are both wild isolates and both diploid (Lopes et al., 2010; Libkind et al., 2011). While many studies report the transcriptome of haploid S. cerevisiae strains, transcriptome data for diploid S. cerevisiae are scarce (Galitski et al., 1999; Li et al., 2010). To obtain comparable transcriptome datasets for the three species, the diploid CEN.PK122 strain was used. The three diploid strains were grown in aerobic batch cultures in bioreactor using minimal chemically defined medium with glucose as sole carbon source. To ensure optimal growth conditions S. cerevisiae was cultivated at 30°C, while its cold-tolerant relatives that have lower temperature optima were cultivated at 25°C (Arroyo-López et al., 2009; Hebly et al., 2015). Under these conditions the maximum specific growth rate of S. cerevisiae, S. kudriavzevii, and S. eubayanus was 0.38 h−1, 0.25 h−1, and 0.33 h−1 respectively (Figure 4). Ethanol yields were similar for the three strains, but the biomass yield of S. kudriavzevii was significantly lower than that of its two relatives (Figure 4), which might reflect the higher relative cost of maintenance requirements at slow growth rates (Pirt, 1982). For S. eubayanus we observed a lower glycerol yield as compared to its relatives, which was previously not observed under anaerobic conditions (Hebly et al., 2015).

FIGURE 4
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FIGURE 4. Biomass specific rates and yields of S. cerevisiae, S. kudriavzevii, and S. eubayanus batch cultivations in bioreactor. The strains were grown aerobically in synthetic medium supplemented with 20 g L−1 glucose. S. cerevisiae CEN.PK122 (white) was grown at 30°C, and S. kudriavzevii CR85 (gray) and S. eubayanus CBS 12357 (black) at 25°C. Asterisks indicate significant difference from S. cerevisiae (One-Way ANOVA, Dunnett post hoc test, P < 0.01).

Transcriptome analysis of S. cerevisiae, S. kudriavzevii, and S. eubayanus during mid-exponential growth phase revealed a remarkable similarity between the three species (Figure 5), despite differences in culture temperature. Furthermore, the major or minor classification of paralogous genes was fully conserved between the three species (Figure 5). From the genes considered as major paralogs the SePFK1, SeFBA1, SkTDH3, SeTDH3, SkGPM1, SeENO2, and SeADH1 genes displayed significantly lower expression levels as compared to S. cerevisiae, although only for SeTDH3 and SeADH1 the difference with S. cerevisiae was larger than 2-fold (8 and 3-fold, respectively). For the minor paralogs slightly more variability was observed. Interestingly SeHXK1 expression was 13-fold higher than its S. cerevisiae ortholog. All three TDH genes displayed a significantly lower expression in S. kudriavzevii and S. eubayanus as compared to S. cerevisiae. Likewise, for ENO1 a lower expression was observed for SeENO1 and even lower for SkENO1 as compared to ScENO1. Finally, compared to S. cerevisiae a ca. 3-fold higher expression was observed for SkPDC5 and SeADH4.

FIGURE 5
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FIGURE 5. Transcript levels of the diploid strains S. cerevisiae (black), S. kudriavzevii (gray), and S. eubayanus (white) from two biological replicates during mid-exponential growth in aerobic batch fermentations on glucose. Asterisks indicate significant difference from S. cerevisiae per gene (One-Way ANOVA, Dunnett post hoc test, P < 0.01).

Optimization of Microtiter Plate Assays to Monitor Promoter Strength via Fluorescent Reporters

To explore the transferability of promoters within the Saccharomyces genus, the promoters of the major glycolytic and fermentative genes (indicated in bold in Figure 2) of S. kudriavzevii and S. eubayanus were functionally characterized in S. cerevisiae. A library of fluorescent reporter strains in which mRuby2 expression was driven by heterologous promoters and, for comparison, by S. cerevisiae promoters, was constructed. To avoid bias due to gene copy number, the constructs were integrated in S. cerevisiae genome, at the URA3 locus. The strains were cultured in 96-well plates, sealed with a transparent foil to prevent evaporation. Simultaneous monitoring of optical density and fluorescence revealed a premature saturation of the fluorescence signal as compared to biomass formation (Supplementary Figures S2A,B). Fluorescent proteins have a strict requirement for molecular oxygen for the synthesis of their chromophores (Tsien, 1998). The poor oxygenation of the cultures in sealed plates combined with the competition for oxygen between cellular respiration, anabolic reactions and mRuby2 maturation could explain the early saturation of the fluorescence signal. Unfortunately, this effect is rarely reported in literature and could be easily overlooked when fluorescence is measured at only one or few time points. Plate readers are widely used as method to characterize promoters with fluorescence reporters (Davis et al., 2010; Zeevi et al., 2011; Keren et al., 2013; Lee et al., 2015) however, information provided in Materials and Methods Sections are often scarce or incomplete, which makes reproduction of data by other groups difficult. To increase oxygen transfer while preventing evaporation, a small aperture was created in each well by puncturing the seal with a needle. The presence of an aperture had a strong impact on the fluorescence intensity of the cultures, enabling to monitor the cultures for a prolonged period of time (Supplementary Figure S2B). Also during growth with ethanol as sole carbon source, for which oxygen requirement is substantially increased, no premature saturation of fluorescence was observed (Supplementary Figures S2C,D). The location of the aperture in the well did not affect the fluorescence intensity (data not shown). To further evaluate the reliability of the fluorescence signal measured by the plate reader as well as the cell-to-cell heterogeneity of the fluorescence signal, measurements were also performed by flow cytometry. Comparing these data with the plate reader data revealed a very strong correlation of the fluorescence measured with these two techniques (R2 = 0,96, Supplementary Figure S3).

Transferability and Context-Dependency of Glycolytic and Fermentative Promoters Within the Saccharomyces Genus

The strain library grown in SMG at 30°C not only revealed that the S. kudriavzevii and S. eubayanus promoters could drive gene expression in S. cerevisiae, but also that their strength was remarkably similar to the strength of their S. cerevisiae orthologs (Figure 6). Additionally, two reporter strains expressing mRuby2 from the constitutive S. cerevisiae TEF1 and ACT1 promoters were constructed and cultivated on all plates experiments. The activity of these two promoters was remarkably reproducible between independent culture replicates (Supplementary Figure S4).

FIGURE 6
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FIGURE 6. Promoter activity of the major glycolytic promoters from S. cerevisiae (black), S. kudriavzevii (gray), and S. eubayanus (white) expressing mRuby2 in S. cerevisiae. During exponential growth in SMG (A), SMG 20°C (B), YPD (C), and SMEtOH (D) fluorescence and optical density were measured every 20 min and promoter activity was calculated as the slope of the linear regression between optical density and fluorescence. Two reference strains expressing mRuby2 from the ScTEF1 and ScACT1 promoters were taken along in every plate. Error bars represent the standard deviation of the mean of six biological replicates.

While, due to high data reproducibility, expression driven by S. kudriavzevii or S. eubayanus promoters was in most cases considered statistically different from the expression led by their S. cerevisiae orthologs (student t-test, P < 0.01), differences in expression larger than 1.5-fold were rarely observed. Expression of ENO2p and PDC1p of S. kudriavzevii and S. eubayanus was lower than for their S. cerevisiae counterparts, while SkGPM1p, SeGPM1p, and SePYK1p led to clearly higher expression levels than their S. cerevisiae homologs (Figure 6). These differences were not reflected in the transcript data (Figure 5). Conversely, the differential expression of PFK1 and TDH3 revealed by the RNAseq analysis was also found in the promoter transplantation study at SMG 30°C. Overall similarities and differences between the three species in transcript levels were mirrored by promoter activity.

To test the condition dependency of promoter activity, strains were tested under several culture conditions. YPD was used as rich medium, and ethanol was used as gluconeogenic carbon source (SMEtOH). Since S. kudriavzevii and S. eubayanus have a lower optimum growth temperature and hexokinase from S. kudriavzevii has been proposed to have a lower temperature optimum as compared to S. cerevisiae (Gonçalves et al., 2011), the strains were also grown in SMG at 20°C. When grown in YPD and SMG at 20°C, all strains showed highly similar promoter activities as compared to cultures in SMG at 30°C even though the growth rates were different (SMG 30°C: 0.34 h−1, SMG 20°C: 0.15 h−1, YPD 30°C: 0.36 h−1). However, during growth on ethanol (0.13 h−1) promoter activity of the three species dropped tremendously as compared to glucose-grown cultures, in stark contrast with the fluorescence of the reference strains (TEF1p and ACT1p) that remained remarkably constant for all cultivation conditions. Nevertheless, also on SMEtOH S. kudriavzevii and S. eubayanus promoters showed expression levels very similar to their S. cerevisiae orthologs.

Discussion

In this study we showed that the genetic makeup of the glycolytic and fermentative pathways is highly conserved among S. cerevisiae, S. kudriavzevii, and S. eubayanus. For 11 out of 12 reactions, the exact same number of paralogs was found in the three species, reflecting that species divergence took place after whole genome and post-whole genome duplications. The only exception was the absence of the minor paralog PDC6 in the S. kudriavzevii CR85 genome. In agreement with this observation, the presence of a pseudogene in S. kudriavzevii strains IFO1802 and ZP591 consisting of only about 15% of the full PDC6 gene length has been reported (Scannell et al., 2011). At the transcript level a strong conservation was also observed, suggesting that the classification between major and minor paralogs, confirmed in S. cerevisiae by mutant studies, could be extended to S. kudriavzevii and S. eubayanus. The slightly lower degree of conservation of minor paralogs (e.g., GPM2, PYK2, ENO1, TDH1, TDH2, PDC6, ADH2, ADH4, ADH5) is in line with the previously reported accelerated evolution of the PYK2 and ADH5 as compared to their PYK1 and ADH1 paralogs (Kellis et al., 2004).

The glycolytic pathway is known to be highly conserved compared to most other pathways (Fothergill-Gilmore and Michels, 1993; Webster, 2003). Recently it was shown that glycolytic coding regions from E. coli could replace the corresponding yeast genes (Kachroo et al., 2017). For promoter regions the conservation is in general lower as compared to coding regions, but a stronger conservation was found for the glycolytic promoters in the Saccharomyces genus than for other promoter regions (Kuang et al., 2017). Combined with the remarkable conservation of binding sites for major transcriptional regulators (i.e., Rap1, Gcr1, and Abf1), these observations suggested a very similar transcriptional regulation of glycolytic and fermentative genes across the three species. Accordingly, transcriptome data showed a remarkable conservation in expression for the majority of glycolytic and fermentative genes in their native context. It is noteworthy that transcript levels of glycolytic and fermentative genes of these three diploid species were highly similar to the transcript levels of the haploid S. cerevisiae CEN.PK113-7D cultivated in the same condition as the S. cerevisiae diploid (Solis-Escalante et al., 2015). The similarity in gene expression and the conservation of the main transcription factor binding sites in the three species suggested the possibility to introduce the promoters in S. cerevisiae, expecting similar regulation.

Until now a limited number of examples of heterologous glycolytic promoters driving gene expression in S. cerevisiae is available. Recently, it was shown that S. kudriavzevii glycolytic and fermentative promoters could drive gene expression in S. cerevisiae (Kuijpers et al., 2016). More recently, it was shown that the ADH2 promoter of several Saccharomyces species could drive gene expression in S. cerevisiae (Harvey et al., 2018). Further, the glycolytic genes PFK1, PFK2 and PYK1 of the more distantly related yeast Hanseniaspora uvarum, expressed from their native promoters were shown to complement their S. cerevisiae orthologs (Langenberg et al., 2017).

To explore the conservation of glycolytic genes in a broader context, the sequence of the TPI1 gene was compared across a set of 18 species within the Saccharomycotina subphylum (Dujon, 2010). Within this subphylum, the coding region of TPI1 was highly conserved (ranging from 64,7 to 96,3% identity to S. cerevisiae), while the promoters generally displayed a much weaker similarity (ranging from 28,5%–71,1% identity to S. cerevisiae) (Figure 7). These observations are in line with studies reporting the loss of the gene encoding the Gcr1 transcription factor and the gain of new function by Rap1 in the CTG clade yeast Candida albicans (Askew et al., 2009; Lavoie et al., 2010; Weirauch and Hughes, 2010). Indeed using the MEME suite motif discovery tool (Bailey et al., 2009) gave only hits for Rap1 and Gcr1 motifs in the Saccharomyces genus.

FIGURE 7
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FIGURE 7. Phylogenetic trees of the alignments of the TPI1 genes (ORF) (A) and promoters (800 bp) (B) for a set of yeast species from the Saccharomycotina phylum. The coding regions are strongly conserved, whereas there is hardly any conservation among promoter regions. E. coli was used as an outgroup. Color indicates groups as defined in Dujon (2010).

The present study shows the ability of all the major glycolytic promoters of S. kudriavzevii and S. eubayanus to drive gene expression in S. cerevisiae with similar strength and condition-dependency. Since many hybrids occur between S. cerevisiae x S. eubayanus and S. cerevisiae x S. kudriavzevii, it is not surprising that promoters are functional in S. cerevisiae. However, the similarity we found in promoter activities for most promoters transplanted to S. cerevisiae under different conditions is remarkable and indicates a strong conservation of the glycolytic regulatory mechanisms for S. cerevisiae, S. kudriavzevii, and S. eubayanus (Supplementary Figure S6). In general, these data do not correlate very well with the transcript data (Supplementary Figure S7). This can most likely be explained by the relatively low dynamic measurement range of the plate reader compared to RNAseq, differences in cultivation conditions, length of promoters, choice of site for genomic integration (Bai Flagfeldt et al., 2009) or differences in regulatory sequences in the promoters. During growth on ethanol a strong decrease in promoter activity was observed. This is in agreement with the previously reported drop in enzymatic activity of glycolysis during growth on ethanol (Peter Smits et al., 2000; Van Hoek et al., 2000).

S. cerevisiae’s proficiency in assembling and functionally expressing large (heterologous) pathways has propelled this yeast as preferred host for the production of complex molecules such as isoprenoids or opioids (Paddon et al., 2013; Galanie et al., 2015). However, the successful expression of these pathways depends on the availability of suitable promoters. While S. cerevisiae has one of the most furbished molecular toolbox, the number of constitutive and well characterized promoters remains limited. Since S. cerevisiae’s extremely efficient homologous recombination renders strains with repeated usage of promoter sequences genetically unstable (Manivasakam et al., 1995), this shortage of promoters presents a hurdle for extensive strain construction programs. While a lot of effort is invested in the design of synthetic promoters and transcription amplifiers (Redden and Alper, 2015; Rantasalo et al., 2016; Machens et al., 2017; Naseri et al., 2017), using slightly distant but functional orthologous promoters presents an attractive alternative (Naesby et al., 2009; Harvey et al., 2018). Usage of especially the S. eubayanus promoters, which are slightly more distant from S. cerevisiae than the S. kudriavzevii promoters, would reduce the length of the sequences being 100% identical to the native S. cerevisiae promoters. The minimum length which was found to be needed for efficient homologous recombination in S. cerevisiae was 30 bp with an optimal efficiency at a length of 60 bp or more (Manivasakam et al., 1995; Hua et al., 1997). In the S. eubayanus promoters, with one exception for the PFK2 promoter, the longest sequence being identical to S. cerevisiae was found to be 34 bp. Usage of the S. eubayanus promoters would therefore substantially decrease the risk of instability and undesired recombination events during strain construction programs.

Conclusion

This study brings new insight in the genetic makeup and expression of glycolytic and fermentative genes in S. eubayanus and S. kudriavzevii. It also expands the molecular toolbox for S. cerevisiae, but also for its two relatives, with a set of strong, constitutive promoters. Furthermore, combining Illumina and Oxford Nanopore technologies, the present study offers a high quality sequence for S. kudriavzevii CR85, available from NCBI (PRJNA480800). Finally, the full set of transcript levels for the three diploid strains grown in tightly controlled conditions is available via GEO (See Materials and Methods section) and can be mined to compare species-specific regulation of gene expression beyond the glycolytic and fermentative pathways.

Author Contributions

FB, J-MD, and PD-L designed the research. FB and SD performed the experiments. MvdB and TG performed the transcriptome analysis. MvdB performed the sequence analysis. FB, SD, J-MD, and PD-L prepared the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Funding

This project was funded by the AdLibYeast European Research Council (ERC) consolidator 648141 grant awarded to PD-L.

Conflict of Interest Statement

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Acknowledgments

We thank Rik Brouwer for his contribution to strain construction, Mark Bisschops for advice and help with fermentations and data analysis, Marijke Luttik for technical support, and advice for the TECAN plate reader and flow cytometry analysis and Pilar de la Torre for performing the whole genome sequencing. Furthermore, we thank Jack Pronk for his advice and Raúl Ortiz Merino for constructive comments on the manuscript. We thank Eladio Barrio Esparducer for kindly providing S. kudriavzevii CR85.

Supplementary Material

The Supplementary Material for this article can be found online at: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fgene.2018.00504/full#supplementary-material

Footnotes

  1. ^ http://www.yeastgenome.org
  2. ^ http://www.ebi.ac.uk/swissprot/
  3. ^ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/bioproject/

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Keywords: glycolysis, promoter characterization, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Saccharomyces kudriavzevii, Saccharomyces eubayanus, transcription factor binding sites

Citation: Boonekamp FJ, Dashko S, van den Broek M, Gehrmann T, Daran J-M and Daran-Lapujade P (2018) The Genetic Makeup and Expression of the Glycolytic and Fermentative Pathways Are Highly Conserved Within the Saccharomyces Genus. Front. Genet. 9:504. doi: 10.3389/fgene.2018.00504

Received: 27 July 2018; Accepted: 08 October 2018;
Published: 16 November 2018.

Edited by:

Ed Louis, University of Leicester, United Kingdom

Reviewed by:

Catherine Tesnière, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique Centre Montpellier, France
Jing Hua Zhao, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom

Copyright © 2018 Boonekamp, Dashko, van den Broek, Gehrmann, Daran and Daran-Lapujade. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: Pascale Daran-Lapujade, p.a.s.daran-lapujade@tudelft.nl

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